Golden Knights Recall Braeden Bowman, Mark Stone Remains Out
The Vegas Golden Knights will continue to be without star winger Mark Stone in Tuesday night’s Game 5 against the Anaheim Ducks. Stone will remain out of the lineup with an undisclosed injury that kept him out of Game 4 per Jesse Granger of The Athletic. Stone left Game 3 at the end of the first period. It was not clear where his injury was sustained, though he seemed to be nursing his left leg at the end of his final shift. Defenseman Jeremy Lauzon will also remain out of the lineup with an upper-body injury sustained in Game 6 of Vegas’ first round matchup against the Utah Mammoth.
Veteran winger Brandon Saad filled in for Stone on Sunday. His line – completed by Tomas Hertl and Keegan Kolesar – was outshot four-to-one and on the ice for no goals. That quiet performance, and a Game 4 loss, has prompted Vegas to recall winger Braeden Bowman from the AHL’s Henderson Silver Knights.
Bowman had a surprising breakout this season. He scored at a point-per-game pace through the start of Henderson’s season, prompting the first call-up of his career in mid-November. The undrafted-rookie was an immediate impact, netting seven points in his first eight NHL games and proving he could bring the grit and work ethic needed to earn a lineup role. Bowman stayed up with Vegas’ lineup for 54 games, ultimately scoring eight goals and 26 points. He was returned to Henderson in April and caught fire once again – netting 18 points through the Silver Knights’ final 14 games of the season.
The Golden Knights will struggle to make up for Stone’s absence. The Vegas captain scored 28 goals and 73 points in 60 games this season – a full-season scoring pace of 38 goals and 100 points. He sat out of 17 games between October and November, and an additional five games in March, due to injury. The Golden Knights struggled in his absence, setting a 8-9-5 record and getting outscored 59-to-66. Vegas won’t have any room for those struggles now, as they sit tied at two wins with the Ducks.
Bowman has continued to produce for Henderson in the postseason. He has four points in six games, third-most on the Silver Knights behind Trevor Connelly and Lukas Cormier. If a move between leagues brings another scoring spark, the Golden Knights could find a timely X-factor addition in the young winger. Meanwhile, Ben Hutton will continue to support the defense in Lauzon’s absence. Hutton recorded 15 points, 28 hits, and 55 shot blocks in 55 regular-season games. He won’t match Lauzon’s bruising presence – but should continue to provide serviceable depth in must-win games.
Team Canada Notes: Crosby, Barzal, Mercer
Sidney Crosby will join Team Canada at the IIHF Men’s World Championship tournament, Hockey Canada announced today. Crosby’s decision marks the second consecutive season in which the Penguins’ captain has decided to head to IIHF Worlds. Crosby scored 12 points in eight games at last year’s edition of the tournament, although Canada was upset in the quarterfinals by Denmark. One of the game’s greatest players of all time, Crosby has already represented Canada on numerous occasions. He’s a member of the Triple Gold Club, meaning he has won a Stanley Cup, Olympic gold medal, and IIHF World Championship.
Crosby joins a Canada roster that is already looking like the strongest in the tournament by a wide margin. The Canadians are set to be captained by 2024 No. 1 overall pick Macklin Celebrini. It is unclear if Celebrini will hand over the captaincy to Crosby, who has served as captain for Canada every time he’s represented them over the past decade. If nothing else, it would be quite the sight to see Celebrini, 19, serving as Crosby’s captain. In any case, the announcement is a good sign for Crosby’s health. He briefly left the bench during game five of the Penguins’ first-round loss to the Flyers to get his knee checked, but it appears that he has not suffered an injury of any sort.
Other notes from Hockey Canada:
- While Canada has added one of the game’s top forwards in Crosby, they’ve also lost another premier NHL forward: Mathew Barzal. The New York Islanders star will miss IIHF Worlds as what Hockey Canada describes as “a precaution” due to a “minor, pre-existing injury.” Barzal, who scored 19 goals and 72 points this past season, has played at two prior IIHF Worlds tournaments. He scored eight points in nine games during the 2022 tournament, and had seven points in 10 games at the 2018 championship. He won a silver medal for Canada in 2022 but is still waiting on his first gold.
- Team Canada also added another forward from the Metropolitan Division today: Dawson Mercer of the New Jersey Devils. Like Barzal, Mercer has also represented Canada at IIHF Worlds on two occasions: first in 2022, and again in 2024. Mercer won a silver medal with Barzal in 2022 and has scored nine points in 19 career games at the World Championships. The 24-year-old can play both center and on the wing, and scored 20 goals and 42 points for New Jersey this past season.
Wild Notes: Zuccarello, Brodin, Eriksson Ek
Although veteran forward Mats Zuccarello is 38 years old and his contract is expiring, he is not looking to conclude his NHL career. Zuccarello indicated to The Athletic’s Joe Smith that he would like to play next season and beyond, saying “I feel like I have some more years left in me. But it’s up to contracts and everything like that. It’s not up to me always. So let’s just take this series, hopefully (the) next one, and see how far we go here before we start thinking about that.”
Zuccarello, 38, could play in his 1,000th NHL game if he ends up returning for next season. He hasn’t shown many signs of slowing down on the ice. In 2025-26, he scored 15 goals and 54 points in 59 regular-season games. He’s managed two goals and nine points in seven playoff contests. Zuccarello has played the best hockey of his career since superstar forward Kirill Kaprizov arrived in Minnesota, regularly flirting with point-per-game levels of production. He made $4.125MM on his last contract and he’s earned every right to stay at that level – if not exceed it – on his next deal.
Other notes from the State of Hockey:
- Injured Wild defenseman Jonas Brodin will not travel with the team to Colorado for their must-win game five against the Avalanche, Michael Russo of The Athletic reported today. Brodin, 32, suffered a lower-body injury in game five of the team’s first round series against the Dallas Stars. He has not played since. His regular role as Minnesota’s second-pair left-shot defenseman has been taken up by 23-year-old Daemon Hunt, and while Hunt has some admirable qualities to his game, he is a clear downgrade from the 915-game NHL veteran.
- The Wild will also be without injured center Joel Eriksson Ek for game five against the Avalanche, meaning the Wild will need to fight to keep their season alive without their best overall center. Eriksson Ek suffered a lower-body injury and has not played since the series against the Stars. The 29-year-old shutdown pivot scored 51 points in the regular season and five points in six games against Dallas. Eriksson Ek’s qualities as a matchup center would be hugely valuable for the Wild as they try to shut down Nathan MacKinnon and the rest of the Avalanche’s firepower. They’ll have to try to extend their season without him as Eriksson Ek remains injured.
Flyers Notes: Michkov, Martone, Abols
Philadelphia Flyers star winger Matvei Michkov had a trying sophomore season, starting from when he reportedly arrived at training camp out of shape, (per Kevin Kurz of The Athletic) to when he got healthy scratched during the playoffs. The 21-year-old has been viewed as a potential future franchise player since the Flyers selected him No. 7 overall at the 2023 draft, but the 2025-26 campaign raised questions about his overall trajectory. Michkov wasn’t able to build on a successful rookie campaign under former head coach John Tortorella, one that saw him score 26 goals and 63 points. His fit with new head coach Rick Tocchet was questioned at times, with some critics taking aim at Tocchet’s usage of the winger. Michkov averaged just 14:50 time on ice per game, ranking No. 9 among Flyers forwards with double-digit games played.
In his end-of-season media availability today, Michkov said he wants to hit the ground running next season and replicate the form he showed after the Olympic break. In 26 games following that break, he scored seven goals and 22 points while the Flyers went 18-7-1 and secured a playoff spot. The key to doing that will be a productive summer, avoiding having to work his way into peak shape during the season. Michkov said, per team reporter Bill Meltzer, that he will meet with GM Danny Briere later this week to discuss his offseason plan in greater detail.
Other notes from Philadelphia:
- The other star young forward in Philadelphia, Porter Martone, will join Team Canada at the IIHF Men’s World Championships in Switzerland, Hockey Canada announced today. This will be Martone’s second consecutive campaign playing for Canada at Worlds, as the 2025 No. 6 overall pick got into two games for the country’s senior team last season. This season, Martone has been a star scorer in college hockey for Michigan State, a captain for Team Canada at the World Juniors, and a stellar rookie winger for a Flyers team that made a run to the playoffs and upset their arch-rivals in the first round. It’s been quite the campaign for the 19-year-old winger, and he’ll now look to conclude it with a world championship.
- Flyers fourth-line center Rodrigo Abols shared some more detail today on the lower-body injury that ended his season. Per Jordan Hall of NBC Sports, Abols said he had to have surgery as a result of the injury, as there was quite a bit of damage, including a broken fibula. He also added that his recovery is now ahead of schedule. Abols, 30, was a nice find for the Flyers’ scouting staff, signing as a 28-year-old unrestricted free agent from the SHL. He was a full-time NHL-er this season, though his injury limited him to playing in just 47 games.
NHL Announces General Manager Of The Year Finalists
The Wild’s Bill Guerin, the Avalanche’s Chris MacFarland, and the Ducks’ Pat Verbeek are the three finalists for this year’s Jim Gregory General Manager of the Year Award, the league announced today.
The award is presented annually “to the general manager who best excelled at his role during the regular season.” It is voted on by the League’s general managers and, per the league, “a panel of NHL executives and print and broadcast media” after the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs concludes.
This is the first time all three names have surfaced as finalists for the award. Of the three, Guerin is the longest-tenured lead executive. He was hired in 2019 to lead the Wild, and has guided the team to the playoffs in five of his seven campaigns in charge of the team. His Wild went 46-24-12 this season, good for third place in the Western Conference.
Guerin pulled off what most would likely consider this past season’s boldest transaction, putting together a package of players, prospects, and draft picks strong enough to land Quinn Hughes from the Vancouver Canucks. The move gave the Wild one of the game’s best players and arguably the game’s top defenseman.
He also secured the signature of franchise face Kirill Kaprizov on a massive contract extension, ensuring his team’s centerpiece player would not be departing in free agency. Kaprizov’s signing and the trade for Hughes represent two of the most consequential transactions in franchise history.
While Minnesota were pushed to the brink of elimination by the Avalanche last night, their loss should not diminish what Guerin accomplished this season – and that’s not even including his work constructing America’s roster for the Winter Olympics in Italy, work that resulted in a gold medal. He’s built the Wild into one of the NHL’s strongest teams, and his status as a finalist is a reflection of the strength of his body of work in 2025-26.
Verbeek, who like Guerin is a former longtime NHLer, has been running the Ducks’ hockey operations since February 2022. As GM in Anaheim, Verbeek has engineered a youth movement that is the envy of the NHL, securing high-end young pieces such as Leo Carlsson, Cutter Gauthier, and Beckett Sennecke.
But Verbeek hasn’t just stockpiled young talent. It’s his work to supplement his burgeoning young core with strong veteran contributors that has likely landed him as a finalist – and what has helped propel Anaheim to the second round of the playoffs.
Many rebuilding teams end up playing as many young players as possible, and the quality of the team overall suffers. The Ducks have taken a different approach, fusing a high number of young players with significant investments in veteran leaders. The result has been strong player development outcomes across the board, and the elevation of the Ducks into a winning, playoff-caliber team.
Verbeek signed Mikael Granlund and Alex Killorn as free agents, and landed Chris Kreider, Jacob Trouba, and most recently John Carlson via trade. Those additions, combined with the offseason hire of three-time Stanley Cup champion head coach Joel Quenneville, have supercharged the Ducks’ rebuild and pushed them back to contention at a quick pace.
Of the three finalists, MacFarland has been GM for the shortest period of time, though his tenure in Colorado overall actually stretches back more than a decade. Joe Sakic’s longtime assistant GM took the reins in 2022, and has since helped turn the Avalanche into a Presidents’ Trophy winner.
MacFarland’s bold decision to move on from star forward Mikko Rantanen, who was inching closer to unrestricted free agency, appears to have paid off. His direct replacement Martin Necas had an 100-point season and is now signed through 2033-34. MacFarland was also able to retain veteran pivot Brock Nelson, who ended up a Selke Trophy finalist in his first full campaign in Denver.
MacFarland has been able to find diamonds in the rough, such as Sam Malinski and Parker Kelly to support a contending team with fewer available draft picks thanks to trades designed to secure veteran talent.
The work of MacFarland and his staff has Colorado in a position to potentially win its second Stanley Cup of the 2020s, and that’s why he’s a finalist for GM of the year.
Photos courtesy of Nick Wosika-Imagn Images
Hurricanes Sign Charlie Cerrato To Entry-Level Deal
According to a team announcement, the Carolina Hurricanes have signed forward prospect Charlie Cerrato to a three-year, entry-level contract. The deal includes $2.525MM in total salary at the NHL level, $85K per season in the AHL, and $220K in signing bonuses.
Cerrato, 21, was drafted with the 49th overall pick of the 2025 NHL Draft by the Hurricanes. He was finishing up his freshman year with the upstart Penn State Nittany Lions, scoring 15 goals and 42 points in 38 games with a +16 rating.
Remaining with Penn State for his sophomore campaign, Cerrato’s scoring dissipated somewhat, but he missed a decent chunk of the season due to injury. He finished the NCAA season with seven goals and 27 points in 23 games with a +3 rating.
Although he didn’t play in the regular season, Cerrato signed an amateur tryout agreement with the AHL’s Chicago Wolves after his season with Penn State finished. He appeared in one contest in Chicago’s recent series against the Texas Stars, going scoreless.
Throughout his time in the Big Ten Conference, Cerrato typically played well in a support role and on the defensive side of the puck. He’s relatively physical and somewhat of a pest with his stick. On offense, most of his production comes from reading the defense quickly and charging the net or dropping back to be the third man in.
Given the depth that the Hurricanes have on offense, it’s unlikely that Cerrato will begin the 2026-27 campaign on the opening night roster for Carolina. Despite his competitive nature, it’ll likely serve him better to get a full season with the Wolves to continue his development, as Carolina typically does with their prospects.
Ethan Belchetz Commits To Michigan State
Another top NHL Draft prospect is headed to play College Hockey. According to an announcement on his Instagram, Ethan Belchetz, a projected first-round pick in the upcoming 2026 NHL Draft, has committed to Michigan State University.
Belchetz did not confirm in the announcement whether he was staying or leaving his current team, the Windsor Spitfires, but he will likely arrive in East Lansing this fall. He finished the 2025-26 season second on Windsor in goals with 34, behind Rangers prospect Liam Greentree‘s 38 and fourth in points, scoring 59 across 57 OHL games. He added seven points in five games en route to a Hlinka-Gretzky Cup Bronze Medal with Canada and was a +5 rating on the U18 team in that tournament.
At 6-foot-5, 227 lbs, Belchetz is known as a strong forward with great offensive awareness. The 18-year-old forward from Oakville, Ontario, is likely to be selected within the top ten of the draft. He has an average ranking of eighth among all consolidated outlets that cover the NHL Draft and its prospects. Belchetz is set to join notable NHL Draft names also committed to Michigan State, like Mason West (2025-CHI-1), Chase Reid (2026), Nikita Klepov (2026), Jack Hextall (2026), among others.
Under head coach Adam Nightingale, Michigan State has become a dominant force in the college hockey realm. The Spartans have boasted three consecutive seasons with 25 or more wins and have won the Big Ten regular season title en route to the NCAA Tournament in each of those campaigns. Two of those seasons saw them also win the Big Ten championship in 2023-24 and 2024-25.
Flyers’ Owen Tippett Suffered From Internal Bleeding
The Philadelphia Flyers were without winger Owen Tippett throughout their Round Two series against the Carolina Hurricanes for what was originally described as a sports hernia. This morning, according to a team announcement, the Flyers revealed that Tippett was suffering from internal bleeding as a result of the hernia.
In the announcement, Tippett was quoted as saying, “I was unable to return for the Second Round series vs. Carolina due to an internal bleeding issue that I sustained during the First Round series vs. Pittsburgh. Following a series of medical evaluations, treatments, and rehabilitation under the care of the Flyers medical team, I am making progress and feeling better each day. Despite being cleared to travel and skate with the team at certain practices, things did not progress at a pace that I hoped for or would allow me to safely continue playing.”
Given that Tippett played in all six games against the Penguins in Round One, and the Flyers were eliminated by the Hurricanes only 10 days later, it’s remarkable that Tippett even got close to returning. Recovery from a sports hernia typically takes six to twelve weeks and may require surgery to repair damaged muscles, tendons, or ligaments. The Flyers update suggests that Tippett might have been available if the series against Carolina had gone longer, or during the Eastern Conference Final had Philadelphia advanced that far.
Fortunately, it does not sound like Tippett will have any issues beginning the 2026-27 on time. The 27-year-old winger is coming off the second-highest scoring season of his career, registering 28 goals and 51 points with a -6 rating, averaging 16:51 of ice time per game.
Blue Jackets Sign Charlie Coyle To Six-Year Extension
According to a team announcement, the Columbus Blue Jackets have signed Charlie Coyle to a six-year, $36MM ($6MM AAV) extension. Coyle was considered one of the top available unrestricted free agents heading into the offseason.
Earlier this morning, Rick Dhaliwal of CHEK reported that the Blue Jackets and Coyle were nearing an extension. Shortly thereafter, Pierre LeBrun of TSN added that both sides were ‘working on language’ as the talks progressed.
This contract will take Coyle through the 2031-32 season, when he’ll turn 40 years old. The length ties his previous high in contract years signed in Boston when he extended with the Bruins after the 2018-19 season.
The 34-year-old forward was set to be an unrestricted free agent coming off a six-year contract that paid him $31.50MM ($5.25MM AAV). Coyle finished the 2025-26 season in Columbus, resurging back to his former scoring ways. He was fourth on the Blue Jackets in scoring, tallying 20 goals for 58 points in his fifth consecutive season playing in 82 games. That mark with Columbus was his second-highest point total within that six-year contract span, with the highest production coming out of his 2023-24 campaign, where he reached 60 points in the Bruins centennial season.
Coyle’s new extension provides him with some stability in a time of his career where he has bounced around, to say the least. Coyle was a victim of the Bruins’ reset, where they dealt away the majority of their outer core to recoup future assets. The Weymouth, MA native was dealt to the Colorado Avalanche and produced 13 points in 19 regular-season games and added an assist in their seven-game, first-round loss to the Dallas Stars. The Avalanche then sent him to Columbus over the summer, where he played out the remainder of his deal before this extension.
Originally a first-round pick of the San Jose Sharks, Coyle never donned the teal and orange after he was selected 28th overall in the 2010 NHL draft. He became a key part of the package traded to Minnesota in exchange for Brent Burns, where Coyle signed his entry-level contract. After providing back-to-back 30-point campaigns in his early twenties, the Wild extended Coyle to a five-year, $16MM ($3.2MM AAV) contract. In the final year of that deal, they dealt him to Boston for Ryan Donato. Coyle proved himself as a key piece in Boston, providing 16 points in 24 playoff games en route to the 2019 Stanley Cup Final, where Boston lost in seven games. The Bruins signed him shortly after to the contract that he just finished up in Ohio.
Coyle will assumbly finish out his career in Columbus, adding a blend of scoring, steady two-way play, and veteran leadership to a team that is on the cusp of making the dance in a tough Eastern Conference.
Columbus entered their offseason with over $40MM in cap space before the Coyle extension. Now the Blue Jackets have around $34MM to work with in a summer where they’re looking to build off a 92-point campaign that saw them fall seven points short of an Eastern Conference Wild Card spot that would’ve snapped their Stanley Cup Playoffs drought dating back to the 2019-20 season.
Blue Jackets GM Don Waddell will need to make several decisions this summer to supplement Coyle’s return. Unrestricted free agents for Columbus include forwards Mason Marchment, Danton Heinen, and captain Boone Jenner, as well as defensemen Erik Gudbranson and Brendan Smith. Along with Cole Sillinger and Egor Zamula as restricted free agents, former third overall pick Adam Fantilli, who scored a career-high 59 points at age 21, and goaltender Jet Greaves, who finished ninth in the NHL with 16.5 goals saved above expected, are restricted expiring deals.
They’ll have some added money from the expirations of buried and bought-out contracts from Adam Boqvist, Alexander Wennberg, and Ivan Fedotov. All three will come off the books and contribute $3.55MM to the space they can use to bring back key players.
Kings, Oilers Connected To Bruce Cassidy
Just like players, coaches in the NHL are just as much of a talking point when they’re available for hire.
Throughout the latter months of the 2025-26 NHL season, we’ve seen coaching changes that sent waves throughout the league. Most notably, the New York Islanders replaced Patrick Roy with their late-season hiring of Peter DeBoer with four games left in the regular season. Before that, an even more surprising move flooded the headlines when the Vegas Golden Knights fired Bruce Cassidy and brought on John Tortorella as his replacement.
Since being let go, Cassidy has made appearances on TNT’s panel for their Stanley Cup Playoffs broadcasts, but that hasn’t taken away his potential of getting behind a new team’s bench. According to David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period on Hello Hockey, he said that the free agent is under consideration with two Western Conference teams that would keep him in the Pacific Division: the Los Angeles Kings and the Edmonton Oilers. Both are potential teams that could benefit from Cassidy as their bench boss.
The Kings currently have D.J. Smith, who was elevated to interim head coach after they parted ways with Jim Hiller. In his short tenure, Smith kept them on pace for the playoffs with an 11-6-6 record before falling to the Colorado Avalanche in the first round.
Los Angeles is at a pivotal turning point in losing their longtime franchise center in Anže Kopitar and will have to evaluate how they can utilize $18MM in cap space this summer to remain competitive with a forward group that has Quinton Byfield, Kevin Fiala, Adrian Kempe and Artemi Panarin all under contract through the 2027-28 season, when Drew Doughty, the Kings longtime franchise defenseman will be a free agent.
The Kings have lost in the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs in each of the last five seasons. If they want to make a deeper run, maybe Cassidy is the guy who can help them make one final push.
As for the Edmonton Oilers, Kris Knoblauch is finishing his third season behind the bench, in the approaching climax of Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl‘s quest for both superstars’ first Stanley Cup. Since his hire, Edmonton has a .624 points percentage; good for the fifth-most regular-season wins in the NHL (135) and second to the Florida Panthers in playoff victories (31).
Through all that success, the Oilers still have yet to hoist the Stanley Cup within this timeframe. Back-to-back Cup Final appearances in 2024 and 2025 have both seen Edmonton clawed away by the Panthers. This past season, without Florida as a potential East opponent, they’re already in offseason mode after a first-round exit to the Anaheim Ducks.
Along with Pagnotta, Frank Seravalli of Victory + has also weighed in, saying the Oilers have sought permission to interview with Cassidy. Unfortunately for the Oilers, although the Golden Knights haven’t outright denied Edmonton, they are withholding their ability to interview Cassidy for the time being. If Cassidy were to consider the Edmonton job, it would be much more attractive, given the star power they possess. However, the window is much shorter, and the seat would automatically have a hotter temperature, given the circumstances of McDavid’s two-year, $25MM ($12.5MM AAV) extension kicking in.
According to Eric Macramalla of TSN, Cassidy has a year left on his contract with the Golden Knights at $4.5MM. If Vegas allowed Edmonton to interview and eventually hire him, Vegas would typically only owe the difference in his salary and not the entirety of the remaining money left.
Cassidy took the wheel with Vegas in the 2022-23 season, winning the franchise’s first Stanley Cup against a Panthers team that Edmonton has yet to crack in the big dance. He left carrying a .623 points percentage in Sin City and amassed the most playoff wins by a coach (24) in the Knights’ short history as an NHL team. Before that, he spent six seasons as head coach of the Boston Bruins. He was a Jack Adams Award winner in 2019-20, the year after making the 2019 Stanley Cup Finals, where the Bruins fell to the St. Louis Blues in seven games.
Both situations are certainly attractive and would mutually benefit Cassidy regardless of choice. He’s been known as a coach who brings a direct approach and a winning mindset to an organization. For two teams that are in the midst of competitive windows, they could use the tutelage of a coach who has the caliber that Bruce Cassidy can stand on.
