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DEL’s Straubing Tigers Sign Tyler Madden

July 12, 2025 at 6:23 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

Once a promising prospect in the Kings’ pool, Tyler Madden is off to Germany on a one-year deal with the Straubing Tigers of the DEL, the team announced.

Madden, 25, heads to Germany’s top league on the heels of a few years of stagnation in the minors. The son of longtime NHL center John Madden was a third-round pick of the Canucks in 2018 and quickly made a name for himself in college at Northeastern, turning pro after a sophomore season in which he had 37 points in only 27 games.

A few weeks before leaving college, Madden’s signing rights were sent to Los Angeles in the trade that sent Tyler Toffoli to Vancouver. He quickly signed his entry-level contract, but the pandemic delayed his professional debut.

After playing just 14 games with AHL Ontario in 2020-21 as a result, Madden looked like he was well on his way to a full-time NHL role the following season when he put up 31 points in 48 games for the Reign. Unfortunately, that was the peak of the New York native’s production.

Madden’s AHL points per game totals went from 0.65 in 2021-22 to around 0.46 over the following two seasons, resulting in him never getting an NHL call-up. Midway through last season, the Kings traded him to the Wild in exchange for minor-league defenseman Joseph Cecconi.

He finished the season with two goals and 10 points in 20 games for AHL Iowa, not enough to convince Minnesota to give him a qualifying offer. He became an unrestricted free agent on July 1 as a result and presumably didn’t receive any NHL two-way offers that intrigued him.

The 2019 World Juniors silver medalist now heads to Straubing, where he’ll potentially look to fuel a return to North America with a strong performance. If not, it might be the start of a lengthy European career.

The Tigers have been in Germany’s top league since gaining promotion from the second division in 2006, but have largely been a middle-of-the-pack team over the last two decades. They’ll hope Madden offers them an offensive infusion after their top scorer last season, Josh Samanski, left to sign an entry-level contract with the Oilers.

DEL| Transactions Tyler Madden

1 comment

Players With Trade Protection In 2025-26

July 12, 2025 at 5:39 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 11 Comments

The following players have some form of trade protection for the duration of the 2025-26 league year, according to PuckPedia.

Trade protection comes in three forms: no-movement clauses (NMCs), no-trade clauses (NTCs), and modified no-trade clauses (M-NTCs). No-movement clauses are blanket protection save for buyouts, so the player is also protected against a waiver placement and subsequent AHL assignment unless they approve it.

No-trade clauses limit a team from trading a player to any other club without their approval, but if they’re trying to send a player somewhere where he won’t approve a deal, the team can still waive the player and have the team in question claim them.

Modified no-trade clauses do not prevent all trades. Players can submit a trade list with a preset number of teams, which is either in the form of a no-trade list or an approved trade list. The former is far more common. If a player has an approved trade list, the number of teams they can be traded to is asterisked. If there is no asterisk, the number of teams they can block a trade to is shown next to their name in parentheses.

NMCs and M-NTCs can be combined to provide guardrails for discussions when a team is approaching a player about waiving their NMCs. No-move and no-trade clauses can also differ over the life of a contract, or sometimes, mid-season. Only players who would otherwise be eligible for UFA status are eligible for trade protection.

Anaheim Ducks

NMCs: none

NTCs: Mikael Granlund

M-NTCs: Radko Gudas (10), Alex Killorn (15), Chris Kreider (15), Troy Terry (10), Jacob Trouba (12), Frank Vatrano (7)

Boston Bruins

NMCs: Viktor Arvidsson, Elias Lindholm, Hampus Lindholm, Charlie McAvoy, David Pastrnak

NTCs: Tanner Jeannot, Nikita Zadorov

M-NTCs: Henri Jokiharju (8), Joonas Korpisalo (10), Pavel Zacha (8)

Buffalo Sabres

NMCs: Rasmus Dahlin

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Jordan Greenway (5), Tage Thompson (5), Alex Tuch (5), Jason Zucker (5)

Calgary Flames

NMCs: Mikael Backlund, Jonathan Huberdeau, Nazem Kadri

NTCs: MacKenzie Weegar

M-NTCs: Rasmus Andersson (6), Backlund (15, begins Jan. 1), Blake Coleman (10*), Yegor Sharangovich (10)

Carolina Hurricanes

NMCs: Sebastian Aho, Frederik Andersen, William Carrier, Jalen Chatfield, Nikolaj Ehlers, Taylor Hall, Jaccob Slavin, Jordan Staal

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Andersen (20), Shayne Gostisbehere (15), Jordan Martinook (10), Eric Robinson (8), Andrei Svechnikov (10*), Sean Walker (15)

Andersen’s M-NTC reduces to a five-team no-trade list on Feb. 23 if he does not play in at least 33% of the Hurricanes’ regular season games by Feb. 15.

Chicago Blackhawks

NMCs: none

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Tyler Bertuzzi (10), Andre Burakovsky (10), Ryan Donato (10), Ilya Mikheyev (12), Connor Murphy (10), Teuvo Teravainen (8)

Colorado Avalanche

NMCs: Gabriel Landeskog, Nathan MacKinnon, Devon Toews

NTCs: Brock Nelson

M-NTCs: Mackenzie Blackwood (6), Ross Colton (12), Samuel Girard (9), Artturi Lehkonen (12), Landeskog (12), Josh Manson (12), Valeri Nichushkin (12), Logan O’Connor (6)

Columbus Blue Jackets

NMCs: Charlie Coyle, Sean Monahan, Ivan Provorov, Zach Werenski

NTCs: Damon Severson

M-NTCs: Coyle (3), Erik Gudbranson (10), Boone Jenner (8), Elvis Merzlikins (10), Mathieu Olivier (10), Miles Wood (6)

Dallas Stars

NMCs: Jamie Benn, Matt Duchene, Miro Heiskanen, Roope Hintz, Mikko Rantanen, Tyler Seguin

NTCs: Esa Lindell

M-NTCs: none

Detroit Red Wings

NMCs: none

NTCs: Patrick Kane, Dylan Larkin

M-NTCs: Ben Chiarot (10), J.T. Compher (10), Andrew Copp (10), Alex DeBrincat (16), John Gibson (10), Justin Holl (10)

Edmonton Oilers

NMCs: Leon Draisaitl, Trent Frederic, Adam Henrique, Zach Hyman, Connor McDavid, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Darnell Nurse

NTCs: Andrew Mangiapane

M-NTCs: Mattias Janmark (10)

Florida Panthers

NMCs: Aleksander Barkov, Sam Bennett, Aaron Ekblad, Gustav Forsling, Seth Jones, Brad Marchand, Sam Reinhart, Matthew Tkachuk, Carter Verhaeghe

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Sergei Bobrovsky (16), Reinhart (16)

Los Angeles Kings

NMCs: Kevin Fiala, Anze Kopitar

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Cody Ceci (10), Phillip Danault (10), Drew Doughty (7*), Brian Dumoulin (10), Joel Edmundson (10), Warren Foegele (5), Adrian Kempe (10), Darcy Kuemper (10)

Minnesota Wild

NMCs: Joel Eriksson Ek, Marcus Foligno, Kirill Kaprizov, Jacob Middleton, Mats Zuccarello

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Eriksson Ek (10), Filip Gustavsson (5), Ryan Hartman (15), Jared Spurgeon (10), Vladimir Tarasenko (8*)

Montreal Canadiens

NMCs: Brendan Gallagher, Carey Price

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Josh Anderson (5), Gallagher (6), Patrik Laine (10), Mike Matheson (8)

Nashville Predators

NMCs: Filip Forsberg, Roman Josi, Jonathan Marchessault, Juuse Saros, Brady Skjei, Steven Stamkos

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Erik Haula (6), Skjei (15)

New Jersey Devils

NMCs: Jesper Bratt, Dougie Hamilton, Jacob Markstrom, Timo Meier, Ondrej Palat

NTCs: Jake Allen, Connor Brown, Evgenii Dadonov (through March 1), Brenden Dillon, Johnathan Kovacevic, Brett Pesce

M-NTCs: Dadonov (10 after March 1), Hamilton (10*), Nico Hischier (10), Stefan Noesen (10), Palat (10*), Jonas Siegenthaler (10)

New York Islanders

NMCs: Ilya Sorokin

NTCs: Anthony Duclair, Bo Horvat, Scott Mayfield, Kyle Palmieri, Ryan Pulock

M-NTCs: Mathew Barzal (22), Jonathan Drouin (16), Pierre Engvall (16), Anders Lee (15), Jean-Gabriel Pageau (16), Adam Pelech (16), Semyon Varlamov (16)

New York Rangers

NMCs: Adam Fox, Vladislav Gavrikov, J.T. Miller, Artemi Panarin, Igor Shesterkin, Mika Zibanejad

NTCs: William Borgen

M-NTCs: Jonathan Quick (20), Carson Soucy (12), Vincent Trocheck (12)

Ottawa Senators

NMCs: Claude Giroux, Brady Tkachuk, Linus Ullmark

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Thomas Chabot (10), Lars Eller (14*), David Perron (15), Artem Zub (10)

Philadelphia Flyers

NMCs: Sean Couturier, Travis Konecny

NTCs: Travis Sanheim, Nick Seeler

M-NTCs: Dan Vladar (8)

Pittsburgh Penguins

NMCs: Sidney Crosby, Erik Karlsson, Kris Letang, Evgeni Malkin

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Noel Acciari (8), Ryan Graves (12), Kevin Hayes (12), Danton Heinen (12), Tristan Jarry (12), Rickard Rakell (8)

San Jose Sharks

NMCs: none

NTCs: John Klingberg (through Jan. 30), Dmitry Orlov, Jeff Skinner (through Jan. 30), Tyler Toffoli

M-NTCs: Logan Couture (3*), Barclay Goodrow (15), Klingberg (14 after Jan. 30), Skinner (8* after Jan. 30), Alexander Wennberg (15*)

Seattle Kraken

NMCs: Chandler Stephenson

NTCs: Jordan Eberle, Adam Larsson, Brandon Montour

M-NTCs: Joey Daccord (12), Vince Dunn (16), Frederick Gaudreau (15), Philipp Grubauer (10), Ryan Lindgren (6), Mason Marchment (10), Jared McCann (10), Jamie Oleksiak (16), Jaden Schwartz (16)

St. Louis Blues

NMCs: none

NTCs: Pavel Buchnevich, Jordan Kyrou, Colton Parayko, Robert Thomas

M-NTCs: Jordan Binnington (14), Justin Faulk (15), Cam Fowler (4*), Torey Krug (15), Brayden Schenn (15)

Tampa Bay Lightning

NMCs: Jake Guentzel, Victor Hedman, Brayden Point

NTCs: Erik Cernak, Anthony Cirelli, Yanni Gourde, Nick Paul

M-NTCs: Oliver Bjorkstrand (10), Zemgus Girgensons (16*), Nikita Kucherov (10*), Ryan McDonagh (12), Andrei Vasilevskiy (10*)

Toronto Maple Leafs

NMCs: Auston Matthews, William Nylander, Morgan Rielly, Chris Tanev, John Tavares

NTCs: Jake McCabe

M-NTCs: Brandon Carlo (8), Max Domi (13), Oliver Ekman-Larsson (16), Calle Jarnkrok (10), David Kampf (10), Anthony Stolarz (8)

Utah Mammoth

NMCs: none

NTCs: Clayton Keller, Mikhail Sergachev

M-NTCs: John Marino (8), Olli Maatta (10), Nick Schmaltz (10), Nate Schmidt (10), Brandon Tanev (10), Karel Vejmelka (10)

Vancouver Canucks

NMCs: Brock Boeser, Jake DeBrusk, Filip Hronek, Kevin Lankinen, Tyler Myers, Elias Pettersson, Marcus Pettersson

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Teddy Blueger (12), Dakota Joshua (12), Evander Kane (16*), Drew O’Connor (12)

Vegas Golden Knights

NMCs: Jack Eichel, Mitch Marner, Alex Pietrangelo, Mark Stone

NTCs: Noah Hanifin, Brayden McNabb, Brandon Saad, Reilly Smith, Shea Theodore

M-NTCs: Ivan Barbashev (8), Tomas Hertl (3*), Adin Hill (10), William Karlsson (10)

Washington Capitals

NMCs: Jakob Chychrun, Pierre-Luc Dubois, Alex Ovechkin

NTCs: none

NMCs: John Carlson (10), Ovechkin (10), Matt Roy (15), Logan Thompson (15), Tom Wilson (14)

Winnipeg Jets

NMCs: Connor Hellebuyck, Mark Scheifele, Jonathan Toews

NTCs: none

M-NTCs: Kyle Connor (10), Dylan DeMelo (10), Adam Lowry (6), Josh Morrissey (15), Neal Pionk (15)

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

11 comments

West Notes: Rossi, Gushchin, Skinner, McQueen

July 12, 2025 at 3:59 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 4 Comments

One of the more prominent remaining restricted free agents is Wild center Marco Rossi.  He has long been in trade speculation given what’s believed to be a significant gap to bridge between the two sides but with a little more than $10MM in cap space per PuckPedia, they have ample room to sign him or match any potential offer sheet.  Without the ability to file for arbitration, Sarah McLellan of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune suggests that Minnesota still holds the hammer in negotiations, especially since they’ve positioned themselves to be able to match an offer sheet, something Edmonton didn’t do last summer when they lost a pair of players to St. Louis.  At this point, a trade looks less and less likely so it feels like a situation where the two sides are going to have to hammer out a contract.  While the team has presented short-term and long-term offers, a shorter-term pact would seemingly make the most sense for Rossi if his camp feels that Minnesota’s offers are too low for a long-term agreement.

More from out West:

  • Sharks RFA winger Daniil Gushchin told Sport24’s Dmitry Yerkalov that he hasn’t decided yet if he’ll re-sign with San Jose or play in Russia next season. The 23-year-old was quite productive in the minors with the Barracuda, tallying 28 goals and 23 assists in 56 games but that performance didn’t give him much of an opportunity with the Sharks as he played in just a dozen games where he had only one assist.  Gushchin stated that he is hoping to make a decision about his playing future by the beginning of August.
  • Still with the Sharks, new winger Jeff Skinner received some trade protection in his contract according to PuckPedia (Twitter link). The 33-year-old has a full no-trade clause through January 30th at which time, the protection drops to just a six-team no-trade clause for the remainder of the season.  Accordingly, while this deal won’t stop Skinner from being a speculative in-season trade candidate, any move is likely to come closer to the trade deadline.  Skinner had 16 goals and 13 assists in 72 games with Edmonton last season.
  • If Roger McQueen doesn’t make the Ducks’ roster in training camp, he told Global News’ Scott Roblin (Twitter link) that he will return to WHL Brandon instead of pursuing NCAA options. McQueen was the tenth pick last month, sliding in the draft after being limited to just 17 regular season games last season due to back troubles but he was quite productive in those outings, picking up 10 goals and 10 assists.  Given that he missed most of the year, it’s not overly surprising that he’d elect to return to junior to get more game action in to try to make up for some lost time.

Anaheim Ducks| Minnesota Wild| San Jose Sharks| WHL Daniil Gushchin| Jeff Skinner| Marco Rossi| Roger McQueen

4 comments

PHR Mailbag: Maple Leafs, Miller, Byram, Tuch, Goaltending

July 12, 2025 at 2:51 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 3 Comments

Topics in this edition of the PHR Mailbag include Carolina’s acquisition of K’Andre Miller, the Bowen Byram situation in Buffalo, and more.  If your question doesn’t appear here, check back in one of our next two mailbag columns.

MoneyBallJustWorks: I imagine the Maple Leafs aren’t done tinkering with their lineup. What do you see as the next move for this team and do you think they are a tougher team to play against today than they were at the end of last year?

Technically, it turns out that the next move was them finding a taker for Ryan Reaves with them getting Henry Thrun from San Jose for him.  Maybe Thrun makes the team as a seventh or eighth defenseman, maybe he winds up on waivers.  But with Reaves set to count for $200K against the cap had he been back with the AHL’s Marlies (he makes $1.35MM and the maximum buriable amount is $1.15MM), they at least saved a bit of cap space.

I think there’s some smoke to the Jack Roslovic speculation.  He was recently connected to Toronto and while the talk of reconnecting with Auston Matthews seems a bit overblown, I think there’s a fit.  The Maple Leafs feel like a team that’s going to shake up the lines a bit more next season so having some players who can move up and down in the lineup with some positional flexibility makes sense.  A short-term deal with him that gives him a soft landing and allows Toronto to keep its options open soon after feels like a reasonable move to make.

As for being tougher to play against, it depends on what you mean by tougher.  If you mean are they more physical, maybe.  Nicolas Roy isn’t overly physical but he plays more of a heavy game than Mitch Marner.  Matias Maccelli is one of the least physical players in the league so if you say he takes Pontus Holmberg’s spot on the roster (not in terms of line placement), that might offset any physicality gain from Marner to Roy.  But if you mean more difficult to play against, no.  I like Roy and Maccelli but that’s a big drop in talent compared to Marner.  If I’m an opposing coach, one less star player to gameplan against means they’re probably less difficult of an opponent (but still a strong team in general).

William 12: Is K’Andre Miller worth the price Carolina paid to get him? Also, who is your pick for best sneaky good/under-the-radar trade or free agency acquisition so far this offseason?

If Carolina can get Miller to settle down a bit defensively, he should be.  He is already a top-four defender who has shown flashes of being closer to a number two option at his best.  In this market, $7.5MM for a player with that ceiling isn’t bad, if, again, he becomes more reliable in his own end.

In terms of the trade cost, it would have cost them a first, a second, and a third had they offered $7.5MM on an offer sheet.  They’d have been capped at offering six years at that price as well.  The maximum denominator for an offer sheet is five years so a six-year offer would have been $45MM divided by five or $9MM for offer sheet purposes, keeping them just inside that threshold.  Was it worth parting with Scott Morrow to get two more years on the contract?  If they’re convinced that Miller can be the player they think he can be, I’d say yes.  Meanwhile, New York is probably quite pleased with the return as well.

I think Brent Burns to Colorado is a signing that hasn’t gotten a lot of attention.  Yes, he’s slowing down but he can still play on a second pairing and be a secondary contributor offensively.  With a bonus-laden structure, the contract gives the Avs extra flexibility to add another piece at some point either this summer or in-season and they’ll just have to absorb the bonus hit in 2026-27, cutting into their spending room then.  But when you’re in win-now mode, adding that good of a player for a $1MM base salary is pretty good.

Now, if you’re looking for someone more under the radar than that, I’ll nominate Jakob Pelletier.  He signed a three-year, minimum-salary deal with Tampa Bay with an AAV that will ultimately rise each year thanks to the pending increases to the minimum salary with the CBA extension.  He did pretty well in a bottom-six role last season in 49 games and has a track record of success at the lower levels.  He brings more upside to Tampa’s bottom line than they’ve had in recent years at as low a price tag as possible.  For a no-risk move, there’s some upside to it.

12Kelly: Now that Adams has filed arbitration on Byram, does that hamper any trade the Sabres were working on? I am very disappointed in our GM and I think we will end up keeping Byram as an unhappy player and go through this next year. Why can’t Adams make a good trade, especially since the Blues are really interested in Byram? Another year of missing the playoffs is on the horizon.

In the immediate term, Buffalo’s decision to take Bowen Byram to arbitration doesn’t necessarily hamper any trade talks.  If there’s a team out there – St. Louis or otherwise – who wants him, they can swing a trade and try to sign him before the arbitration hearing which will be scheduled between July 20th and August 4th.  If the hearing is more toward the back of that range, there’s still upwards of three weeks to work something out.  That’s still ample time, especially if the acquiring team has a good indication of Byram’s asking price already.

But once things get closer to the hearing, then it’s going to hamper talks.  Because the Sabres were the team to file against Byram, Byram gets to pick the term of the contract – either one or two years.  The latter would walk him right to UFA eligibility at the age of 26 so that definitely is going to be a temptation.  Once they get to the point of starting the hearing, that’s it and if Byram does pick the two-year deal, his trade value is going to dip as there won’t be the ability to work out a long-term agreement as part of the swap.  Suffice it to say, there’s a firm clock now and it’s definitely running.

The decision to take him to arbitration was to take the threat of an offer sheet off the table, one that would have secured Buffalo only draft-pick compensation.  And at this point, it feels like some of the suitors are preferring to go with futures-based offers which is what GM Kevyn Adams doesn’t want as his goal is to get the Sabres back to the playoffs.  That’s a goal that already seems unlikely and without Byram, it would be even tougher.  The decision to take the offer sheet option off the table hedges against that happening but it cranks up the pressure.

ljfranker: What would the Blues have to pay for Byram? Is Jiricek, Stenberg, and offer sheet compensation reasonable?

haubrick: Do the Blues ultimately pull off a trade for Bowen Byram?

Let’s put the St. Louis questions together here.  I assume the projected contract offer for Byram is in the $7.02MM to $9.36MM tier which carries a return of a first-round pick, a second rounder, and a third rounder.  That plus two first-round prospects in Adam Jiricek and Otto Stenberg feels like quite the overpayment.  That’s more than what Montreal gave up for Noah Dobson who is a more proven player.  And yet, I don’t think Buffalo would say yes to that even though the offer would be in their favor.

As noted above, the Sabres aren’t thinking about rebuilding.  They’re banking on this group taking a step or two forward and getting into the mix for a Wild Card spot this season.  While it’s fair to question whether that’s the right approach, achieving that goal would be much harder by taking out a top-four defender and replacing him with a bunch of future assets that aren’t NHL-ready yet.

For St. Louis or any other team to get Byram in a trade, there has to be a key core player coming back to get Buffalo at least more open to the idea of moving him.  Think Jake Neighbours, Dylan Holloway, Philip Broberg, or even Jordan Kyrou who has popped up in trade speculation although he has a no-move clause that could scuttle that thought in a hurry.  If they want to avoid dipping into Torey Krug’s LTIR pool, they’ll basically need to match whatever they give Byram in terms of outgoing salaries which could add another player or two to the swap as well.  I’m not sure the Blues are willing to part with that core piece (making it a change to the core, not a true addition) which is why I’m skeptical that they can get this over the finish line.

Dan from Buffalo: Lifelong Sabres fan, I’m 100% hoping we re-sign Alex Tuch at some point this offseason. I know he’s due for a nice raise from his current deal, should I be worried the longer the summer goes with no news?

I wouldn’t be worried if the summer comes and goes without an extension.  While some players move quickly to sign contract extensions as soon as they’re eligible – we saw that with a few players on July 1st – many more haven’t yet.  And it’s a pretty prominent list of those eligible who haven’t, one that includes Connor McDavid, Kirill Kaprizov, Artemi Panarin, Kyle Connor, and Jack Eichel, among many others.  Those teams shouldn’t be worried yet so it’s not time to worry about Tuch just yet either.

At this point, it feels like players seem a bit more open to waiting things out and it wouldn’t surprise me if that’s the case with Tuch here.  I don’t question his stated desire to stick around but at the same time, I think he might want to see where things stand before putting pen to paper on a new contract.  If Buffalo winds up having a change of heart and moves Byram for futures or struggles out of the gate in the first half, leaving Adams to seriously start to ponder another rebuild, Tuch’s enthusiasm for sticking around for the long haul might be tempered.

If Tuch remains unsigned a couple of weeks before the trade deadline, that’s when I’d start to get concerned from a Buffalo perspective.  While the Sabres re-signed a pair of pending UFAs close to the deadline back in March, there’s a big talent difference between Tuch versus Jason Zucker and Jordan Greenway.  Those two wouldn’t yield the type of impactful future-based return that Tuch would, one that would be difficult for Adams to pass up at that point.  But for now, the fact that an extension hasn’t been signed less than two weeks after being eligible isn’t too concerning.

PyramidHeadcrab: Is there a goaltending shortage in the NHL? It seems like quite a few teams are searching for a true starter where none are available, with a large drop-off in quality after the top 20-25 netminders. This doesn’t seem to be an issue with other positions, though those positions typically take less time to cook.

If true, how could this problem be systematically rectified within the league? And considering the goalies in development and those yet to be drafted, does relief appear to be on the horizon?

It certainly feels like there’s a goaltending shortage in the NHL right now.  And there definitely is a drop-off quality-wise.  But I’m not sure there’s a big fix that can be made.

More teams appear to be navigating toward a lower-cost platoon system which means there isn’t necessarily a big differentiator between the starter and the backup goalie.  While top goalies like Igor Shesterkin can break the bank, I don’t think there are a ton of organizations who would be willing to go really high on a contract for a player that might only play in 70-75% of the games.

There’s also the matter of shooters being better.  I don’t know how many times I’ve caught myself when writing about a goalie’s save percentage, for example.  I might have something along the lines of so-and-so struggled with a SV% of just .902 before I remember that a mark just over .900 is now considered above average whereas a few years ago, it was below average.  A few years before that, if you could barely scrape above .900, you weren’t a guarantee to stay in the NHL.  Yes, some of that is a drop-off in the supply of good goalies but shooters now are better than they were not even a decade ago.

I suppose the fix could be to try to restrict some of the technological improvements for skaters or allow some equipment improvements for goalies but I doubt there’s much appetite for that beyond the goaltenders themselves wanting some extra help.

You could look at it from a grassroots perspective in that goaltender is the most expensive position for kids growing up.  But there’s no way around that and it’s not the NHL’s responsibility to be funneling money into youth hockey programs worldwide to offset the price of equipment so I don’t think there’s a fix there either.

I don’t expect things to change much moving forward.  There are a handful of above-average goalies in various prospect pools but certainly not an overwhelming amount that will eventually lead to a material improvement in goalie performance in the NHL.  Lots of the prospects out there carry the ceiling of a platoon netminder which, for a lot of organizations, isn’t viewed as a bad thing.

If I’m being honest, I don’t think the NHL truly considers this a problem.  For years, there were summits on how to increase goal scoring and now that this is happening, they’re probably pleased with that result.  There is still enough of a supply of higher-end starters that some teams have some flexibility in structuring their rosters (go for a true starter and a low-cost backup versus the more common 50/30 type of split) so it’s not a cookie-cutter situation in terms of roster-building.  Frankly, instead of it being a problem to solve, I suspect the NHL hopes that this is the new normal moving forward.

frozenaquatic: There was a discussion on r/hockey where we were talking about “best trades that benefited both teams.” There were a lot of obvious answers: Iginla for Nieuwendyk, ROR for Tage, RBA for Keith Primeau. But it got me thinking, what is the real answer to this question? We could only come up with one instance ALL-TIME where traded players won Cups with their new respective teams. STL trades Ian Cole to PIT for Robert Bortuzzo and a 2016 7th on March 2nd, 2015. Both Cole and Bortuzzo won cups with their new teams, both of them playing significant roles in the Cup run. Is this really the only case of this ever happening? Is this the greatest trade in NHL history?

Off-hand, I started looking through several seasons of old trades to see if I could spot one.  It served as a stark reminder about how a lot of trades wind up making very little of a difference in the long run but I couldn’t spot another one that met the criteria of both players winning a Stanley Cup with their new team.  I can’t sit here and say that’s the only instance of that happening – it easily could have back in the Original Six days (and I tried to look through some trades from those days to see if one popped) – but it has to be a pretty short list.

Does that make it the best trade in NHL history?  That’s one of those questions where the answer is in the eye of the beholder.  Was it ultimately a big win-win move (literally) for both sides?  It sure was.  But I suspect a lot of fans would have a different ‘best trade ever’ in mind.

Photo courtesy of Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images.

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals PHR Mailbag

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Kraken Reportedly Open To Moving Jared McCann

July 12, 2025 at 11:54 am CDT | by Brian La Rose 20 Comments

After a breakout 40-goal effort in 2022-23, Kraken forward Jared McCann has taken a small step back offensively since then.  While he has still surpassed 20 goals in each of the last two years, it appears that might not be enough to make his roster spot secure.  In a recent appearance on the Sekeres and Price Show (video link), David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period relayed that Seattle is open to moving McCann.  Meanwhile, Chris Johnston of TSN and The Athletic suggested on his podcast earlier this week (video link) that the Kraken might be compelled to move McCann.

The 29-year-old has spent the last four seasons in Seattle after being selected from Toronto (a team he never played for) in the expansion draft.  McCann has led the Kraken in scoring in each of those four seasons which certainly makes it puzzling that there are suggestions that he could be available.

Last season, he had 22 goals and 39 assists in 82 games, while amassing 118 goals and 125 assists in 315 games over his four seasons with the Kraken.  After never reaching 40 points with any of his former teams, McCann has reached the 50-point mark at a minimum each year in Seattle.  Meanwhile, his goal-per-60 rate at that time is sixth-best in the NHL over that stretch, a number inflated obviously by that 40-goal campaign.  Nonetheless, that’s an impressive spot to be in.

McCann has two years left on his contract with a $5MM price tag, one that stands out as a team-friendly pact in an inflationary salary cap environment with two more big jumps to the Upper Limit expected over the next two years.  It’s a contract that many teams can afford or would be willing to make other moves to be able to afford although it’s worth noting that McCann would have some say in any possible trade as he has a 10-team no-trade clause.

A natural center coming up, McCann has primarily played on the wing in Seattle and with the center depth they’ve amassed, especially among their younger players, it’s unlikely that they’d need to move him back down the middle for an extended period of time.  But given the extremely high demand for centers right now, that would only strengthen his trade value.

Seattle has a new GM in Jason Botterill plus a new head coach in Lane Lambert and has done more buying than selling so far this summer.  They’ve added Mason Marchment in a trade from Dallas along with Frederick Gaudreau in a swap with Minnesota and signed Ryan Lindgren to one of the bigger blueline deals in free agency while their main subtraction was Andre Burakovsky in a cap-clearing move to Chicago.  Those moves suggest that they are hoping to get back into the playoff picture and moving their top scorer would completely run counter to that objective.

However, in a free agent market that’s completely bereft of impact forwards now, the Kraken would be able to command a significant trade return if they were to move McCann and perhaps their reported willingness to deal him stems from that.  It would be a case of taking a step back to potentially take a couple of steps forward depending on the return and while Seattle has shied away from that approach early in their franchise’s history, perhaps they’ll get an offer that’s too good to pass up to push them in that direction now.  Either way, McCann becomes a player to keep an eye on over the next couple of months on the trade front.

Seattle Kraken Jared McCann

20 comments

Morning Notes: Comtois, Kuznetsov, AHL

July 12, 2025 at 10:40 am CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

Back in the spring, Max Comtois was believed to be receiving some interest to return to North America.  However, it appears the offers weren’t to his liking, relays Sport-Express’ Mikhail Zislis, who notes that the winger is expected to sign a two-year deal to remain with Dynamo Moscow of the KHL.  Comtois was quite productive with them last season, picking up 21 goals and 29 assists in 62 regular season games while adding 13 points in 15 playoff contests.  He has 87 points in 211 career NHL contests but it appears he won’t have a chance to add to those totals for another couple of years at least.

Elsewhere around the hockey world:

  • While the Canadiens are known to be searching for center help, they are not among the teams pursuing Evgeny Kuznetsov. His agent, Shumi Babaev, told Louis-Andre Lariviere of La Page Sportive that Montreal has informed him that they won’t be offering Kuznetsov a contract.  The 33-year-old had 37 points in 39 games with SKA St. Petersburg of the KHL last season where he was teammates with Canadiens winger Ivan Demidov who is expected to play his first full NHL season in 2025-26.  Kuznetsov has 575 points in 743 games at the NHL level over an 11-year career but managed just 23 points in 64 games in 2023-24 between Carolina and Washington.
  • On Thursday, the AHL released its end-of-season Excellence Awards. Avalanche defenseman Jacob MacDonald was the winner of the President’s Award for player excellence after setting a league record for most goals by a blueliner with 31, helping earn him the Eddie Shore Award as the league’s outstanding defenseman.  Meanwhile, the newly established Bruce Landon Award for the most outstanding hockey operations executive went to Canadiens assistant GM John Sedgwick, who also serves as the GM of AHL Laval.

AHL| Colorado Avalanche| KHL| Montreal Canadiens Evgeny Kuznetsov| Jacob MacDonald| Max Comtois

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Nikolai Kovalenko Signs With CSKA Moscow

July 12, 2025 at 9:28 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

A couple of years ago, it looked like winger Nikolai Kovalenko was going to have a chance to become an impactful NHL player.  Instead, he is effectively one-and-done in North America as CSKA Moscow of the KHL announced on its Telegram page that they’ve signed Kovalenko to a two-year contract.

The 25-year-old was a fifth-round pick by Colorado back in 2018, going 171st overall.  While it took some time, Kovalenko became a key scoring threat back home, putting up 87 points over his last two seasons with KHL Torpedo, earning himself an entry-level contract along the way.

Once Kovalenko’s KHL season ended in 2024, he was brought up by the Avs and even got into a pair of playoff contests that spring for his first taste of NHL action.  The hope was that he’d be well-positioned to upgrade Colorado’s bottom-six group heading into last season with potentially showing enough to move into the top six whenever injuries crept up.

Unfortunately, things didn’t quite go as planned on that front.  Kovalenko was limited to just four goals and four assists in the first 28 games of the season while logging just 12 minutes a night of playing time.  Instead of being an upgrade on some of the question marks the Avalanche deployed at the back of their forward group, he simply became another one of them.

As a result, Colorado opted to trade Kovalenko to San Jose in early December as one of the key pieces of the return for Mackenzie Blackwood who was brought in to shore up their goaltending (and later signed a five-year extension).  With the Sharks firmly in rebuilding mode, it seemed like Kovalenko would get a longer leash and potentially develop into the type of player the Avs were hoping he’d become.

But that didn’t happen.  Kovalenko found himself primarily in the same role he had with Colorado and even found himself as a healthy scratch at times.  He got into 29 games with San Jose, notching just three goals and nine assists while his ice time ticked up only slightly to 12:40 per game.  With the Sharks looking to shake things up roster-wise this summer, they elected to non-tender Kovalenko last month, making him an unrestricted free agent.

While Kovalenko was believed to prefer to stay in the NHL, evidently the offers weren’t to his liking so he has decided to return home after just one full season across the pond.  Given his age, it’s quite possible that he’ll be able to get himself back on the radar if he immediately goes back to being a top performer at the KHL level so this might not be the last we see of him in North America.

Photo courtesy of Stan Szeto-Imagn Images.

KHL| Transactions Nikolai Kovalenko

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West Notes: Sharks, Lord, Prosvetov

July 11, 2025 at 9:01 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

The Sharks have been busy in recent days, adding Ryan Reaves and Jeff Skinner up front.  Those moves came after the back end was shaken up last week with the additions of John Klingberg, Dmitry Orlov, and Nick Leddy while other depth moves were made this summer as well.  Speaking to reporters today including Curtis Pashelka of The Mercury News (Twitter link), GM Mike Grier indicated that San Jose is probably finished with their offseason movement but that they’d definitely look into other trade scenarios that could pop up before the season starts.  With all of the moves they’ve made, more than one-third of their roster has been changed up this summer, a percentage that could go higher depending on if other prospects make a push for a roster spot in training camp.

More from out West:

  • As expected, the AHL’s Ontario Reign, affiliate of the Kings, announced today that Andrew Lord has been named as the fourth head coach in team history. He takes the place of Marco Sturm who held the post the last three seasons before being named as Boston’s head coach earlier this offseason.  Lord was the head coach with QMJHL Halifax last season after spending the previous four years as the coach and GM (for three seasons) of ECHL Greenville.
  • Goaltender Ivan Prosvetov signed a one-year, $950K contract with the Flames early in free agency. Speaking with reporters including Championat’s Nastya Vinnik, the 26-year-old acknowledged that he had an offer for more money on the table but picked Calgary instead since there was a pathway to a potential NHL spot.  Prosvetov had a 2.32 GAA and a .920 SV% in 38 games last season with CSKA Moscow in the KHL and will battle Devin Cooley to serve as the backup to Dustin Wolf next season.

Calgary Flames| Los Angeles Kings| San Jose Sharks Andrew Lord| Ivan Prosvetov

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Erik Karlsson Open To Being Traded To A Handful Of Teams

July 11, 2025 at 7:54 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 27 Comments

With the Penguins known to be sellers this summer, there has been plenty of speculation about the future of some of their veterans.  While wingers Bryan Rust and Rickard Rakell have been generating a lot of attention, one other veteran that seemingly could be in play is blueliner Erik Karlsson.

The 35-year-old has two years left on his contract with the Penguins responsible for $10MM of his $11.5MM cap charge and San Jose covering the remainder.  Notably, a $5MM signing bonus this summer has already been paid, meaning his total cash compensation remaining is $11.5MM over the final two years combined, $1.5MM of which again is covered by the Sharks.

While Karlsson has a no-move clause, Chris Johnston of TSN and The Athletic recently reported in his latest podcast (audio link) that he is willing to be moved.  However, he adds that there are only a few teams the veteran is willing to move to; Johnston didn’t identify any of the potential landing spots Karlsson would be amenable to going to.

While Karlsson hasn’t been able to come close to the 101 points he put up just two seasons ago, he’s still an above-average offensive blueliner, notching 56 and 53 points over the last two years while logging over 23 minutes a night.  While he’s never been elite on the defensive side of things, he’s still a legitimate impact player.

To that end, Johnston notes that Pittsburgh isn’t viewing Karlsson as merely a cap dump.  If he is to be moved, GM Kyle Dubas will be expecting a positive-value return and in the current environment, he has a good chance to land that.  The UFA market for blueliners is largely dried up now while more than one-third of the league has the cap space to take on the remainder of his contract outright without salary retention.  Meanwhile, if Pittsburgh were to retain some money or take players back, several more teams could get into the mix as well.

Depending on which teams Karlsson is willing to move to, Pittsburgh actually might have more realistic options than San Jose did two summers ago when very few teams had the ability to add the bulk of his contract.  Despite the drop in production, that should have Dubas in decent shape in terms of trying to build some sort of market for his defender’s services, especially if there are suitors that value the cap hit being higher than the remaining cash outlay.

But, even in a salary cap environment that’s set to jump again considerably next summer, moving Karlsson for even close to full value will be a challenge.  That said, the Penguins didn’t pay close to full value for him two summers ago when he was coming off his third Norris Trophy win.  So, while Pittsburgh is in decent shape to get something of value for Karlsson, it’s unlikely they’ll get a key element to their rebuild in a package.  And with Karlsson holding the cards with a full veto if he doesn’t want to go to a specific team, the Penguins could yet lose some leverage in discussions.

While it might make sense to wait for an in-season move if injuries strike, the summer is generally considered an easier time to make bigger moves work on the salary cap side.  With that in mind, Karlsson is a player to keep an eye on in the coming weeks with teams still looking to add to their rosters in a market where demand greatly outweighs supply.

Pittsburgh Penguins Erik Karlsson

27 comments

Minor Transactions: 7/11/25

July 11, 2025 at 6:50 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

While the frequency of signings has certainly dried up as of late, there are still some free agents at the lower levels looking for new homes.  Some of those have inked recent contracts; we’ll run down those moves and other minor transactions here.

  • The Blackhawks’ AHL affiliate in Rockford announced that they’ve signed defenseman Andrew Perrott and forward Connor Mylymok to one-year AHL contracts. Perrott split last season between Washington’s AHL and ECHL affiliates, tallying 140 penalty minutes between the two levels.  Mylymok, meanwhile, was held off the scoresheet in eight games with AHL Calgary while posting 23 points in 40 outings with ECHL Rapid City.
  • Winger Robert Mastrosimone has signed with AHL Charlotte, an affiliate of the Hurricanes, per a team release. The 24-year-old was a second-round pick by Detroit back in 2019 but didn’t sign with them, ultimately becoming a free agent where he spent the last two seasons on a minor league deal with Toronto.  Mastrosimone played in 50 games for the Marlies in 2024-25, collecting 10 goals and four assists.
  • The Marlies announced that they’ve re-signed forwards Cedric Pare and Sam Stevens to one-year AHL deals. Pare was a capable secondary scorer last season for the Maple Leafs’ affiliate, notching 12 goals and 14 assists in 59 games.  Stevens, meanwhile, was limited to just 21 games with the Marlies in his first professional season, picking up two goals and two assists.
  • Earlier this week, Rangers prospect Artyom Gonchar has committed to play for OHL Sudbury next season, the junior team announced. The defenseman, who is the nephew of long-time NHLer Sergei Gonchar, was a third-round pick last month, going 89th overall.  Gonchar spent last season with MHL Magnitogorsk, tallying 25 points in 50 games.

AHL| Carolina Hurricanes| Chicago Blackhawks| New York Rangers| OHL| Toronto Maple Leafs Andrew Perrott| Artyom Gonchar| Cedric Pare| Connor Mylymok| Robert Mastrosimone| Sam Stevens

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