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Stars, Wyatt Johnston Discussing Eight-Year Extension

March 3, 2025 at 1:50 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 6 Comments

The Stars are putting forth their best effort to finalize an extension for emerging center Wyatt Johnston before Friday’s trade deadline, Jeff Marek of Daily Faceoff reports Monday. There’s a mutual desire for a maximum eight-year commitment, but Dallas’ offers have ranged between $8MM and $8.5MM annually, Marek writes.

That’s not likely enough to convince Johnston to extend before becoming a restricted free agent this summer. The 21-year-old is fourth on the Stars in goals (24), third in assists (34), and third in points (55) through 60 games. His 19:08 ATOI leads Dallas forwards and is a decent margin ahead of second-place Jason Robertson (17:45).

He’s not technically centering Dallas’ designated top line beside Robertson – that honor still goes to Roope Hintz. In fact, Johnston’s even-strength role has been on what’s technically the Stars’ third line between veterans Jamie Benn and Evgenii Dadonov. He’s also spent a good bit of time with Hintz and Robertson at even strength, though, flexing between wing and center with the former. The edge in ice time above Dallas’ other top forwards largely comes from his penalty kill usage. He’s played a major role shorthanded for the Stars this season, averaging 1:33 per game and factoring in on their top PK unit with Benn.

All this is to say that Johnston is beginning to solidify himself as Dallas’ top center, even if he’s not a first-line fixture. The Stars’ proposition that he should be in the same pay range as Hintz ($8.45MM) amid a rising cap while being seven years younger with better point production is thus an incredibly tough sell for Johnston’s camp, led by Octagon’s Andy Scott.

Among pending RFAs, Johnston’s 55 points are tied with the Jets’ Gabriel Vilardi for most in the league. Dallas must tread carefully here – with only seven forwards under contract for next season and under $25MM in projected cap space, failing to land a deal with Johnston before the summer could lead to the 2021 first-rounder garnering offer sheets north of $10MM annually. Depending on the order in which general manager Jim Nill does his business, they simply may not be able to afford to match.

That’s why it’s no surprise the Stars are trying to dial in a realistic number now to avoid it hanging over their heads down the stretch and into the postseason. There’s also the benefit of a solidified cap number for Johnston aiding their long-term planning in case they decide to add a non-rental asset on deadline day, a feasible outcome since they still have nearly $5MM in cap space available, per PuckPedia.

Johnston led the Stars in goals (10) and tied for the team lead in points (16) in their run to the Western Conference Final last season. He’s also yet to miss a game in his three-year NHL career and is on pace for a career-high 75 points.

Dallas Stars Wyatt Johnston

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Predators Sign Joey Willis To Entry-Level Contract

March 3, 2025 at 12:24 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Predators announced today they’ve signed forward prospect Joey Willis to a three-year, entry-level contract. Financial terms were not disclosed. His signing rights were set to expire on June 1 if an agreement was not reached.

Nashville selected Willis, 19, in the fourth round of the 2023 draft. He will remain on assignment to the Ontario Hockey League’s Kingston Frontenacs, who acquired him from the Saginaw Spirit in January, through the end of their season. If the dates line up, he would be eligible to make his professional debut for AHL Milwaukee down the stretch once his junior obligations end.

The Illinois-born forward has seen a jump in production in what’s likely to be his final junior season. The center/left-winger has 21-23–44 in 38 appearances split between Saginaw and Kingston this season, his first time breaching the point-per-game mark.

Willis recorded 50 points in 66 regular-season games for the Spirit last year. While the club fell short of the OHL championship, they won the Memorial Cup as the host city with Willis contributing four points (2 G, 2 A) in five games. The 5’11” playmaker also added a pair of assists in two games for the United States at this year’s World Junior championship, adding a gold medal to his résumé.

However, Willis was not ranked among the top 15 prospects in Nashville’s system by Scott Wheeler of The Athletic last month. Other public outlets are higher on Willis’ ceiling, with Dobber Prospects giving him a 65% chance of developing into a full-time NHL player – likely in a third-line scoring role.

He turns 20 later this month, so he’ll be eligible for a full-time assignment to Milwaukee in 2025-26. Since his 20th birthday falls after Jan. 1, 2025, his contract is only eligible for an entry-level slide this year, provided he plays in fewer than 10 NHL games as expected. He’ll likely earn a small signing bonus for the 2024-25 campaign, though, lowering the cap hit of his deal when it goes into effect next season. He will be a restricted free agent upon expiry in 2028.

Nashville Predators| Transactions Joey Willis

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Senators’ Tyler Kleven Out Week-To-Week With Lower-Body Injury

March 3, 2025 at 11:22 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Senators defenseman Tyler Kleven will miss extended time with his lower-body injury, head coach Travis Green told reporters Monday (via Claire Hanna of TSN). He’s been labeled week-to-week and will not travel with the team on their two-game road swing through Washington and Chicago.

Kleven, 23, left last Wednesday’s game against the Jets after laying a hit on Winnipeg forward Mason Appleton and subsequently fighting Adam Lowry. He was held out of Saturday’s win over the Sharks as a result.

Drafted 44th overall in 2020, the North Dakota product is in his first season of full-time NHL minutes. He’s been as consistent of a bottom-pairing presence as it gets – last weekend marked Kleven’s first absence of the campaign. The 6’5″ lefty has just 2-2–4 through 58 appearances, though, and his possession metrics leave much to be desired. While described as a defensively-skewed talent, Kleven has seen more offensive zone deployment than defensive at even strength. Despite starting 52.8% of his shifts in the offensive end, the Sens have controlled just 46.8% of shot attempts and 41.7% of expected goals with him on the ice. Those numbers aren’t promising, especially considering Ottawa controls 51.8% of shot attempts without Kleven.

As expected, Kleven has been a factor physically, tying for third on the team with 76 blocks and tying for ninth with 70 hits. Those numbers are certainly a product of his lack of possession time, though, and his cumulative -8.9 expected rating is the worst on the Sens.

Ottawa’s win against San Jose stopped a five-game streak of regulation losses, plunging their playoff chances back below 50%, per MoneyPuck. They’ve gotten healthier up front, seeing core forwards Brady Tkachuk, Shane Pinto, and Joshua Norris all recently return from multi-game absences. Outside of Kleven’s injury and a knee injury to Nick Cousins that’s expected to keep him out through the trade deadline, they’re fully healthy. Adding a forward this week will be the priority for the Senators’ 24th-ranked offense. Still, Kleven’s injury will likely motivate them to target a depth defenseman if their limited salary cap flexibility allows as well.

Injury| Ottawa Senators Tyler Kleven

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Maple Leafs Recall Dakota Mermis, Likely To Activate Calle Järnkrok

March 3, 2025 at 11:01 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 5 Comments

The Maple Leafs announced they’ve recalled defenseman Dakota Mermis from AHL Toronto. Fellow D-man Marshall Rifai is headed back to the minors in a corresponding move, and PuckPedia reports forward Alex Steeves was also returned to the AHL yesterday. The moves leave them with an open roster spot and just enough cap space to activate forward Calle Järnkrok from long-term injured reserve before tonight’s game against the Sharks, as Chris Johnston of TSN and The Athletic reported Sunday.

Järnkrok, 33, has yet to play this season after a lingering lower-body injury resulted in him undergoing groin and sports hernia surgery in mid-November. He was listed as month-to-month, and he only returned to practice as a full participant yesterday.

Signed to a four-year, $8.4MM contract in the 2022 offseason, the versatile Swede has been a decent middle-six piece for the Leafs when healthy. He missed seven games with a previous groin issue in 2022-23 and missed 30 games last year with separate knuckle and hand fractures.

When dressed, he’s produced at a 20-goal, 39-point full-season pace with a +25 rating over 125 appearances. He’s averaged just south of 15 minutes per game and can easily flex between both wings and center, winning 47.3% of his draws since arriving in Toronto. He’s seen consistent penalty-kill usage for the Leafs and fringe power-play usage, occasionally getting looks in the top six. That could be an option down the stretch with a revolving door of second-line left wingers for William Nylander and John Tavares not providing much stability, but for now, he’ll presumably have his minutes limited in a fourth-line role as he gets back up to speed.

Mermis has been added to the Maple Leafs organization twice since the summer, first signing in free agency and then being claimed off waivers in January. Yet his lone NHL appearance this season came with Utah, which selected him off waivers from Toronto in mid-December before losing him back to the Leafs on the wire. Toronto was the only team to submit a claim for Mermis at that time, so he’s been able to suit up for the farm club over the past couple of months without needing to pass through them again.

The 31-year-old was expected to compete for a roster spot as an extra out of camp after appearing in a career-high 47 games with the Wild in 2023-24. A broken jaw sustained during the preseason sidelined him until late November, though. He got some AHL action on a conditioning stint but was claimed by Utah when the Leafs attempted to convert his minor-league assignment into a permanent one.

Mermis is now on his fifth NHL organization after previous stints with the Coyotes, Devils, and Wild. The 6’0″ lefty is a viable puck-mover but has always been more of a defensive option, never topping 26 points in an AHL season. He has six assists and a plus-four rating in 20 showings with the Marlies this year. His defensive metrics in bottom-pairing minutes in Minnesota last year were fine – a 49.5 CF% at even strength with a +0.1 relative impact, plus a 47.9% expected goals share.

He’ll now serve as the Leafs’ extra D for the time being with Chris Tanev on injured reserve as Toronto looks to rotate him and Rifai on the roster to avoid either needing to pass through waivers anytime soon. Rifai cleared at the beginning of the season and has been summoned on a few occasions this season to serve as an extra when injuries strike the Leafs’ defense corps, although he’s yet to appear in a game after making his NHL debut in 2023-24. He’s been on Toronto’s active roster for less than 30 days cumulatively since last clearing waivers, so he doesn’t need them for today’s demotion. The 26-year-old stay-at-home lefty has 3-6–9 with 57 PIMs and a plus-seven rating in 44 games this season.

Steeves has been on the Leafs’ roster since the end of the 4 Nations break, marking his most extended NHL trial to date. The 25-year-old winger appeared in three straight contests for Toronto out of the gate, including a two-point effort against the Hurricanes on Feb. 22, but has now been a healthy scratch in two straight wins. Those two points stand as his only offensive output across seven NHL contests this season and his first since recording an assist against the Blackhawks in December 2021. He remains an extremely valuable minor-league presence, torching the AHL with 29-17–46 through 40 games.

Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions Alex Steeves| Calle Jarnkrok| Dakota Mermis| Marshall Rifai

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Pittsburgh Penguins Recall Tristan Jarry, Reassign Joel Blomqvist

March 3, 2025 at 10:02 am CDT | by Brennan McClain 9 Comments

The Pittsburgh Penguins are changing their goaltending tandem once again. The Penguins announced they’ve recalled goaltender Tristan Jarry from their AHL affiliate, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, and have reassigned Joel Blomqvist in a corresponding transaction.

Jarry has spent much of the last two months with Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, managing a 6-5-1 record in 12 games with a .908 SV% and 2.67 GAA. After clearing waivers in mid-January, Pittsburgh made the difficult decision to reassign Jarry to the AHL for the first time since the 2018-19 season. The Penguins will now hope Jarry has regained confidence in his game after a relatively strong stretch of play in the AHL.

The Surrey, British Columbia native doesn’t have much runway left with the organization. Jarry parlayed .909 SV% and 2.90 GAA in 47 starts into a five-year $26.88MM extension in Pittsburgh after the 2022-23 season. To put it bluntly, the Penguins haven’t received a quality return on investment.

Since the start of the 2023-24 season, Jarry has managed a 27-33-9 record through 69 starts with a .897 SV% and 3.04 GAA. He lost his starting role to Alex Nedeljkovic toward the end of last season and hasn’t done anything to earn it back. Still, the Penguins’ goaltending struggles don’t begin and end with Jarry, as the entire goaltending trio has produced a .888 SV% in 63 games with a startling -25.2 goals saved above average, according to Hockey Reference.

Meanwhile, given his struggles in the NHL this season and that he’s only 23 years old, the hourglass was nearly empty for Blomqvist’s stay in Pittsburgh for the remainder of the season. He’s earned a 4-9-1 record through his first 15 NHL starts with a .885 SV% and 3.81 GAA.

Given the early struggles of his career and the Penguins’ lethargic play in front of him for much of the season, it’s prudent for Blomqvist’s development to return to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. The Uusikaarlepyy, Finland native has been remarkably better in the AHL, boasting a 32-19-10 record in two years with a .917 SV% and 2.38 GAA.

Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Joel Blomqvist| Tristan Jarry

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San Jose Sharks Place Henry Thrun On IR, Recall Jimmy Schuldt

March 3, 2025 at 9:30 am CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

The San Jose Sharks needed some defensive depth after losing their new top-pairing defenseman to injury. The Sharks announced they’ve placed Henry Thrun on injured reserve and have recalled Jimmy Schuldt from their AHL affiliate, the San Jose Barracuda, in a corresponding roster move.

Thrust into a top-pairing role since San Jose traded Cody Ceci to the Dallas Stars on February 1st, Thrun left the Sharks’ February 27th game against the Montreal Canadiens in the third period due to an upper-body injury. He finished that contest with a -2 rating in 12:13 of ice time.

The Southborough, MA native is on par with his production from last season, scoring one goal and nine assists through 51 games compared to a three-goal, eight-assist performance in the same number of contests last year. Practically matching last year’s production, it’s a notable change in contribution, given Thrun’s average ice time has dropped by approximately three minutes.

Despite missing the team’s contest on Saturday, Thrun’s recovery timeline is only considered day-to-day. San Jose likely made the IR placement retroactive to February 27th, meaning Thrun is eligible to return on Thursday against the Colorado Avalanche. Since the Sharks are on an Atlantic Division road trip until that time, Schuldt gives the team a seventh defenseman in case of another injury.

It’s unlikely Schuldt will play during the team’s back-to-back against the Toronto Maple Leafs and Buffalo Sabres, but it would mark his first NHL contest since the 2018-19 season and the second game of his career. The St. Cloud State University product has spent the last six years in the American Hockey League, split between the Chicago Wolves, Henderson Silver Knights, Rochester Americans, Coachella Valley Firebirds, and Barracuda, scoring 34 goals and 125 points in 343 games with 218 PIMs.

Injury| San Jose Sharks| Transactions Henry Thrun| Jimmy Schuldt

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Capitals Sign Charlie Lindgren To Three-Year Extension

March 3, 2025 at 8:06 am CDT | by Brennan McClain 1 Comment

The Washington Capitals have both halves of their goaltending tandem signed beyond this season. According to a team announcement, the Capitals have signed netminder Charlie Lindgren to a three-year, $9MM contract extension.

Although Lindgren’s salary will nearly triple on this deal, it appears to be a solid bit of work from Capitals’ general manager, Chris Patrick. Washington will pay a combined $8.85MM to Lindgren and Logan Thompson next season, equating to 9.26% of the 2025-26 salary cap ceiling.

However, it’s reasonable to assume Lindgren missed a bigger payday. His first season with the Capitals was fairly generic, sporting a 13-11-3 record in 26 starts with a .899 SV% and 3.05 GAA. According to MoneyPuck, his -3.9 goals saved above average was good for 80th in the league, while his goaltending partner at the time, Darcy Kuemper, ranked 16th in the NHL with an 8.8.

Due to injuries and poor play from Kuemper last season, Lindgren became the de facto starting netminder in Washington. In one of the most unprecedented seasons from a goaltender in recent memory, Lindgren managed a 25-16-7 record through 48 starts with a .911 SV%, a 2.67 GAA, and a league-leading six shutouts. His 10.5 GSAA ranked 16th in the NHL, helping Lindgren to an eighth-place finish in Vezina Trophy voting and a 12th-place finish as the league’s MVP.

Still, the Capitals desired to lighten Lindgren’s load this season by acquiring Thompson from the Vegas Golden Knights last summer. His 48 starts from the 2023-24 campaign nearly matched his total starts from the previous seven years combined, split between the Capitals, Montreal Canadiens, and St. Louis Blues.

Returning to a share of the crease this year, Lindgren’s production more closely resembles his output from two years ago rather than last year. The Lakeville, MN native has a 13-10-3 record through 27 starts with a .896 SV%, 2.70 GAA, and a -2.2 GSAA. Washington’s patience in signing Lindgren to an extension likely saved the organization a few million dollars compared to pursuing an extension in the summer months after his incredible 2023-24 campaign.

Photo courtesy of USA Sports Images.

Newsstand| Transactions| Washington Capitals Charlie Lindgren

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Golden Knights Sign Kai Uchacz To Entry-Level Contract

March 3, 2025 at 7:36 am CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

In the other half of last night’s announcement, the Vegas Golden Knights signed forward Kai Uchacz to a two-year entry-level contract. Similarly to Braeden Bowman, Uchacz had been playing the 2024-25 campaign on an AHL contract with the Henderson Silver Knights.

Uchacz recently finished a five-year career in the Western Hockey League, split between the Seattle Thunderbirds and Red Deer Rebels. Unfortunately, his departure from the Thunderbirds wasn’t under good circumstances. The Calgary, Alberta native was removed from the Thunderbirds roster for the 2020-21 season due to making racially-charged comments toward one of his teammates.

After additional training and education, the WHL reinstated Uchacz for the 2021-22 season. The WHL’s announcement came shortly after the Thunderbirds traded Uchacz to the Rebels for a second-round pick in the 2021 WHL Prospects Draft.

He finished his career on a three-year hot streak, scoring 106 goals and 199 points in 188 games for the Rebels. Much like Bowman, Uchacz went undrafted at the NHL level and had to settle for an AHL contract this season with the Silver Knights.

At the time of writing, Uchacz sits seventh on the team in scoring with 12 goals and 23 points in 51 contests. Unfortunately, it hasn’t been enough to help Henderson climb out of the Pacific Division basement.

Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights Kai Uchacz

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Golden Knights Sign Braeden Bowman To Entry-Level Contract

March 3, 2025 at 7:31 am CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

The Vegas Golden Knights announced two two-year entry-level contracts shortly after last night’s game against the New Jersey Devils.  The first player signed was forward Braeden Bowman, who had been playing on an AHL contract with the Henderson Silver Knights.

Bowman joined the Silver Knights out of training camp after four years with the OHL’s Guelph Storm. He had always shown a knack for putting the puck in the net, scoring 27 goals and 10 assists through his first two years with the Storm.

Like many quality goal-scorers at the OHL level, Bowman reached beyond a point-per-game average during his junior and senior seasons. The Kitchener, Ontario native scored 70 goals and 73 assists in 122 games, finishing second on the team in scoring in back-to-back campaigns. Unfortunately, Bowman’s production in Guelph never earned him a draft selection at the NHL level.

Still, his professional career has gotten off to a positive start. He’s scored 12 goals and 30 points in 52 games with AHL Henderson- good for third on the team in scoring.

Unless the Silver Knights go on an unprecedented win streak to end the 2024-25 season, Bowman will have to wait another year to compete for the Calder Cup. Henderson occupies last place in the AHL’s Pacific Division with a 22-30-3-0 record and 17 games remaining.

Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights Braeden Bowman

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Five Key Stories: 2/25/25 – 3/2/25

March 2, 2025 at 9:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

The trade deadline is now less than a week away.  Not surprisingly, several of the key stories from the past seven days are on the trade front with a handful of teams looking to get a jump on bringing in some help.

Wild Bring Back Nyquist: For the second time in just over two years, the Wild acquired winger Gustav Nyquist before the deadline.  In 2023, they gave up a fifth-round pick to get him but this time, the cost was higher as they had to part with a 2026 second-round selection to get him from Nashville.  As part of the move, the Predators are retaining half of the $3.185MM cap charge.  The 35-year-old had a career year last season, tallying 75 points in 81 games but hasn’t been able to produce anywhere near the same level this year with 21 points in 57 contests before the swap.  However, Nyquist had some success with the Wild in 2023 and he should be able to help give them some extra scoring depth for their playoff push.

Done For The Year: After missing almost all of last season after undergoing knee surgery, Canadiens center Kirby Dach will miss roughly the final two months of this year after once again having knee surgery on the same knee.  The former third-overall pick had a quiet year, tallying 10 goals and 12 assists in 57 games and will now have lots of rehab on his knee for the second straight year.  Meanwhile, the Red Wings will be without a key veteran for the rest of the year after Andrew Copp underwent surgery to repair a torn pectoral muscle.  He had 10 goals and 13 helpers in 56 games this season while also seeing regular time shorthanded.  Detroit, did, however, free up some cap space to replace him when they dealt Ville Husso to Anaheim for future considerations, opening up lots of flexibility for GM Steve Yzerman heading into Friday’s deadline.

Panthers Make A Splash: The Panthers decided to go big with their pre-deadline move, acquiring defenseman Seth Jones and a 2026 fourth-round pick from Chicago in exchange for goaltender Spencer Knight and a 2026 first-round pick (that could become a 2027 first).  The Blackhawks are retaining $2.5MM of Jones’ $9.5MM AAV (through 2029-30) as part of the move.  Jones recently indicated an openness to be moved to a contender and he gets his wish.  He’s been in the number one role for Chicago for quite some time but will go to a club where he won’t be counted on quite as much which might work out well for both sides.  Meanwhile, Chicago will get a look at Knight who was once viewed as one of the top young goalies in the league to see if he can be part of their long-term plans while adding another first-round pick and some future cap flexibility as their long rebuild continues.

Suspension Reduced: It’s not often that NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman will step in and reduce a suspension but he did so in Wild forward Ryan Hartman’s case.  After initially receiving a ten-game ban, Bettman opted to lower that to eight games.  In his ruling, he noted that despite a fairly lengthy recent history of supplemental discipline, an increase of seven games from his most recent suspension “is excessive in this case and that the quantum of increase should be reduced.”  As a result of the reduction, Hartman will be eligible to return to the lineup on Tuesday and with the Wild dealing with some other injury woes on their active roster (suspended players count against the 23-player roster), it also may have made it easier to pull the trigger on the Nyquist deal now over waiting a few more days.

Avs Add A Blueliner: The Avalanche added some depth on the back end, acquiring blueliner Ryan Lindgren, winger Jimmy Vesey, and unsigned prospect Hank Kempf from the Rangers in exchange for winger Juuso Parssinen, blueliner Calvin de Haan, and 2025 second- and fourth-round picks.  New York is retaining half of Lindgren’s $4.5MM cap charge in the move.  While Lindgren is in the middle of a down season, he has a track record of being a quality defensive defender which should give Colorado a boost at the fourth or fifth slot on their blueline.  Vesey also is a more experienced option for an Avalanche fourth line that has undergone plenty of turnover this season.  As for New York, they add two more draft picks to the fold and a look at Parssinen, a 24-year-old who had 25 points in Nashville in 45 games just two seasons ago, to see if he can be part of their longer-term plans.

Photo courtesy of Imagn Images.

NHL Week In Review

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