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Buffalo Sabres Injury Updates

September 29, 2025 at 4:00 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 1 Comment

With 10 days remaining until their opening game of the 2025-26 season, the Buffalo Sabres are dealing with injuries on multiple fronts of their roster. Earlier today, the Sabres provided updates on several injured players, including Bowen Byram, Mattias Samuelsson, Jiri Kulich, Jordan Greenway, and Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen.

Fortunately, aside from Samuelsson, it doesn’t appear that any player is expected to miss opening night, though there is some cause for concern. Byram, who the team shares is dealing with an undisclosed injury, is expected to practice with the team tomorrow. However, he’ll miss their preseason contest against the Pittsburgh Penguins on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Luukkonen, who is the de facto top netminder in Buffalo, has only recently returned to practice after suffering a lower-body injury toward the end of his offseason training. The Sabres expect Luukkonen to play in Buffalo’s contests on Wednesday and Thursday this week, and there’s no doubt in the organization that he’ll play opening night. It will be an important year for Luukkonen’s trajectory, as he followed up a promising 2023-24 campaign with a disappointing effort last season.

Kulich (undisclosed) and Greenway (middle body) are expected to return to practice either this week or next, though the latter has yet to practice with the team at all this preseason. Although Greenway, who signed a two-year, $8MM extension with the Sabres last season, may be healthy enough to play on opening night, Buffalo may wait a week or two to allow him time to ramp up after missing several weeks already.

Unfortunately, Samuelsson, who has dealt with injury concerns every season of his professional career, may not start the season on time due to an upper-body injury suffered last week. Sabres head coach Lindy Ruff said that Samuelsson is expected to miss multiple weeks, which would take his recovery timeline beyond Buffalo’s opening night contest on October 9th. The update is becoming a theme with Samuelsson, who played in a career-high 62 games last season. He has five years and $21.43MM remaining on his contract.

Buffalo Sabres| Injury Bowen Byram| Jiri Kulich| Jordan Greenway| Mattias Samuelsson| Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen

1 comment

2025 NHL Training Camp Rosters

September 29, 2025 at 3:30 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 11 Comments

Originally published Sep. 4

The NHL’s 32 clubs are beginning their full training camps ahead of the 2025-26 regular season. They’ve all announced their full camp rosters – a list that most will need to chop in half in order to get to the 23-player roster limit by the time opening night rolls around on Oct. 7.

Players who are attending via PTOs and those who aren’t participating due to injury are listed in the total counts. This page will be updated as cuts are made – a new feature here at PHR for the 2025-26 season. This article will be continually updated as more announcements come in.


Anaheim Ducks

Roster size: 27/23
Last updated Oct. 2, 5:30 p.m.

Forwards (17): Leo Carlsson, Sam Colangelo, Cutter Gauthier, Mikael Granlund,  Jansen Harkins (IR), Ross Johnston, Alex Killorn, Chris Kreider,  Mason McTavish, Nikita Nesterenko, Matthew Phillips, Coulson Pitre, Ryan Poehling, Beckett Sennecke, Ryan Strome, Troy Terry,  Frank Vatrano, Tim Washe

Defenseman (7): Radko Gudas, Drew Helleson, Jackson LaCombe, Pavel Mintyukov, Ian Moore, Jacob Trouba, Olen Zellweger

Goaltenders (3): Lukas Dostal, Ville Husso, Petr Mrazek

Boston Bruins

Roster size: 28/23
Last updated Oct. 3, 12:36 p.m.

Forwards (17): Viktor Arvidsson, John Beecher, Matej Blumel, Michael Eyssimont, Morgan Geekie, Tanner Jeannot, Mark Kastelic, Marat Khusnutdinov, Sean Kuraly, Elias Lindholm, Fraser Minten, Casey Mittelstadt, David Pastrnak, Matthew Poitras, Alex Steeves, Jeffrey Viel, Pavel Zacha

Defensemen (8): Jonathan Aspirot, Jordan Harris, Henri Jokiharju, Hampus Lindholm, Mason Lohrei, Charlie McAvoy, Andrew Peeke, Nikita Zadorov

Goaltenders (3): Michael DiPietro, Joonas Korpisalo, Jeremy Swayman

Buffalo Sabres

Roster size: 30/23
Last updated Sep. 29, 8:39 a.m.

Forwards (18): Zach Benson, Justin Danforth, Josh Doan, Joshua Dunne, Mason Geertsen, Jordan Greenway, Tyson Kozak, Peyton Krebs, Jiri Kulich, Beck Malenstyn, Ryan McLeod, Carson Meyer, Joshua Norris, Noah Ostlund, Jack Quinn, Tage Thompson, Alex Tuch, Jason Zucker

Defensemen (9): Jacob Bryson, Bowen Byram, Rasmus Dahlin, Ryan Johnson, Michael Kesselring, Radim Mrtka, Owen Power, Mattias Samuelsson, Conor Timmins

Goaltenders (3): Alexandar Georgiev, Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, Alex Lyon

Calgary Flames

Roster size: 24/23
Last updated: Oct. 2, 1:46 p.m.

Forwards (14): Mikael Backlund, Blake Coleman, Matthew Coronato, Joel Farabee, Morgan Frost, Matvei Gridin, Jonathan Huberdeau, Nazem Kadri, Justin Kirkland, Adam Klapka, Ryan Lomberg, Martin Pospisil, Yegor Sharangovich, Connor Zary

Defensemen (8): Rasmus Andersson, Kevin Bahl, Jake Bean, Joel Hanley, Daniil Miromanov, Brayden Pachal, Zayne Parekh, MacKenzie Weegar

Goaltenders (2): Devin Cooley, Dustin Wolf

Carolina Hurricanes

Roster size: 26/23
Last update: Sep. 30, 10:08 a.m.

Forwards (15): Sebastian Aho, Jackson Blake, William Carrier, Nikolaj Ehlers, Taylor Hall, Juha Jaaska, Mark Jankowski, Seth Jarvis, Jesperi Kotkaniemi, Jordan Martinook, Eric Robinson, Givani Smith, Jordan Staal, Logan Stankoven, Andrei Svechnikov

Defensemen (8): Jalen Chatfield, Shayne Gostisbehere, Charles-Alexis Legault, K’Andre Miller, Alexander Nikishin, Mike Reilly, Jaccob Slavin, Sean Walker

Goaltenders (3): Frederik Andersen, Pyotr Kochetkov, Cayden PrimeauRead more

Chicago Blackhawks

Roster size: 29/23
Last updated Sep. 30, 2:15 p.m.

Forwards (16): Joey Anderson, Connor Bedard, Tyler Bertuzzi, Andre Burakovsky, Colton Dach, Jason Dickinson, Ryan Donato, Nick Foligno, Ryan Greene, Sam Lafferty, Ilya Mikheyev, Oliver Moore, Frank Nazar, Lukas Reichel,  Landon Slaggert, Teuvo Teravainen

Defensemen (10): Nolan Allan, Louis Crevier, Ethan Del Mastro, Matt Grzelcyk, Ty Henry (inj.), Wyatt Kaiser, Artyom Levshunov, Connor Murphy, Sam Rinzel, Alex Vlasic

Goaltenders (3): Laurent Brossoit (inj.), Spencer Knight, Arvid Söderblom

Colorado Avalanche

Roster Size: 29/23
Last Updated Oct. 3, 1:14 p.m.

Forwards (16): Zakhar Bardakov, Gavin Brindley, Ross Colton, Jack Drury, Parker Kelly, Joel Kiviranta, Gabriel Landeskog, Artturi Lehkonen, Nathan MacKinnon, Martin Necas, Brock Nelson, Valeri Nichushkin, Logan O’Connor (inj.), Victor Olofsson, Nikita Prishchepov, Matthew Stienburg,

Defensemen (10): Jack Ahcan, Brent Burns, Samuel Girard, Jacob MacDonald (inj.), Cale Makar, Sam Malinski, Josh Manson, Keaton Middleton, Ilya Solovyov, Devon Toews

Goaltenders (3): Mackenzie Blackwood, Trent Miner, Scott Wedgewood

Columbus Blue Jackets

Roster Size: 23/23
Last Updated Oct. 3, 1:05 p.m.

Forwards (13): Zach Aston-Reese, Yegor Chinakhov, Charlie Coyle, Adam Fantilli, Boone Jenner, Kent Johnson, Isac Lundestrom, Kirill Marchenko, Sean Monahan, Mathieu Olivier, Cole Sillinger, Dmitri Voronkov, Miles Wood

Defensemen (7):  Jake Christiansen, Dante Fabbro, Erik Gudbranson, Denton Mateychuk, Ivan Provorov, Damon Severson, Zach Werenski

Goaltenders (3): Ivan Fedotov, Jet Greaves, Elvis Merzlikins

Injured/Non-Roster (2): F Jordan Dumais, D Luca Marelli

Dallas Stars

Roster size: 28/23
Last updated Oct. 2, 10:49 a.m.

Forwards (19): Oskar Back, Nathan Bastian, Jamie Benn, Colin Blackwell, Mavrik Bourque, Matt Duchene, Adam Erne, Radek Faksa, Roope Hintz, Justin Hryckowian, Arttu Hyry, Cameron Hughes, Wyatt Johnston, Mikko Rantanen, Jason Robertson, Tyler Seguin, Sam Steel, Chase Wheatcroft

Defensemen (8): Lian Bichsel, Thomas Harley, Miro Heiskanen, Vladislav Kolyachonok, Esa Lindell, Nils Lundkvist, Ilya Lyubushkin, Alexander Petrovic

Goaltenders (2): Casey DeSmith, Jake Oettinger

Detroit Red Wings

Roster size: 25/23
Last updated: Oct. 3, 11:07 a.m.

Forwards (14): Mason Appleton, Jonatan Berggren, Michael Brandsegg-Nygard, J.T. Compher, Andrew Copp, Alex DeBrincat, Emmitt Finnie, Patrick Kane, Marco Kasper, Dylan Larkin,  Carter Mazur, Michael Rasmussen, Lucas Raymond, Elmer Soderblom, James van Riemsdyk

Defensemen (9): Jacob Bernard-Docker, Ben Chiarot, Simon Edvinsson, Erik Gustafsson, Travis Hamonic, Justin Holl, Albert Johansson, Axel Sandin-Pellikka, Moritz Seider

Goaltenders (2): John Gibson, Cam Talbot

SOIR: D Shai Buium (undisclosed), F Nate Danielson (undisclosed, indefinite)

Edmonton Oilers

Roster size: 28/23
Last updated Oct. 2, 3:26 p.m.

Forwards (16): Leon Draisaitl, Trent Frederic, Adam Henrique, Isaac Howard, Zach Hyman, Mattias Janmark, Max Jones, Kasperi Kapanen, Curtis Lazar, Andrew Mangiapane, Connor McDavid, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Noah Philp, Vasily Podkolzin, Matthew Savoie, David Tomasek

Defensemen (9): Evan Bouchard, Damien Carfagna, Mattias Ekholm, Ty Emberson, Brett Kulak, Darnell Nurse, Alec Regula, Troy Stecher, Jake Walman

Goaltenders (3): Calvin Pickard, Stuart Skinner, Connor Ungar

Florida Panthers

Roster size: 30/23
Last updated Oct. 3, 1:16 p.m.

Forwards (19): Aleksander Barkov, Sam Bennett, Jesper Boqvist, Jonah Gadjovich, A.J. Greer, Noah Gregor,  Luke Kunin, Eetu Luostarinen, Anton Lundell, Brad Marchand, Tyler Motte, Tomas Nosek, Sam Reinhart, Evan Rodrigues, Mackie Samoskevich, Cole Schwindt, Jack Studnicka, Matthew Tkachuk, Carter Verhaeghe

Defensemen (8): Uvis Balinskis, Tobias Bjornfot, Aaron Ekblad, Gustav Forsling, Seth Jones, Dmitry Kulikov, Niko Mikkola, Jeff Petry

Goaltenders (3): Sergei Bobrovsky, Brandon Bussi, Daniil Tarasov

Los Angeles Kings

Roster size: 25/23
Last updated: Oct. 1, 4:01 p.m.

Forwards (14): Joel Armia, Quinton Byfield, Phillip Danault, Kevin Fiala, Warren Foegele, Samuel Helenius, Adrian Kempe, Anže Kopitar, Andrei Kuzmenko, Alex Laferriere, Jeff Malott, Trevor Moore, Corey Perry, Alex Turcotte

Defensemen (9): Mikey Anderson, Angus Booth, Kyle Burroughs, Cody Ceci, Brandt Clarke, Drew Doughty, Brian Dumoulin, Joel Edmundson, Jacob Moverare

Goaltenders (2): Anton Forsberg, Darcy Kuemper

Minnesota Wild

Roster size: 27/23
Last updated Oct. 3, 1:41 p.m.

Forwards (17): Matt Boldy, Cameron Butler, Joel Eriksson Ek, Marcus Foligno, Hunter Haight, Ryan Hartman, Vinnie Hinostroza, Marcus Johansson, Kirill Kaprizov, Michael Milne, Liam Ohgren, Tyler Pitlick, Marco Rossi, Nico Sturm, Vladimir Tarasenko, Yakov Trenin, Danila Yurov

Defensemen (7): Zach Bogosian, Zeev Buium, Brock Faber, Daemon Hunt, David Jiricek, Jacob Middleton, Jared Spurgeon

Goaltenders (3): Filip Gustavsson, Calvin Petersen, Jesper Wallstedt

IR: D Jonas Brodin (upper body, indefinite), F Mats Zuccarello (lower body, proj. return Nov. 18-25)

Montreal Canadiens

Roster size: 27/23
Last updated Sep. 28, 1:10 p.m.

Forwards (16): Josh Anderson, Owen Beck, Sammy Blais, Zachary Bolduc, Cole Caufield, Kirby Dach, Ivan Demidov, Jake Evans, Brendan Gallagher, Oliver Kapanen, Patrik Laine, Alex Newhook,  Juraj Slafkovsky, Nick Suzuki, Joe Veleno, Florian Xhekaj

Defensemen (8): Alexandre Carrier, Noah Dobson, Adam Engstrom, Kaiden Guhle, Lane Hutson, Mike Matheson,  Jayden Struble,  Arber Xhekaj

Goaltenders (3): Jakub Dobes, Kaapo Kahkonen, Sam Montembeault

Season-Opening IR: David Reinbacher, William Trudeau

Nashville Predators

Roster size: 25/23
Last updated Oct. 3, 2:05 p.m.

Forwards (15): Michael Bunting, Luke Evangelista, Filip Forsberg, Erik Haula, Tyson Jost, Joakim Kemell, Jonathan Marchessault, Brady Martin, Michael McCarron, Ryan O’Reilly, Cole Smith, Steven Stamkos, Fedor Svechkov, Ozzy Wiesblatt, Matthew Wood

Defensemen (8): Justin Barron, Nick Blankenburg, Nicolas Hague, Roman Josi, Nicklaus Perbix, Brady Skjei, Spencer Stastney, Adam Wilsby

Goaltenders (2): Justus Annunen, Juuse Saros

New Jersey Devils

Roster size: 45/23
Last updated Sep. 29, 9:17 a.m.

Forwards (26): Thomas Bordeleau, Jesper Bratt, Connor Brown, Paul Cotter, Angus Crookshank, Evgenii Dadonov, Cody Glass, Luke Glendening, Arseny Gritsyuk, Jonathan Gruden, Brian Halonen, Lenni Hameenaho, Mike Hardman, Nico Hischier, Jack Hughes, Shane Lachance, Juho Lammikko, Nathan Legare, Zack MacEwen, Marc McLaughlin, Timo Meier, Dawson Mercer, Stefan Noesen, Ondrej Palat, Xavier Parent, Kevin Rooney

Defensemen (15): Calen Addison, Seamus Casey, Dennis Cholowski, Brenden Dillon, Mikael Diotte, Ethan Edwards, Dougie Hamilton, Johnathan Kovacevic, Simon Nemec, Dmitri Osipov, Brett Pesce, Jonas Siegenthaler, Austin Strand, Topias Vilen, Colton White

Goaltenders (4): Jake Allen, Nico Daws, Jacob Markstrom, Georgi Romanov

New York Islanders

Roster size: 32/23
Last updated Sep. 27, 11:45 a.m.

Forwards (19): Mathew Barzal, Adam Beckman, Casey Cizikas, Jonathan Drouin, Anthony Duclair, Pierre Engvall, Marc Gatcomb, Emil Heineman, Matthew Highmore, Simon Holmstrom, Bo Horvat, Anders Lee, Kyle MacLean, Jesse Nurmi, Jean-Gabriel Pageau, Kyle Palmieri, Calum Ritchie, Maxim Shabanov, Maxim Tsyplakov

Defensemen (9): Ethan Bear, Adam Boqvist, Tony DeAngelo, Isaiah George, Scott Mayfield, Adam Pelech, Ryan Pulock, Alexander Romanov, Matthew Schaefer

Goaltenders (4): Marcus Hogberg, David Rittich, Ilya Sorokin, Semyon Varlamov

New York Rangers

Roster size: 24/23
Last updated: Oct. 3, 11:09 a.m.

Forwards (15): Brett Berard, Jonny Brodzinski, Sam Carrick, William Cuylle, Adam Edstrom, Noah Laba, Alexis Lafrenière, J.T. Miller, Artemi Panarin, Juuso Pärssinen, Taylor Raddysh, Matt Rempe, Conor Sheary, Vincent Trocheck, Mika Zibanejad

Defensemen (7): William Borgen, Adam Fox, Vladislav Gavrikov, Matthew Robertson, Braden Schneider, Carson Soucy, Urho Vaakanainen

Goaltenders (2): Jonathan Quick, Igor Shesterkin

Ottawa Senators

Roster size: 31/23
Last updated Sep. 25, 11:21 a.m.

Forwards (18): Michael Amadio, Drake Batherson, Nick Cousins, Dylan Cozens, Lars Eller, Claude Giroux, Ridly Greig, Stephen Halliday, Hayden Hodgson, Jan Jeník, Arthur Kaliyev, Olle Lycksell, Kurtis MacDermid, David Perron, Shane Pinto, Tim Stützle, Brady Tkachuk, Fabian Zetterlund

Defensemen (10): Thomas Chabot, Nick Jensen, Tyler Kleven, Nikolas Matinpalo, Jake Sanderson, Donovan Sebrango, Jordan Spence, Lassi Thomson, Carter Yakemchuk, Artem Zub

Goaltenders (3): Leevi Merilainen, Mads Søgaard, Linus Ullmark

Philadelphia Flyers

Roster size: 26/23
Last updated Oct. 2, 2:33 p.m.

Forwards (14): Rodrigo Abols, Bobby Brink, Noah Cates, Sean Couturier, Nicolas Deslauriers, Christian Dvorak, Tyson Foerster, Nikita Grebenkin, Garnet Hathaway, Travis Konecny, Jett Luchanko, Matvei Michkov, Owen Tippett, Trevor Zegras

Defensemen (10): Oliver Bonk, Jamie Drysdale, Dennis Gilbert, Adam Ginning, Noah Juulsen, Ethan Samson, Travis Sanheim, Nick Seeler, Cameron York, Egor Zamula

Goaltenders (2): Samuel Ersson, Daniel Vladar

IR: D Rasmus Ristolainen (triceps, proj. return Oct.-Nov.)

Pittsburgh Penguins

Roster size: 33/23
Last updated Oct. 3, 1:45 p.m.

Forwards (19): Noel Acciari, Justin Brazeau, Tristan Broz, Sidney Crosby, Connor Dewar, Robby Fabbri, Filip Hallander, Rafael Harvey-Pinard, Avery Hayes, Bokondji Imama, Benjamin Kindel, Ville Koivunen, Blake Lizotte, Evgeni Malkin, Anthony Mantha, Thomas Novak, Samuel Poulin, Rickard Rakell, Philip Tomasino

Defensemen (11): Alexander Alexeyev, Harrison Brunicke, Connor Clifton, Matt Dumba, Ryan Graves, Caleb Jones, Erik Karlsson, Kris Letang, Owen Pickering, Ryan Shea, Parker Wotherspoon

Goaltenders (3): Tristan Jarry, Sergei Murashov, Arturs Silovs

IR: F Kevin Hayes (upper body, proj. return Oct. 19), F Bryan Rust (undisclosed, proj. return Oct. 16)

SOIR: G Joel Blomqvist (lower body, proj. return Oct. 24), F Tanner Howe (undisclosed), F Rutger McGroarty (undisclosed, indefinite), D Jack St. Ivany (lower body, proj. return Nov. 13), F Bill Zonnon (undisclosed), D Peyton Kettles (undisclosed)

San Jose Sharks

Roster size: 36/23
Last updated Oct. 1, 1:48 p.m.

Forwards (22): Egor Afanasyev, Ethan Cardwell, Macklin Celebrini, Ty Dellandrea, William Eklund, Adam Gaudette, Barclay Goodrow, Collin Graf, Carl Grundström, Donovan Houle, Philipp Kurashev, Samuel Laberge, Cameron Lund, Michael Misa, Quentin Musty, Zack Ostapchuk, Ryan Reaves, Jeff Skinner, Will Smith, Tyler Toffoli, Alexander Wennberg, Colin White

Defensemen (11): Luca Cagnoni, Lucas Carlsson, Vincent Desharnais, Sam Dickinson, Mario Ferraro, John Klingberg, Nick Leddy, Timothy Liljegren, Shakir Mukhamadullin, Dmitry Orlov, Jack Thompson

Goaltenders (2): Yaroslav Askarov, Alex Nedeljkovic,

Seattle Kraken

Roster size: 35/23
Last updated Oct. 2, 11:46 a.m.

Forwards (19): Matty Beniers, Berkly Catton, Jordan Eberle, Oscar Fisker Molgaard, Frédérick Gaudreau, John Hayden, Kaapo Kakko, Tye Kartye, Mason Marchment, Jared McCann, Max McCormick (inj.), Julius Miettinen, Jani Nyman, Jake O’Brien, Jaden Schwartz, Chandler Stephenson, Eeli Tolvanen, Ryan Winterton, Shane Wright

Defensemen (13): Alexis Bernier (inj.), Vince Dunn, Ryker Evans, Jakub Fibigr, Blake Fiddler, Cale Fleury, Adam Larsson, Ryan Lindgren, Josh Mahura, Brandon Montour, Jamie Oleksiak, Ville Ottavainen, Will Reynolds

Goaltenders (3): Joey Daccord, Philipp Grubauer, Matt Murray

St. Louis Blues

Roster size 32/23
Last updated Sep. 28, 2:38 p.m.

Forwards (19): Nick Bjugstad, Pavel Buchnevich, Zach Dean, Dalibor Dvorsky, Dylan Holloway, Mathieu Joseph, Aleksanteri Kaskimaki, Jordan Kyrou, Milan Lucic, Jake Neighbours, Brayden Schenn, Jimmy Snuggerud, Otto Stenberg, Oskar Sundqvist, Pius Suter, Alexandre Texier, Robert Thomas, Alexey Toropchenko, Nathan Walker

Defensemen (10): Philip Broberg, Justin Faulk, Cam Fowler, Matthew Kessel, Theo Lindstein, Leo Loof, Logan Mailloux, Colton Parayko, Hunter Skinner, Tyler Tucker

Goaltenders (3): Jordan Binnington, Colten Ellis, Joel Hofer

Tampa Bay Lightning

Roster size: 26/23
Last updated Oct. 2, 1:41 p.m.

Forwards (14): Oliver Bjorkstrand, Mitchell Chaffee, Anthony Cirelli, Jack Finley, Conor Geekie, Zemgus Girgensons, Gage Goncalves, Yanni Gourde, Jake Guentzel, Brandon Hagel, Pontus Holmberg, Nikita Kucherov, Nick Paul, Brayden Point

Defensemen (8): Declan Carlile, Erik Cernak, Maxwell Crozier, Victor Hedman, Emil Martinsen Lilleberg, Ryan McDonagh, J.J. Moser, Darren Raddysh

Goaltenders (3): Pheonix Copley, Brandon Halverson, Jonas Johansson, Andrei Vasilevskiy

Toronto Maple Leafs

Roster size: 33/23
Last updated Sep. 29, 10:09 a.m.

Forwards (16): Easton Cowan, Max Domi, Calle Järnkrok, Dakota Joshua, David Kämpf, Matthew Knies, Scott Laughton, Steven Lorentz, Matias Maccelli, Auston Matthews, Bobby McMann, William Nylander, Michael Pezzetta, Nicholas Robertson, Nicolas Roy, John Tavares

Defensemen (13): Simon Benoit, Matt Benning, Brandon Carlo, Ben Danford, Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Jake McCabe, Dakota Mermis, Philippe Myers, Morgan Rielly, Marshall Rifai, Chris Tanev, Henry Thrun, William Villeneuve

Goaltenders (4): Dennis Hildeby, James Reimer, Anthony Stolarz, Joseph Woll

Utah Mammoth

Roster size: 34/23
Last updated Oct. 3, 2:12 p.m.

Forwards (20): Andrew Agozzino, Cole Beaudoin, Daniil But, Michael Carcone, Logan Cooley, Lawson Crouse, Curtis Douglas, Dylan Guenther, Barrett Hayton, Cameron Hebig, Tij Iginla, Clayton Keller, Alexander Kerfoot, Jack McBain, Liam O’Brien, JJ Peterka, Nick Schmaltz, Kevin Stenlund, Brandon Tanev, Kailer Yamamoto

Defensemen (11): Ian Cole, Nick DeSimone, Sean Durzi, Terrell Goldsmith, Maveric Lamoureux, Olli Määttä, John Marino, Nate Schmidt, Mikhail Sergachev, Dmitri Simashev, Juuso Välimäki

Goaltenders (3): Anson Thornton, Vítek Vaněček, Karel Vejmelka

Vancouver Canucks

Roster size: 31/23
Last updated: Oct. 3, 1:00 p.m.

Forwards (17): Arshdeep Bains, Teddy Blueger, Brock Boeser, Filip Chytil, Braeden Cootes, Jake DeBrusk, Conor Garland, Nils Hoglander, Evander Kane, Linus Karlsson, Vitali Kravtsov, Jonathan Lekkerimaki, Drew O’Connor, Elias Pettersson, Aatu Raty, Max Sasson, Kiefer Sherwood

Defensemen (11): Guillaume Brisebois, Derek Forbort, Filip Hronek, Quinn Hughes, Pierre-Olivier Joseph, Victor Mancini, Tyler Myers, Elias Pettersson, Marcus Pettersson, Tom Willander, Jett Woo

Goaltenders (3): Thatcher Demko, Kevin Lankinen, Nikita Tolopilo

Vegas Golden Knights

Roster size: 30/23
Last updated Oct. 3, 1:15 p.m.

Forwards (17): Ivan Barbashev, Pavel Dorofeyev, Jack Eichel, Tomas Hertl, Alexander Holtz, Brett Howden, William Karlsson, Keegan Kolesar, Tanner Laczynski, Raphael Lavoie, Mitch Marner, Cole Reinhardt, Jonas Rondbjerg, Brandon Saad, Colton Sissons, Reilly Smith, Mark Stone

Defensemen (10): Dylan Coghlan, Lukas Cormier, Noah Hanifin, Ben Hutton, Kaedan Korczak, Jeremy Lauzon, Brayden McNabb, Jaycob Megna, Shea Theodore, Zach Whitecloud

Goaltenders (3): Adin Hill, Carl Lindbom, Akira Schmid

Washington Capitals

Roster size: 27/23
Last updated Oct. 3, 8:40 a.m.

Forwards (15): Anthony Beauvillier, Nic Dowd, Pierre-Luc Dubois, Brandon Duhaime, Ethen Frank, Hendrix Lapierre, Ryan Leonard, Connor McMichael, Sonny Milano, Ivan Miroshnichenko, Alex Ovechkin, Aliaksei Protas, Justin Sourdif, Dylan Strome, Tom Wilson

Defensemen (9): John Carlson, Declan Chisholm, Jakob Chychrun, Martin Fehervary, Vincent Iorio, Dylan McIlrath, Matt Roy, Rasmus Sandin, Trevor van Riemsdyk

Goaltenders (3): Charlie Lindgren, Clay Stevenson, Logan Thompson

Winnipeg Jets

Roster size: 29/23
Last updated Oct. 1, 4:11 p.m.

Forwards (17): Morgan Barron, Nikita Chibrikov, Kyle Connor, Walker Duehr, Parker Ford, David Gustafsson, Alex Iafallo, Cole Koepke, Brad Lambert, Vladislav Namestnikov, Nino Niederreiter, Gustav Nyquist, Tanner Pearson, Cole Perfetti, Mark Scheifele, Jonathan Toews, Gabriel Vilardi

Defensemen (9): Dylan DeMelo, Haydn Fleury, Ville Heinola, Colin Miller, Josh Morrissey, Neal Pionk, Dylan Samberg, Luke Schenn, Logan Stanley

Goaltenders (3): Eric Comrie, Domenic DiVincentiis, Connor Hellebuyck

Injured Reserve (1): Adam Lowry (hip surgery, proj. return: October or November)

Newsstand| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Waivers: 9/29/25

September 29, 2025 at 2:04 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 3 Comments

Teams are continuing to lean on the waiver wire as they make their final rounds of training camp cuts. All 23 players placed on waivers yesterday have cleared, but 22 more names are on the wire on Monday, captured by hockey insider Frank Seravalli.

Carolina Hurricanes

F Skyler Brind’Amour
D Ronan Seeley

Minnesota Wild

F Nicolas Aube-Kubel
D Ben Gleason
F Ben Jones
D Matt Kiersted

Nashville Predators

D Kevin Gravel
F Jake Lucchini
G Matt Murray
F Navrin Mutter
D Jordan Oesterle

New York Rangers

F Anton Blidh
F Justin Dowling
F Trey Fix-Wolansky
D Derrick Pouliot

Philadelphia Flyers

D Helge Grans

Vancouver Canucks

F Joseph Labate
F Mackenzie MacEachern
G Jiri Patera
D Jimmy Schuldt

Winnipeg Jets

F Phillip Di Giuseppe
F Mason Shaw

Transactions| Waivers

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Summer Synopsis: New York Rangers

September 29, 2025 at 1:56 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

With training camps underway, 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 the Rangers.

A triumphant President’s Trophy-winning campaign in 2023-24 preceded a jarring nosedive in Manhattan last year. It was the second time in franchise history the team missed the playoffs entirely after having the best regular-season record in the trophy’s existence and just the fourth time it’s happened altogether. That resulted in some drastic in-season trades and some notable offseason movement as well as the Rangers aim to return to playoff contention in 2025-26.

Draft

2-43 – F Malcolm Spence, Erie (OHL)
3-70 – D Sean Barnhill, Dubuque (USHL)
3-89 – D Artyom Gonchar, Magnitogorsk (MHL)
4-111 – F Mikkel Eriksen, Färjestad (Sweden U20)
5-139 – D Zeb Lindgren, Skellefteå (Sweden U20)
6-166 – F Samuel Jung, Kärpät (Finland U20)
6-171 – D Evan Passmore, Barrie (OHL)
7-203 – D Felix Färhammar, Örebro (Sweden U20)

The Rangers held the No. 12 pick in the draft but needed to pick between sending this year’s or next year’s first-round pick to the Penguins to complete the conditions they attached when they sent the pick to the Canucks for J.T. Miller (Vancouver flipped the pick to Pittsburgh in the Marcus Pettersson deal). They opted to retain the unprotected 2026 selection and part ways with a lottery pick in what was viewed as a weaker 2025 class.

Nonetheless, they managed to snag a player in Spence that many prognosticators believe has first-round talent anyway. The physical winger was once viewed as a potential top-10 selection and saw his stock tumble somewhat, but most still had him as a top-25 choice – or at least a late first – heading into the draft. He was among the Otters’ top scorers last year with a 32-41–73 line in 65 appearances and is now heading to the University of Michigan. He already slots in as the No. 4 prospect in their system, according to NHL.com.

The Rangers’ depth picks had a European slant to them aside from a pair of big North American defenders. Barnhill was a combine standout and fits New York’s ethos of drafting for size – the righty clocks in at 6’6″ and 214 lbs. The Arizona native only had 12 points in 54 USHL games last year, but projects solely as a shutdown threat at the NHL level anyway. Like Spence, he’s making the jump to a Big 10 school and will suit up for Michigan State this fall. Passmore has nearly the exact same frame and is also a righty.

Gonchar, the nephew of longtime NHL star Sergei Gonchar, headlines the European contingent. He’s comparatively undersized at 6’0″ and just 157 lbs but was the first left-shot rearguard the Blueshirts took. He had a 7-18–25 scoring line in 50 Russian junior games last year, his first real showing at the country’s top U20 flight, and has already made the jump to North America with the OHL’s Sudbury Wolves for 2025-26.

Eriksen was one of two Norwegians taken in the draft and was the country’s top player at the Division 1A World Juniors last year, also posting 43 points in 40 Swedish junior league games. Lindgren is a mobile 6’1″ lefty who’s already off to a great start back in juniors with Skellefteå this year, recording five assists through his first five games. Jung is a Polish-born Czech national who checks in at 6’3″ and 172 lbs and went undrafted in 2024. He transitioned from Finland’s U18 league to its U20 one last year and will remain with Kärpät’s junior program for 2025-26, already notching a 4-4–8 line through seven games. Färhamar, a 6’1″ lefty, also looks like a promising depth puck-mover and has four assists through his first four games this year.

None outside of Spence are legitimate needle-movers in the Blueshirts’ pool, but it was among the better classes they’ve roped in over the past few years among its depth contingent.

Trade Acquisitions

D Scott Morrow (from Hurricanes)
F Carey Terrance (from Ducks)

The Rangers didn’t pick up any bona fide NHLers via trade this summer but did land Morrow, who’s trending toward a spot on the opening night roster, as the principal piece of the return from Carolina for K’Andre Miller. The 2021 second-rounder was offensively dominant during his time in college with UMass and looked mostly comfortable in the pro environment last year, his first after three years in school.

He has just 16 NHL games to his name, 14 coming in multiple call-ups with Carolina last year. He already looked like a capable third-pairing piece and power-play option with six points while averaging 15:48 per game. Whether his defensive game develops enough for him to be a top-four piece remains to be seen, but the Rangers don’t really need him to be one with Adam Fox, William Borgen, and Braden Schneider all chewing up time on the right side for the near future.

Terrance was the only other player who changed hands in the Chris Kreider deal, which also included a pick swap. His two-way game down the middle made him the No. 7 prospect in the organization after his pickup, per Steven Ellis of Daily Faceoff. He’s already under contract and will jump to the pro level with AHL Hartford this year. The New York native captained the OHL’s Erie Otters last year, skating with Spence, and had a 20-19–39 line in 45 games.

UFA Signings

F Justin Dowling (two years, $1.55MM)*
F Trey Fix-Wolansky (one year, $775K)*
D Vladislav Gavrikov (seven years, $49MM)
D Derrick Pouliot (two years, $1.55MM)*
F Taylor Raddysh (two years, $3MM)

*-denotes two-way contract

The Rangers were already close to the contract limit with existing deals entering 2025-26, so their number of signings was understandably limited. They did have one of the largest-magnitude deals of the UFA period by landing Gavrikov, who was the top defenseman to actually reach the market on July 1, to a max-term deal. The 29-year-old has been a quality two-way piece since entering the league six years ago but broke out in a big way with the Kings last year, averaging north of 23 minutes per game while Drew Doughty missed significant time. Those were high-quality minutes too, with Gavrikov churning out 30 points and a +26 rating with a 53.7% Corsi share at even strength in heavy defensive deployment.

Gavrikov will serve as the best partner Fox has ever had on his left flank, a significantly more stable and offensively capable option than his longtime partner Ryan Lindgren. He’s the clear No. 1 ahead of a rather thin left side behind him and will see a similar workload in 2025-26, with greater potential for point production playing with one of the league’s best offensive threats from the blue line in Fox.

Raddysh was the only other pickup with a seven-figure cap hit. The 27-year-old was a 20-goal threat with the Blackhawks a couple of years ago but has fallen on harder times since. He skated in 80 games with the Capitals last year, averaging 12:22 per game and contributing 27 points. He’s brought in as a higher-ceiling bottom-six piece than some of the other names they already had and could challenge for a consistent top-nine role depending on how many minutes New York’s younger wingers push for.

Dowling, Fix-Wolansky, and Pouliot are all AHL depth, although the former could work his way onto the roster as a veteran fourth-liner or press box fodder.

RFA Re-Signings

G Talyn Boyko (one year, $775K)*
F Brendan Brisson (one year, $775K)*
F William Cuylle (two years, $7.8MM)
F Adam Edstrom (two years, $1.95MM)
G Dylan Garand (one year, $775K)*
F Juuso Pärssinen (two years, $2.5MM)
F Matt Rempe (two years, $1.95MM)
D Matthew Robertson (two years, $1.55MM)*

*-denotes two-way contract

While the Rangers had a few NHL-caliber RFAs to re-up, none of them reached the magnitude of Cuylle, who many feared might have been at risk for an offer sheet. While it wasn’t a long-term marriage, they did get that all-important bit of business done right on July 1 to keep that from looming over either side’s heads over the summer, understandable as they looked for a drama-free offseason to lead into a calmer regular season.

A 2020 second-round pick, Cuylle emerged as a true top-nine piece and potential long-term top-six fixture in 2024-25. In his second full NHL season, he managed 20 goals and 45 points in 82 games to tie for fifth on the team in scoring while racking up 301 hits, fourth in the league and the most by a Rangers player since the stat started being tracked in 2005. He’s back for two more years at an extremely team-friendly $3.9MM cap hit and could be in line to at least double that in 2027 if his current trajectory continues.

Edstrom, Pärssinen, and Rempe were the other notable RFA skaters in need of new deals. They all received cap hits in the $900K-$1.25MM range but all project to play bottom-six roles for the club on opening night. Edstrom and Rempe are towering fourth-line wingers who averaged under 10 minutes per night last year but combined for 17 points, 211 hits, and 94 PIMs. Pärssinen was a late-season trade pickup from the Avalanche and closed out the year with five points in 11 games. He’ll look for more consistent time in the lineup this year, potentially starting the season as the club’s third-line center.

Boyko and Garand will comprise the Blueshirts’ primary AHL tandem in Hartford this year. Brisson and Robertson slot in as organizational depth as well, although the former was a first-round pick by the Golden Knights in 2020 and requires waivers to head to the minors.

Departures

F Nicolas Aubé-Kubel (signed with Wild, one year, $775K)*
D Calvin de Haan (signed with Rögle, SHL)
D Zachary Jones (signed with Sabres, one year, $900K)*
F Arthur Kaliyev (signed with Senators, one year, $775K)*
F Chris Kreider (traded to Ducks)
D K’Andre Miller (sign-and-trade with Hurricanes)
D Chad Ruhwedel (retired)

*-denotes two-way contract

The Rangers spent much of the season trading away big-name talent in hopes of a locker room refresh. That continued into the summer with Kreider, who spent 13 years and nearly 900 games in New York. A nightmarish 2024-25 campaign saw the three-time 30-goal scorer manage only 22 tallies and eight assists for 30 points in 68 appearances, though, and the Rangers weren’t keen on keeping him at $6.5MM per season for two more years after that. He’ll look for a resurgence in Anaheim while the Rangers opened up flexibility to retain younger names like Cuylle, sign Gavrikov, and graduate younger forwards to meaningful minutes.

Miller is also a considerable departure. He’d been their second-pairing lefty for quite some time, essentially stepping into the role out of the gate in 2020 after being a first-round pick two years prior. He was coming off an underwhelming 7-20–27 scoring line in 74 games, though and, with questions around his individual defensive skills looming over what might have been a considerable payday as an RFA this summer, the Blueshirts opted for a sign-and-trade with Carolina. The Canes get Miller locked in long-term on an eight-year deal with a $7.5MM cap hit as a result.

All the other names were fringe pieces who wouldn’t have had an impact on their 2025-26 opening night lineup had they stayed in the organization. Jones was once a promising puck-mover but never advanced beyond a No. 7 role in parts of five NHL seasons. Ruhwedel, de Haan, and Kaliyev spent most of their time in the press box last year while Aubé-Kubel was in the AHL after getting picked up from the Sabres at the trade deadline.

Salary Cap Outlook

The Rangers are very nearly in forced emergency recall range, with their projected 23-man opening night roster projected to leave them with $778K in cap space, per PuckPedia. That’s enough for a league-minimum recall in the event of an IR placement, but nothing else, at least to start the campaign while their cap space slowly accrues.

Key Questions

Can Igor Shesterkin Return To Form?

Shesterkin signed an eight-year, $92MM extension midway through last season, the largest deal ever handed out to a goalie. That was given to him during the worst campaign of his six-year NHL career by a considerable margin. His numbers were only slightly above average at a .905 SV% and 2.86 GAA, leading to him not receiving any Vezina consideration despite starting a career-high 61 games. Advanced numbers were much kinder to him, attributing a good portion of his decline to woeful team defense in front of him. His 21.6 goals saved above expected, per MoneyPuck, still ranked seventh in the league but didn’t quite reach the heights of his two-year window of utter dominance from 2021-23. With question marks still around the Rangers’ depth on the blue line behind Gavrikov and Fox, he might need to build on that GSAx figure again to get New York back in the playoff picture.

What Will A Full Season Of J.T. Miller Bring?

Only Artemi Panarin had more points per game for the Rangers last year than Miller, whose second stint in Manhattan began with a blockbuster trade in January. His 35 points in 32 games to close the season worked out to 1.09 per game, much closer to the level of offensive production he’s set as his expectation over the last few years in Vancouver. Now newly minted as the club’s captain, a full season of that production ahead of the aging Vincent Trocheck and Mika Zibanejad could get the Rangers’ offense back into top-10 range and help along names like Cuylle and Alexis Lafrenière to resurgences.

Is Gavrikov A One-Hit Wonder?

The Rangers committed a lot of resources to Gavrikov, and the pressure is on him to perform like a true top-pair talent for a second straight season. But aside from last year in L.A., Gavrikov’s untested with that kind of responsibility and always played a more sheltered second-pairing role. He also played in a much more adept defensive system with the Kings, although a new head coach in Mike Sullivan might address a good portion of those woes for the Rangers. Nonetheless, there could be a significant swing in the team’s results depending on if Gavrikov repeats his standout, first-pair play from last year or is simply an average-to-above-average complementary piece for Fox.

Photo courtesy of Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images.

New York Rangers| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals| Summer Synopsis 2025| Uncategorized

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Jets’ Dylan Samberg Out 6-To-8 Weeks With Broken Wrist

September 29, 2025 at 12:58 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 1 Comment

Winnipeg Jets head coach Scott Arniel announced that defenseman Dylan Samberg has sustained a broken wrist and will miss the next six-to-eight weeks, per NHL.com’s Mitchell Clinton. Samberg was knocked out of Winnipeg’s Saturday preseason game against the Calgary Flames in the second period, after taking an awkward hit from Flames winger Ryan Lomberg. Arniel referred to the hit as a “freak accident” after the game to Murat Ates of The Athletic.

This will be a dismal start to the three-year, $17.25MM contract that Samberg signed with Winnipeg in late July. The deal makes him Winnipeg’s third-highest paid defenseman, behind Neal Pionk ($7MM) and Josh Morrissey ($6.25MM). Samberg earned that standing with a career-year last season. He set multiple personal highs, including six goals, 20 points, and a plus-34 in 60 games. He led the Jets in plus-minus, blocked shots (120), and takeaways (33) – while standing out as one of the team’s top defensive stalwarts. That role elevated Samberg to an a career-high 21 minutes of ice time each game and a premier role on the team’s top penalty-killing unit.

It was Samberg’s third season of productive defense for the Jets. He’s offered minimal offense to this point in his career – but no Jets defender has blocked more shots, or recorded more takeaways, on a per-game basis than Samberg since his rookie season in 2022-23. His absence will leave a major hole in Winnipeg’s opening night roster. That should mean added minutes for physical defender Logan Stanley, who was limited to a low-end, third-pair role for the bulk of last season. It could also mean a promotion for extra-defenseman Haydn Fleury, who played in only 39 games last season. Stanley could be a reasonable bet to make up for some of Samberg’s defensive impact, though Fleury will be far from a direct replacement. The Jets will need to lean on veterans Morrissey, Pionk, and Luke Schenn to help carry their blue-line pairings until Samberg is ready to be reevaluated in mid-November.

NHL| Newsstand| Winnipeg Jets Dylan Samberg

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Flyers’ Tyson Foerster To Make Preseason Debut

September 29, 2025 at 11:57 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley 1 Comment

The Philadelphia Flyers have announced that top winger Tyson Foerster is set to make his preseason debut in Monday’s matchup against the Boston Bruins. This will mark a full recovery from an elbow injury and infection that required Foerster to undergo surgery over the summer. He sustained the injury while playing for Team Canada at the 2025 World Championship.

Foerster was originally feared to be set for a long-term absence when he sustained his infection in July. Instead, he’ll hit his target of reaching full health before the start of the regular season. Foerster told Kevin Kurz of The Athletic that, while trainers may be watching him closely, he’ll be “full go” from here on out.

Those are encouraging words the Flyers, who will be getting one of their top offensive drivers back with this news. Foerster posted career-highs across the board in his second NHL season last year – notching 25 goals, 43 points, and 49 penalty minutes in 81 games last season. His goal totals ranked second on the team, behind rookie Matvei Michkov’s 26 goals. That’s impressive standing for the 23-year-old winger, and should set him up to only continue growing as Philadelphia’s team-wide offense continues to improve.

The Flyers reeled in flashy playmaker Trevor Zegras with an offseason trade. They also have emerging rookie Nikita Grebenkin, Alex Bump, and Jett Luchanko all vying for NHL minutes. While there may not be enough spots to go around, that list of additions will speak to the growing support Foerster will receive. Philadelphia seems ready to lean into the sentiment of strong depth this season – with Foerster lining up next to his usual linemates, Noah Cates and Bobby Brink, in his return on Monday. Should that line stick, the Flyers will be able to roll scoring threats Michkov, Foerster, and Travis Konecny – their top-three goal-scorers last season- on three separate lines to start the year.

Injury| NHL| Philadelphia Flyers Tyson Foerster

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Red Wings’ Nate Danielson Out Indefinitely Among Injury Updates

September 29, 2025 at 11:24 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The race for an NHL roster spot has been cut short for one of the Detroit Red Wings’ top prospects. Centerman Nate Danielson sustained an injury during the team’s Saturday preseason loss to the Buffalo Sabres, head coach Todd McLellan relayed to Ansar Khan of Michigan Live. No specifics were provided on Danielson’s injury or timeline to return. McLellan also shared that defenseman Simon Edvinsson will continue to sit out of the next two preseason games, but is expected to be at full health for opening night. Edvinsson has missed the majority of training camp with a lower-body injury.

This news will come as a major blow for Danielson, who was making the Red Wings’ decisions tougher with his camp performances. He had averaged just over 11 minutes of ice time through three preseason games and was one of only seven Red Wings to score a goal. Now, the 2023 ninth-overall selection will be sidelined in a move that’s sure to default him to the AHL when he’s back to full health. Danielson played through his first professional season with the Grand Rapids Griffins last season. He emerged as one of the club’s top three centers by the end of the year, and notched a commendable 12 goals and 39 points in 71 games. Danielson was highly regarded through a four-year career in the WHL, where his shifty playmaking earned him 217 points in 199 career games. He’s expected to be main pillar in Detroit’s new era, but will need to overcome this new injury before he can solidify that standing with a strong sophomore season.

The Red Wings’ lineup will get some relief with positive news on Edvinsson’s recovery. He was a core piece of Detroit’s blue-line last season, averaging over 21 minutes of ice time through 78 games in his first full NHL season. Edvinsson made good work of the minutes, notching 31 points – second-most among Red Wings’ defenders behind Moritz Seider’s 46 points. He’ll be in line for a premier role again this season, and could close the gap in scoring with Seider, assuming Edvinsson remains in line to take the ice on opening night.

AHL| Detroit Red Wings| Injury| NHL| Prospects Nate Danielson| Simon Edvinsson

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Maple Leafs Sign Anthony Stolarz To Four-Year Extension

September 29, 2025 at 9:38 am CDT | by Ethan Hetu 12 Comments

Sep. 29: Stolarz’s contract includes a 16-team no-trade clause that applies not only to the first year of his extension in 2026-27 but will retroactively apply to the last year of his current contract, giving him new protection for the 2025-26 campaign, reports David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period. That list will downgrade to a 10-team NTC from 2027-29 and further to a five-team NTC in 2029-30. PuckPedia has the full cash breakdown of the deal:

2026-27: $850K base salary + $4.225MM signing bonus = $5.075MM total
2027-28: $900K base salary + $2.91MM signing bonus = $3.81MM total
2028-29: $1.07MM base salary + $2MM signing bonus = $3.07MM total
2029-30: $1.045MM base salary + $2MM signing bonus = $3.045MM total

Sep. 28: It was previously reported that Anthony Stolarz and the Toronto Maple Leafs were getting very close to an extension, and now ESPN’s Kevin Weekes and The Athletic’s Chris Johnston have reported that the two parties have come to an agreement on a four-year, $3.75MM AAV contract extension. According to Weekes, the contract is “largely signing bonus money” although no firm breakdown has been reported at this time. The Maple Leafs have now officially announced the contract.

Two days ago, it was reported that Stolarz and his camp, led by RSG Hockey’s Allain Roy, were eyeing recent contracts signed by Karel Vejmelka and Kevin Lankinen as potential comparables – deals that each carry a five-year term and an AAV of at least $4.5MM. The contract reported today isn’t quite as lucrative as those deals, although the fact that it is, per Weekes, heavy in signing bonuses does help bridge the gap.

The path to this contract has been an odd one for Stolarz, who appears to have emerged as a starting-caliber netminder at the age of 31. Five years ago, Stolarz was an AHL starter in the Anaheim Ducks organization, and he established himself as an NHL backup there. He signed with the Florida Panthers for 2023-24 to be Sergei Bobrovsky’s backup, and ended up putting forth a brilliant .925 save percentage and 2.03 goals-against average in 27 games.

That performance in Florida, which ended with Stolarz watching from the bench as the Panthers won their first-ever Stanley Cup championship, earned the netminder a two-year, $2.5MM AAV deal to join the Maple Leafs in a tandem with Joseph Woll. Although Woll started more games in 2024-25, Stolarz was the superior of the two netminders, playing to an excellent .926 save percentage and 21-8-3 record across 34 games.

While he hasn’t been tested in a heavy workload just yet, Stolarz has posted some of the league’s best numbers across the last two seasons. While it’s no easy task to sustain such brilliance across a heavier diet of starts, Stolarz certainly has the talent to do it. If he can end up taking a larger role in the crease in Toronto, perhaps playing something closer to a standard starting netminder’s number of games, he could easily provide an immense amount of surplus value to Toronto over the course of this contract.

The last time Stolarz played in more than 40 games was for the 2015-16 Lehigh Valley Phantoms – it’s been a while. So there is some risk to this contract, without question. But that level of risk is likely wholly acceptable to Toronto given Stolarz’s brilliance over the last two years, and the odds he provides them with surplus value appear to greatly outweigh the odds he underperforms this modest cap hit.

The key for the Maple Leafs will, unsurprisingly, be the playoffs: Stolarz led Toronto to a first-round victory over the Ottawa Senators, but an injury cost him the chance to compete in the second round. If he can find a way to be a reliable, go-to starter in playoff situations, this would be a home run of a contract for the Maple Leafs.

Photos courtesy of Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

Newsstand| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions Anthony Stolarz

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Sabres Recall Vsevolod Komarov

September 29, 2025 at 8:51 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Sabres announced Monday they’ve recalled defenseman Vsevolod Komarov from AHL Rochester. While he was a part of Buffalo’s massive round of training camp cuts over the weekend, they’re likely looking to get him into one more preseason game to allow rest for their veterans before sending him back to the minors.

Komarov, 21, was a fifth-round pick in 2022 but has outpaced his draft billing so far in his development. The 6’2″ righty had a highly successful major junior career, leading the QMJHL in scoring among defenders in 2023-24 while taking home a second league title, being named the league’s top defenseman during the regular season, and earning playoff MVP honors.

Last year’s adjustment to professional hockey was smooth. He didn’t pop in a huge way offensively, but delivered a well-rounded two-way game with the physical edge Buffalo hoped for when they drafted him. He played in all but three games for Rochester last year, logging a 2-16–18 scoring line with 85 PIMs and a +7 rating in 69 appearances. He was knocking on the door of top-pair minutes by season’s end, notes Steven Ellis of Daily Faceoff, who tabbed him as the No. 10 prospect (and No. 4 defenseman) in Buffalo’s prospect pipeline this summer.

He was never expected to compete for an opening-night job this fall. Taking a chunk out of his time with Rochester in training camp to give him another preseason look, though, could be an indicator he’s high on their list of recall options this season in case a shakeup or injury replacement is needed.

Komarov’s entry-level contract carries him through 2026-27 at a cap hit of $835K, after which he’ll be a restricted free agent. This season, he’s owed a minor-league salary of $82.5K with a $90K signing bonus and up to $35K in performance bonuses and a prorated $775K salary if he spends time in the NHL. Unless he somehow manages to play 160 NHL games in the next two years, he’ll remain waiver-exempt for the life of his ELC before requiring them beginning with the 2027-28 campaign.

Buffalo Sabres| Transactions Vsevolod Komarov

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Blackhawks Still Shopping Lukas Reichel

September 29, 2025 at 8:14 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 7 Comments

The Blackhawks have made clear that 2020 first-round pick Lukas Reichel is available for trade “even in the last few days,” Scott Powers of The Athletic writes. Teams had been semi-fervently calling Chicago about Reichel’s availability earlier in the offseason, too. Still, he ended up remaining with the organization for a pivotal training camp that kicked off earlier this month.

Those rumors come after a pair of seasons in which Reichel has been given the opportunity higher up in the Hawks’ lineup but failed to establish himself there. He even started the 2023-24 season as the No. 2 center behind Connor Bedard but found himself quickly demoted in the lineup after a woefully unproductive start. That trend continued in 2024-25, where he quietly managed to establish his floor as an effective fourth-line piece. He spent a significant amount of time sheltered between veterans Pat Maroon and Craig Smith, actually seeing an uptick in offensive production compared to the previous year, with an 8-14-22 scoring line in 70 games. He saw just 11:55 of ice time per night and had slightly improved possession metrics compared to the previous year, despite facing more difficult defensive assignments.

That’s still not at all what the Hawks envisioned when making him the No. 17 overall pick five years ago. The 23-year-old came into the league as a highly-touted sniper with utility at center and on the wings. He looked to realize that potential in a later-season call-up from AHL Rockford in 2022-23, when he managed a 7-8–15 scoring line in just 23 appearances down the stretch and looked at home in a top-six role.

That ceiling has eluded him ever since. He now requires waivers to go to Rockford for a reset. Understandably, the risk of losing a recent first-round choice for no compensation isn’t a risk general manager Kyle Davidson has been too keen on taking. Still, it’s one he’s at least considering if Reichel doesn’t crack their opening night roster and a trade doesn’t materialize, Powers writes.

That said, Windy City-area observers note Reichel has put his best foot forward in this year’s camp. It’s also worth reading between the lines, as Powers points out, that Reichel hasn’t received many reps in bottom-six roles. A top-six one seems unlikely with André Burakovsky and Ryan Donato settling in as Bedard’s initial linemates through most of camp. Tyler Bertuzzi, Frank Nazar, and Teuvo Teräväinen are widely expected to comprise the Hawks’ second line. That leaves him out of the opening night lineup, but it may not leave him off the roster if Chicago decides to stash him in the press box to open the campaign as they did last year.

“If Reichel played the way he did in the first two preseason games in a past camp, the conversation around him might be different,” Powers wrote. “But the Blackhawks’ patience with Reichel has changed in that time, and the organization brought in many more hyped prospects since then. The Blackhawks aren’t just looking for positive signs and hoping Reichel will figure it out in the NHL any longer.” Therein lies the danger of a scorched-earth rebuild – prospects are under pressure to develop quickly, or they might be promptly replaced by a new wave of multiple high-end first-rounders and squeezed out of a role.

Chicago Blackhawks Lukas Reichel

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