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Atlantic Notes: Meloche, McTavish, Hildeby

September 2, 2025 at 11:45 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

Sabres goaltending prospect Samuel Meloche has committed to Northeastern University, he announced on Instagram. It’s unclear if the 18-year-old will join the school for the upcoming 2025-26 season or return to the QMJHL’s Rouyn-Noranda Huskies, where he emerged as a starter in his draft year, before heading to the college ranks in 2026-27. He was a fourth-round selection in June and checked in as one of the more athletic goalies in this year’s class. The 6’2″, 190-lb netminder had a .900 SV%, 2.90 GAA, five shutouts, and a 30-14-6 record for the Huskies last year – now committing to a school with the same moniker.

Other updates from the Atlantic Division:

  • As the Bruins continue to overhaul their center pipeline, swinging a trade for Ducks restricted free agent Mason McTavish may be among the most realistic options they have to add a top-six piece, Conor Ryan of the Boston Globe opines. “If McTavish is actually available, the Bruins likely would need to relinquish a first-round pick or two, along with an intriguing prospect or young NHL player,” Ryan wrote. “There’s plenty of risk involved with moving first-round picks — especially for a retooling team that could land another top-10 pick next June. But a player such as McTavish also represents a high-upside addition with established production and room to grow — especially given his age.“
  • After signing a three-year deal this morning, Maple Leafs goalie Dennis Hildeby will have a $945K qualifying offer due upon expiry in 2028, PuckPedia reports. His one-way salary in the final year of the deal will be $900K after earning a $775K NHL/$350K AHL breakdown this season and an $850K/$450K split in 2026-27.

Anaheim Ducks| Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| Toronto Maple Leafs Dennis Hildeby| Mason McTavish| Samuel Meloche

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Maple Leafs Sign Dennis Hildeby To Three-Year Deal

September 2, 2025 at 10:02 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Maple Leafs goaltender Dennis Hildeby had spent most of the summer as a restricted free agent, but he finally has a new contract in hand. The team announced Tuesday that they’ve signed their No. 3 option between the pipes to a three-year deal, keeping him in Toronto through 2027-28.

Hildeby’s deal carries a two-way structure through 2026-27 before converting to a one-way deal in its final season, the team said. He’ll carry a cap hit of $841,667 if he’s on the NHL roster.

The 24-year-old is coming off his first season of NHL action. The towering Swede didn’t fare all that well in his six starts, however, logging a .872 SV% and 3.33 GAA with a 3-3-0 record. Only two of those starts were quality ones, and he conceded 4.3 goals above expected in just over 360 minutes of ice time, per MoneyPuck.

Toronto is betting on there still being better days ahead in Hildeby’s development. He was initially draft-eligible in 2019 but was passed over three times before finally being selected by the Leafs in the fourth round in 2022 following a small but stellar first taste of professional action with Färjestad BK in Sweden’s SHL.

After Hildeby became the first player from the 2022 class to sign his entry-level deal, Toronto loaned him back to Färjestad before bringing him to North America at the end of the 2022-23 season. He’s largely remained on assignment to the AHL’s Toronto Marlies ever since, where he has a .909 SV%, 2.53 GAA, six shutouts, and a 37-21-14 record in 73 appearances for the club in the last three years.

Hildeby was an AHL All-Star in 2023-24 and, since he won’t require waivers for another season, is virtually guaranteed to begin this season as the Marlies’ starting option unless an injury strikes down one of Toronto’s NHL tandem of Anthony Stolarz and Joseph Woll in preseason. He’ll be the Leafs’ only real recall option unless they make another addition. Their other goalies under contract, Russians Artur Akhtyamov and Vyacheslav Peksa, are potentially high-ceiling options but are still too early in their development to warrant an NHL look.

Newsstand| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions Dennis Hildeby

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Cal O’Reilly Signs In Switzerland

September 2, 2025 at 8:17 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

After 19 professional seasons in North America and well over 1,100 games, center Cal O’Reilly is making the jump overseas for a second time. He’s signed a contract with SCL Tigers of Switzerland’s National League that runs through the end of October with an option to extend for the remainder of the 2025-26 season, the team announced.

O’Reilly, the older brother of Ryan O’Reilly, has 145 NHL games to his name but hasn’t touched the top level since 2017-18 with the Wild. He’s played exclusively in the minors ever since, spending the last two seasons in the same organization as his brother on an AHL contract with the Milwaukee Admirals.

Long a premier playmaking threat at the game’s second-highest level this side of the Atlantic, the 6’0″, 187-lb pivot still managed an 11-38–49 scoring line in 68 games for the Admirals last season to lead the club in scoring. As he enters his age-39 season, he’s showing little sign of slowing down – rebounding quite well from some regression that saw him produce as little as 18 points in 59 games with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms in 2022-23.

The move to Langnau marks O’Reilly’s first time playing in Europe in over a decade. His only previous overseas stint coincided with the 2012 lockout, when he joined the KHL’s Metallurg Magnitogorsk on a multi-year deal. For whatever reason, his offense didn’t translate – he only managed 20 points in 46 games before he was released early in the 2013-14 season and promptly returned to North America.

O’Reilly was a fifth-round pick by Nashville way back in 2005 and has since gone on to appear in five AHL All-Star games, although a Calder Cup title has eluded him. He’s notched 177 goals and 606 assists for 783 points in 1,022 career minor-league games, tied for 17th in AHL all-time total points and second among active players behind Chris Terry’s 807.

He joins the Tigers a week ahead of their regular-season opener amid some recent injuries to their forward group. He joins Saku Mäenalanen, Harri Pesonen, André Pettersson, and Juuso Riikola as the NHL-experienced talent on their roster.

NLA| Transactions Cal O'Reilly

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Summer Synopsis: Seattle Kraken

September 1, 2025 at 9:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

With training camps now less than a month away, the bulk of the heavy lifting has been done from a roster perspective.  Most unrestricted free agents have found new homes, the arbitration period has come and gone, and the trade market has cooled.  Accordingly, it’s a good time to take a look at what each team has accomplished this offseason.  Next up is a look at Seattle.

When the Kraken promoted Dan Bylsma to take over as head coach last summer, Seattle was hoping that he’d be able to get them going back in the right direction after taking a big step back.  Unfortunately for them, they instead took another step back, prompting not only a coaching change again with Lane Lambert taking over but even a new front office structure with Jason Botterill being elevated to general manager.  His first summer at the helm saw the team make a few moves but the primary core of this group remains largely unchanged.

Draft

1-8 – F Jake O’Brien, Brantford (OHL)
2-36 – D Blake Fiddler, Edmonton (WHL)
3-68 – D Will Reynolds, Acadie-Bathurst (QMJHL)
5-134 – D Maxim Agafonov, Ufa (MHL)
7-205 – D Karl Annborn, HV71 (Sweden U20)
7-218 – F Loke Krantz, Linkoping (Sweden U20)

There’s a saying that a team can’t have enough centers.  Seattle’s draft history might yet put that theory to the test as the selection of O’Brien made it four middlemen taken with their top pick in five years, all of those coming no later than eighth overall.  O’Brien had a breakout season with OHL Brantford, finishing as one of the league’s top assist and point leaders, an impressive feat for a player in his draft-eligible season.  He has already signed his entry-level contract taking a possible NCAA detour off the table but he doesn’t have a lot left to prove in junior either.  He might not push for a spot with Seattle this season but next fall, he could legitimately get a look.

Fiddler was a nice pickup in the early second round as a player ranked by some in the late teens.  The son of long-time center Blake Fiddler, he’s a strong skater on the back end with a bit of secondary offensive upside and showed well at the World Under-18s back in May.  Size-wise, he’s already big enough to fit in on an NHL back end but he’s probably a few years away from getting that chance.  The Kraken stayed in the junior ranks with Reynolds, another big defender but whose profile is much different than Fiddler’s.  He’s more of a true physical shutdown player, a profile they don’t have a lot of in their system.

Among the late-round selections, Agafonov showed well at the Russian junior level last season with his mobility standing out in particular.  He’s someone who will need a couple of years to work up to the KHL and then likely a year or two from there before being NHL-ready.  Annborn, their fourth straight rearguard, got a brief taste of SHL action but spent most of the year at the Under-20 level where he notched 21 assists in 39 games.  Under contract through 2027-28 back home, he won’t be on the radar for a while.  The same can be said for Krantz, though not necessarily because of his contract.  He has a strong shot that made a big impact in Sweden’s Under-18 level but it didn’t translate to the Under-20 division.  He still has some work to do there and is a multi-year project as well.

Trade Acquisitions

F Frederick Gaudreau (trade with Minnesota)
F Mason Marchment (trade with Dallas)

With Dallas needing to free up some money this summer, Seattle was there to take advantage, acquiring Marchment and his $4.5MM contract for the low cost of a 2025 fourth-round pick and a 2026 third-round selection.  For a player who has put up 100 points over the last two seasons while also bringing some physicality to the table, that’s a nice bargain acquisition for them.  If things go well, he’s someone who plausibly could be offered a deal to stick around beyond this season.  If not, he’s someone that they should be able to flip closer to the trade deadline as a rental player for a return that’s better than what they gave up to get him.  Either way, the Kraken should come out of this trade a winner.

Very quietly, Gaudreau has put up solid offensive numbers for a secondary producer in recent years, tallying at least 14 goals and 37 points in three of the last four seasons while also being a regular killing penalties and respectable at the faceoff dot.  The Wild decided that they’d rather try someone else in that role and again, while Seattle has a lot of center depth already, the acquisition cost of a fourth-round pick is quite reasonable, especially since he has three years left on his contract.  That said, his role might be a bit lower on the depth chart than it was in Minnesota.

UFA Signings

D Cale Fleury (two years, $1.78MM)^
F John Hayden (two years, $1.55MM)^
D Ryan Lindgren (four years, $18MM)
D Josh Mahura (two years, $1.815MM)^
G Matt Murray (one year, $1MM)
F Ben Meyers (one year, $775K)^

*-denotes two-way contract
^-denotes re-signing

For the second straight summer, Seattle’s biggest free agent splash came on the back end although Lindgren’s deal isn’t anywhere near as significant as the seven-year, $50MM contract given to Brandon Montour.  Lindgren has largely been the same player for most of his career, a second-pairing defensive-minded player whose possession metrics aren’t the prettiest while he doesn’t bring much to the table offensively; last season was the first time he reached 20 points.  His addition gives the Kraken one of the more expensive bluelines in the NHL for the upcoming season but with the team allowing an extra 30 goals compared to 2023-24, it’s not much of a surprise that their top signing was someone who they hope can help on the defensive side of things.

Most of their other three signings were more of the depth variety, aside from Mahura who spent most of the year on the third pairing and should be in that sixth or seventh battle once again.  Murray will be given a shot to battle for the backup job but could be ticketed to start the year with AHL Coachella Valley.  Fleury has seen NHL action in each of the last four years, albeit in a limited role as he spent the bulk of last season with the Firebirds, a role he’ll likely have once again.  As for Meyers, he had five recalls in 2024-25 although that only led to eight appearances with the Kraken.  He’s also likely heading for the minors where he’ll be one of their veteran recall options when injuries arise as will Hayden.

RFA Re-Signings

D Ryker Evans (two years, $4.1MM)
F Kaapo Kakko (three years, $13.575MM)
F Tye Kartye (two years, $2.5MM)

*-denotes two-way contract

Kakko had a rough start with the Rangers last season and New York decided that the time was right to move him.  As they did with their two trade pickups this summer, the Kraken were there to take advantage of a buy-low pickup.  The change of scenery certainly seemed to work as Kakko collected 30 points in 49 games following the swap, allowing him to set new career bests in assists and points.  After filing for arbitration back in July, the two sides settled on this deal soon after.  Considering his overall struggles in his young career, it’s a deal that carries some risk but if Kakko is able to keep up the same type of production he had following the swap, he could become an important part of their top six.

Seattle had enough cap space to try to do a long-term deal with Evans but they instead elected to do a bridge.  He impressed in his first full NHL campaign last season, notching 25 points in 73 games while logging over 19 minutes a night before getting a look with Canada at the Worlds in May.  He projects to be a big part of their long-term plans defensively but the big pay day will have to wait a little while longer.  Kartye made a name for himself when he debuted in the 2023 playoffs but since then, he has been limited to primarily fourth-line duty.  A short-term pact accordingly made sense for both sides as he’ll look to grab hold of a spot higher on the depth chart over the next couple of years.

Departures

F Brandon Biro (signed in Russia)
D Nikolas Brouillard (signed with San Diego, AHL)
F Andre Burakovsky (trade with Chicago)
F Michael Eyssimont (signed with Boston, two years, $2.9MM)
F Luke Henman (signed in Finland)
D Maxime Lajoie (signed in Russia)
D Gustav Olofsson (signed with Coachella Valley, AHL)
G Ales Stezka (signed in Czechia)

*-denotes two-way contract

After acquiring Marchment, the Kraken quickly moved out Burakovsky to Seattle, taking back Joe Veleno who was promptly bought out.  Brought in on the heels of a career year with Colorado that saw him score 61 points in 2021-22, Burakovsky only managed 92 points over his three seasons with the Kraken, two of which were plagued by a significant injury.  On top of that, he dropped under the 15-minute-per-game mark over the last two seasons, not ideal for one of their top-paid forwards.  Still, they managed to clear out his $5.5MM AAV with only needing to eat a $379K cap charge for the next two seasons with the Veleno buyout so with them deciding the time was right to part ways, it could have gone worse.

Eyssimont was acquired at the trade deadline as part of the return for Yanni Gourde and Oliver Bjorkstrand and played well in limited action following the swap.  However, Gaudreau could ultimately wind up taking his place in the lineup.  Most of their other departures had at least a little bit of NHL experience over the years but those players were primarily regulars at the AHL level and in Olofsson’s case, he remains with the organization, just not on an NHL contract.

Salary Cap Outlook

By electing to do a bridge contract for Evans, Botterill has left himself plenty of flexibility heading into the season with the team projected to open up with just under $4.6MM in cap space, per PuckPedia.  That gives them more than ample coverage should injuries arise while if they find themselves in the mix by the trade deadline, they’ll have more than enough room for a couple of additions.  On the other hand, if they’re not in the playoff picture, they’ll be able to retain on some of their pending unrestricted free agents or act as a third-party facilitator (which is still legal for this season before becoming much more restrictive for 2026-27).

Key Questions

Will Beniers Take The Next Step? When Seattle drafted Matty Beniers second overall in 2021, they thought they had their top center of the future in place.  After putting up 57 points in his rookie season, it looked like he was on his way to being that player.  But production has been harder to come by over the last two years with point totals of 37 and 43.  Those are still decent for a player who is still only 22 but they’re not top-end either.  Right now, he looks more like a second option than a first; if he can get to that top level, the trajectory of this offense changes considerably.

Can Grubauer Deliver NHL-Level Goaltending? Last season was an unmitigated disaster for goaltender Philipp Grubauer and frankly, that still might be an understatement.  He struggled out of the gate and never really got going after that.  The end result was him clearing waivers midseason and posting a career-worst .875 SV% in 26 starts, leading to some buyout speculation this summer.  With Murray in the mix now, Grubauer will simply be fighting to keep a roster spot in training camp, an outcome few thought possible when he signed a six-year contract with them back in 2021.

Will The Special Teams Improve? Botterill indicated recently that one of the goals for this season will be to improve on special teams.  Both units struggled last season with the power play checking in 23rd overall (18.9%) while the penalty kill came in 21st (77.2%).  Neither of those numbers are at the level of a playoff-caliber team and with the Kraken electing not to rebuild but merely to tinker with their core, it’s clear they envision themselves as a group capable of making the postseason.  Can they get the desired rebound on special teams?  If not, their goal of getting back to the playoffs is going to be even tougher.

Photos courtesy of Sergei Belski and Walter Tychnowicz-Imagn Images.

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals| Seattle Kraken| Summer Synopsis 2025

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Blue Jackets Prospect Malte Vass Transfers To Boston University

September 1, 2025 at 7:27 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Sept. 1: Vass has made his college commitment official as Boston University recently announced (Twitter link) that the blueliner will indeed suit up for them this season.  He’s their final addition to a class that saw them add multiple NHL draft picks including Ryder Ritchie, Haoxi Wang, and Sacha Boisvert, among others.

Aug. 9: It’s not very often that a player will leave a professional team to go to college but it does happen periodically with international players.  It appears that Blue Jackets prospect Malte Vass will be one of them as Varmlands Folkblad’s Johan Ekberg reports (subscription link) that the blueliner is leaving Sweden to play in the NCAA next season.  Which school he has chosen to go to yet remains unknown but Boston University is a school that is believed to have shown interest in him.

Vass was a third-round pick by Columbus last month, going 76th overall.  However, he was rated much higher on their draft board as Brian Hedger of The Columbus Dispatch relayed after the draft that the Blue Jackets had Vass within the top 15 in their rankings, a sign that they clearly viewed him as being first-round-worthy.

Vass spent last season in Farjestad’s system, playing predominantly with their junior team where he had 11 points and 53 penalty minutes in 40 games.  However, he also got into five games with their SHL club where he was held off the scoresheet.  It’s likely that he would have had a chance to get some more action at their top level in 2025-26 but that’s no longer in the cards.

Vass noted that the recent change to allow CHL players to play in the NCAA expedited his decision to come to North America as the spot that’s being made available to him now might not have been available next year, given the number of junior players now seeking a school to play at.  It will be interesting to see if other international players start to feel that same pressure and up the urgency to pursue an NCAA spot as well over the next couple of years.

Columbus Blue Jackets| NCAA| SHL Malte Vass

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Salary Cap Deep Dive: Minnesota Wild

September 1, 2025 at 6:58 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

Navigating the salary cap is one of the most important tasks for a front office.  Teams that can avoid total cap chaos by walking the tightrope of inking players to deals that match their value (or compensate for future value without breaking the bank) remain successful.  Those who don’t often see struggles and front office changes.

PHR will look at every NHL team and give a thorough look at their cap situation for the 2025-26 season.  This will focus more on players who are regulars on the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL.  All cap figures are courtesy of PuckPedia.  We’re currently covering the Central Division, next up are the Wild.

Minnesota Wild

Current Cap Hit: $91,088,165 (below the $95.5MM Upper Limit)

Entry-Level Contracts

D Zeev Buium (two years, $966.5K)
D David Jiricek (one year, $918.3K)
F Liam Ohgren (two years, $886.7K)
F Danila Yurov (three years, $950K)

Potential Bonuses
Buium: $1MM
Jiricek: $1MM
Ohgren: $500K
Yurov: $2MM
Total: $4.5MM

Yurov is coming off a bit of a tough year in the KHL after a breakout 49-point effort in 2023-24 but he’s still expected to come in and play a regular role with Minnesota right away.  His $1MM in ‘B’ bonuses are unlikely while he’ll need to play regularly in the top six if he is going to have a shot at his $250K ‘A’ bonuses, of which there are four of them.  Ohgren’s first season in North America didn’t go quite as well as the Wild had hoped.  He was a solid scorer with AHL Iowa but didn’t fare particularly well with the big club.  Projected as more of a depth player this season, his ‘A’ bonuses seem unlikely while he’d be trending toward a bridge deal if he winds up in that limited role this year.

Buium was a late-season addition, getting into four playoff games where he held his own.  Without a ton of firepower on the back end, he should be able to play an important role this season, including seeing some action on the power play.  Reaching a couple of his ‘A’ bonuses should be doable while if things go as planned, he could be the type of player that they want to sign long-term quickly.  Jiricek, on the other hand, feels likely for a bridge as well.  He has yet to establish himself as a full-time NHL player and while he should get there this year, that won’t be enough to land a long-term pact.  If he can lock down a regular third-pairing spot, he could potentially double his current price tag although his bonuses are unlikely to be hit.

Signed Through 2025-26, Non-Entry-Level

D Zach Bogosian ($1.25MM, UFA)
G Filip Gustavsson ($3.75MM, UFA)
F Marcus Johansson ($800K, UFA)
F Kirill Kaprizov ($9MM, UFA)
F Vladimir Tarasenko ($4.75MM, UFA)
F Mats Zuccarello ($4.125MM, UFA)

The timing of the multi-year cap increase couldn’t have been any better for Kaprizov.  Already poised for a multi-million-dollar raise, his market value will only go up now.  Recent speculation has a possible offer landing in the $16MM per season range which feels a bit much on the high side but if it gets a deal done, expect GM Bill Guerin to do it.  When healthy, he’s one of the elite wingers in the league.  Tarasenko was brought in from Detroit in a cap-clearing move from the Red Wings and is coming off a rough year that only saw him record 33 points, the lowest full-season total of his career.  A rebound this season could keep him in this price range but if he has a similar showing in 2025-26, landing half of this could be tough.

Zuccarello saw his production dip last season but he still managed 54 points, a solid return on the first season of this contract.  Now 38, it’d be surprising to see him land another two-year pact but if both sides are happy, he could land another one-year agreement.  His next deal would be a candidate to be bonus-laden if Minnesota needs some extra flexibility next summer with an overall price checking around this one.  Johansson opted to take just above the minimum to ensure he stayed with the Wild.  He probably could have beaten that on the open market with something more in the $1.5MM range based on the season he had but as long as he’s content in Minnesota, they could keep him around at a price close to the minimum if he has a similar role this season.

Bogosian wasn’t quite as impactful last season as he was in his first year with the team but he still held down a steady third-pairing role while taking a regular turn on the penalty kill.  This type of salary for that type of role is reasonable value but it would be surprising if he landed this much on his next deal when he’s 36.  By that point, he may be better off in a seventh defender role who steps in when injuries arise.

While plenty has been said about Kaprizov’s situation (and justifiably so), Gustavsson’s expiring contract also looms large.  After a tough 2023-24 showing that saw him lose the starting job at times to Marc-Andre Fleury, he rebounded quite nicely, making a career-high 58 starts while finishing sixth in Vezina Trophy voting.  The starting goaltender market has gotten a lot more expensive over the last 18 or so months and while he’s not in the same echelon as the starters who passed the $8MM mark recently (Linus Ullmark, Jeremy Swayman, Jake Oettinger, and Thatcher Demko), there’s a case to make that he’s in the tier below them.  That could allow him to push for $7MM on a long-term agreement which would be another sizable jump on their books.

Signed Through 2026-27

F Ryan Hartman ($4MM, UFA)
D Jared Spurgeon ($7.575MM, UFA)
F Nico Sturm ($2MM, UFA)
G Jesper Wallstedt ($2.2MM, RFA)

Hartman has shown some flashes of being a legitimate top-six threat over his six seasons with the Wild which earned him this vote of confidence.  However, the first year of the deal wasn’t great while he has now dealt with injury issues in four of those six years.  Still, a center who has 20-goal upside when things are going well should be able to command at least a little more than this on the open market two years from now on another multi-year deal.  Sturm was Minnesota’s most notable UFA signing this summer, coming over from Florida to help the penalty kill and play in the bottom six.  He’ll need to get back into the 20-point range with Minnesota to avoid being cast more into the fourth-line role which would lower his market value.

Spurgeon has been a big-minute, all-situations player for a long time but it has started to catch up with him in recent years.  They’ve managed his minutes a bit more lately to the point where he was fourth in ATOI among Minnesota’s blueliners.  While that’s an appropriate role for his age, this contract is definitely on the expensive side for someone in that role.  If there’s an extension two years from now, it could be worth closer to half this amount, including incentives.

Wallstedt’s deal was a headscratcher when it was signed and it looks even worse now.  Following San Jose’s path when they signed Yaroslav Askarov early, he struggled considerably with AHL Iowa last season, posting a .879 SV%.  Had they waited, they probably could have signed him for half this amount.  Nonetheless, he’s still viewed as a quality prospect and if he performs to those expectations, they should still get a good return on this deal.  He’ll need to cut into Gustavsson’s playing time if he wants to get more than an incremental raise in 2027.

Signed Through 2027-28

D Jonas Brodin ($6MM, UFA)
F Marcus Foligno ($4MM, UFA)
F Marco Rossi ($5MM, RFA)
F Yakov Trenin ($3.5MM, UFA)

Few players were in as much trade speculation as Rossi was this summer.  For months, it had been well known that he wanted a long-term, big-money contract while Guerin’s preference was a bridge deal.  A suitable trade offer wasn’t made, nor did an offer sheet materialize and in the end, Rossi moved toward Minnesota’s preferred option.  Coming off a 60-point season, this isn’t bad value for the Wild and notably, the contract is back-loaded, carrying a $6MM salary in 2027-28; that number becomes his qualifying offer when he’ll also have arbitration rights.  If all goes as planned in his development, the big payday coming his way will be even higher than the contract he was originally seeking this summer.

Foligno also got an early extension a couple of years back like Hartman did.  Unlike Hartman, the offensive upside isn’t there as he has only reached 30 points once in his 14-year NHL career nor does he play center.  He’s still an effective third liner but this is on the high side of things for someone who is best known for his physicality.  Considering he’ll be 37 when his next contract starts, he’ll probably be year-to-year on his next deals at a lower cost than this.  Trenin’s deal was baffling at the time as giving someone who is best suited as a fourth liner this term and money was not necessarily the best of ideas.  Clearly, they were banking on a bounce-back offensively and that didn’t come.  Trenin can contribute, sure, but his value might be closer to half of this.

Brodin has been a key shutdown defender throughout his 13-year NHL career, playing big minutes and anchoring the penalty kill.  Those players typically don’t get big contracts but Brodin, being one of the better players in that role, was the exception with this deal.  As market values increase with the cap, this contract will hold up just fine, as long as he stays healthy.  Unfortunately, that has been a consistent challenge for him lately.

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Signed Through 2028-29

F Joel Eriksson Ek ($5.25MM, UFA)
D Jacob Middleton ($4.35MM, UFA)

Eriksson Ek dealt with some injury issues last year (a common theme for core players on the Wild) but he remains a legitimate top-six center offensively while being one of the top defensive middlemen out there as well.  That combination isn’t necessarily a prototypical number one center but it’s a role he often fills with Minnesota.  If he was hitting free agency now, he could likely land a contract starting with an eight.  This has been a big bargain for a few years and should continue to be moving forward.

Middleton begins this contract that was signed last summer on the heels of a career year.  He wasn’t able to duplicate that last season but he was still a key top-four defender who handled some tough defensive minutes.  At first glance, this deal might seem a little high but with where market values are going, this should be a fair-value contract even coming off the dip in production a year ago.

Signed Through 2029-30 Or Longer

F Matt Boldy ($7MM through 2029-30)
D Brock Faber ($8.5MM through 2032-33)

Boldy’s contract looked like it had the potential to be a team-friendly one when it was signed.  Yes, there was some shared risk with a long-term deal signed when he had around 100 NHL games under his belt but if he lived up to his potential, it would be a favorable one for Minnesota.  Now, in a cap environment that’s going to crank up much higher than we’ve seen, it’s even more of a club-friendly deal.  He could surpass Eriksson Ek as their best contract before too long while he’s on track to hit double digits for an AAV on his next deal.

Faber had a fantastic rookie season, earning him this deal after just one year; like Boldy, Minnesota moved to sign him early.  His sophomore year (played on his entry-level pact) wasn’t quite as high-end but he was still a high-impact performer.  It might take a year or two for the offense to come back but this deal should age well while it’s already being used as a new benchmark in contract talks for other young defenders.

Still To Sign

None

Buyouts

F Zach Parise ($833.3K to 2028-29)
D Ryan Suter ($833.3K to 2028-29)

Retained Salary Transactions

None

Carryover Bonus Overage Penalty

$1.1MM

Best Value: (non-entry-level) Eriksson Ek
Worst Value: Trenin

Looking Ahead

Heading into the summer, with the big dead cap charges gone from Suter and Parise’s deals, Minnesota had the flexibility they’d been lacking for a while now.  They ultimately didn’t do much with it.  The benefit to that is that with more than $4MM in room, they’re in a good spot to bank some space early and then have ample wiggle room to take a big swing or two in the second half if the right trade materializes.  If not, they’ll be well-positioned to absorb the entry-level bonuses and avoid the overage penalty for next season.

Speaking of next summer, they have nearly $40MM in cap space, more than half of which will be needed to re-sign Kaprizov and Gustavsson.  But after that, they’ll only have a handful of spots to fill.  Things look even cleaner for the following year.  After some lean years in their spending room, the Wild now have a very promising cap outlook.

Photos courtesy of Jerome Miron and Nick Wosika-Imagn Images.

Minnesota Wild| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals| Salary Cap Deep Dive 2025

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What New Features Would You Like To See At PHR?

September 1, 2025 at 5:55 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 47 Comments

As the new regular season approaches and we add to our staff at Pro Hockey Rumors, we’re looking to expand our slate of features, originals, and trackers in 2025-26.

In doing so, we’d love to get some reader input. Were tools like our Active Roster Tracker from the 2024-25 season useful? What other features do you wish PHR had to make it a more immersive home for everything related to hockey transactions?

If there are certain features you find valuable or there are things you’d like us to implement, let us know in the comment section below, use the Contact Us page on our website, or email us directly at prohockeyrumorshelp@gmail.com.

Polls| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

47 comments

International Notes: Smith, Yip, Josefson, Barron

September 1, 2025 at 3:09 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

As the Shanghai Dragons begin their first season in the KHL under their new name, they’re parting ways with a pair of longtime fixtures under the club’s former moniker, Kunlun Red Star. Former NHL winger Brandon Yip and goaltender Jeremy Smith will not return to the club in 2025-26, the league announced today.

Both Smith and Yip played long enough for Kunlun to earn Chinese player licenses and suited up for the country in top-level competition when they hosted the 2022 Winter Olympics. Yip served as captain and also helped them gain promotion from Division 2A to Division 1B of the World Championship that same year.

Yip continued to serve as Kunlun’s captain until last season, but injuries limited the former Avalanche and Predators forward to two assists in eight games. He played parts of seven seasons for Kunlun since joining the club in 2017, and the 40-year-old now presumably ends his professional career as the franchise’s all-time leader in goals (92), assists (93), and points (185).

As for Smith, the former ECHL MVP and longtime NHL farmhand had been Kunlun’s starter since he first headed overseas in 2019. The 36-year-old Michigan native was arguably one of the league’s best netminders, considering the often porous defense in front of him, logging a respectable .912 SV% in 184 games for the club despite holding an overall record of 53-103-12.

Elsewhere from around hockey:

  • Ex-Devils forward Jacob Josefson’s attempted comeback after three years away is successful, at least for now. After skating for SHL club Djurgårdens IF on a tryout basis during the preseason, he’s landed a full contract with the club for the upcoming regular season, the team announced today. The 34-year-old, who has only played for Djurgården in his home country, dating back to his youth hockey days, has not played a professional game since 2021 and has served in their front office for the past three seasons. He had a 20-44–64 scoring line in 315 career NHL games with New Jersey and Buffalo from 2010 to 2018.
  • After spending the last four seasons with AHL Tucson in the Arizona and Utah organizations, power winger Travis Barron is headed to Austria on a one-year deal with Black Wings Linz of the ICEHL. He was a Group VI unrestricted free agent this summer and turned 27 last month. He was previously pursuing KHL offers but was evidently unsuccessful, leading to him signing in a less competitive but still premier European league. A seventh-round pick by the Avalanche back in 2016, Barron has 43 goals and 93 points in 305 career AHL games.

ICEHL| KHL| SHL| Transactions Brandon Yip| Jacob Josefson| Jeremy Smith| Travis Barron

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PHR Live Chat Transcript: 9/1/25

September 1, 2025 at 12:48 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Click here to view the transcript from Monday’s chat with PHR’s Josh Erickson.

Live Chats

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Snapshots: Price, Prokhorov, PHR Chat

September 1, 2025 at 12:06 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Canadiens are reportedly intent on moving the contract of LTIR-bound goaltender Carey Price as it enters its final season, a feat that becomes astronomically more achievable after they pay out a $5.5MM signing bonus today. Today, Marco D’Amico of RG confirms that the Sharks are the most likely trade partner for Montreal, but that a move would require some maneuvering on San Jose’s behalf since they’re one contract shy of the 50-player limit. Given that, the framework of any deal would involve the Sharks sending a few AHL depth pieces back to the Canadiens to free up some flexibility, while taking on Price’s deal to ensure they stay above the salary cap floor throughout the season. Montreal still has seven open contract slots, per PuckPedia, so it’s a non-issue for them to take some two-way deals on in a Price trade.

More things to keep an eye on throughout the hockey world:

  • Late last month, Islanders 2025 second-rounder Daniil Prokhorov signed a two-year contract with Dynamo Moscow in his native Russia to continue his development. Unlike with other Russian players, though, that won’t necessarily delay his North American arrival until 2027, Stefen Rosner writes for The Elmonters. His deal has a formal out-clause that could allow him to report to the Islanders or their AHL affiliate in Bridgeport if he’s offered an entry-level contract before his KHL obligation ends. The gargantuan 6’6″, 218-lb power winger scored 20 goals in 43 junior games for Dynamo St. Petersburg’s MHL club last year.
  • With preseason looming, PHR’s Josh Erickson will host a holiday edition live chat today at 1pm CT. You can click here to ask a question in advance, join in live when the chat begins, or stick around to read the transcript when it’s finished.

Live Chats| Montreal Canadiens| New York Islanders| San Jose Sharks| Snapshots Carey Price| Daniil Prokhorov

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