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Pacific Trade Notes: Golden Knights, Canucks, Tanev

March 4, 2025 at 7:28 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 10 Comments

Despite being tepidly mentioned in some trade rumors leading up to the deadline, don’t expect much activity from the Vegas Golden Knights this week. Vegas dominated the headlines during last year’s deadline but are taking an increasingly mild-mannered approach to the market this season.

In an interview with Daren Millard and Ryan Wallis of the VGK Insider Show, Golden Knights’ general manager Kelly McCrimmon was quoted saying, “We’ve sort of said from the outset that we don’t anticipate being real busy this week, I still maintain that. That was the position we felt we were in right from the beginning of the season.”

If they maintain that approach through this year’s deadline, it would be a notable deviation from years past. Much to the dismay of many fans around the league, the Golden Knights have infamously acquired Tomáš Hertl, Noah Hanifin, Anthony Mantha, Jonathan Quick, Teddy Blueger, and Ivan Barbashev over the last two deadlines. It would remove a consistent buyer from the market if they’ve preemptively decided to sit this deadline out.

Other trade notes from the Pacific Division:

  •  Sportsnet’s Iain MacIntyre shared a quote from the general manager of the Vancouver Canucks, Patrik Allvin, saying, “You’re always trying to make the team better. But I think we’re in the position this year where. . . I don’t envision any (rental) pickups like last year. We’re just going to continue to build and get better.” This would have been a confusing quote as recently as a few weeks ago given the Canucks acquired then-rental Marcus Pettersson and Drew O’Connor from the Pittsburgh Penguins. However, Vancouver quickly extended both players. Allvin’s quote doesn’t necessarily mean the Canucks are done trading but it likely indicates most of their heavy lifting is complete.
  • According to TSN’s Pierre LeBrun, the Seattle Kraken have indicated they’re willing to retain 50% of Brandon Tanev’s $3.5MM cap hit. If Tanev’s market wasn’t already robust, the news should open up his market to most, if not all, of the contending teams this season. The 10-year veteran would instantly improve any team’s bottom six and should command a second-round pick in a strong seller’s market.

Seattle Kraken| Vancouver Canucks| Vegas Golden Knights Brandon Tanev

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New Jersey Devils Have Expressed Interest In Mikko Rantanen

March 4, 2025 at 6:26 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 10 Comments

Per James Nichols of New Jersey Hockey Now, the New Jersey Devils have expressed interest in Carolina Hurricanes’ winger, Mikko Rantanen. Nichols added that their interest wholly depends on Jack Hughes’ status, but it’s an interesting development nonetheless.

Despite rumored interest from the Devils, it doesn’t appear as a likely hypothetical landing spot. Carolina and New Jersey would play in the first round of the postseason if the season ended today, and neither is expected to catch up to the red-hot Washington Capitals. Theoretically, the Columbus Blue Jackets and New York Rangers are within striking distance of a divisional playoff spot, although it’s not all that likely.

Meanwhile, the Devils and Hurricanes don’t have a long history of trading with each other. Since the 2019-20 season, the pair have connected on two trades, the first being the deal sending defenseman Sami Vatanen to Carolina in 2020 and the other being a minor league swap of Zack Hayes and Jonathan Dugan in 2023.

Still, it’s hard to dislike Rantanen’s fit in the Devils lineup if the purported interest is accurate. Despite their need for a third-line center, Rantanen would objectively prove a massive upgrade over Ondřej Palát or Dawson Mercer in New Jersey’s top six. Rantanen has more points this season alone than Palát and Mercer combined. Although he doesn’t register many body checks, Rantanen is a physical forward who can put the puck in the net, which would benefit New Jersey’s 14th-ranked offense in terms of GF/G.

Unless the Hurricanes believe they have no realistic opportunity to win the Stanley Cup this season, it’s difficult to imagine a trade of this magnitude happening between the organizations. Even if the Devils maximize their cap space by placing Hughes on their long-term injured reserve, and they’re able to put together a compelling offer, it would make little sense for Carolina to improve a team they’re likely to face in the playoffs.

Carolina Hurricanes| New Jersey Devils Mikko Rantanen

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Vancouver Canucks Recall Jonathan Lekkerimaki, Reassign Arshdeep Bains

March 4, 2025 at 5:30 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 1 Comment

According to a team announcement, the Vancouver Canucks have recalled top prospect Jonathan Lekkerimaki from their AHL affiliate, the Abbotsford Canucks. Vancouver shared in the same announcement that they’ve reassigned forward Arshdeep Bains in a corresponding roster move.

It’s a familiar transaction for both players. Today’s roster move is the sixth time Lekkerimaki has been recalled from Abbotsford this season, and it’s the ninth reassignment for Bains. Each player is waiver exempt, although Lekkerimaki makes approximately $100K more at the NHL level.

Lekkerimaki is arguably the best prospect in Vancouver’s pipeline. Still, he hasn’t gained much traction in the NHL this year due to the frequent taxiing between Vancouver and Abbotsford. The Tullinge, Sweden native has recorded two goals and one assist in 11 contests, averaging 13:47 of ice time per game. His 49.8% CorsiFor% at even strength and 12.5% shooting percentage are solid, but it’s not a large enough sample size to make any concrete judgments about his development.

He’s played far more promisingly with the AHL Canucks. In his first full year in North American professional hockey, Lekkerimaki is nearly a point-per-game player in the AHL with 19 goals and 28 points in 32 contests. It won’t be enough to earn the Red Garrett Memorial Award as the AHL’s top rookie, but it’s an impressive season nonetheless.

Meanwhile, Bains has been less productive in a fourth-line role. Despite four games separating him from losing his rookie status, Bains has looked somewhat lost at the NHL level, scoring one goal in 21 career games. He is a physical player with 24 career hits in limited action, but he doesn’t play well enough on the defensive side of the puck to overlook his offensive shortcomings. He’ll return to Abbotsford, where he’s collected seven goals and 20 assists in 32 games this season.

Transactions| Vancouver Canucks Arshdeep Bains| Jonathan Lekkerimaki

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Sharks Not Playing Vítek Vaněček For Trade-Related Reasons

March 4, 2025 at 3:55 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 5 Comments

The Sharks won’t be starting goaltender Vítek Vaněček tonight against the Sabres in their penultimate game before the trade deadline, Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now reports. He’ll dress as Alexandar Georgiev’s backup, but presumably won’t enter the game unless an injury forces Georgiev out. Since he’s dressing, San Jose doesn’t yet need to recall a goalie from AHL San Jose in his place.

It’s worth noting if they trade Vaněček and don’t recoup a goalie in return, they won’t be able to recall top prospect Yaroslav Askarov for the minors, at least not right away. He’s been out of the lineup for the last couple of weeks with a lower-body injury and remains day-to-day.

Where Vaněček could end up amid a general lack of interest in goalies this week remains to be seen. David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period speculates the Panthers could be a fit as they look to add a veteran name to back up Sergei Bobrovsky after they traded away young No. 2 option Spencer Knight to the Blackhawks in last weekend’s Seth Jones trade.

If a team can’t accommodate Vaněček’s $3.4MM cap hit, they’ll need to find a third dance partner for a trade. The Sharks are using all three of their salary retention slots on Brent Burns, Tomáš Hertl, and Erik Karlsson and will only have Burns’ opening up this summer.

Vaněček, 29, is on an expiring deal. San Jose acquired him from the Devils at last year’s deadline in the deal that sent Kaapo Kähkönen eastward, but he didn’t play down the stretch due to various injuries. His Sharks debut had to wait until this season. It’s been a tumultuous one for the Czechia native, who missed a chunk of time with a cheekbone fracture and has been underwhelming when dressed. Even behind a San Jose defense that allows a league-high 32.1 shots per game, his 3.88 GAA and .882 SV% aren’t inspiring. He has a 3-10-3 record in 18 outings and has allowed nine goals above expected, per MoneyPuck.

Teams interested in him are either banking on a return to form in a more insulated environment or desperately need even a marginal upgrade at their backup position. Vaněček was a fine tandem option at his peak, recording a career-high 33 wins in 52 appearances with New Jersey in 2022-23 along with a .911 SV% and 2.45 GAA. His numbers have nosedived since then, though, and the 2014 second-rounder now has a .903 career SV% with a 2.82 GAA across 181 NHL games since making his debut with Washington in the 2020-21 campaign.

If the Sharks trade Vaněček, don’t receive a goalie back, and can’t recall Askarov, 25-year-old Georgi Romanov is their only other minor-league goalie under contract. He allowed one goal on 30 shots faced in two appearances in his NHL debut last year, and the Russian has a .905 SV% and 3.10 GAA in 21 AHL appearances in 2024-25.

San Jose Sharks Vitek Vanecek

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Bruins Open To Moving Charlie Coyle, Pavel Zacha

March 4, 2025 at 3:10 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 27 Comments

For the first time in recent memory, the Bruins have made the call to sell at the trade deadline in earnest. After trading pending UFA forward Trent Frederic to the Oilers earlier today and following previous reports that defenseman Brandon Carlo and forward Morgan Geekie are available for the right price, they’re now open to hearing offers for centers Charlie Coyle and Pavel Zacha, David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period reports.

Their availability adds some depth to a relatively thin center market ahead of Friday’s deadline, although neither are rental pickups. Coyle is signed through 2026-27 at a $5.25MM cap hit and carries a full no-movement clause for the duration of his deal, per PuckPedia, so the Bruins’ options for moving him will be extremely limited. Meanwhile, Zacha is under contract through 2027-28 with a $4.75MM cap hit and has a 10-team no-trade list until July 1.

Neither has had a season to write home about, especially Coyle. Fresh off his 33rd birthday, the hometown kid has churned out just 14-7–21 through 62 games after recording a career-high 25 goals and 60 points last season. It’s not for a lack of usage – he’s averaging 17:39 per game, the second-highest mark of his career behind last year. He’s shooting at a strong 15.6% but not generating nearly as many chances. His 1.45 shots on goal per game mark the second-lowest rate of his 13-year run in the NHL, ahead of only his rookie season with the Wild 12 years ago. He’s also tracking to post a career-worst -13 rating.

That doesn’t paint a rosy picture in terms of the likelihood of a trade. He only has a three-team no-trade list if he waives his no-movement clause, but whether or not he’d even waive his NMC to depart his home city is uncertain, even as Boston enters sell-off mode. His $5.25MM cap hit is also immovable given his performance this season without retention, and it’s unlikely Boston would be willing to do so for a contract that runs past this season as they look to reload for 2025-26.

The 27-year-old Zacha is thus a far more intriguing candidate. His offensive totals have dropped too, but not as much. He’s still third on the team in scoring with 12-25–37 in 62 games, all while averaging 19:23 per game and serving as the Bs’ de facto No. 1 center for the second year in a row. He’s averaged 0.69 points per game in a Bruins uniform since they acquired him from the Devils in 2022 and wouldn’t command any retention to move. Limited trade protection also increases his market, and at his cap hit, he’s a better value proposition – especially with two years left on his deal – than most other centers out there.

The 6’3″ Zacha is also a full-time pivot with good faceoff numbers, more than what can be said about names like Ryan Donato or Scott Laughton. After spending most of his career below 50%, he’s won 54.2% of his draws since the beginning of 2023-24.

Moving either would represent a more aggressive retooling than most would have expected out of the Bruins. Still, their names floating into rumors at least signal an openness to moving out some of their lower-ceiling offensive talents in hopes of landing a top-six impact piece (or multiple) this summer.

Boston Bruins Charlie Coyle| Pavel Zacha

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Sharks’ Walker Duehr Clears Waivers

March 4, 2025 at 1:30 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

March 4: Duehr cleared waivers, Friedman reports. The Sharks can now remove him from their roster at will. The team later confirmed they’d sent him to the AHL.

March 3: The Sharks have placed winger Walker Duehr on waivers for the purposes of assignment to AHL San Jose, according to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet.

San Jose acquired Duehr by claiming him off waivers from the Flames in January. If Calgary submits a claim for him and is the only team to do so in his 24-hour waiver window, they may assign him directly to their AHL affiliate without needing to waive him again.

Duehr, 27, failed to land a regular role in the lineup in the Bay Area. After playing in eight consecutive contests for the Sharks following his addition to the roster, he’s now been scratched in three straight heading into tonight’s matchup against the Maple Leafs.

The South Dakota-born righty scored twice as a Shark, his first goals of the season after going scoreless in 16 with the Flames. He posted a minus-five rating while recording six shots on goal and 11 hits, and his 8:49 ATOI nearly mirrored his 8:48 with Calgary to begin the campaign.

This is Duehr’s third time on waivers since the 2024-25 league year began. He cleared them late in preseason en route to starting the season with AHL Calgary, but he was recalled in December following season-ending ACL surgeries to Flames forwards Justin Kirkland and Anthony Mantha. Upon failing to lock down a fourth-line role in Alberta, he ended up on waivers to San Jose’s benefit when Calgary decided to try other internal solutions in their bottom six.

Whether the Flames will be interested in a reunion remains to be seen, but it’s likely considering how valuable he was to their feeder club. They signed Duehr as an undrafted free agent out of Minnesota State in 2021. He scored 9-10–19 with a minus-nine rating in 84 games for Calgary before the Sharks claimed him. While that’s not particularly impactful, especially with highly underwhelming possession numbers this season, his performance in the AHL was stellar. He had 11-8–19 in 20 games for the Wranglers before his December recall to the big club, production they’d surely like to add back into the fold if possible.

San Jose, on the other hand, will hope Duehr clears and can provide that offense to their farm system despite the lack of NHL impact. He’d be a major add for a Barracuda club tracking to finish above .500 for the first time since the 2018-29 season. They boast the AHL’s leading scorer in veteran Andrew Poturalski (23-35–58 in 49 GP), while Sharks 2023 fourth-rounder Luca Cagnoni leads AHL rookie defensemen in scoring with 13-28–41 in 51 games.

San Jose Sharks| Transactions| Waivers Walker Duehr

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Panthers, Jesper Boqvist Agree To Two-Year Extension

March 4, 2025 at 1:05 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

The Panthers announced they’ve agreed to terms with pending RFA center Jesper Boqvist on a two-year extension. He’ll remain in South Florida through the 2026-27 season. The contract is worth $3MM with a $1.5MM cap hit, Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic reports.

The Falun, Sweden native parlayed a one-year prove-it deal in Sunrise to the highest payday of his career. It’s the first time in Boqvist’s career that he’ll earn more than a $925K AAV, and it’s nearly double what he’s making in Florida this season.

He was originally selected with the 36th overall pick of the 2017 NHL Draft by the New Jersey Devils. After a few seasons with the SHL’s Brynäs IF, Boqvist transitioned to North American hockey for the 2019-20 season. It wasn’t an easy transition for Boqvist, as he scored four goals in 35 games for the Devils with a -11 rating. Still, his performance was remarkably better in the AHL with the Binghamton Devils, scoring eight goals and 11 points through 19 contests.

After a brief loan to Timrå IK of the HockeyAllsvenskan league, Boqvist returned to North America for the 2020-21 season. He improved mildly from his rookie campaign, scoring four goals and three assists in 28 games for New Jersey, and another two goals and five assists in eight games for the AHL Devils.

The 2021-22 season can effectively be characterized as Boqvist’s breakout season in the NHL. He scored 10 goals on 74 shots through 56 games, making for the fourth-best shooting percentage on the team. Still, it became apparent that Boqvist needed more maturity in the face-off dot, losing 62.7% out of 450 draws.

Since Boqvist hadn’t shown much talent outside of the 2021-22 campaign, the Devils brought him back cheaply on a one-year, $874K contract after his entry-level deal concluded. He produced similarly offensively, scoring 10 goals and 21 points, albeit in 12 more games. He maintained his efficiency shooting the puck, sitting third on the team with a 14.9% shooting percentage.

Unfortunately, New Jersey chose not to tender Boqvist a qualifying offer for the 2023-24 season, leading to a one-year league minimum salary deal with the Boston Bruins. He played much of the year for their AHL affiliate, the Providence Bruins, scoring 10 goals and 23 points in 31 AHL contests.

The defending Stanley Cup champion Panthers had a dearth of bottom-six forwards, thanks to a mass migration of their depth options last summer. Florida quickly signed Boqvist to his second straight league minimum deal on the second day of free agency.

It’s a signing that has worked out well for both parties. Boqvist has returned to a consistent third-line role with the Panthers, scoring 12 goals and 11 assists in 59 games while averaging 13:01 minutes of ice time per game. Meanwhile, his possession metrics have improved thanks to Florida’s system, as he’s averaged a 50.3% CorsiFor% at even strength this season, with an eye-popping 18.8% shooting percentage.

There are no expectations that Boqvist will return to center, given his career 36.9% faceoff percentage in 1,042 faceoffs. Still, he should remain an effective bottom-six winger in the Panthers’ lineup over the life of his new contract.

PHR’s Brennan McClain contributed to this article. 

Florida Panthers| Transactions Jesper Boqvist

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Canadiens Sign Jake Evans To Four-Year Extension

March 4, 2025 at 12:15 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 10 Comments

The Canadiens announced they’ve signed center Jake Evans to a four-year extension, taking him off the trade market. It’s worth a total of $11.4MM with a cap hit of $2.85MM. The contract doesn’t include trade protection, according to Chris Johnston of TSN and The Athletic.

Talks on the deal came to a head over the weekend after a few weeks of silence, Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic adds. The 28-year-old “made the call he didn’t want to leave” and will remain in Montreal as the upstart club looks to challenge for their first playoff berth since reaching the 2021 Stanley Cup Final.

Evans, a seventh-round pick by the Habs back in 2014, was on that club. Now in his sixth NHL season, he’s been a bottom-six fixture for Montreal almost instantaneously upon getting his first taste of NHL hockey. Now a reliable producer in the 20-to-30-point range, he’s seen his ice time climb to the 16-minute range per game while seeing increased even-strength minutes and heavy penalty kill deployment, especially since the 2022-23 campaign.

Trade interest in Evans, who was set to be a UFA this summer, spiked after a scorching start to the campaign. He punched far above his weight offensively in the first half of the campaign, notching 10-13–23 in 37 appearances before New Year’s. He’s been far quieter as of late, limited to five points in his last 24 outings, but his winning draws at a career-best 52.8% clip and is still on pace for a career-high 38 points. He likely could have fetched a higher return than the second-rounder, fourth-rounder, and C-tier prospect the Bruins received for physical depth forward Trent Frederic today. He’ll instead opt to continue his career in Montreal on a deal that earns him less per season than his $3.4MM projection from AFP Analytics.

Evans hasn’t been a possession monster for the Habs, posting negative relative Corsi shares at even strength in every year since 2022-23. Those splits come amid heavy defensive zone usage, though, making his career 46.7 CF% and 46.6 xGF% defensible. In fact, his shutdown unit this season with Joel Armia and rookie Emil Heineman has graded out quite well defensively. They’re allowing just 1.79 expected goals against per 60 minutes, seventh-best in the league among lines with more than 150 minutes together, according to MoneyPuck.

The Toronto native thus elects to stick around with Montreal as they exit their rebuild. His play is a significant reason why they’re just one point out of a playoff spot during deadline week and have a 12% chance of leapfrogging at least the Red Wings, Rangers, and Senators for the final wild-card spot, per MoneyPuck. He’ll remain in a Habs sweater through the 2028-29 campaign, after which he’ll be a UFA at age 33.

The Canadiens now have $11.4MM in projected cap space for next season with six open roster spots, although they’ll have significant flexibility with retired goaltender Carey Price’s $10.5MM cap hit eligible for LTIR.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Montreal Canadiens| Newsstand| Transactions Jake Evans

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Oilers Acquire Trent Frederic

March 4, 2025 at 12:00 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 13 Comments

The Oilers are acquiring forward Trent Frederic from the Bruins in a trade that will also involve the Devils as a third team, according to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. Winger Max Jones is also headed from Boston to Edmonton in the deal, Frank Seravalli of Daily Faceoff reports. The Devils announced they’ve acquired the rights to left-wing prospect Shane Lachance from the Oilers and will retain half of Frederic’s salary in the trade after the Bruins’ initial 50% retention, bringing his cap hit for Edmonton down to $575K from $2.3MM. New Jersey also dealt the signing rights to right-winger Petr Hauser to the Oilers to complete their involvement. Edmonton announced the full trade, which reads as follows:

Oilers receive: Frederic, Jones, signing rights to Hauser
Devils receive: Signing rights to Lachance
Bruins receive: D Maximus Wanner, the Blues’ 2025 second-round pick, and the Oilers’ 2026 fourth-round pick.

Frederic is currently week-to-week with a lower-body injury, and Chris Johnston of TSN and The Athletic reports there’s a possibility he won’t be cleared to play until the playoffs. In that case, the Oilers could place Frederic at his reduced cap hit on long-term injured reserve to open up additional spending flexibility for further moves ahead of Friday’s deadline.

Boston selected Frederic 29th overall in the 2016 draft, ahead of higher-ceiling forwards Alex DeBrincat and Jordan Kyrou who both went in the second round. After a brief but successful two-year collegiate stint at Wisconsin, the versatile depth piece took a couple of years to simmer in the minors, only emerging as a roster regular for the Bruins in the 2020-21 campaign.

Frederic spent a pair of seasons as a fourth-line fixture without much offensive pop, but the physical 6’3″ forward popped big time in Boston’s historic 65-win season in 2022-23. Skating primarily on the wing, he recorded 17-14–31 in 79 games despite averaging under 12 minutes per night, also finishing second among Bruins forwards with 105 hits.

In addition to spending more time down the middle, Frederic amped up his production last season. The Missouri native recorded a career-high 18-22–40 scoring line in 82 games, adding 204 hits while seeing a slight bump in his special teams deployment. But despite skating a career-high 13:55 per game in 2024-25, he hasn’t been able to keep up his scoring. Snakebit like the majority of his Boston teammates, Frederic has just 8-7–15 in 57 games with a career-worst -14 rating. His shooting percentage has regressed to 10.5% after hovering north of the 14% mark the prior two years.

While the drop in point totals is concerning, he’s established his floor as a high-end fourth-line piece with middle-six upside and will likely see an uptick in production depending on how he’s deployed amid a far more talented offensive group in Edmonton. His struggles this season, his expiring contract, and Boston’s slide down the standings made it almost a guarantee he’d be moved at the deadline. The 27-year-old will be an unrestricted free agent for the first time this summer after finishing out the year with the Oilers.

Frederic has posted similar offensive numbers to the Oilers’ current pair of third-line wingers in Connor Brown and Mattias Janmark, so it’s unclear if he’ll unseat either for a top-nine role. While faceoffs aren’t his strong suit (a career average of 44.4%), his experience playing down the middle also addresses an immediate need for an Edmonton squad without a legitimate fourth-line center. He could slot in there once he’s ready to return, relieving natural wingers like Kasperi Kapanen who have had to step into the role lately.

They also pick up Jones, who amounts to a failed offseason pickup for Boston. He managed only seven appearances for the Bs after signing a two-year, $2MM deal last offseason, going without a point and averaging 10:01 per game. Selected a few spots ahead of Frederic by the Ducks in the 2016 draft, Jones will remain on his minor-league assignment after clearing waivers in November but now reports to the Oilers’ affiliate in Bakersfield. His $1MM cap hit is completely buriable in the minors and thus carries no cap impact for Edmonton. Before the move, he posted 13-8–21 with a plus-one rating in 38 games for the P-Bruins.

Rounding out Edmonton’s haul in the deal is Hauser, who New Jersey selected in the fifth round in 2022. The 21-year-old is amid a tumultuous campaign in his native Czechia, playing for three different squads across the top-level and second-tier professional leagues. He has 1-10–11 in 63 Czech Extraliga games dating back to his top-level debut in the 2022-23 season. While he has great size at 6’4″ and 207 lbs, he wasn’t considered a meaningful prospect in the Devils organization by Scott Wheeler of The Athletic in his January ranking. He’s a low-ceiling, low-floor option whose signing rights will expire in June 2026.

The Oilers give up a decently intriguing prospect in Lachance for the Devils’ additional salary retention. The son of ex-NHLer and Devils head scout Scott Lachance was the No. 6 prospect in an already-thin Edmonton system, per Wheeler. The 6’5″ winger has suited up for Boston University the past two seasons after Edmonton selected him in the sixth round in 2021, posting 23-29–52 in 72 games while also serving as captain this season. New Jersey will hold his signing rights until the Aug. 15 following his final collegiate season.

In what’s been a strong rental market, Boston landing what’s slated to be a mid-tier second-round pick is some decent work by general manager Don Sweeney. Edmonton previously acquired the second-rounder from St. Louis as compensation for signing defenseman Philip Broberg to an offer sheet last August. The Bruins didn’t have a second-rounder in this year’s draft before the trade – they traded theirs to the Capitals in the 2023 Dmitry Orlov three-team deal.

Wanner was also one of the Oilers’ more notable prospects, checking in at No. 10 in Wheeler’s rankings. The 6’3″ righty isn’t a legitimate needle-mover for a Bruins pool that lacks high-end talent, though. Now 21, he was a seventh-round pick in the 2021 draft and projects as a likely No. 7/8 option on an NHL depth chart at his peak. He’s been limited to just two points in 22 games with Bakersfield this year after posting 7-10–17 in 68 games with a +13 rating in his first pro season last year. He’ll now report to Providence.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Boston Bruins| Edmonton Oilers| New Jersey Devils| Newsstand Max Jones| Petr Hauser| Shane Lachance| Trent Frederic

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Avalanche, Adam Scheel Agree To Two-Way Deal

March 4, 2025 at 11:42 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Avalanche are in agreement with goaltender Adam Scheel on a two-way deal for the remainder of the season, per PuckPedia. It carries the prorated league minimum of $775K as NHL salary and a $115K AHL salary. He’s waiver-exempt and was reassigned directly to AHL Colorado.

Scheel, 25, was on the Stars’ roster briefly in the 2021-22 campaign but hasn’t appeared in an NHL game. Dallas signed him as an undrafted free agent out of North Dakota in 2021, and he split time evenly between their AHL and ECHL affiliates before they non-tendered him in the 2023 offseason. Scheel has since played in the minors on AHL contracts since, spending last year as the starter for the then-independent Chicago Wolves. He recorded a promising .907 SV% in 42 games behind one of the league’s worst teams after spending nearly all of 2022-23 with the Stars’ ECHL affiliate in Idaho, but his performance didn’t yield any NHL interest.

He settled for an AHL contract again for 2024-25, this time with the Avalanche’s top minor-league affiliate. Much like his time in Dallas, he’s split time evenly between AHL Colorado and ECHL Utah this season. Unlike in past years, though, his AHL numbers are more impressive than his ECHL ones. Now part of a three-goalie rotation in the AHL for the Avs with Kevin Mandolese and Trent Miner, he has a 2.61 GAA, .911 SV%, and an 8-1-2 record in 11 outings with a pair of shutouts. He’s nothing more than another injury insurance/recall option for the Avs down the stretch, adding to the inexperienced aforementioned duo of Mandolese and Miner. He’s slated for Group VI unrestricted free agency this summer.

Colorado Avalanche| Transactions Adam Scheel

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