Blues Activate Mathieu Joseph, Place Oskar Sundqvist On IR
The Blues activated winger Mathieu Joseph from injured reserve on Friday, according to Matthew DeFranks of The St. Louis Post-Dispatch. He’s been replaced on injured reserve by Oskar Sundqvist to keep the Blues’ active roster at the 23-player maximum.
Joseph will be in the lineup for tonight’s game against the Stars in a third-line role with rookies Dalibor Dvorsky and Otto Stenberg, per Elise Butler of the team’s website. He comes in for Nathan Walker, who had two points in his first two games since returning from an upper-body injury earlier this month, but has now gone without a point in five straight.
The 28-year-old Joseph’s stay on IR was relatively brief. He hasn’t played since Jan. 3 but was a healthy scratch for several games after that before developing an elbow infection, diagnosed as day-to-day on Jan. 12. He was moved to IR the following day to create a roster spot for Nick Bjugstad.
Joseph operated as an occasional healthy scratch for much of last season. His deployment hasn’t changed much in 2025-26, the last season of a four-year, $11.8MM deal signed with the Senators in 2022 that St. Louis picked up as a cap dump in 2024. He’s shot under 10% for every season of that contract and has just two goals in 35 games this year, although his 10 points bring him to a respectable 24-point pace over 82 games – more offense than he gave the Blues last year while also seeing his ice time increase by nearly a minute per game.
He’s an effective forechecker and penalty killer, but at this stage of his career, what was long thought to be untapped offensive potential looks to stay unrealized if he continues as one of the league’s most underwhelming finishers. He’s nonetheless an experienced body (455 career games) for a Blues group currently without a third of its top nine in Dylan Holloway, Pius Suter, and Robert Thomas.
That’s not counting Sundqvist’s injury. The 31-year-old is out indefinitely after sustaining an ankle laceration due to a skate cut against the Oilers last weekend, according to the team. He already missed Tuesday’s loss to the Jets and is ruled out for St. Louis’ next two games as a result of the IR placement, although he might not end up returning until the other side of the Olympic break, depending on the severity of the laceration and how much, if any, tendon or muscular damage it caused.
Sundqvist is in the third year of his second stint with the Blues and has been chugging along as a reliable two-way piece in their bottom six. They’ve relied on him more than anticipated due to their rash of injuries, and he’s held up his end of the bargain offensively with 13 points in 39 games – right at his career average pace of 0.33 points per game. He’s the Blues’ most relied-upon forward in the defensive zone at even strength and averages 1:22 of ice time per game on the penalty kill. Joseph’s return should help the Blues shoulder Sundqvist’s shorthanded absence, though.
Will Depth Players Get Paid Again This Summer?
Something funny was happening in the summer of 2019. Depth players began getting serious term on multi-year deals to a level we’d rarely seen before.
Take the contract for depth forward Brandon Tanev, who signed a six-year, $21MM deal with the Penguins. At the time, that contract raised a lot of eyebrows, as Tanev had topped out at just 14 goals and 15 assists in any single season, and a $3.5MM average annual value was especially steep on such a long-term deal.
The deal was an outlier on July 1, 2019, with no close comparison other than the Panthers signing Brett Connolly to a four-year, $14MM deal. Connolly was coming off a 46-point season, which far exceeded any of Tanev’s offensive contributions.
There was a sense at the time that the NHL might shift, with depth players able to secure longer-term, higher-dollar contracts. When Colton Sissons signed his seven-year extension with the Predators a few weeks later, it certainly looked that way.
Sissons was two years younger than Tanev and an RFA, whereas Tanev was a UFA, yet their eventual contracts were comparable. However, the global pandemic in 2020 stalled the league’s growth and led to a flat salary cap, effectively shutting teams out of paying for depth and fringe players’ big-money deals.
The stars still got their money, as evidenced by 2020 free agency, when Alex Pietrangelo was still paid handsomely (seven years, $61.6MM), while depth players had to take one-year deals at or around the league minimum.
The stars have continued to get their money, and top salaries have escalated over the last few years, while second-line players have also been rewarded handsomely as the salary cap has eventually climbed. But the depth players in the NHL have continued to feel the squeeze to this point, and it does feel like that might change this summer, with another big cap jump coming, multiple teams with loads of cap space, and a very weak free agency market.
In previous summers, solid defenders such as Calvin de Haan and Matt Grzelcyk, as well as forwards Jack Roslovic and Evgenii Dadonov, have been part of a large group of NHL-caliber players who have experienced a very tight free-agent market when they have been available to all NHL teams. Now, it’s not unheard of for players to fall short of salary expectations in free agency, but it has become a common occurrence over the last six years, and it feels like this could be a summer where teams overpay for depth.
There has been a surge in signings in recent weeks, with the most recent being the Penguins locking up fourth-line center Blake Lizotte to a three-year deal worth $6.75MM total, and the Canadiens inking Alexandre Texier to a two-year deal worth $2.5MM per season. These deals were not massive signings, but they show that teams are moving to lock up their depth as they look to the summer UFAs and realize there isn’t much out there.
Center Christian Dvorak is another excellent example, having recently signed a five-year deal with the Flyers after settling for a one-year deal last summer. Dvorak has long been injury-prone and inconsistent, but the Flyers felt they had to ink him to an extension amid a career year in Philadelphia.
So, what depth players will get shocking contracts this upcoming summer, or will they? If you go by the old cliché that a rising tide raises all boats, it sure looks like the players at the bottom of the lineup will finally start to get a bigger slice of the pie.
Could a player like Ryan Shea, Connor Dewar, or Philipp Kurashev get a big-money, multi-year deal this summer? Or will teams continue to show restraint in the lower rungs of the free agency market, even though they have more wiggle room?
It’s hard to believe there won’t be some silly deals on July 1, 2026. There are always head-scratching choices NHL GMs make. But this could be a free agency unlike any we’ve seen in a decade or so.
July 1, 2016, is hard to forget for some teams, as massive mistakes were made that were clearly bad choices at the time. Loui Eriksson signed with Vancouver, Milan Lucic signed with Edmonton, and David Backes signed with Boston. Several other players were given ridiculous contracts relative to their future projections, which wasn’t anything new, especially for players with a history of being top-six NHL players.
However, some general managers watched those errors and learned a valuable lesson that carried through the COVID years, when there was a massive salary-cap squeeze. While teams didn’t have the salary-cap space to make the egregious contract offers, some GMs still did, and they usually paid the price for it.
A good example was Penguins GM Ron Hextall, who made some odd choices in free agency, particularly when he signed a Tanev replacement in the summer of 2021. Hextall inked Brock McGinn to a four-year, $11MM contract that was a poor value for the Penguins and was eventually traded along with a sweetener to the Anaheim Ducks in 2023.
That deal, along with contracts like Pierre Engvall’s, highlighted why many teams stayed away from giving terms to their depth players. But this summer, the stars are aligning for some wild contracts to be handed out to players who likely won’t last the length of the deal in the NHL. For fans of contending teams, or teams on the upswing who think they are just a player away from contention, you just have to hope your favorite team isn’t among the unlucky ones handing out the money.
Maple Leafs Recall Henry Thrun
1:41 p.m.: Matt Benning was returned to AHL Toronto in the corresponding move for Thrun’s recall, per the NHL’s media site. Swapping the two clears $150K in cap space, an important factor in giving the Leafs the flexibility to activate Anthony Stolarz from long-term injured reserve today as well.
9:38 a.m.: According to a team announcement, the Toronto Maple Leafs have recalled defenseman Henry Thrun from the AHL’s Toronto Marlies. The transaction coincides with recent injuries to Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Brandon Carlo.
Still, Thrun’s recall may be only a precaution. Jonas Siegel of The Athletic reported that both Ekman-Larsson and Carlo were on the ice for the team’s practice. Toronto may have avoided longer-term injuries to one or both of the blue liners. Regardless, given that their active roster is full, the Maple Leafs will have to make a corresponding roster move at some point today.
Meanwhile, Thrun, 24, is in his first year with the Maple Leafs organization. Toronto acquired him this past summer in a trade that sent Ryan Reaves to the San Jose Sharks. He’s earning $1MM this season and will be a restricted free agent next summer.
After serving consistently with the Sharks, Thrun has primarily played in the AHL this season. He’s been a boon to AHL Toronto, scoring three goals and 14 points in 28 games with a -2 rating. His scoring output doesn’t necessarily jump off the page, but it’s good for second on the team among defensemen.
Given his place on the team’s depth chart, Thrun has only featured in a few games for the Maple Leafs this season. At the time of writing, he has gone scoreless in four contests, producing a -1 rating while averaging 14:52 of ice time per game.
Golden Knights Add Rasmus Andersson To Active Roster
After being acquired from the Flames in last weekend’s blockbuster, defenseman Rasmus Andersson will make his Golden Knights debut tonight against the Maple Leafs, the team announced. He had been unavailable due to work visa complications, so he’d been on the non-roster list since his pickup. To open a space for him on the active roster, Jaycob Megna was reassigned to AHL Henderson.
Andersson’s $2.275MM cap impact – minimized thanks to Calgary retaining half his salary in the trade – still counted against Vegas’ books while he had a non-roster designation, so there’s no move required there. With Alex Pietrangelo on season-ending LTIR and William Karlsson and Brayden McNabb on regular LTIR, the Knights now have $3.09MM in cap space after reassigning Megna. That’s also with $6.5MM tied up in the IR-bound Carter Hart, Brett Howden, and Brandon Saad.
The Golden Knights didn’t hold a morning skate prior to tonight’s game. It’s the second half of a back-to-back for them after losing 4-3 to the Bruins yesterday, so we’ll need to wait until warmups to figure out who will serve as Andersson’s left-shot complement in Vegas’ top four to start.
Vegas was on a 7-0-1 run before dropping its last two in regulation. Still with a comfortable Pacific Division lead, they’ll hope Andersson can continue the offensive momentum he had in his final days with Calgary with a goal and two assists in his last four games.
Megna’s latest recall ends after just four days. He was brought up after the trade to ensure Vegas had an extra defenseman while Andersson was getting his paperwork sorted out. They needed to recall a D at the time because they surrendered Zach Whitecloud in the deal to acquire Andersson.
The 6’6″, 214-lb lefty did draw into the lineup on Monday against the Flyers, recording a shot on goal in 11:01 of ice time before heading to the press box in Boston to make way for Dylan Coghlan to get a bottom-pairing rep. Coghlan will remain as the Knights’ seventh defender for the time being, although he’s also destined for a demotion once McNabb returns following the Olympic break.
In Megna’s eighth NHL season and first in Vegas, the 33-year-old has a -5 rating with a 45.0 CF% in four outings across multiple recalls. A strong shutdown presence at the minor-league level, he’s got seven points and a +4 mark in 27 showings for Henderson.
Islanders Notes: Bridgeport, Horvat, Pulock
Back in late June, insider Frank Seravalli reported that the AHL’s Bridgeport Islanders were likely moving to Hamilton, Ontario, beginning in the 2026-27 campaign. In an update yesterday, Seravalli confirmed that the news is official.
Bridgeport, then the Sound Tigers, had their inaugural campaign back in the 2001-02 season. They made it to the Calder Cup Final that year and were purchased by the Islanders in 2004. Unfortunately, it’s been a mixed bag since then, winning one Northeast Division title in the 2011-12 season but having yet to return to the Calder Cup Final.
Meanwhile, Hamilton has been without a hockey team since 2023. The Hamilton Bulldogs, an OHL team, temporarily moved to Brantford until Edmonton Oilers’ forward Zach Hyman purchased the team in 2025, keeping the team in Brantford long-term. There is no information about whether the Bridgeport Islanders will adopt the Bulldog name.
Additional Islanders notes:
- All indications suggest that Bo Horvat will return to the Islanders’ lineup tomorrow. According to Stefen Rosner of The Hockey News, Horvat skated in a regular jersey at New York’s practice this morning and feels “ready to go.” Horvat has missed the last three weeks with a lower-body injury. Still, the Islanders never placed him on the injured reserve, so they won’t need to make any transactions.
- Unfortunately, it’s not all positive news on the injury front. Rosner also reported that defenseman Ryan Pulock is considered day-to-day with an upper-body injury. Pulock is meeting with the team doctors today, but considering that he wasn’t at practice, the chances of him playing tomorrow are slim. If he misses tomorrow’s contest against the Buffalo Sabres, it would be the first game Pulock has missed all season.
Winnipeg Jets Reassign Isaak Phillips, Danil Zhilkin
According to a team announcement, the Winnipeg Jets have reassigned defenseman Isaak Phillips and forward Danil Zhilkin to the AHL’s Manitoba Moose. Each player was recalled relatively recently as injury insurance.
Unfortunately, it seems the transaction will not align with any positive updates regarding the injury situation. The Moose play tonight at home, allowing each player to play before being recalled for tomorrow’s contest against the Detroit Red Wings. Winnipeg remains without Haydn Fleury, Colin Miller, and Neal Pionk.
Phillips, 24, is in his second year with the Jets organization. Winnipeg acquired him from the Chicago Blackhawks last season as he was passed over on the team’s depth chart. Unfortunately, he hasn’t found more playing time with the Jets.
Still, he’s having a much better year in the AHL. Split between Manitoba and the AHL’s Rockford IceHogs, Phillips finished with four goals and 16 points in 67 games with a -3 rating. He’s nearly matched that output already this year, registering three goals and 13 points in 33 games with a +3 rating.
Meanwhile, Zhilkin, 22, is in his third professional season. He hasn’t had much success so far, but got off to a moderately good start this season, scoring seven goals and 14 points in 30 games. He has not scored in four NHL appearances, averaging 8:14 of ice time.
Wild Reassign Hunter Haight, Ben Jones
The Minnesota Wild are expected to have a fully healthy forward core for their game tomorrow against the Florida Panthers. The Wild announced that they’ve reassigned forwards Hunter Haight and Ben Jones to the AHL’s Iowa Wild.
Reports indicate that the Wild are expected to activate Matt Boldy tomorrow. He was a full participant at the team’s practice yesterday, but was not eligible to play against the Detroit Red Wings. The news comes after Minnesota returned Joel Eriksson Ek and Marcus Johansson to the lineup yesterday.
Haight, 21, is in his second professional season. The former second-round pick was one of the few bright spots with AHL Iowa last season, scoring 20 goals and 34 points in 67 games. He’s again primarily played in the AHL this season, registering seven goals and 12 points through his first 26 contests.
Still, Haight hasn’t reached beyond an extra forward role for the Wild yet. He has been recalled five times this season for injury depth in Minnesota. Unfortunately, he has yet to register his first point, appearing in five games while averaging 9:41 of ice time.
Meanwhile, Jones, 26, has also been used as an extra forward for the Wild this season. However, unlike Haight, Minnesota has utilized him far more. Across 26 games this season, Jones has scored one goal and one assist with a -10 rating, averaging 8:36 of ice time. In the AHL, he has tallied three goals and six points in eight games with Iowa.
Latest On New York Rangers, Alexis Lafreniere
As soon as the New York Rangers announced a retool to finish out the 2025-26 campaign, all eyes turned toward Artemi Panarin as a trade candidate leading up to the March 6th deadline. Still, outside of Panarin, there is another winger that the Rangers may move on from by the end of the season.
According to a recent article by Peter Baugh in The Athletic, there are indications that General Manager Chris Drury does not consider Alexis Lafrenière to be part of the team’s core moving forward. In fact, reports last week suggested that Drury met one-on-one with each of the team’s core players. Lafrenière told reporters on Monday that Drury never met with him individually.
If the Rangers seriously entertain offers for Lafrenière, and there’s no indication that they won’t, the major hurdle in any negotiation will be his contract. Lafrenière signed a seven-year, $52.15MM extension with New York last season, which began this year. Still, he doesn’t have any trade protection until the 2027-28 campaign. Even then, it’ll only be an eight-team no-trade list.
Fortunately for New York, as Baugh points out, the team has a recent trade comparable to Lafrenière. Last season, at the trade deadline, the Ottawa Senators and Buffalo Sabres traded Dylan Cozens for Joshua Norris, a swap that has seemingly benefited both sides, provided Norris can stay healthy.
At the time, each player had six years remaining on their respective contracts, with Cozens earning $7.1MM and Norris earning $7.9MM. Unfortunately, there aren’t many younger players earning similar amounts to Lafrenière that would make sense for a trade. Pavel Buchnevich of the St. Louis Blues ($8MM through 2030-31) and Brock Boeser of the Vancouver Canucks ($7.25MM through 2031-32) make some sense as fellow struggling wingers. However, the Rangers would likely ask for more considering Lafrenière is a former first-overall pick.
Regardless, moving on from top-10 picks has become a trend for the Rangers in years past. Since the 2010 NHL Draft, New York has had five first-round picks fall within the top-10, and Lafrenière is the only one that remains.
Now in his sixth season, Lafrenière has not lived up to his draft billing. During the 2023-24 campaign, he appeared to be breaking out, scoring 28 goals and 57 points in 82 games, averaging 17:16 of ice time per night. He’s never been much of a defensive stalwart, though his possession metrics are typically above average.
Unfortunately, he hasn’t come close to reaching those totals. His output dropped to 17 goals and 45 points in 82 games last season, and he’s again pacing toward 45 points this year. The only thing that Lafrenière really has going for him is that he’s remained remarkably healthy throughout his career. At the time of writing, he has only missed four regular-season contests for the Rangers.
Still, if they don’t receive a beneficial offer for Lafrenière, the Rangers aren’t really in any rush. He won’t have trade protection in his contract next season, either, which could allow New York to push serious trade negotiations to the summer. Lafrenière projects as an asset that may be a later domino to fall in the Rangers’ retool.
Kraken Recall Jacob Melanson, Place Ben Meyers On IR
The Seattle Kraken will be down a hot hand for the final two games of their current homestand. Depth forward Ben Meyers has been placed on injured reserve due to a lower-body injury that has him out week-to-week. Meyers scored three points in his last two games. The Kraken have responded to his injury by recalling forward Jacob Melanson in a corresponding move.
It isn’t entirely clear when Meyers sustained his injury. He played through the final minute of action in Wednesday night’s win over the New York Islanders and recorded one point and one shot in the contest. Meyers didn’t appear to be nursing an injury in his final shift but will now land on the shelf for a minimum of one week and three games. He will be eligible to return on January 29th, when the Krkaen host the Toronto Maple Leafs to close out a six-game homestand.
Meyers has chipped his way up to Seattle’s third-line with a strong, two-way effort as of late. He ranks third on the offense in hits (15) and second in penalty-kill ice time (20:41) since the start of 2026. On the year, Meyers has recorded 11 points, 36 hits, and 40 shots on goal in 31 games. He’s proven to be a responsible veteran near the bottom of Seattle’s lineup, a role that could be hard to replace with an AHL call-up.
Melanson has been a responsible piece of the Coachella Valley Firebirds’ lineup this year, with 16 points and 28 penalty minutes in 26 games. He has carved out a top-six role and ranks third among Firebirds forwards in plus-minus with a plus-seven. That diligence hasn’t quite translated to the top flight, with Melanson boasting only four points and a minus-two in 15 NHL games this season. They are the first NHL games of his career, except for his NHL debut, which he made at the end of last season.
That inexperience could be a motivator as Melanson looks to make himself comfortable in a bottom-six role in place of the toolsy Meyers. He will compete with Tye Kartye for a spot in the lineup. Kartye has recorded seven points and a minus-seven in 37 games this season.
Pittsburgh Penguins Activate Erik Karlsson
According to a team announcement, the Pittsburgh Penguins have activated defenseman Erik Karlsson from the injured reserve. In a corresponding roster move, the Penguins have placed defenseman Ryan Graves on the injured reserve.
Pittsburgh will have their highest-scoring defenseman back in the lineup tonight against the Edmonton Oilers. Karlsson, 35, has been sidelined the last nine days with an undisclosed injury and has returned somewhat earlier than expected.
In a resurgent year, the former Norris Trophy winner has registered four goals and 33 points in 44 games for the Penguins this season. He’s led all defensemen in Pittsburgh in ATOI with a 23:46 mark.
He has played a crucial role in the Penguins’ surprising return to contention this season. Not only is Karlsson 20 points away from matching his point totals from last season, but he’s managed a robust 54.3% CorsiFor% at even strength. Despite his 88.6% on-ice SV% being below what most teams would expect from their top defenseman, it’s an improvement from where Karlsson was at as recently as last year.
It couldn’t have come at a better time for the player or team, either. Being the subject of trade speculation throughout Pittsburgh’s retool, a resurgent year from Karlsson has put the Penguins in a better spot regarding his future. The team may be more comfortable retaining Karlsson, given his strong play this season, or have better luck trading him now that interested parties may be more inclined to acquire him.
Meanwhile, Graves will head to the injured reserve after initially being recalled to replace Karlsson’s spot on the active roster. Assuming the rest of the defensive core can remain healthy, Graves will likely be reassigned to the AHL’s Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins upon his activation. He cleared waivers at the end of December and hasn’t met the requirements to need waivers again.
Infamously signed through the 2028-29 season at a $4.5MM cap hit, Graves has been scarcely used by the Penguins this season. Serving in a depth role, he’s registered one goal in 19 games while averaging 15:29 of ice time per game. Playing in the AHL for the first time since the 2018-19 season, Graves has recorded two goals and nine points in 13 contests.
