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Boston Bruins Sign Dalton Bancroft To Entry-Level Contract

April 3, 2025 at 9:23 am CDT | by Brennan McClain 1 Comment

The Boston Bruins have tapped into the collegiate free-agent market. Boston announced they’ve signed forward Dalton Bancroft to a one-year entry-level contract starting in the 2025-26 NHL season and that he’ll finish the remainder of the 2024-25 campaign on an ATO with their AHL affiliate, the Providence Bruins.

Bancroft recently finished his junior campaign with the Cornell University Big Red hockey program. The 6’3″, 207 lbs winger finished his collegiate career with 36 goals and 79 points in 103 games, helping Cornell to its most successful three-year run in program history.

Cornell won back-to-back ECAC Hockey Conference championships, first beating St. Lawrence University in 2023-24 and then defeating Clarkson University in 2024-25. In the national tournament, Bancroft helped Cornell reach the Regional Final in three consecutive campaigns, this year usurping the heavily favored Michigan State University in their first game of the tournament.

Fortunately, Bancroft will have more meaningful hockey to play. The AHL’s Providence Bruins have already qualified for a spot in the 2025 Calder Cup playoffs, and Bancfort will be allowed the opportunity to test his NHL readiness down the stretch.

He likely couldn’t have found a better situation for his playstyle, either. It’s difficult to place Bancroft into an archetype as a two-way forward, power forward, etc, because he excels in a unique aspect. He can play physically, move the puck well, play soundly defensively, and chip in for goals when needed. The best way to articulate Bancroft’s value is calling him a jack-of-all-trades, master of none.

Still, he should fit in nicely for AHL Providence down the stretch. The team has one of the best goal differentials in the AHL due to their intelligent playstyle, and Bancroft should benefit from this down the stretch in his first taste of professional hockey.

Boston Bruins| Transactions Dalton Bancroft

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Pittsburgh Penguins Recall Joona Koppanen

April 3, 2025 at 8:50 am CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

With little to no expectation of qualifying for the 2025 Stanley Cup playoffs, the Pittsburgh Penguins again have the opportunity to try a few pieces in preparation for next year’s roster. Depth forward Joona Koppanen will get another chance for an informal tryout on the NHL roster as he’s been recalled by the Penguins.

Koppanen was reassigned to the AHL’s Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins only a few days ago in a corresponding move to bring Ville Koivunen and Rutger McGroarty to the NHL roster. The Tampere, Finland native no longer carries any fervor as a prospect in Pittsburgh’s developmental pipeline, but he could represent an interesting option for the team’s bottom six next season.

Unfortunately, Koppanen has never received an extended look at the NHL level. Dating back to his time in the Boston Bruins organization, Koppanen has only played in 14 games in the sport’s highest league, tallying one goal and one assist while averaging 11:13 of ice time.

Still, he’s been nothing if not consistent at the AHL level. His two best years in the AHL came during his last two with Boston, scoring 23 goals and 65 points in 126 contests with a +28 rating. Koppanen proved he could be counted upon for modest secondary scoring and showed a keen ability to care for the puck in the defensive zone.

Due to a handful of call-ups during his time with Pittsburgh, he hasn’t reached the point totals he had with the AHL’s Providence Bruins. Still, he’s managed 13 goals and 43 points in 113 games as an AHL Penguin, with a +2 rating.

With less than 10 games remaining on their schedule for the 2024-25 season, it can’t hurt the Penguins to throw everything at the wall and see what sticks. Koppanen is eligible for Group VI unrestricted free agency this summer, and Pittsburgh could use the last portion of the regular season to determine if he’s worth retaining for next year.

Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Joona Koppanen

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Snapshots: Hertl, Thompson, Whitelaw, Boija

April 2, 2025 at 9:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Golden Knights center Tomas Hertl rejoined the team for practice today, the team announced (Twitter link).  It’s worth noting that he wasn’t cleared for contact so he’s not particularly close to returning.  The 31-year-old suffered a shoulder injury a little more than a week ago, stalling what had been one of his better offensive seasons as he has 31 goals and 28 assists in 70 games.  However, Pierre LeBrun reports in his latest piece for The Athletic (subscription link) that Hertl is expected to be ready for the start of the playoffs so while Hertl won’t be back in the immediate future, he won’t be out for much longer either.

Elsewhere around the hockey world:

  • Capitals goaltender Logan Thompson suffered an upper-body injury in the first period tonight against Carolina, the team announced (Twitter link). While he finished the period, he did not return after that.  The 27-year-old has done quite well in his first season with Washington, posting a 31-5-6 record with a 2.43 GAA and a .912 SV% in 42 games heading into tonight’s action, earning himself a six-year, $35.1MM extension back in January.  While Washington has a big cushion for top spot in the Metropolitan Division, an extended absence certainly wouldn’t be ideal heading into the playoffs.
  • Blue Jackets prospect William Whitelaw is looking for a new place to play next season as he has entered the NCAA transfer portal, relays Mark Divver of the New England Hockey Journal (Twitter link). The 20-year-old was an early third-round pick back in 2023, going 66th overall but has bounced around since then.  He played at Wisconsin in his freshman year but after managing 10 goals and seven assists in 37 games, he entered the portal and wound up choosing to play at Michigan this year.  The change of scenery didn’t yield much of an increase in production, just one extra goal in two fewer games so it appears he’s hoping the third time is the charm in terms of finding the right school to play at.
  • University of Maine goaltender Albin Boija was one of the top goaltenders from this year’s college free agent class. However, he won’t be turning pro after all as Divver reports in a separate tweet that the 21-year-old has elected to return for his junior year.  Boija took over as the starter for the Black Bears this season, posting a 1.82 GAA and a .926 SV% in 37 games, ranking him in the top ten in Division I in both categories.

Columbus Blue Jackets| NCAA| Snapshots| Vegas Golden Knights| Washington Capitals Albin Boija| Logan Thompson| Tomas Hertl| William Whitelaw

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PHR Mailbag: Blackhawks, Bedard, Hofer, Brunette, Breakout Players, Laviolette

April 2, 2025 at 8:26 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

Topics in this edition of the PHR Mailbag include an assessment of Kyle Davidson as GM of the Blackhawks, the backup goalie situation in St. Louis, and more.  If your question doesn’t appear here, check back in our last mailbag while we have one more coming from our most recent call for questions as well.

Unclemike1526: What is your evaluation of Kyle Davidson? I think he’s done a fine job of acquiring talent while taking some shots at veterans to try and catch lightning in a bottle to maybe make the playoffs. None of those contracts are bad enough to block anybody important. Moving off Jones and Mrazek was a stroke of genius IMO. This seems to be the year where some serious talent arrives at the end and they move up. Moore, Rinzel, Thompson should be here soon. However, where he has been lacking is picking the right coach to blend the young and the old. If his next coach pick fails, is he in trouble? I feel this is a crucial decision for him AND the team. Your thoughts? Thanks as always.

I’m not sure about their veteran additions being geared toward trying to catch lightning in a bottle for a playoff push.  I think it was more culture additions – especially in the 2023 summer – and then last summer, trying to add pieces to raise the floor of their forward group and push some younger players into bigger roles in Rockford.  I don’t have a problem with that strategy either, although some of the short-term contracts are pretty steep overpays.  Granted, with their cap space, they can easily afford it.

Circling back to the first part of the question, I think the macro-level view is positive.  Davidson has brought in several quality prospects and landed what they hope is a franchise player in Connor Bedard.  Their cap situation is about as clean as anyone’s and they have plenty of draft picks to fill the cupboards moving forward.  That’s all great.

Looking at the micro-level view, it’s not as great.  Some good deadline dealing aside, some of the veterans brought in haven’t had the desired impact in terms of raising the floor and insulating the young talent.  This year has been ugly from a win-loss perspective and in some cases, a development perspective which is the last thing you want in a rebuilding year.  It hasn’t mattered who’s coaching this group, neither Luke Richardson nor Anders Sorensen could get enough out of them.  While the longer-term objectives are getting hit (a high draft pick this June, development at lower levels for the younger prospects), how this season has gone takes a bit of the shine off the longer-term positives.

The general belief is that GMs get three coaches and then things start to get shaky.  And in this case, whoever is hired to coach next season would be number three.  But with Sorensen being an interim in-season promotion, I don’t think that will count against Davidson.  Most coaching targets aren’t available midseason so you do what you can with who you have and go from there.  So, in my mind, whoever is coaching next season will be the second hire.  As long as Chicago starts to show some more progress under that bench boss next season, I think Davidson will be fine for a little while yet.

Zakis: Read that some Hawks fans want Bedard run out of town due to regression and some silly penalties recently. First, what are they thinking? And two, in the nonzero chance they think about moving him (0%), what would the return look like?

I was baffled seeing some trying to correlate a couple of misconduct penalties to a desire to leave when it comes to Connor Bedard.  And it’s more baffling to think some would want him run out of town already; I can’t come up with a logical reason for someone to have that mindset.  He’s still a junior-aged player, anchoring a team that frankly isn’t very good.  If you look back at some of the teenagers who had strong second seasons, their supporting cast was a lot better than Bedard has had.

Saying that doesn’t absolve him from any blame by any stretch either.  I expected he’d take a step forward development-wise this season and he hasn’t.  But I still think he’s going to be a legitimate star center in this league and those are players you don’t give up on early when things aren’t going well.  And that’s why he’s obviously not getting dealt.

But since you’re asking about the hypothetical scenario that he is, a lot would depend on if the reset button is being pushed.  If so, then the return is more futures or prospect-based.  (Think a recent top-five center, one or two other first-rounders, and a quality prospect or two for good measure.)  But if the intention is to accelerate things, then you’re looking at maybe an established top-line center with plenty of team control remaining, plus some other younger NHL-level upgrades.  I’m being purposefully vague here as I can’t think of a single established young center who would fit that part of the return that another team would want to move so it doesn’t really matter what the other pieces would be if the core one isn’t there.  Either way, it’s clearly not happening.

Gmm8811: In your mind, has Joel Hofer done enough to warrant a two-year extension or has Colten Ellis overtaken him? If Hofer gets offer sheeted, does Armstrong take the draft pick?

Hofer has absolutely done enough to warrant another contract.  He has certainly established himself as a legitimate second-string option and there’s a case to be made he should be playing more than he has.  It’s worth noting that he’s three years away from unrestricted free agency so a two-year deal would still make him a restricted free agent at the end, albeit one that puts him a year away from hitting the open market.  If they’re not ready to commit a long-term deal to him, that term makes sense with an AAV approaching the $3MM range.

The offer sheet is interesting in theory.  It’s not a great UFA market for goaltenders so if there’s a team that thinks Husso could be a better long-term option, then an offer sheet would make sense.  Again, that’s really only in theory.  Let’s look at last year’s offer sheet thresholds, numbers that will only be higher this summer.  I can’t see the Blues letting him walk for a second-round pick so that means the offer would need to be higher than at least $4.58MM (which is probably closer to $4.8MM or so this summer) to get them to balk.  Is there a team that would him that much on a five-year deal or less?  (Anything more than that and the compensation cranks up further with the maximum divisor being five.)  I like Hofer but I don’t think there’s a team willing to pay that much money plus a first-round pick and a third-rounder to get his services.

As for Ellis, this is his fourth professional season and the only one in which he hasn’t spent extended time in the ECHL.  He’s having a nice year with AHL Springfield for sure but I doubt he’s done enough to make St. Louis management think he’s ready for full-time second-string duty with them.  I suspect their plan is to have him as the starter for the Thunderbirds next season pending waivers.

Jakeattack: In your opinion, how much job security does Brunette have with Nashville? Last season, multiple players hit new career highs. This season? Well, everyone knows how this season has gone for multiple reasons.

GBear: Apart from GM Trotz being buddies with Andrew Brunette, can you see any way that Bruno doesn’t get fired at the end of this season?

It certainly has been an ugly year in Nashville, hasn’t it?  Even if you expected that the team wouldn’t be as good as the group that went on a massive point streak to go from dead in the water to playoff spot, the thought was that some of their key additions over the summer – Steven Stamkos, Jonathan Marchessault, and Brady Skjei – would at least be enough to offset that, keeping them squarely in the playoff mix.  Instead, they’ve already been mathematically eliminated (only one of three teams with that fate) and finishing 30th overall is the probable outcome at this point.

Here’s the question that I’m pondering.  Last year was a year where everything went right in the second half and this season has been one where pretty much nothing has gone right.  Can that happen two years in a row or are we likely to see a bounce-back from several players?  I’m inclined to think it’s the latter which could work in Brunette’s favor.

Brunette is only in his third season as an NHL head coach but even with how things have gone this season, his teams have played to a .587 points percentage which is among the higher numbers among NHL coaches.  Looking at it from afar, if Trotz believes in Brunette’s limited track record and thinks that things can’t go so poorly again next year, I could see a scenario where he stays.

There’s also the matter of his contract, which has two years plus an option remaining on it.  If Trotz thinks that next season could be another transition type of year where they might not be a playoff contender, the inclination may be to give him another year to see how things go and avoid having two pay two head coaches for two years.  And if things don’t go well early next season, they could easily pivot and make the move at that time.

Do I think that Brunette should feel quite secure in his job for next season?  No; any time that things go that badly, a coach can’t feel too secure in his future.  But honestly, I wouldn’t be shocked if he is back behind the bench next season.

PyramidHeadcrab: What are some notable examples of players that have gone from so-so to nearly elite after being traded to the right team?

I feel like we’ve seen a few examples in recent years, but it’s always fun to think a 3rd liner from Pittsburgh could become a playoff-defining top-liner on, say, Calgary.

I can think of a couple via the trade route but more from other routes.  On the trade side, Chandler Stephenson went from a fourth-line depth piece in Washington to a two-time 60-plus-point player in Vegas and while he probably won’t get there this season with Seattle, he’s on pace to surpass 50 at least.  The other is Sam Bennett.  With Calgary, he showed some flashes of being an impactful power forward but by the end of his time there, he was a third-line winger with a point total in the 20s.  Meanwhile, in Florida, Bennett is now a full-time top-six center, notching at least 40 points a season, and is about to become one of the most sought-after players on the open market in July should a pricey extension not be reached by then.

Florida also comes to mind about some of the other routes as well.  Carter Verhaeghe was a fourth liner in Tampa Bay, went to the Panthers in free agency, and has a pair of 70-point seasons under his belt since then while becoming a top-six fixture as well.  Going back a few years, Marchessault followed a similar path, going from a fourth liner with the Lightning to a 30-goal guy in Florida before being moved to Vegas where he produced even more.  If we look at waivers, Gustav Forsling couldn’t crack Carolina’s roster, was claimed off waivers (by Florida, yet again), and has become an all-situations top-pairing player.  (If you’re looking for a reason why the Panthers are a consistent contender, finding these under-the-radar gems is a huge part of that.)  It looks like Dylan Holloway (offer sheet) should be part of this category as well after going from being a depth piece with Edmonton to a top-50 scorer in St. Louis.

frozenaquatic: Can a coach be fired in the middle of a game? Asking for Laviolette.

I don’t think there’s anything in the rules that says it can’t happen.  If a player can be traded mid-game (as Jakob Pelletier was not long ago, for example), a team could make an in-game coaching change.  But I wouldn’t expect to see that happen.  As for Peter Laviolette’s future with the Rangers, that’ll probably be decided on at the end of the season; it’d be surprising (though not unprecedented) for a team still in the playoff mix to make a coaching change this late in the year.

Photo courtesy of Jeff Curry-Imagn Images.

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals PHR Mailbag

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Atlantic Notes: Cousins, Brannstrom, Barkov, Sturm

April 2, 2025 at 7:20 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

While it was expected that the Senators would be without forward Nick Cousins for the rest of the season after he underwent knee surgery in January, that might not be the case anymore.  Postmedia’s Bruce Garrioch relays that the 31-year-old could resume skating with them as soon as Thursday after skating on his own in recent weeks.  As a result, it’s possible that Cousins could return either late in the regular season or be available to suit up in the playoffs.  Through 47 games this season, Cousins has five goals and eight assists along with 80 hits in a little under 12 minutes of playing time.

More from the Atlantic Division:

  • Sabres defenseman Erik Brannstrom has had a bit of a whirlwind season with Buffalo being his fourth organization. Colorado signed him in free agency but moved him before the season to Vancouver and he was then flipped to the Rangers in the J.T. Miller trade.  Along the way, he has only gotten into 28 NHL games this season.  As a result, it appears he could be eyeing a change of scenery as SportExpressen’s Johan Svensson reports (subscription link) that the 25-year-old could be off to Switzerland next season with a long-term contract expected.  Brannstrom has 294 career NHL appearances under his belt but with a quickly diminishing role so a change of scenery could help his chances of getting back to the top level down the road.  Buffalo can retain his rights via restricted free agency for the next two years.
  • The Panthers announced (Twitter link) that center Aleksander Barkov was scratched from tonight’s game versus Toronto due to an upper-body injury. The captain was banged up on Tuesday in Montreal but while he left the game briefly, he returned for the third period and didn’t seem to have any lingering effects.  Barkov is second on Florida in scoring this season, tallying 19 goals and 47 assists in 64 games.
  • Still with the Panthers, center Nico Sturm suffered an upper-body injury on Tuesday in Montreal and is listed as day-to-day, relays team reporter Jameson Olive (Twitter link). The 29-year-old was injured in a collision in the first period with A.J. Greer in his first shift of the game.  Sturm was added from San Jose at the trade deadline as extra depth and has one assist in 11 appearances with Florida in a little under 10 minutes per night of playing time.  Sturm did not suit up tonight either with Tomas Nosek taking his spot on the fourth line.

Buffalo Sabres| Florida Panthers| Ottawa Senators Aleksander Barkov| Erik Brannstrom| Nick Cousins| Nico Sturm

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Blues Assign Dalibor Dvorsky To AHL

April 2, 2025 at 6:48 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Dalibor Dvorsky’s first NHL stint was a short-lived one.  After being recalled for the first time a little more than a week ago, the Blues announced that the center has been sent back to AHL Springfield.

Dvorsky was the tenth overall pick back in 2023 and even though he’s just 19, he is eligible to play full-time in the minors this year since he wasn’t drafted out of the CHL.  He’s done well this season with the Thunderbirds, collecting 20 goals and 23 assists in 57 games, ranking him in the top ten in points for a player considering that he’s still junior-eligible.  Dvorsky got into one game with St. Louis while on recall but was held off the scoresheet in 10:40 of playing time.

With Jimmy Snuggerud signing and jumping right into the lineup, the Blues clearly feel that Dvorsky would be best served getting regular minutes in the minors over sporadically playing at the NHL level, a decision that certainly makes sense from a development perspective.

His assignment also helps the Blues duck a little more below the $88MM spending threshold which is notable in the sense that it allows them to bank a bit more cap space to apply against their achieved bonuses, an amount that already has reached $1.725MM thanks to Ryan Suter meeting his games played targets.  Any dollar that they can save in cap space now is a dollar less of a carry-over penalty they’ll face next season, so keeping Dvorsky up to sit him would also have served little value on that front.

AHL| St. Louis Blues| Transactions Dalibor Dvorsky

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Panthers Recall Jaycob Megna, Reassign Tobias Bjornfot

April 2, 2025 at 5:30 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Florida Panthers have swapped depth defensemen on the roster, assigning Tobias Bjornfot to the minor league and recalling Jaycob Megna per the AHL Transactions Log. Bjornfot will return to the minors after appearing in Florida’s last six games. He manageed no scoring, two penalty minutes, and a minus-five in the appearances.

Bjornfot is now up to no scoring and a minus-three through 14 NHL appearances this season. He’s had a bit better footing in the minor leagues, where he’s potted 16 points, 22 penalty minutes, and a plus-one in 43 games. Bjornfot has developed into more-and-more of a stay-at-home defenseman as his professional career progresses, though his lack of offense at the top flight has made him hard to routinely trust.

With a three-game road trip on the horizon, Florida will opt to instead reward Megna with the first call-up of his season. He’s matched Bjornfot’s AHL scoring, with 16 points in 64 games of his own. Megna adds to that 23 penalty minutes and a strong plus-26, which ranks second on the Charlotte Checkers. The six-foot-six defender appeared in 44 games with the Chicago Blackhawks last season – recording two assists, 22 penalty minutes, and a minus-15. He’s totaled 27 points in 185 career games in the NHL, and 114 points in 434 games in the AHL. Megna could be in store to step immediately into the NHL roster on this recall, headed for the third-line left-defender role that Bjornfot previously occupied.

AHL| Florida Panthers| NHL| Transactions Jaycob Megna| Tobias Bjornfot

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Predators Prospect Gunnarwolfe Fontaine Signs ATO With Iowa Wild

April 2, 2025 at 5:02 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 5 Comments

It appears the Nashville Predators will elect not to sign 2020 seventh-round draft pick Gunnarwolfe Fontaine, who has instead signed an amateur try-out with the AHL’s Iowa Wild. The Predators were set to lose Fontaine’s rights at the end of this season if they didn’t sign him to his entry-level contract. They’ll expedite the process here, allowing Fontaine to turn pro in the AHL after completing his graduate season at The Ohio State University.

Fontaine was drafted after his second season with the USHL’s Chicago Steel. He scored 26 goals and 57 points in 45 USHL games that season, apt support to a Steel roster that also contained Brendan Brisson, Sam Colangelo, Mackie Samoskevich, and Matthew Coronato. Fontaine followed his draft selection by moving to Northeastern University for the 2020-21 campaign. He scored a stout six goals and 15 points in 21 games of his freshman season, and grew to 25 points in 39 games in his sophomore year.

But Fontaine seemed to plateau a bit after the 2021-22 season. His scoring dipped as high-tier teammates like Cameron Lund and Justin Hryckowian began challenging his ice time. Fontaine managed 30 points in 35 games as a junior and fell to 27 points in 36 games in 2023-24. He failed to find his groove as Northeastern’s leading playdriver – sparking a search for bigger minutes at OSU in his graduate year. Fontaine did grow to 40 points in 40 games in the Big Ten – marking his first point-per-game season since his draft-year campaign in the USHL. He’ll look to bring that momentum to the AHL, with hopes that strong play can push him back into the attention of NHL clubs.

AHL| Minnesota Wild| NHL| Nashville Predators| USHL Gunnarwolfe Fontaine

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Golden Knights Sign Jackson Hallum To Two-Year Deal

April 2, 2025 at 4:35 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Vegas Golden Knights have finally put pen to paper with 2020 third-round draft pick Jackson Hallum, signing the forward to a two-year, entry-level contract. Vegas was set to lose Hallum’s rights this summer if they left him unsigned. There has so far been no indication on if Hallum’s deal will begin immediately, and see him join Vegas’ active roster, or if it will begin next season while he finishes this year in the minor leagues.

Hallum joins the Vegas organization after spending the last three seasons at the University of Michigan. He scored eight goals and 17 points in 36 games of his junior season, matching his point totals in 39 games of his freshman season. Hallum split the two seasons with a sophomore year season that was ended by a knee-to-knee hit after he scored eight points in his first nine games of the season. He had a slow return from the lower-body injury this season, but found his stride at the turn of the year with nine points in eight games in January. Unfortunately Hallum couldn’t hang onto his hot scoring, with just two points in Michigan’s final nine games of the season.

Hallum is a well-rounded playmaker who performed well as the second or third forward in on Michigan’s forecheck. He’s a smart passer who gets into open space, though his low scoring speaks to the need for a bit more creativity. Hallum often fills a role on the wing, and has posted a negative faceoff win percentage over his collegiate career. Fans can likely expect Hallum to soon head to the minor leagues, where he’ll look to make better use of his playmaking tools now a full season removed from injury.

Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights Jackson Hallum

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Flames Sign Aydar Suniev To Three-Year Contract

April 2, 2025 at 3:51 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Calgary Flames have made official the reports that 2023 third-round draft pick Aydar Suniev signed a three-year, entry-level contract per Pat Steinberg of Sportsnet 960. The deal was first reported by Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman. Suniev will turn pro after completing his sophomore season at the University of Massachusetts. News of his signing comes just minutes after news that Suniev’s teammate Cole O’Hara has signed his entry-level contract with the Nashville Predators.

Suniev scored 20 goals and 38 points in 35 games this season. It was a strong continuation of his collegiate scoring after he potted 12 goals and 35 points in 36 games last season. Suniev ranked second on the UMass Minutemen in scoring this season, only behind O’Hara’s 51 points. While Suniev posted modest scoring last year, his climb up the leaderboards this year has been impressive – coming on the back of growing confidence on the puck. He’s seemed to take a hardy stride forward in his ability to work the puck into the middle of the ice, effectively rounding out his ability as a puck-hog on the perimeter.

Suniev was a part of a strong Flames draft class in 2023. With this deal, he could become the second member of that class to make their NHL debut, with Steinberg adding that Suniev’s deal should mirror that of former collegiate star and current Flame Matthew Coronato. Coronato played in one NHL game at the end of the 2022-23 season, after wrapping up his sophomore year at Harvard University.

Calgary has eight games remaining in their 2024-25 campaign, and currently sit four games back from the second Western Conference Wild Card with one game in hand. That’s treacherous ground to award an undersized winger his NHL debut, though Calgary could use Suniev’s strong puckhandling and speedy motor as a spark plug as they attempt one final push for the postseason. If they want to stay careful, the Flames could also assign Suniev to the minor leagues, and avoid burning the first year of his contract on an abbreviated stint in the 2024-25 NHL season.

Calgary Flames| NHL| Transactions Aydar Suniev

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