Ducks Sign Konnor Smith To Entry-Level Deal

The Ducks announced they’ve signed defenseman Konnor Smith to a three-year entry-level contract beginning in the 2025-26 season. Smith will join the AHL San Diego on a tryout for the remainder of the 2024-25 campaign. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Smith was set to be an unrestricted free agent on June 1 if he and Anaheim didn’t agree to terms on a deal. The Ducks brought him in as a fourth-round pick in 2023, selecting the 6’6″, 216-lb lefty from the Peterborough Petes of the Ontario Hockey League. He’s since been traded to the Owen Sound Attack and then the Brampton Steelheads. He won an OHL championship with the Petes back in 2023.

A pure shutdown defender, Smith will turn pro on a full-time basis next year after recording 26-44–70 in 219 OHL games with 229 PIMs and an even rating. This year was Smith’s best offensively by a wide margin. In 40 games with Owen Sound and Brampton, he posted 10-16–26 with a +14 rating. He’s got a heavy shot when he chooses to use it but continues to project as a box-out, stay-at-home rearguard in the pros.

The Ontario native made his pro debut last year on a tryout with San Diego after his OHL season ended, posting a goal and a minus-six rating in six games. The Ducks will be able to gauge how much his defensive game has improved with another short stint to end the year with the Gulls before presumably returning to San Diego in a regular role next year. Smith will remain on his ELC until 2028 and be a restricted free agent upon expiry.

Sharks’ Logan Couture Announces Retirement Due To Injury

April 15: As expected, Couture told reporters today that he’s unable to continue his playing career (via Pashelka). He’ll presumably remain on long-term injured reserve (if necessary to keep San Jose cap-compliant) for the remainder of his contract, which carries an $8MM cap hit through 2026-27.

April 14: The San Jose Sharks are planning to hold a joint press conference with team captain Logan Couture on Tuesday where Couture is expected to announce the end of his playing career due to injury, per Curtis Pashelka of the Bay Area News Group. The news was originally reported by Frank Seravalli of Daily Faceoff. Couture has been working to recover from Osteitis Pubis, a condition that causes inflammation of the joints between pubic bones.

Couture made a detailed effort to return to game shape after receiving his diagnosis ahead of the 2023-24 season. He had to miss the first three months of the campaign to rehab, but told NHL.com in December of 2023 that he was optimistic and trending upwards. Couture said at the time:

Finally, knock on wood, everything continues to go well and I’m over that hump and things can continue to trend to me getting back to practicing with the guys.

He would skate in his first game of that season just over one month after delivering that quote – and recorded an assist in his return. But Couture’s comeback was short-lived, and he’d end up back out of the lineup due to his injury after just six games. His final game, on January 31st of 2024, will now stand as the last of Couture’s storied NHL career.

There’s a short list of players whose name is more ubiquitous with Sharks hockey than Couture’s. He spent all 16 seasons of his NHL career with San Jose, after being drafted by the team with the ninth overall selection in the 2007 NHL Draft. Over the years, Couture worked his way up to the fifth-most games (933) and fourth-most points (701) in franchise history. He also ranks third in goals (323) and fifth in assists (378).

Couture played through his NHL rookie season on the 2009-10 Sharks – a legendary squad in franchise history that featured the likes of Joe Thornton, Patrick Marleau, Dany Heatley, Dan Boyle, Ryane Clowe, and Joe Pavelski among many others. Couture only scored nine points in 25 games – the minimum to qualify a rookie season. He found his spot in the NHL lineup before the end of the regular season and went on to support San Jose with four goals in 15 playoff games as the team chased a loss in the Western Conference Finals. Couture would play his first full season in the following year. He scored an impressive 32 goals and 56 points in 79 games during the regular season, and added 14 points split evenly in 18 playoff games to again push the Sharks to a loss in the Western Conference Finals.

With his legs under him, Couture quickly became a locked-in piece of the Sharks’ daily lineup. He held down a set-and-forget role as San Jose’s second-line center throughout the 2010s, serving as the young-and-reliable punch behind Thornton, Marleau, and Pavelski as the trio aged. He routinely rivaled the 30-goal and 60-point mark during the regular season, and consistently found a way to grow to point-per-game scoring in the postseason. That sentiment rang loudest during the 2015-16 campaign, when Couture was forced out of 30 regular season games by a broken fibula – but then returned for a dazzling 10 goals and 30 points in 24 playoff games. He was the beating heart of the Sharks lineup that summer, and pushed the team to their first Stanley Cup Final in franchise history, only to be beaten by the dynasty-era Pittsburgh Penguins.

San Jose’s routine appearance in the postseason would fizzle out just three years after their run to the Cup Finals. Couture scored 20 points in 20 games of the 2019 Stanley Cup Playoffs to push the team to one last run to the Conference Finals, but their walls crumbled soon after. Couture missed 30 games of the 2019-20 season with a fractured ankle. His next full season was in 2020-21, on a Sharks lineup without Thornton and soon to part with Marleau, Brent Burns, and Erik Karlsson. The Sharks continued to tear down through 2023-24 – sending Timo Meier to New Jersey in 2023 and Tomas Hertl to Vegas in 2024. Through all of the change and fluctuation, Couture remained the proud consistent – holding strong to the captaincy and welcoming an increasingly younger roster with open arms.

Couture’s support of the Sharks has stayed consistent even as he’s faced career-ending injury. He’s supported rookie head coach Ryan Warsofsky for much of this season, helping to make lineup decisions and adjust star rookies to the next level. He enters retirement still in firm grip of San Jose’s captaincy – and surely with a coaching or development role soon to come. Stepping onto a pro team’s staff will likely coincide with Couture handing the Sharks’ “C” to one of the team’s future superstars – most likely Macklin Celebrini. That handoff will mark yet another meaningful step in Couture’s journey as a Sharks legend, even if the details surrounding it are unfortunate. Couture’s only hardware during his NHL career was a Gold Medal at the 2017 World Cup – though his presence as a consistent leader, strong two-way forward, and top-echelon franchise scorer will almost certainly earn the Guelph, Ontario native respect from local Hall of Fames over the coming years.

Predators Waive Marc Del Gaizo

The Predators put defenseman Marc Del Gaizo on waivers Tuesday, according to PuckPedia. The move is a precursor to assigning the pending Group VI unrestricted free agent to AHL Milwaukee for the Calder Cup Playoffs.

Del Gaizo, 25, already cleared waivers last month but ended up playing in 10 games since then, requiring the Preds to expose him to waivers again in order to eventually assign him to the Admirals. He’s been up and down throughout the year but has primarily been with Nashville’s roster since late February when Roman Josi and Adam Wilsby sustained season-ending injuries on the back end. Nashville did demote Del Gaizo to Milwaukee on trade deadline day in a paper transaction, though, so he’s eligible to play for the minor-league club in the postseason.

As the 2019 fourth-rounder waits to see if the Preds have an interest in extending him before he hits the open market on July 1, he closes the book on a 2024-25 campaign that saw him slot into the lineup a career-high 45 times, although that could jump to 46 if he plays in tomorrow’s season finale. He only had nine games of NHL experience entering the year, all coming in 2023-24. The New Jersey native averaged 16:43 per game for the Preds this season and scored 2-7–9 with a minus-four rating. His 51 blocks tied for ninth on the team, while his 70 hits ranked third among defensemen and ninth overall despite only being rostered for a little over half of the campaign.

Del Gaizo likely showed enough to earn another chance in Nashville as an opening-night roster hopeful next season in a No. 6/7 role. He posted solid even-strength possession metrics amid an underwhelming season for the Preds (49.1 CF%, +1.2 expected rating at even strength) in defensively-skewed deployment.

Red Wings Assign Michael Brandsegg-Nygård, Axel Sandin-Pellikka To AHL

As expected, the Red Wings announced 2023 and 2024 first-round picks Axel Sandin-Pellikka and Michael Brandsegg-Nygård will finish the season with AHL Grand Rapids. The pair spent the season as teammates on Skellefteå AIK of the Swedish Hockey League.

The duo’s season came to an end when Skellefteå lost their semifinal series against Brynäs IF in five games. They were both important players for the club, but the older Sandin-Pellikka was particularly impactful. Wrapping up his second full SHL season and third overall, he tied for fourth on the team in scoring and ranked second among Skellefteå defenders with 12-17–29 in 46 games. His season culminated with leading U-20 SHLers in goals and points and taking home the Swedish Junior Hockey Player of the Year award. He was also named the top defenseman at the World Juniors for the second year in a row, posting 10 points in seven games while serving as Sweden’s captain.

Ranked as the No. 11 prospect in the league and the No. 1 prospect in the Red Wings‘ system by Scott Wheeler of The Athletic, Sandin-Pellikka is nearly a shoo-in for next season’s opening night roster as the second or third right-shot option behind Moritz Seider. Before doing so, the 5’11”, 185-lb rearguard will get a taste of North American pro hockey in Grand Rapids with the Calder Cup Playoffs-bound Griffins.

Not to be overlooked is Brandsegg-Nygård. Detroit made him the highest-drafted Norwegian in NHL history when they selected him 15th overall last year out of Mora IK of the Swedish second-tier league, the HockeyAllsvenskan. The Wings inked Brandsegg-Nygård to his entry-level deal last summer and loaned him back to Sweden to face some higher-level professional competition in a familiar environment.

A physically involved winger with a scoring touch, the 6’1″, 207-lb Brandsegg-Nygård managed 5-6–11 in 42 regular-season SHL games with a team-high 51 PIMs. He ended the season more optimistically, contributing 4-2–6 in 11 postseason games. He checked in as the No. 2 prospect behind Sandin-Pellikka in Wheeler’s midseason rankings and, while his NHL status for next season isn’t as certain, should at least make the jump to North America on a permanent basis and get heavy deployment in Grand Rapids. The end of this season will provide him with an early tune-up/adjustment period ahead of a pivotal 2025-26 campaign for his development.

Sabres Recall Isak Rosen

The Sabres have recalled winger Isak Rosen from AHL Rochester for their final two regular-season games, per the AHL’s transaction logs. He comes up with Beck Malenstyn likely done for the year with an undisclosed injury, relays NHL.com’s Heather Engel.

Buffalo has recalled Rosen, 22, on multiple occasions this season as an injury fill-in. He last appeared on March 29, his sixth of the season. The 2021 No. 14 overall pick now has 13 NHL appearances to his name and finally recorded his first career point, an assist, in a win over the Penguins on March 27. He’ll look to add to that tally while getting additional NHL reps to close out another season without playoff action for the Sabres.

Down in Rochester, Rosen has had a breakthrough season for the Americans and has put himself in legitimate consideration for a job on the NHL roster next fall. He leads the team in scoring with 28-27–55 in 60 games, breaking last year’s career-high 50 points set in 67 games. He’s now up to 142 points in 193 career AHL games over the last three years, an unusually long development resume in the minors for such a high pick. Nonetheless, he remains among the league’s top 100 prospects. He still has another year left on his entry-level contract and will be eligible to sign an extension on July 1.

As for Malenstyn, it’s unclear what’s ailing him. He played 11:45 in Sunday’s loss to the Lightning, 1:13 higher than his season average. The 27-year-old ends his first season in Buffalo with a 4-6–10 scoring line in 71 games, down from last year’s 21 points in 81 games with the Capitals. His -16 rating is second-worst on the team, but he does rank second among Sabres forwards with 63 blocks and leads them with 191 hits. He’s still got another year left on his deal at a $1.35MM cap hit.

Nikolaj Ehlers Out Week-To-Week With Foot Injury

Jets winger Nikolaj Ehlers is out week-to-week with the foot injury he aggravated in a collision with an official against the Blackhawks on Saturday, head coach Scott Arniel said today (via Ken Wiebe of the Winnipeg Free Press).

Ehlers’ status for the beginning of Winnipeg’s first-round series against the second wild card in the Western Conference is now highly doubtful. A week-to-week designation likely sidelines him for the first two games of the series at the very least, although that timeline this late in the regular season could keep him out for the entire first round – or even longer.

That’s a humongous blow to the President’s Trophy winners as they attempt to win their first playoff series since 2021. Ehlers, a perennial top-six producer despite receiving less-than-expected deployment, ranks third on the Jets in scoring with 24-39–63 in 69 games. He also missed a stretch of games earlier in the year with a lower-body injury. It’s the third time in four seasons Ehlers has missed at least 10 games due to injury.

Ehlers’ performance this season is the second-best of his career on a per-game basis, and it also comes in the final season of his seven-year, $42MM contract. Might the pending unrestricted free agent have played his final regular-season game in Winnipeg? He’ll look to at least get back to that production if the Jets can win enough playoff games without him to extend his season, building on what’s been an extremely underwhelming playoff reputation so far in his career. The 29-year-old has just four goals in 37 career postseason outings.

Luckily, the Jets may not be down a pair of top-six fixtures when their postseason begins. Arniel also said that top-line winger Gabriel Vilardi has been upgraded to day-to-day as he nears a return from the upper-body injury that’s kept him out since March 23. Like Ehlers, he’s a member of the 60-point club with a career-best 27-34–61 stat line in 71 showings. He spent the year stapled to Kyle Connor and Mark Scheifele and will return to that role when he gets back in the lineup, whether that’s in their final regular-season game tomorrow against the Ducks, Game 1 of the playoffs, or later in their first-round series.

It’s still a big bite out of the league’s third-ranked offense and will mean one of Alex Iafallo or Nino Niederreiter remains elevated in a top-six role when the postseason begins, even if Vilardi is cleared to play. Ehlers also has the best possession impacts of any qualified Winnipeg forward, with a 53.3 CF% and +10.1 expected rating at even strength.

Avalanche Terminate Gabriel Landeskog’s Conditioning Stint

Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog will rejoin the team for practice today after a brief conditioning stint with the AHL’s Colorado Eagles, the club announced. With the Avs’ regular season schedule over, he’ll remain on long-term injured reserve until the rest of the league wraps up their games by Thursday.

Things went well for Landeskog in the minors as he gears up to return to the NHL after a nearly three-year absence due to multiple right knee surgeries. Colorado sent the 32-year-old down to the minors last week for the first time in his career. He suited up in back-to-back games for the Eagles against the Henderson Silver Knights on Friday and Saturday, notching a goal and an assist in the latter effort.

It’s still uncertain whether he’ll be on hand when the Avs open up their first-round series against the Stars, likely on Saturday. Landeskog still has a few days of practice and off time ahead of him to gauge how he feels, but his knee feeling strong enough to play on back-to-back nights in the AHL is promising. If he’s an option for Colorado to open the postseason, it will be his first NHL appearance in 1,028 days. He last suited up in the series-clinching Game 6 of the 2022 Stanley Cup Final against the Lightning.

Outside of its monumental nature, the left-winger’s potential return carries important roster construction implications for the Avs. Top-six fixtures Artturi Lehkonen and Valeri Nichushkin missed Colorado’s final regular-season game on Sunday with lower-body injuries, the team relayed to Evan Rawal of the Denver Gazette. They haven’t been handed designations any longer than day-to-day, so while they remain probable for Game 1 against Dallas, they’re not certain yet. Jonathan Drouin also missed the final six games of the season with a lower-body injury and remains uncertain to open the playoffs. That potentially leaves Colorado without three of its four usual top-six wingers to begin the series.

Of course, expecting Landeskog to stop right back into a top-six role out of the gate is unrealistic. He only played around 15 minutes in his AHL debut on Friday and would presumably have his minutes capped at a similar number if he returns to the NHL lineup. Nonetheless, it’s a major boost for the Avs to have their captain back in the lineup at all.

Kraken Recall Ville Ottavainen

The Seattle Kraken recalled defenseman Ville Ottavainen late Monday night. It is the first call-up of Ottavainen’s career. He will have a chance to make his NHL debut in Seattle’s final game of the season on Tuesday.

Seattle originally drafted Ottavainen in the fourth-round of the 2021 NHL Draft. His draft selection came after he left the OHL to make his professional debut in Finland’s Liiga and recorded three points, 10 penalty minutes, and a minus-15 in 22 rookie games. Ottavainen followed his draft selection with two more seasons in the Liiga, and grew to a career-best 16 points, 30 penalty minutes, and plus-two in 51 games played in the 2022-23 season. He moved to North America at the end of the year, and had a breakout performance as an AHL rookie last season. Ottavainen recorded 34 points, 30 penalty minutes, and a plus-27 in 70 games with the Coachella Valley Firebirds in 2023-24 – good for third on the team’s blue-line in scoring.

Ottavainen’s hot start in the AHL hasn’t stuck this season, though. He’s still performing well – with 15 points, 41 penalty minutes, and a plus-eight in 66 games – but his role has become far more defense-oriented. That may be fitting for the six-foot-five, 225-pound Finnish defender, though. So long as he can stay on top of the goal differential, he should continue to find success in the Kraken pipeline. With one game left on the docket and little to gain, Seattle could use this as a chance to narrow down Ottavainen’s role ahead of a prove-it season next year.

Snapshots: Badinka, NHL Draft, Rutta

The Carolina Hurricanes have assigned defense prospect Dominik Badinka to the AHL after the conclusion of his season in Sweden’s SHL, per NHL.com’s Walt Ruff. Badinka finished the SHL season with five points across 57 games during the Malmo Redhawks regular-season and postseason. That mark sits one point higher than he managed in 33 SHL games last sesaon. He also improved his plus-minus from minus-nine to minus-five from last season to this season, and totaled 18 penalty minutes on the year.

Carolina drafted Badinka with the 34th-overall selection in the 2024 NHL Draft and signed him to his entry-level contract just over two weeks later. His plan was always to return to the SHL for his age-19 season, but Badinka will get a fast track to North American pros with this news. He was never particularly known for his scoring – though he did record 13 points in 17 games in Sweden’s junior league last year. Insteead, Badinka’s defining traits are his poised and gritty physicality and ability to shutdown opponents as they enter the defensive zone. He continued to round out both of those traits this season, while getting a hardy chance at an everyday pro role. His gritty, hard-nosed style should work much better in the more condensed play of the AHL. He’ll get a chance to prove that with the Chicago Wolves, who have already clinched a berth into the AHL postseason.

More notes from around the league:

  • The San Jose Sharks have mathematically clinched last spot in the NHL and earned the top odds at the upcoming draft lottery per Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now. The Sharks will hold a 25.5 percent chance at securing first-overall for the second consecutive season, while the Chicago Blackhawks will hold a 13.5 percent chance and the Nashville Predators an 11.5 percent chance. Many have claimed OHL defenseman Matthew Schaefer as the consensus top pick, though he has only played in 17 games this season due to a collarbone fracture. If not Schaefer, the top pick is likely to go to OHL exceptional status forward Michael Misa or Boston College top center James Hagens. The NHL Draft lottery is set to be held on May 7th.
  • Sticking in San Jose, defenseman Jan Rutta expressed his desire to re-sign with the Sharks to Curtis Pashelka of Mercury News on Sunday. Rutta is set to enter unrestricted free agency this summer and told Pashelka that he’s happy to have a chance to slot into San Jose’s lineup routinely. The 34-year-old defenseman has recorded nine points and a minus-three in 53 games this season, while typically filling a third-pair role. His plus-minus is the second-highest among Sharks defenders with at least 20 games played this season, behind only Jake Walman’s minus-one. Walman was traded to the Edmonton Oilers at the Trade Deadline.

Kings Sign Jared Wright To Two-Year Contract

The Los Angeles Kings have signed 2022 sixth-round draft pick Jared Wright to a two-year, entry-level contract per NHL.com’s Zach Dooley. The deal will begin in the 2025-26 season, while Wright will finish this season on the AHL’s Ontario Reign, per the AHL transaction log. Wright will turn pro after wrapping up his third year at the University of Denver.

Wright was a standout two-way forward over his years with the Pioneers. He filled a quaint role on the National Championship-winning 2023 squad, recording eight goals and 12 points in 34 games of his freshman season. But persisting through a depth role paid off in his sophomore season last year, when Wright jumped up to 15 goals and 25 points in 44 games while rotating through the team’s middle-six. Wright ranked fifth on the team in goals that year, while making a strong impact on play outside of the offensive end. His scoring fell back to earth just a bit this year, to the tune of nine goals and 17 points in 44 games this season – though his strong two-way impact remained clear.

Wright will conclude his collegiate career with 64 points in 122 games – though those low marks are a bit deceiving. Nearly every single point he scored at even-strength was a primary point – 49 of 52 points over the last three seasons to be exact. That’s an almost-shockingly impressive mark for the 22-year-old, Burnsville, Minnesota native – who was relatively young for his class. Wright excelled at shutting down opponents on one end of the ice, and controlling the puck over the blue-line and creating chances on the other end. He’ll look to hang onto those talents through the move to pro hockey, while hopefully discovering a bit more scoring along the way.