Assessing Goaltender Trades Of The 2025-26 Season

With all but four remaining clubs having closed the book on their 2025-26 season, it’s time to look back on goaltender trades throughout the season, how they’ve turned out for both sides, and what comes next. In what was a year relatively quiet within this criteria, outside of one widely scrutinized trade, all transactions going back to last July are considered. 

It’s hardly a surprise which deal is first worth mentioning, as December’s swap of Tristan Jarry/Stuart Skinner became a real storyline of the season. Just five months later, there’s no stretch in saying one side wishes they had a do-over already. 

Edmonton’s interest in Jarry was known leading up to the winter, and as a buy-low candidate it seemed reasonable enough. The now 31-year-old had turned things around from the worst season of his career. In an early sampling of 2025-26, his .909 save percentage, and Goals Saved Above Expected ranking of 22nd (out of netminders playing 10 or more games) by no means set the league on fire. Still, it offered an upgrade for GM Stan Bowman who desperately had to make a switch. 

Instead things got even worse than they were before. Jarry finished the regular season 40th among goaltenders who played at least 25 games with a -4.1 Goals Saved Above Expected, per Moneypuck. In 19 games with the Oilers, he managed to come away with nine wins, but his .858 save percentage, to go with a 3.86 goals-against-average, are career-worst levels for the veteran. 

Even though the Oilers had the ability to outscore Jarry’s shortcomings, he was not trusted in the playoffs, starting just one game. It was decided that 29-year-old Connor Ingram was the better option, someone who spent meaningful time in the AHL this season, and who is further evaluated below. Needless to say, it did not work, as the Oilers were dispatched by Anaheim in six games. 

So how did Pittsburgh come away? For the amount of criticism Bowman has caught, one might expect Skinner to have become a brick wall. It was not quite the case, as his statistics regressed to an .895 save percentage and 2.99 goals-against-average, marks in 27 games as a Penguin which were worse than anything else he’d offered in the NHL to this point. 

However, he finished the regular season 20th out of those who played at least 25 games in Goals Saved Above Expected, 8.3, offering the same type of performance which the Penguins sold Jarry high on. Their swap of Jarry and Skinner was effectively a wash, when it should have been a real downgrade based on the conditions of the trade itself. 

Already a Pittsburgh win to come out even in terms of performance, the scale really tips with Skinner’s $2.6MM coming off the books, while Edmonton must deal with Jarry’s $5.37MM AAV for two more seasons. Even if the Penguins let Skinner walk for nothing, they also acquired Brett Kulak as a throw-in, who was later flipped for Samuel Girard and a 2028 second rounder. 

Escaping the Jarry situation and later adding nice branches to the trade tree is tidy work of GM Kyle Dubas, only serving as salt in the wound for the Oilers. It has quickly become a predicament, perhaps seeking a way out of the contract as soon as this summer, but in all likelihood he’ll return next fall seeking to turn the page. Cutting bait now, with his value at rock bottom, would be painful for a team already dealing with limited assets to improve their roster. 

The savvy business from Dubas doesn’t end there, as next up is Arturs Silovs, brought in by Pittsburgh from Vancouver last July for Chase Stillman and a 2028 fourth round selection. Despite leading the Abbotsford Canucks to an AHL title, Silovs had no path forward with the Canucks as a result of Thatcher Demko in place and Kevin Lankinen’s long term contract. It’s a stark reminder of how different their franchise outlook was just one year ago, at the time intent on playoff contention with no use for a spare 24-year-old goalie despite his talent.

Fast forward to today, the Canucks are the second Pacific Division club longing for a “take back” with the Penguins. Demko’s future is in doubt with his ongoing health troubles, and Stillman, although 23, does not look like a forward with any meaningful NHL upside. So what’s the damage with how well Silovs performed? 

The Latvian started 38 games for Pittsburgh, winning 19 and offering a 3.07 goals-against-average, coming in slightly worse than the league’s mean ranking of 2.88. With a workload far more than anything he saw in the NHL previously, his underlying numbers weren’t all so pretty, with a -11.9 Goals Saved Above Expected. 

Mostly remembered as a Canuck from the 2024 playoffs, where he was tossed into the lineup and pushed the Oilers to the brink in the second round, Silovs stepped up on the biggest stage yet again. His .939 save percentage in three games against the Flyers was a memorable performance in what was otherwise a forgettable series for the team. Silovs will become a restricted free agent this summer and the 6’4” goaltender seems to have a future with the Penguins, impressive considering the limited assets they gave up. 

Jumping right back to the Oilers, next is the aforementioned Connor Ingram, who was acquired from Utah in October for future considerations, set to be an insurance policy at #3 on the totem pole. Like Silovs, Ingram once was thrust into the Stanley Cup Playoffs from the AHL, as a Nashville Predator in 2022. 

Having entered the NHL Player Assistance Program, Ingram’s resilience was on display as he started 30 games for the desperate Oilers, facing huge pressure for a player effectively brought in for nothing. Winning 16, the 29-year-old’s 2.60 goals-against-average was a career best. Out of 59 qualifying NHL goalies who played at least 25 games, Ingram came in at 29th with a 1.7 Goals Saved Above Expected.

By all means a fringe starter, it wasn’t enough for Edmonton to go on another run this spring, but being in a position where the Saskatoon native was their best option between the pipes is indicative of deeper issues within roster construction as opposed to any knock on Ingram. An unrestricted free agent this summer, if he moves on from the Oilers, any team would be getting a solid backup with the former Tampa Bay prospect.

The major goaltender shuffling in Pittsburgh started back with their July 1 trade, moving Alex Nedeljkovic to San Jose for a 2028 third round pick. Nedeljkovic carried a reasonable $2.5MM AAV, but five years older than the later-acquired Silovs, getting younger was of interest. Posting statistics essentially the same as his previous two seasons of a decent workload in Pittsburgh, the Ohio native started 34 games for the Sharks, winning 18 with a .896 save percentage, exactly the league’s average. “Ned” had the slight edge over the young Yaroslav Askarov, who took a big step into his first full-time NHL campaign, flashing brilliance but also having hiccups at times in typical Askarov show-stopping fashion. 

Rather than hitting the market, San Jose re-upped Nedeljkovic on a two-year pact worth $3MM per season in March, a deserved increase as he has proved to be a trusty fallback for the developing Askarov. Already progressing with more stability in net, the duo will look to vault the Sharks into the playoffs next year.

A promising team always willing to take on overpaid veterans to net assets, in January Nedeljkovic’s Sharks also dealt for goaltender Laurent Brossoit, inheriting his $3.3MM AAV netting 23-year-old former Chicago first rounder Nolan Allan as a sweetener. Once a high end backup, Brossoit’s free agent deal with the Blackhawks didn’t work out due to hip issues, never making an appearance with the club. 

The 33-year-old played just one game for the Sharks, coming away with a loss, and otherwise playing in the AHL. Set to become a free agent, this might be it for Brossoit at the NHL level, but the trade paved the way back to the show, commendable for the British Columbia native after a long hiatus.

Rounding out the bunch, Columbus traded for Philadelphia’s Ivan Fedotov back in September. The former KHL star didn’t live up to high expectations in North America, and the Flyers shed his $3.27MM cap hit, happy to take just a sixth round selection in next month’s draft. 

Surpassed by Jet Greaves who broke out this year, Fedotov was left to the AHL, playing in 47 games for the Cleveland Monsters and not offering much to improve his stock this summer. Already reported as having left North America to deal with an undisclosed injury, a return to KHL stardom is likely more appealing than coming back to the AHL next fall. 

With most trades taking years to play out, the goaltender deals during the 2025-26 season are looking mostly inconsequential, of course, with exceptions. It was the Penguins who were winners, finding a solid young piece in Silovs while also leaving their trade partners in Edmonton with a mess on their hands in Jarry. As for who comes next, Jordan Binnington is generating noise, along with Buffalo’s Devon Levi, as it is looking like a summer of bigger names on the move than any we saw over the past season on the goaltending front. 

Image Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images (Silovs)

Image Credit: Perry Nelson-Imagn Images (Ingram)

Image Credit: David Gonzales-Imagn Images (Nedeljkovic)

Afternoon Notes: Makar, Pickering, Thompson

Ahead of tonight’s pivotal Game 3 in Vegas, Avalanche head coach Jared Bednar told reporters, including Evan Rawal of The Denver Gazette, that “you’ll have to wait and see” if star Cale Makar will be able to play. Bednar remained vague in not naming a starting goaltender either.

The Presidents’ Trophy winners, who lost just 16 regular season games all year and had plenty of breathing room atop the league, didn’t face much adversity all year. Now, somewhat quickly, they’re in a big hole staring at a potential 3-0 series deficit, at the hands of the Golden Knights. The sudden development is largely a result of Makar’s absence, dealing with an upper-body injury from the previous round. 

A team built to handle just about any absence up front, obviously the loss of an all-world defenseman has huge implications. Yet Makar’s injury has left an especially evident shortcoming on their powerplay. Missing their quarterback without an adequate second option, they went one-for-five on the man advantage in the series’ first two games on home ice. 

With their season on the line, there’s more than enough reason for Makar to suit up, but even if he does under 100%, there’s real questions on what type of workload the 27-year-old is able to bear, averaging one tick shy of 25 minutes a night in his nine playoff games so far. 

Elsewhere:

  • Penguins top prospect Owen Pickering is day-to-day with a lower-body injury, reported by Tony Androckitis in an article shared on Inside AHL Hockey. Missing a deciding Game 5 in the Atlantic Division Finals, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins came away with a resounding 8-1 win, vaulting them to the Conference Finals as they await their opponent, either the Cleveland Monsters or the Toronto Marlies. It was impressive work considering that the 2021 first rounder is the “Baby Penguins” top defenseman, skating in 68 games and leading all blueliners with 28 points. Pickering stepped right into the NHL in 2024-25 with 24 games, but since then Pittsburgh has been more focused on his long-term development, as he made just four NHL appearances in 2025-26. His WBS Penguins have the chance to return to the Calder Cup Finals for the first time since 2008, as a franchise who has never taken home the AHL title.
  • Tyce Thompson, younger brother of Buffalo star Tage Thompson, has re-signed with Barys Astana of the KHL for another year, the team shared. A fourth round selection of the Devils in 2019, the 6’1” winger played in 11 games with the team, making his mark in the NHL stat book with an assist. Departing the Bridgeport Islanders to go abroad this year, he made a larger offensive impact in Russia with 25 points in 57 games, good for fourth on the club. Notable North American teammates of Thompson include the previous AHL standout Mike Vecchione and former Florida Panther Ian McCoshen.  

Flames Want To Move Up From Sixth Overall In Draft

A hot market for top-five picks in the 2026 NHL Draft is beginning to form. On the heels of reports that the St. Louis Blues want to crack into the top 10, it appears the Calgary Flames could stand in their way. The Flames are hoping to move up from their current spot of sixth-overall, per David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period and Kyle Morton of Daily Faceoff. The San Jose Sharks’ second-overall pick could be Calgary’s target, with TSN’s Darren Dreger sharing that the Sharks could part ways with their pick. Pagnotta also said that the Chicago Blackhawks could shop around the fourth-overall pick.

It has been more than 20 years since the last time a team traded a top-three pick after it was declared. The last instance – Pittsburgh’s move to first-overall in 2003 to select Marc-Andre Fleury – saw the third-overall pick go the other way. Calgary would pull off an unprecedented move if they were able to swing their way into the top-five.

Moving up in the draft could be a strong way for Calgary to  spark their rebuild. The draft class is led by premium forward talents Gavin McKenna, Ivar Stenberg, and Caleb Malhotra. Each of the three have the potential to one day lead an NHL lineup, as do top defense prospects Chase Reid and Keaton Verhoeff. Should those five names all slide off the board before Calgary’s pick, the Flames would be left with the tough job of guessing the next-best star. Left-defensemen Carson Carels and Alberts Smits have caught attention all season with their dominant two-way play and play-driving ability respectively; while centermen Viggo Bjorck, Tynan Lawrence, and Oliver Suvanto have each held high-end acclaim through points in the season.

Outside of the top-five, there seems to be no guarantee of who will hit. Calgary would be stuck in a guessing game as they look for the draft selection who could propel their young lineup forward. Acquiring either San Jose or Chicago’s pick would effectively subvert that issue, allowing Calgary the chance to land a player with a strong chance of becoming a difference-maker. Their roster could use impacts at seemingly every position – whether it’s a playmaking winger to support Matthew Coronato, a true top-center, or an all-around defenseman who can take pressure off of the offensive-minded Zayne Parekh.

The uncertainty of a lower, top pick would be less of a concern for the Sharks or Blackhawks, who have each landed multiple top-five picks over the last four seasons. The draft class still boasts upside through the teens and the pair of rebuilders could stock their cupboards by pushing Calgary to add more draft capital and a strong prospect like Andrew Basha, Henry Mews, or even breakout college star Ethan Wyttenbach.

The package needed to trade into the top-five will only richen as more teams eye a potential trade. It seems to be a great year to be an established-rebuilder like San Jose and Chicago, who could field a long list of offers as they consider whether to take another star prospect or prioritize quantity over quality. Meanwhile, Calgary’s focus appears set to shift towards finding the X-factor they need to pull together a lineup that – thanks to the emergence of players like Kevin Bahl, Yan Kuznetsov, and Connor Zary – seems to wield promising depth.

Morning Notes: Holmstrom, Vitelli, Mosley

New York Islanders forward Simon Holmstrom could be poised to reach even greater heights next season if his usage under new head coach Peter DeBoer was any indication, writes Stefen Rosner of The Elmonters. In the few games DeBoer was able to coach before the end of the Islanders’ season, Holmstrom skated next to top center Bo Horvat, an opportunity he rarely received under former coach Patrick Roy. Horvat, 31, finished the season centering the top line alongside a pair of Swedish wingers: Holmstrom and 2025 first-rounder Victor Eklund.

While the Islanders could seek offseason upgrades along the wing that could box out Holmstrom from retaining such a big role, 2026-27 could nonetheless be a big year for Holmstrom. The 25-year-old, who was a 2019 first-round pick, steadily grew over the course of his time in the Islanders organization, to the point where he has now had back-to-back seasons with around 20 goals and at least 40 points. If Holmstrom can find a way to stick with either of the two Islanders’ top-six centers (Horvat, Mathew Barzal) rather than play where he spent much of last year (alongside third-line center J.G. Pageau) he could most likely make a push into the 50-plus point range. That would be a very positive development for the player, as he will be a pending RFA next season playing out the final year of a $3.625MM AAV deal.

Other notes from around the hockey world:

  • After four years of professional hockey split between the AHL and ECHL, Reece Vitelli has elected to continue his career overseas. The 24-year-old has signed a contract with Kalmar HC of HockeyAllsvenskan, the second tier of hockey in Sweden. A former alternate captain for the WHL’s Prince Albert Raiders, Vitelli didn’t get the chance to play NCAA hockey the way CHLers can today, and as a result began his pro career in 2022-23. He played in 15 games for the AHL’s Tucson Roadrunners, but spent most of the year in the ECHL. He had 37 points in 49 ECHL games, and one point in 15 AHL contests. That would prove to be the trend for Vitelli. Over the last three seasons, Vitelli has been a solid AHL bubble forward, scoring at a decent clip in the ECHL while playing in as many as 15 AHL games per season, but scarce offense at that level. Now, he’ll leave the chance for further AHL call-ups behind as he begins his European pro career.
  • Another player who spent last season on the AHL/ECHL bubble has elected to sign in Europe: longtime college hockey scorer Ryland Mosley. The 26-year-old forward spent a half-decade playing college hockey, skating for Michigan Tech from 2020-2024, and then the Wisconsin Badgers in 2024-25. He reached at least 30 points in his final three campaigns in the NCAA, and scored at a point-per-game rate in his lone season at Wisconsin. He signed an ATO and AHL deal with the Cleveland Monsters after his season as a Badger, but scored just one point across 12 total games in Cleveland. He scored seven points in 12 games at the ECHL level and was traded to the Rockford IceHogs in March, where he managed one point in seven games. Mosley has signed a one-year deal with Mora IK in the HockeyAllsvenskan, where he will look to help the club return to the SHL for the first time since 2018-19.

Evening Notes: Frondell, Perfetti, Dorofeyev

The Chicago Blackhawks aren’t concerned about the long-term effects of a scary-looking injury to top prospect Anton Frondell. The top Swedish winger got his hand caught in a bench door during Team Sweden’s Friday matchup against Team Italy at the IIHF Men’s World Championship. He missed Sweden’s Saturday matchup with a subsequent injury that is not believed to be serious, per Scott Powers of The Athletic.

Frondell has kept his hot season rolling at the World Championship with two points in as many games. He has performed at a top level in competition across the world this season – netting 28 points in 43 SHL games, nine points in his first 12 NHL games, and eight points in seven games at the 2026 World Junior Championship. No decision has been made on Frondell’s availability for the remainder of the summer tournament, which could leave a major hole in Sweden’s roster.

Other notes from around the hockey world:

  • The Winnipeg Jets face an interesting task in re-signing middle-six winger Cole Perfetti this summer. The former 10th-overall pick scored 18 goals and 50 points in the 2024-25 season but fell back to 12 goals and 32 points in 68 games this season. That places him in an interesting spot next to many of his peers from the 2020 and 2021 NHL Draft class, as pointed out by Murat Ates of The Athletic. While Perfetti’s struggles to frequently pop up on the scoresheet could keep him from matching the long-term contracts of players like Matthew Coronato, Matthew Knies, and Alexis Lafreniere – he could find a starting point in negotiations in the six-year, $7.5MM recently signed by Winnipeg’s Gabriel Vilardi. While that deal serves as a ceiling, Ates points out that Winnipeg’s bidding could begin in the realm of $5.5MM. Splitting the gap between the two numbers, and leaning on the term garnered by peers, would put Perfetti’s next deal in the realm of four-to-six years and $6MM-to-$6.5MM in cap hit. That cap hit would dedicate roughly half of Winnipeg’s projected $13.628MM in cap space this summer to their top restricted free-agent – which should leave just enough room to also re-sign Jonathan Toews, Isak Rosen, and Eric Comrie.
  • Another RFA to watch this summer will be Vegas Golden Knights winger Pavel Dorofeyev, who has exploded onto the scene this season with 37 goals and 64 points in the regular season and 10 goals and 14 points in 14 playoff games. That sudden boom – and Dorofeyev’s seamless fill-in for captain Mark Stone over Vegas’ last five games – could quickly be proving Dorofeyev’s ability as a true, top-six scorer. Teams around the league will pay attention to that as Dorofeyev heads towards restricted-free agency per Shayna Goldman of The Athletic. Vegas is only projected to wield $11MM in cap space this summer, per PuckPedia, with Reilly Smith, Brandon Saad, and Rasmus Andersson all set to hit the open market. The 25-year-old Dorofyev would certainly be top priority among that list but could command the majority of their savings after a breakout year. If Vegas gets cold feet, the young sniper could be a great option for teams looking to add an immediate impact. Goldman projects both Dorofeyev and Andersson could command as much as $9MM in cap hit, which would pull Vegas nearly $7MM over budget with multiple lineup holes still to fill. After the St. Louis Blues’ success with their offer sheet of winger Dylan Holloway, could a team see similar potential in the cap-strapped Golden Knights’ handling of Dorofeyev?

Cale Makar To Determine When To Return To Avalanche Lineup

The Colorado Avalanche are down two games in their Western Conference Finals matchup against the Vegas Golden Knights. A major part of their recent struggles has been the absence of superstar defenseman Cale Makar who is out day-to-day with an upper-body injury sustained in the second round.

Makar continues to skate at the team’s practice facility but there has been no indication of when he may return. Head coach Jared Bednar told reporters following Game 2 that the decision will be left up to when Makar feels back to 100 percent, as captured by Vic Lombardi of Altitude TV. Bednar reiterated that after Saturday’s morning skate per Jesse Montano of Guerilla Sports. The head coach said:

No one can go into Cale’s body and feel what he’s feeling. So when he feels like he can do he can do all the things he needs to… then he’s gonna make the decision to play.

The Avalanche have filled the crater left by Makar’s absence by promoting Sam Malinski to the top-pair – but most of the weight to generate offense has been placed on Devon Toews and Brent Burns. Both defenders have struggled to create the same spark as Makar, leaving Colorado at just three goals scored through the first two games of the series. That is far below their league-leading average of 3.63 goals-per-game throughout the regular season – though the dip is no surprise. Makar finished the regular season ranked third among all defensemen with 79 points in 75 games played. He also led all defenseman in power-play ice time with 307 minutes on the man-advantage.

Colorado has been forced to find a new quarterback for their power-play, and make up for a one-man breakout, at the most critical point in their season. Meanwhile, Makar faces the challenge of working back to enough fitness to fill the 25 minutes a night that he has averaged through nine playoff games. It is an uphill battle that will only become tougher as the Avalanche look to climb out of their recent slump.

Makar seemed to sustain his injury in the series-clinching Game 5 matchup against the Minnesota Wild. He left the game early after falling awkwardly on his right arm but managed to return before the eventual overtime-win. While the Avalanche offense can’t pack the same punch without Makar in the lineup, their chances at a full run to the Stanley Cup would also be fully dampened if he was hurt for a longer stretch. That will be the balance that Makar has in mind as he continues to ease his way back into Colorado’s practices.

Makar will aim to make his return as the Avalanche head to Vegas for Game 3 on Sunday. If he decides a return would bring more risk than reward, the Avalanche will have to again lean on Malinski as the puck-mover on the top pair. Toews would also continue his role on a power-play that has yet to score this series. The Norris Trophy finalist’s decision, and its fallout, will be pivotal in the Avalanche’s hopes to break back into the win column.

Ian Laperriere A Coaching Candidate For Islanders’ New AHL Affiliate

The New York Islanders will begin yet another head coach search after promoting AHL head coach Rocky Thompson into an NHL assistant coach role. Their best option to helm the newly-named Hamilton Hammers could already be within the organization. Former Lehigh Valley Phantoms head coach Ian Laperriere moved into a pro scout role with the Islanders last season and could be a candidate to earn the AHL head coach gig per NHL.com’s Stefen Rosner in his newsletter.

Laperriere is a veteran of 1,083 NHL games as a player – spanning 16 seasons, including nine with the Los Angeles Kings and four with the Colorado Avalanche. Formerly a seventh-round pick by the St. Louis Blues, he built a career as a bruiser, racking up 1,956 penalty minutes through his NHL career. Laperriere retired with the Philadelphia Flyers in 2010 and joined the club as an assistant coach in 2013. He spent eight years on the club’s NHL bench before moving into the AHL head coaching role. Laperriere led the Phantoms to three postseason appearances in four seasons – but wasn’t able to push the club into the second round.

Now, Laperriere could represent a chance for New York to replace one career-enforcer for another as they look to keep their AHL club above water. The Bridgeport Islanders have missed the last four Calder Cup Playoffs – and rotated through three head coaches in that span. The Islanders agreed to move their affiliate from Bridgeport, Connecticut to Hamilton, Ontario to occupy the renovated TD Coliseum, once home to the AHL’s Hamilton Canucks, then the Hamilton Bulldogs, for 22 years.

The Bulldogs were a successful affiliate of the Edmonton Oilers and Montreal Canadiens through 20 seasons in the AHL – though their history also ended with four consecutive, missed postseasons. The first head coach of the newly-minted Hamilton Hammers will be looking to break that four-year spell for both the city, and the Islanders’ AHL affiliate. Leaning on the expertise of a playoff veteran at every level, like Laperriere, could be a strong first step towards that goal.

Blues Trying To Move Up In 2026 NHL Draft

Three picks in the 2026 NHL Draft first round may not be rich enough for the St. Louis Blues. The club is putting concerted effort into trying to move up from their current standing at 11th-overall, TSN’s Darren Dreger shared on Hockey Sense with Andy Strickland. Dreger added that the San Jose Sharks, who currently sit at second-overall, could be willing to move down from their current selection.

The last top-three pick to be traded also belonged to the Sharks, who sent what would become the 2020 third-overall pick to the Ottawa Senators in their September 2018 acquisition of star defenseman Erik Karlsson. Toronto also traded what would become the 2010 second-overall pick to Boston in September 2009, setting up the Bruins’ selection of Tyler Seguin. The last instance of a top-three pick changing hands after it was declared came in 2003 – when the Pittsburgh Penguins moved from the third-overall pick up to first-overall to select Marc-Andre Fleury.

St. Louis could feel driven to pull off a trade of this magnitude by a rare opportunity in front of them. While star scorer Gavin McKenna has dominated attention for first-overall, Swedish phenom Ivar Stenberg – the younger brother of Blues prospect Otto Stenberg – has formed a strong case behind him. The younger Stenberg is currently lighting up the IIHF Men’s World Championships with seven points in six games. He has cemented a top-line role on Team Sweden, capping off a year that saw him earn a similar spot on Frolunda HC, who finished second in the SHL regular season.

Stenberg is a true dynamo, capable of dominating games with his breakaway speed and heads-up playmaking. He can hold the puck for as long as needed to create sneaky and successful scoring chances. He is just as involved away from the puck, staying focused in scoring areas and working to make plays on defense. That full-ice impact made Stenberg hard to ignore since he made his SHL debut last season.

The older Stenberg also made waves over the season, earning his NHL debut in mid-December and ultimately scoring 10 points in 32 games of what would become his NHL rookie season. That was only seven points fewer than the scoring total he posted in 36 AHL games. He seemed comfortable at the top level and – after easing into the role – embraced a much-needed center position in St. Louis. His arrival could help St. Louis justify selecting yet another winger headed likely headed for a top-six role, after they landed Justin Carbonneau in the 2025 class.

Ivar Stenberg would bring true top-end ability to the Blues lineup. It would be a final piece for St. Louis, who has already seen wingers Dylan Holloway, Jake Neighbours, and Jimmy Snuggerud excel in their top-nine roles. But while they have each excelled in limited top-line minutes, they’ve proven most effective when rotating through the lineup with each other. Stenberg could add another strong impact to that mix until he can graduate into a lineup-leading role.

The cost of pulling off the first top-three trade in more than two decades wouldn’t be cheap. Many expect San Jose to target an addition on defense after adding Michael Misa with the second-overall pick last season. The Sharks would likely find strong defenders still on the board outside of the top-five, just as they would at second-overall, in a draft class filled with high-end, defense prospects. Moving down would offer a chance to add even more to their riches – potentially emerging defense prospect Theo Lindstein or shutdown defenders Colin Ralph or Arseni Koromyslov from St. Louis’ pool. The Sharks could also ask for multiple first-round picks from a Blues club currently wielding picks 11, 15, and the Colorado Avalanche’s undetermined first-rounder. Packaging all three picks could be enough to make a deal – though adding another prospect could prove a worthwhile supplement.

The St. Louis Blues have made multiple bold decisions to revamp the lineup from its 2023-24 state. They surprisingly fired Drew Bannister mid-season and offer-sheeted Edmonton Oilers free-agents Holloway and Philip Broberg. Those additions  helped push them to the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs, but couldn’t return them to the 2026 postseason. That could be cause for one more bold decision before Doug Armstrong leaves the post he has held for longer than a decade. In doing so, St. Louis – a team that began built around a trio of brothers – would be hoping to land their eighth set of siblings in franchise history.

Photo courtesy of Jerome Miron-Imagn Images.

Offseason Checklist: New Jersey Devils

The offseason has arrived for half of the league’s teams that aren’t taking part in the playoffs plus those who have already been eliminated.  Accordingly, it’s now time to examine what they will need to accomplish over the coming months.  Next up is a look at New Jersey.

It’s safe to say this season didn’t go as planned for the Devils.  Believed to be a team primed for a bounce-back year, it ultimately didn’t happen.  As a result, there’s a new GM in town as Sunny Mehta has taken over from Tom Fitzgerald.  Mehta has elected to keep head coach Sheldon Keefe around, taking one big item off their checklist.  Here are some other things they’ll likely be looking to go over the coming months.

Decide Nemec’s Future

Things have gone well for two of the top three picks from 2022.  Juraj Slafkovsky, the top pick, has become a top-line winger in Montreal while third-overall selection Logan Cooley looks like a fixture in Utah’s lineup for the long haul.  But things haven’t gone as well for the blueliner selected between those two, Simon Nemec.

After getting into 60 games as a rookie in 2023-24 while averaging nearly 20 minutes a night of playing time, it looked like Nemec had made it.  But things went in the wrong direction the following year, resulting in him spending more time in the minors than in the NHL.  He became a full-timer on the roster this season and returned to his rookie-season usage while chipping in with 26 points in 68 games.  That’s a step in the right direction, no doubt, but is he on his way to being a core piece like the other two?

The answer to that is uncertain, which is also an apt way to describe his situation in New Jersey.  Nemec is a pending restricted free agent and with the rapid escalation of salaries, it’s fair to say he’ll be eyeing a significant raise from the $855K base salary he had this season.  Potentially anticipating a tough negotiation, Fitzgerald was listening to calls on the youngster at the trade deadline with no deal coming to fruition.  Nemec, meanwhile, had expressed frustration about his role in the past with recent conflicting reports suggesting that he might still be unhappy with his situation.

With how things went up and down on his rookie deal, it’s hard to see both sides agreeing on a long-term contract at a cap hit that’s comfortable for everyone.  A bridge deal makes sense; AFP Analytics pegs a two-year bridge deal checking in around $4.4MM per season which is still on the higher side for someone who wasn’t a regular not that long ago.  But, in this cap environment, some of these future bridge contracts are going to be on the high side.

If Mehta isn’t sold on Nemec’s upside or they’re too far apart in contract talks, a trade could still be on the horizon.  A 22-year-old high pick who’s a right-shot defenseman is bound to have considerable trade value and he’d undoubtedly yield a strong return.  Is that more valuable to the Devils than what they believe Nemec will be able to provide?  They need to decide the answer to that this offseason.

Work On Hischier Extension

When Nico Hischier signed a seven-year, $50.75MM extension after his sophomore year in 2018-19, the move seemed a little risky.  The salary cap was much lower back then, bypassing bridge contracts wasn’t as widely common as it is now, and a 47-point showing in his sophomore year wasn’t necessarily screaming ‘big contract’.  That deal has certainly worked out quite well for New Jersey and with the captain set to enter the final season of that deal starting in July, he will be eligible for a contract extension at that time.

Hischier has only surpassed the 70-point mark once in his career (when he reached 80 in 2022-23) but he has notched between 60 and 69 points four times in the last five seasons.  That type of offensive consistency is quite coveted, especially for centers.  Meanwhile, he has been a Selke Trophy finalist and finished fourth in voting over the past five years as well.  That type of defensive consistency is also quite coveted.  Between that and the projected salary cap spikes, the 27-year-old is heading for quite a sizable raise on his next contract.

What type of price tag could he plausibly fetch?  Let’s start by looking at the cap percentage.  When he signed his current deal, Hischier received 8.9% of the cap.  Forecasting that against the projected 2027-28 Upper Limit of around $113.5MM, that would put him at $10.1MM per season.  Considering his current contract had four RFA years on it (his next one won’t have any) and his status in the league as a strong two-way center, it’s fair to say $10.1MM feels like the absolute minimum.  Adding a million or two more to that number is a very realistic possibility.  If Mehta doesn’t want to pay that (which would be a surprise, given his importance to the team), someone else undoubtedly will.

With Hischier signed through next season, this isn’t something that necessarily has to be completed this summer.  But with a mid-September cutoff for an eight-year extension (when the new CBA fully kicks in), that stands as a bit of a pressure point for negotiations.  And if the two sides are so far apart that a trade becomes likely (not a likely scenario), it’s better to know that now than in-season.  But even with it not necessarily being overly urgent, expect this to be a big item on their summer checklist.

Clear Defensive Logjam

In the NHL, from a roster-building perspective, there are good problems to have and bad problems to have.  The state of their back end is a good one.  When their defensive group got fully healthy midseason, Keefe found himself rotating a few quality blueliners in and out of the lineup.  That wound up seeing Dougie Hamilton get scratched with some scathing comments coming from his agent soon after, fueling trade speculation although a move never got across the finish line.

In fact, for all of the viable trade speculation surrounding their blueliners in the second half of the season, no moves were ultimately made.  The logjam ultimately resolved itself when Brett Pesce landed on injured reserve right before the deadline but there’s no denying that the logjam still exists.  New Jersey has $34.9MM committed to six blueliners next season, per PuckPedia.  That doesn’t include Nemec so if Mehta doesn’t make a move, there’s a very good chance that the Devils will have the most expensive back end in the league next season.  With less than $12MM in cap room and several roster spots to fill, moving out a defenseman works on multiple fronts.

The state of the market should work in New Jersey’s favor.  Yes, other teams will know that they probably need to shed a defenseman but with the UFA class not exactly yielding a bumper crop of quality options, demand is going to outweigh supply.  That should put Mehta in the driver’s seat to elicit a strong return.

It could be Hamilton getting a fresh start while clearing at least part of his $9MM cap charge off the books.  It could be Nemec moving somewhere where he has a chance to play a bigger role to try to grow into the player his draft slot warranted.  It could be Johnathan Kovacevic, the type of quality depth defender that stabilizes things on the third pairing but is now paid (at $4MM per season) to play a bigger role than that.  All three are right-shot pieces, the side in even higher demand.  If new management wants to shake up the team a bit, this is a logical spot to try to do so.

Add Firepower

Offense has been hard to come by under Keefe’s watch.  They had a drop-off of 24 goals in his first season behind the bench while dropping from 12th to 20th league-wide in that department.  This season, there was a similar-sized dip in scoring as they went down another 14 tallies while finishing 27th in goals scored.  In two years, they’ve gone from a slightly above-average team offensively to one of the weaker ones while shedding nearly half a goal per game in the process.

Suffice it to say, this is a problem that needs to be addressed.  With Jack Hughes, Jesper Bratt, and Hischier, they have some quality pieces.  Timo Meier has been more hit than miss since being acquired but he could still be part of the solution while Dawson Mercer, extension-eligible himself this summer, is a solid secondary piece.  There’s a decent foundation to work off here.

Adding a top-six forward would certainly put them in the right direction toward trying to even get back to the middle of the pack.  But beyond that, they need some more firepower in the bottom six.  Evgenii Dadonov, a UFA pickup last summer, wound up being a flop, Nick Bjugstad had just two assists in 26 games after being acquired near the trade deadline, and Maxim Tsyplakov, added in the Ondrej Palat trade, had four points in 49 games between the two teams.  Upgrading one or two of those lineup spots would also go a long way in helping their fortunes.

This is where clearing the defensive logjam should help.  At a minimum, they’d shed enough cap space to afford an extra addition of some consequence up front.  In a perfect world, it’d come in the same trade.  That way, their remaining cap space could be deployed toward upgrading the back half of the forward group, allowing them to hit both parts here.  That won’t turn them into a high-end offensive squad but even getting closer to the middle would be a big boost to their playoff odds next season.

Photo courtesy of Ed Mulholland-Imagn Images.

Lightning Re-Sign Scott Sabourin

Veteran Scott Sabourin will be sticking around in the Lightning’s organization for another year.  The team announced today that they’ve signed the winger to a one-year, two-way contract extension.  Financial terms were not disclosed but he’ll be guaranteed at least a $75K raise at the NHL level with that minimum salary moving up to $850K next season from $775K in 2025-26.

The 33-year-old joined Tampa Bay last summer on a one-year, two-way deal, one that worked out well for both sides.  Sabourin played in 26 games with the Lightning this season, the second-highest NHL total of his career.  He picked up a goal and four assists in those outings, along with 89 penalty minutes and 63 hits.  That’s the type of physicality he’s been known for over his professional career, one that spans parts of 15 seasons.

Sabourin was on Tampa Bay’s roster for the playoffs and even got into a pair of games in the first round against Montreal, his first career NHL postseason action.  For his career, he now has 73 career NHL appearances under his belt, collecting three goals, 10 assists, and 147 penalty minutes over parts of six seasons.

While he hasn’t been a big offensive producer in the NHL, Sabourin has been a reasonable producer in the minors.  He played in 24 games with Syracuse this season, notching a respectable six goals and two assists.  Prior to this season, Sabourin had at least 25 points in the minors in each of the last three years.

It’s likely that Tampa Bay envisions Sabourin filling the same role he did this season.  For games where they expect things to get more physical, he’ll probably see time on the fourth line.  Meanwhile, he can serve as a capable depth producer in Syracuse in between those outings, assuming he clears waivers to be eligible to be sent back to the Crunch.