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West Notes: McDavid, Dickinson, Martinez, Johnson

March 23, 2025 at 11:01 am CDT | by Brennan McClain 2 Comments

In an interview with Sportsnet’s Scott Oake and Louie DeBrusk, Edmonton Oilers’ General Manager Stan Bowman spoke briefly on the upcoming extension negotiations between the Oilers and franchise superstar, Connor McDavid. As expected, Bowman appeared confident and optimistic about getting a deal done with McDavid and fell just short of guaranteeing it’ll happen during the summer.

Bowman admitted that it’s still early to start discussing negotiations, but he stated, “We all know Connor is going to be here, and we’re going to make it happen.” Besides some speculation, there isn’t much information about McDavid’s second contract extension negotiations, given he’s a few months away from being eligible for one. However, it could become a significant media story over the summer if he doesn’t sign a new deal with Edmonton relatively soon, especially considering the intensity of the Canadian media market.

There’s a solid chance that McDavid will break a few salary records in his next deal. Next year’s salary cap would allow McDavid to earn a maximum of $19.1MM on an extension, and could get closer to $21MM should he wait until late June of 2026. The healthy increase in next year’s salary cap should allow McDavid to beat out teammate Leon Draisaitl’s $14MM salary as the highest AAV in NHL history, and he could tie or break Alex Ovechkin’s largest total contract record should he earn $15.5MM or more on an eight-year term.

Other notes from the NHL’s Western Conference:

  • The Chicago Blackhawks lost a pair of players during yesterday’s loss to the St. Louis Blues, announcing forward Jason Dickinson and defenseman Alec Martinez had each left the game due to injuries. Chicago hasn’t provided any meaningful updates to either player’s status at the time of writing, and both are questionable for today’s afternoon contest against the Philadelphia Flyers. Neither Dickinson nor Martinez played in more than five minutes of yesterday’s contest, and the pair went scoreless.
  • Despite not having trade protection in his contract, the Philadelphia Flyers’ General Manager, Daniel Brière, treated veteran defenseman Erik Johnson as if he had a full no-movement clause. According to Luke Fox from Sportsnet, Brière received more interest in Johnson; however, he only wanted to return to the Colorado Avalanche or remain in Philadelphia. Fox quoted Johnson saying, “There’s nowhere else I would be willing to go. I really enjoyed my time in Philly, and love the guys, love the city, love my role there. And I said, if something would work with Colorado, that would be the only way I would be willing to leave.”

Chicago Blackhawks| Colorado Avalanche| Edmonton Oilers Alec Martinez| Connor McDavid| Erik Johnson| Jason Dickinson

2 comments

Penguins Should Look To Re-Sign Matt Grzelcyk

March 23, 2025 at 8:49 am CDT | by Josh Cybulski 5 Comments

Kelsey Surmacz of The Hockey News made the case that the Pittsburgh Penguins should re-sign pending UFA defenseman Matt Grzelcyk before he hits the market on July 1st. The veteran has been a good fit in Pittsburgh, and bringing him back on a short-term deal makes sense in a vacuum as the Penguins are very thin on the left side going forward. Grzelcyk has set career highs this season in multiple offensive categories, as the 31-year-old has a goal and 31 assists in 71 games while averaging over 20 minutes a night for the first time in his career.

He’s become an important piece of the Penguins’ defense core, and the team opted to hang onto him rather than move him at the NHL Trade Deadline. Grzelcyk’s veteran presence has mentored some of Pittsburgh’s younger players and could be valuable during a re-tool. Surmacz believes that Pittsburgh should look at a one or two-year deal for Grzelcyk, which would make sense as the Penguins don’t look like they’ll be bottoming out, and they likely won’t be making any major additions over the next year. Many Penguins insiders believe that Pittsburgh hopes to contend for the playoffs again in the 2026-27 season, and while Grzelcyk shouldn’t be a top-four defenseman on a contending team, he could serve as valuable depth when the Penguins are ready to make a push.

While a short-term deal would suit Pittsburgh, it likely wouldn’t be Grzelcyk’s preferred outcome. The Charlestown, Massachusetts native has rebounded this season and could be looking at his last opportunity to cash in a lucrative contract. Playing under a one-year,  $2.75MM deal that he signed in free agency last summer, it’s not hard to imagine him receiving three-year offers this upcoming summer with an increased salary cap and very few options available.

Pittsburgh Penguins Matt Grzelcyk

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Pacific Notes: Pettersson, Höglander, Weegar, Farabee

March 22, 2025 at 7:30 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

The Vancouver Canucks lost a pair of forwards as the team shared Elias Pettersson and Nils Höglander were pulled from today’s game against the New York Rangers due to injuries.

Pettersson finished the game going scoreless through 7:50 of action in 14 shifts. The only notable mark he left on the game was delivering one hit. Meanwhile, Höglander exited the game with even less ice time (7:03) through 12 shifts, putting two shots on net and similarly delivering one hit.

Nobody in the organization could provide meaningful updates to Pettersson or Höglander’s status. Still, Sportsnet’s Brendan Batchelor relayed an idea from head coach Rick Tocchet indicating Vancouver may need to recall a center before their game against the New Jersey Devils on Monday. The hypothetical recall will likely come in the form of Aatu Räty or Max Sasson should the Canucks need some help.

Other happenings in the Pacific Division:

  • The Calgary Flames were without their top defenseman today as they announced MacKenzie Weegar was out due to a lower-body injury. Weegar initially intended to play, and even skated through most of the warmup before deciding the injury would preclude him from the lineup. Fortunately, it doesn’t sound like a major injury, as multiple reports indicate Weegar will return to action on Tuesday against the Seattle Kraken.
  • Sticking in southern Alberta, forward Joel Farabee was also absent from the Flames’ lineup due to an illness (Twitter Link). Farabee, acquired from the Philadelphia Flyers in late January, hasn’t responded well since moving north of the Canada/United States border. Since donning the flaming ’C’, Farabee has only mustered three goals and two assists over 18 games in his new home.

Calgary Flames| Injury| Vancouver Canucks Elias Pettersson| Joel Farabee| MacKenzie Weegar| Nils Hoglander

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Atlantic Notes: Sacco, Marchand, Kastelic, Jensen

March 22, 2025 at 6:00 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 5 Comments

The Boston Bruins may be in the market for another head coach this summer. In a wide-ranging article about the team’s season, Kevin Paul Dupont of The Boston Globe claims the Bruins will likely move on from Joe Sacco this offseason although they’ll want to keep him in a different role on the staff.

In his first head coaching role since his time with the Colorado Avalanche in the early 2010s, Saccos’ Bruins have managed a 22-22-6 record in 50 games. Boston shipped away significant pieces at the trade deadline and appeared poised for their first top 10 draft selection since picking Dougie Hamilton with the ninth overall pick in the 2011 NHL Draft.

Dupont believes Sacco’s future with the organization in a different role hinges on whether General Manager Don Sweeney and President Cam Neely retain their positions beyond this season. They want to reward Sacco’s loyalty to the organization for the last 11 years but there’s no guarantee they’ll be around to make that decision after a difficult season.

Other notes from the NHL’s Atlantic Division:

  • Despite being acquired by the team two weeks ago, Brad Marchand has yet to debut with the Florida Panthers. It shouldn’t be too long as Tom Gulitti of NHL.com passed along a note from Panthers’ head coach Paul Maurice saying Marchand should only be a week away from returning. Florida has a light schedule throughout the next week so Marchand may only miss two or three more games. That would allow him to play in the Panthers’ final nine or 10 games of the regular season should his recovery process continue in the right direction.
  • Moving back to eastern Massachusetts, Jim McBride of The Boston Globe reported that Bruins’ forward Mark Kastelic has returned to Boston due to an upper-body injury and will miss the rest of the team’s road trip. Given that their current road trip extends past next week, the news likely ends Kastelic’s availability for the rest of March. The bottom-six forward is enjoying the highest-scoring season of his career with five goals and 14 points in 61 games, leading to a three-year, $4.7MM extension with Boston in January.
  • The Ottawa Senators could have an important right-handed defenseman back in the lineup tonight when they take on the New Jersey Devils. After missing the last three games with a lower-body injury, TSN’s Bruce Garrioch reports that Nick Jensen has been elevated to a game-time decision. Jensen would be an important player to get back into the lineup as the Senators look to correct their two-game losing streak and keep pace in the Eastern Conference playoff race.

Boston Bruins| Florida Panthers| Injury| Ottawa Senators Brad Marchand| Joe Sacco| Mark Kastelic| Nick Jensen

5 comments

West Notes: Norris, Girard, Ohgren, Dach

March 22, 2025 at 5:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

While Ottawa ultimately moved center Josh Norris within the division when they traded him to the Sabres on trade deadline day this month, that wasn’t the only team they had serious talks with.  Postmedia’s Bruce Garrioch reported earlier this week that the Sens held trade talks with the Canucks and Predators before the deadline but obviously, neither move materialized.  Nashville certainly had ample salary cap space to absorb his $7.95MM cap charge along with three first-round picks but didn’t have the young impact center to send that Buffalo did in Dylan Cozens.  Vancouver, meanwhile, would have been able to cover Norris’ cap charge as well (though longer term, it would have been a challenge) but also lacked the core center to go the other way with Elias Pettersson pulled out of trade talks before the deadline.

More from out West:

  • Avalanche defenseman Samuel Girard won’t play tonight against Montreal due to a lower-body injury, notes Corey Masisak of The Denver Post (Bluesky link). The 26-year-old suffered the injury late in Wednesday’s game against Toronto and was out the following night in Ottawa.  Already missing Josh Manson, Colorado’s recently strengthened defensive depth is certainly getting tested.  Girard has 22 points and 94 blocked shots in 66 games this season while averaging just under 21 minutes a night.
  • After being recalled on Tuesday on an emergency basis, the Wild announced (Twitter link) that winger Liam Ohgren has been returned to AHL Iowa. The 21-year-old got into the lineup on Wednesday but with Marcus Johansson returning today against Buffalo, the emergency conditions no longer existed, necessitating his demotion or conversion to a regular recall which would have counted against their post-deadline limit of four.  Ohgren is in his first full season in North America and has five points in 24 games with Minnesota but has been quite productive on the farm, tallying 14 goals and 14 assists in 28 outings with Iowa.
  • Blackhawks winger Colton Dach won’t play tonight against St. Louis due to an elbow injury, relays NHL.com’s Tracey Myers (Twitter link). The 22-year-old has been a regular for Chicago since being recalled in early January, getting into 25 games.  In those outings, he has two goals and five assists along with 86 assists while averaging a little over 12 minutes a night in his first taste of NHL action.

AHL| Chicago Blackhawks| Colorado Avalanche| Minnesota Wild| Nashville Predators| Vancouver Canucks Colton Dach| Elias Pettersson| Joshua Norris| Liam Ohgren| Samuel Girard

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PHR Mailbag: Playoffs, Levi, Rangers, Flames, Kantserov

March 22, 2025 at 3:59 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 5 Comments

Topics in this edition of the PHR Mailbag include a look at what has been a busy season for the Rangers on the trade front and what’s potentially to come, assessing Calgary’s notable trade from earlier in the year, and more.  If your question doesn’t appear here, check back in one of our next two columns.

Cla23: If the playoffs started today which teams are Paper Tigers?

Assuming we’re not talking about the Wild Card teams, let’s look at the ones whose spots are more secure.  In the East, I don’t trust the Metropolitan Division outside of Washington (and even then, with it being their first real playoff run in a while, an upset wouldn’t shock me).  Carolina’s underlying numbers are always strong but they typically struggle to score in the postseason and are a weaker team on that front compared to the past.  I think they’ll get by New Jersey whose injuries are probably going to be too much to overcome but as a perceived contender in past years, the Hurricanes won’t get over the hump.  I could see any of the top three teams in the Atlantic coming out of that division so I can’t nitpick on them too much.

Out West, I still have some doubts about Winnipeg.  Connor Hellebuyck is a great goalie but teams have figured him out in the playoffs the last couple of times.  They still don’t have a true second center which is probably going to hurt as well.  On paper, I think they’re a weaker team than Dallas and Colorado and the Jets will have to go through one of them.  A long run for Winnipeg would be great for that market and core group but I’d be surprised if it happened.  In the Pacific, I’m leery about Edmonton’s chances of making it out of the division let alone the conference again.  I think they’ll get past Los Angeles assuming that matchup holds but their goaltending remains a big question mark, as does the secondary scoring.  Can their top group carry them again?  Sure.  Will they?  I’m not so sure about that.

The Duke: Is Devon Levi an AHL lifer?

Things certainly haven’t gone great for Levi this season.  Originally expected to see a lot of time with Buffalo and maybe a bit of time with AHL Rochester to get a few more games in, it instead has been the exact opposite.  Levi has a 4.12 GAA with a .872 SV% in nine appearances with the Sabres this season which played a big role in them going and reclaiming James Reimer from Anaheim early in the year.  That brings his overall NHL numbers to a 3.29 GAA and a .894 SV% in 39 games.  It’s certainly fair to say that things haven’t gone as planned for him so far.

But there is some reason for optimism with Levi still.  His numbers with AHL Rochester last year were stellar.  His numbers this season are reasonably close (a little lower of a GAA and SV%) and are still well above league average.  Yes, he’s playing behind a more veteran-laden team down there that’s good defensively but that tells me he can still bring something to the table.  People have been saying this for year but one day, Buffalo is going to be good again.  A lot will come from their core young blueliners getting better which just takes time and reps.  In a year or two when they’re better, it wouldn’t shock me if Levi performs a lot better for the Sabres.

Levi is still 23 and when you consider his first pro season was only a handful of games, it’s really only his second full professional campaign.  Goalies generally have a longer and more gradual development curve; Levi only has 59 AHL games under his belt so far when lots of good prospects get double that.  There’s still up to two years of waiver exemption left (though that will end once he gets into 21 more NHL games) so there’s still a fair bit of time for him to improve.

If it was me in charge, I’d be looking for another one-year stopgap option between the pipes to back up Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen.  Levi needs plenty of playing time and giving him that behind a defense that’s still going through some growing pains might do more damage development-wise.  A year or two from now, both he and Buffalo’s back end will be more ready and I expect he’ll fare better at that time.  Levi might not be their long-term starter of the future but I still think he’s going to be at least a capable NHL netminder down the road.

Schwa: Curious to hear your thoughts on Chris Drury’s attempts to ‘retool’ the NYR roster. I think he certainly blew up the locker room chemistry, but obviously cleared some bad contracts that he inherited.

– Do you see Kreider and maybe Mika (if he waives trade protection) moving out this summer? Seems to further prioritize cap at risk of further damage to the room? What kind of trade value do you see here – or is this an attach an asset to rid the contract?

– Also, thoughts on the D extensions, I feel Borgen has been better than expected, while Urho and Soucy seem to maybe block some AHL prospects/Zac Jones. Is K’Andre going to see an extension as well? Perhaps price dependent?

The ruthlessness that Drury showed unloading those bad contracts (Barclay Goodrow and Jacob Trouba) was something we rarely see.  It accomplished the objective of getting them off the books without any lingering effects which was good but it’s also ruffled some feathers, so to speak.  It wouldn’t shock me if that has played a role in some of their struggles, especially in the first half of the season but that’s obviously impossible to quantify.

The return for Trouba was pretty light but with freeing up the cap space being the key objective, it looks better in that lens.  The Kaapo Kakko trade was pretty underwhelming but getting someone that’s going to turn into a long-term piece makes that look a little better.  I didn’t mind the J.T. Miller trade from a value perspective although being a buyer with where they were in the standings is a bit odd.  But when the opportunity presents itself to get an impact player, you can’t turn it down thinking it’s just not the right time.  The return for Ryan Lindgren felt a tad light but if Juuso Parssinen turns into a decent piece, that can still be turned around.  I liked the Reilly Smith return a lot while the Carson Soucy trade was a bit of a head-scratcher.  All in all, it’s kind of a mixed bag.  Lots of change, a definite turn in the types of players they added, and in the end, they’re still largely mediocre.

Chris Kreider has two years left on his contract after this one with a $6.5MM AAV.  He’s not having a particularly good year but barring injury, he’ll pot 20 goals once again and we all know his scoring prowess from the previous few seasons.  Someone’s going to think a change of scenery can spark him.  Considering that he can play with a bit of an edge still, I think there’s a Trouba-like market for him.  Someone will take the contract on and New York could get a small something in return while getting out of the entirety of the deal.  But if they wanted to pay that down for a couple of years, I think they could get a decent prospect for Kreider’s services.  They won’t need to attach an asset to move him.

As for Mika Zibanejad, that one’s a tougher call.  He has three years at $8.5MM per season left which is a bit of a bigger ticket to take on, especially with his production dipping considerably as well.  That third year is the hard part as we saw with Trouba that teams will take on two for cheap.  But it’s not a deep center market in free agency and there will be teams who miss out.  Would one take themselves out of the mix early to take on Zibanejad for next to nothing?  I think a few might.  But Zibanejad has the hammer here with a no-move clause that takes doing what they did with Goodrow off the table.  If he limits his market to only a handful of teams that aren’t the best of fits, New York might have to retain some money, attach an asset, or take a multi-year deal in return to balance the money.  The path to move him will be trickier.

As for the defense extensions and acquisitions, that’s a mixed bag.  I like Will Borgen but I don’t like five years at $4.5MM per season for him.  With the year he’s having, I can’t see him beating that if he went to free agency.  He’s a useful player in the right role and good righties are hard to get but that extension seemed like too much, too soon.  Urho Vaakanainen for two years at $1.55MM also feels a little high for someone who is more of a reserve or depth player but it’s not terrible.  And adding Soucy gives them a pricey third-pairing option that cuts into money they will need to re-sign K’Andre Miller this summer.  I do expect him to get a one-year deal around his $4.646MM qualifying offer as his trade market will be weakened after a rough year.  He’s two years away from UFA eligibility so a bounce-back showing in 2025-26 could net him the long-term agreement it looked like he’d be landing not that long ago.

uvmfiji: Frost/Farabee trade. Woof.

So, let’s check in on the two newest Flames, shall we?  The results, well, haven’t been pretty.  Frost has two goals and four assists in 18 games while Farabee has three goals and two helpers in that same stretch.  For players who have shown themselves to have some offensive upside in the past (Farabee is only a year removed from tallying 50 points while Frost had over 40 points the last two years before this), it’s fair to say that Calgary was hoping they’d be able to contribute more than they have so far.

The fit with how Ryan Huska has the Flames playing is a bit of a question mark.  Calgary is a team that plays low-event hockey with lots of attention to detail on defense and positioning.  With a roster that isn’t the most talented on paper, that makes sense too.  But those two players weren’t exactly known for that with the Flyers so now they’re trying to learn a new system and play a little differently than they were before.  Accordingly, some early struggles may be disappointing but they’re also understandable.

I’d still do that trade from Calgary’s standpoint without hesitation today.  Yes, there’s risk in three more years at $5MM for Farabee but they have plenty of cap space with the Upper Limit rising quickly and if he can get back to his 2023-24 form, they’ll make out quite well.  Frost has another RFA year left and probably gets a short-term deal that buys a season or two of eligibility at a price tag that isn’t going to be a drag on anything the Flames want to do in the short term.  To get that for a pricey rental whose standalone value was quite limited (Andrei Kuzmenko), a player who cleared waivers at the beginning of the year (Jakob Pelletier), and a second-round pick, that’s still solid work from an asset accumulation perspective.  Meanwhile, we’ll see what the Flyers have planned for that extra cap space this summer.

Unclemike1526: What are the realistic odds that the Blackhawks can get Kantserov to come over from Russia next year? Asking for whoever the Hawks hire for a coach next year.

The realistic odds here would be slim to nil.  Roman Kantserov is signed through next season with Metallurg Magnitogorsk of the KHL.  Unlike most international federations, there isn’t a transfer agreement between the NHL and Russia so it’s not as if Chicago can sign Kantserov to an entry-level deal that supersedes the KHL one and pay a prescribed fee.

Now, if Metallurg was to release Kantserov early, then he could go and sign with the Blackhawks.  But he’s their second-leading scorer despite missing 21 games due to injury; he has 13 goals and 25 assists through 47 outings.  Knowing that, what would be their motivation to release him early?

Players can buy their way out of a contract but NHL teams aren’t able to contribute to that while Kantserov is obviously capped at what he can earn on an entry-level pact with Chicago so it’s not like the Blackhawks could up his offer high enough to cover the buyout that way.  So this doesn’t seem like a viable option either.  Maybe they work out something that says if he doesn’t make the NHL roster, he has to go back to the KHL (a European Assignment Clause); that’s about the only semi-realistic option there is.  But again, what incentive does Metallurg have to agree to that?

Realistically speaking, the earliest the Blackhawks will probably see Kantserov is the 2026-27 season.  KHL contracts now expire at the end of May and with all due respect to Chicago’s fans, I don’t think there’s much of a chance they’ll be playing into June in 2026.  More patience will be needed before he can come to North America.

Photo courtesy of Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images.

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals PHR Mailbag

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Pat Maroon To Retire After The Season

March 22, 2025 at 2:27 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 6 Comments

Blackhawks winger Pat Maroon is in his 14th NHL season but there won’t be a 15th.  The veteran revealed to CHSN during today’s pregame show (Twitter link) that he plans to retire at the end of the season, citing a desire to start a new chapter with his family.

Maroon is in his first season with Chicago after signing a one-year, $1.3MM contract with them in free agency last summer.  He was brought in to play a mentoring role while taking a regular shift on the fourth line and has done just that, getting into 59 games this season where he has 16 points, 95 hits, and 81 penalty minutes in 11:37 of playing time per outing.

It felt like the 36-year-old was going to be a candidate to be moved at the trade deadline earlier this month to a team looking to add some extra depth and experience for the stretch run.  However, he indicated to the team last month that his preference was to remain with Chicago rather than be on the move for the second straight deadline.

Maroon was a sixth-round pick by Philadelphia back in 2006, going 171st overall.  He spent parts of four seasons in their farm system but never got a chance to play with the Flyers, eventually being traded to Anaheim in 2010.

While Maroon saw a bit of NHL action with the Ducks after the move, it took until the 2013-14 campaign for him to become a regular player for them at the age of 25.  He wound up spending parts of five years with them before he was traded to Edmonton at the 2016 deadline.  With the Oilers is where he had his best success offensively, notching 86 points in 154 games over parts of three years before being moved to New Jersey at the 2018 trade deadline.

Maroon then signed with St. Louis the following summer, winning a Stanley Cup with them in 2019 before moving on to Tampa Bay where he won two more in consecutive seasons.  Along the way, he went from being more of a second-line option as he was with Edmonton to more of an energetic bottom-six piece, one that spent parts of four years with the Lightning before being picked up at the deadline by Boston last season.

All told, Maroon has 125 goals and 195 assists along with 1,583 hits and 1,071 penalty minutes in 839 regular season games across eight different organizations heading into today’s action.  He also has suited up in 163 postseason contests, in the top 75 in NHL history in that regard where he has 53 points and those three Stanley Cup rings.   While Maroon has a few more weeks to add to those regular season numbers, it has certainly been a very solid career for someone who wound up being a late bloomer after working his way up from a long stint in the minors.

Photo courtesy of Perry Nelson-Imagn Images.

Chicago Blackhawks| Newsstand| Retirements Pat Maroon

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Sharks Notes: Eklund, Vlasic, Thrun, Lund, Wennberg

March 22, 2025 at 2:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Sharks forward William Eklund has had discussions about playing for Sweden in the upcoming World Championship in his native Sweden, notes Curtis Pashelka of The Mercury News.  The 22-year-old is having the best season of his young career with 15 goals and 35 assists through 64 games, good for a share for first in team scoring with Macklin Celebrini.  That should have him in line to play a prominent role for his country with several of Sweden’s top players expected to be unavailable due to the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Elsewhere in San Jose:

  • Defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic is expected to get more imaging done soon on the upper-body injury that is plaguing him once again, Pashelka relays in the same column. The veteran is dealing with a recurrence of the injury that kept him out in the first half of the campaign.  Vlasic has played in just 17 games this season where he has two assists and 29 blocks in 15:28 of ice time per game, which is the second-lowest average of his career.  Head coach David Warsofsky indicated that it’s too early to know if this injury will be a season-ender for the 37-year-old.
  • Pashelka also mentions that blueliner Henry Thrun is expected to return to practice on Monday. He was initially listed as week-to-week after suffering an upper-body injury on March 8th.  Through 52 games this season, the 24-year-old has a goal and nine assists in just under 17 minutes of playing time.
  • While recently signed forward Cameron Lund is burning the first year of his entry-level contract this season, he’s not expected to report to the team for a few more days, Pashelka reports (Twitter link).  Lund had 40 points in 37 games at Northeastern this season and should get into at least a few games down the stretch.
  • Center Alexander Wennberg should suit up tonight against Boston, reports Max Miller of The Hockey News (Twitter link). He has been dealing with a lingering lower-body issue lately although it hasn’t caused him to miss any time recently.  Wennberg has eight goals and 23 assists through 64 appearances in his first season with the Sharks while logging over 18 minutes a night of action.

San Jose Sharks Cameron Lund| Henry Thrun| Macklin Celebrini| Marc-Edouard Vlasic| William Eklund

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Canadiens Notes: Armia, Savard, Dvorak, Guhle

March 22, 2025 at 1:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

In an interview with Pierre LeBrun for The Athletic (subscription link), Canadiens GM Kent Hughes acknowledged that he was initially approaching the trade deadline as if they’d be selling.  But the team went on a run after the 4 Nations break, resulting in a change of plan.  In doing so, he noted that he started to move the goalposts on his asking price for winger Joel Armia, his most notable pending unrestricted free agent.  Hughes admitted that while he wouldn’t say a flat-out no to acquiring teams, he readily stated that it would take a big overpayment to get him.  Earlier this month, it was reported that the Canadiens had a second-round pick on the table for Armia but clearly, the adjusted asking price came in higher than that.

More from Montreal:

  • Also from that interview, Hughes stated that he went into the deadline not expecting to move center Christian Dvorak or defenseman David Savard. He noted that with mid-round picks being the potential return for each of them, it wasn’t worth doing to add those while weakening their farm team in Laval which has been in a close battle for first in the AHL in recent weeks.  Also, with one of the deeper prospect pools in the league and with 21 selections over the next two drafts, there wasn’t as much of a need to add extra picks to the cupboard.  Both Dvorak and Savard are slated to be unrestricted free agents this summer and are likely facing pay cuts from their cap charges of $4.45MM and $3.5MM respectively.
  • Defenseman Kaiden Guhle took part in today’s morning skate in a non-contact jersey, relays TVA Sports’ Renaud Lavoie (Twitter link). The 23-year-old is working his way back after suffering a lacerated quad tendon in late January.  He’s still likely a little while away from returning to the lineup but if Montreal can hang around the playoff picture a bit longer, they could get a nice boost to their back end for the late push with Guhle being a big part of their top four, logging more than 21 minutes a night before being injured.

Kent Hughes| Montreal Canadiens Christian Dvorak| David Savard| Joel Armia| Kaiden Guhle

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Metropolitan Notes: Palat, Greaves, Aho

March 22, 2025 at 10:56 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Devils winger Ondrej Palat didn’t take part in the morning skate today, making it unlikely that he’ll suit up tonight against Ottawa.  He was previously listed as questionable after missing Thursday’s game with an undisclosed injury.  However, as team reporter Amanda Stein relays (Twitter link), the 33-year-old took to the ice after the morning skate which suggests he’s probably not too far off from being able to return.  It hasn’t been a great year for Palat as he has just 13 goals and 12 assists through 67 games while his playing time has dipped under 14 minutes a night for the first time since his first taste of NHL action back in 2012-13.  But with New Jersey dealing with a long list of injuries, they’ll certainly be hoping that Palat’s absence is a short one.

More from the Metropolitan:

  • After being recalled yesterday to serve as the backup goalie in Daniil Tarasov’s absence, the Blue Jackets announced that goaltender Jet Greaves has been returned to AHL Cleveland. The 23-year-old has been up and down several times this season and has gotten into six games with Columbus where he has a 2.83 GAA with a .905 SV%.  Greaves has spent most of the year with the Monsters, putting up a 2.84 GAA and a .915 SV% in 34 appearances and will go from one team in a push for a Wild Card spot to another in the battle for the final spots in the AHL’s North Division playoffs.
  • The Penguins announced (Twitter link) that they’ve returned defenseman Sebastian Aho to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. The 29-year-old has been up and down in recent days on emergency recall but it appears he’ll now go back to an extended stay in the minors.  Aho is in his first season in Pittsburgh’s organization but injuries have limited him to just 17 outings in the AHL where he has seven assists.

AHL| Columbus Blue Jackets| New Jersey Devils| Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Jet Greaves| Ondrej Palat| Sebastian Aho

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