Prospect Notes: Sjalin, Kulonummi, Ambrosio
Sabres blueline prospect Calle Sjalin intends to return to Sweden next season, his agent Claes Elefalk told Hockeysverige’s Mans Karlsson. The 24-year-old was acquired at the trade deadline from Florida as part of the Kyle Okposo trade. Sjalin was brought over two years ago but has exclusively played in the AHL and doesn’t appear to be on the verge of pushing for an NHL opportunity. However, his planned return to the SHL doesn’t mean this is it for him in North America as Elefalk indicated that Sjalin plans to sign for a year or two back home and then give it another go at trying to reach the NHL level.
Other prospect news from around the hockey world:
- Predators prospect Kasper Kulonummi has signed with Kiekko-Espoo in Finland’s top division, per a team announcement on their Instagram page. The 20-year-old blueliner was picked 84th overall two years ago and had his first taste of extended Liiga action this year, getting into 40 games where he had four assists. His new team has been promoted from the second-tier Mestis level so Kulonummi will likely be earmarked for a bigger role in 2024-25, the first of the two-year contract he signed.
- Avalanche prospect Colby Ambrosio has elected to transfer for his final season. The center announced (Twitter link) he has moved to Miami University (Ohio). The 21-year-old was a fourth-round pick by Colorado in 2020 (118th overall) and spent the last four seasons at Boston College. Ambrosio struggled in a limited role this season, notching just eight points in 40 games after reaching the 20-point mark the previous two campaigns. He could have elected free agency this summer but coming off the year he had, it made more sense for him to try his hand elsewhere. He’s now reunited with his former USHL coach who will now try to get enough out of Ambrosio to land a pro contract next year.
West Notes: Marchment, Pettersson, Henrique, Drouin
The Stars have been without Mason Marchment since he suffered an undisclosed injury in the second game of the opening round. However, he could return for the second game of their second-round series against Colorado as Joey Hayden of the Dallas Morning News relays that the winger is now close to returning and is likely to be a game-time decision on Thursday. The 28-year-old had a career year offensively with 22 goals and 31 assists in 81 games during the regular season and is a big part of Dallas’ deep forward group so getting him back – whether it’s Thursday or soon after – would be a significant boost for them.
Other news from the West:
- After missing Tuesday’s practice due to illness, Canucks center Elias Pettersson will play tonight in their series opener, mentions Thomas Drance of The Athletic (Twitter link). Head coach Rick Tocchet also ruled out any speculation that the illness designation was covering up an injury. Pettersson had a strong regular season with 89 points in 82 games but was quiet in the first round, being held to just three assists in six contests against Nashville.
- As expected, Oilers forward Adam Henrique has been ruled out of tonight’s opener, notes Daniel Nugent-Bowman of The Athletic (Twitter link). He was listed as doubtful yesterday due to a lower-body injury. However, head coach Kris Knoblauch added that he’s hopeful that the veteran will be able to return on Friday, continuing to list him as day-to-day. Henrique had a pair of points in their opening-round victory over Los Angeles.
- Avalanche winger Jonathan Drouin skated today for the first time as he works his way back from a lower-body injury that caused him to miss the entire first round. Speaking with reporters including Evan Rawal of Colorado Hockey Now (Twitter link), head coach Jared Bednar indicated that they need to ensure that Drouin’s wound heals so that it won’t bust open again which suggests he probably isn’t overly close to returning just yet. Drouin had a strong bounce-back showing during the regular season, picking up 56 points in 79 games after managing just 29 in 58 in 2022-23.
Senators’ Thomas Chabot Undergoes Wrist Surgery
May 8: Chabot underwent the surgery within the past week and is doing well, general manager Steve Staios confirmed to Garrioch. He’s expected to be ready for training camp in September.
April 30: Top Ottawa Senators defenseman Thomas Chabot is expected to spend the next two to three months recovering from a wrist surgery that’s set to take place in the coming weeks, reports Bruce Garrioch of the Ottawa Sun. Ottawa has spent the last month debating the necessity of this surgery, following Chabot’s early exit in the team’s season-finale with the injury. The injury came just a few games after Chabot’s return after missing much of March with a lower-body injury. The pair of injuries, along with a fractured right hand suffered in November, limited Chabot to just 51 games this season.
Chabot will now have all off-season to make sure he’s back to full health for next season. He remained one of Ottawa’s best defenders despite the injuries this year, netting 30 points in 51 games, just 11 points behind Jakob Chychrun‘s – who played all 82 games- scoring lead among the team’s defensemen. Chabot held onto his role as the team’s top option, averaging over 23 minutes of ice time in the games he played, though a step down from the 26 minutes he averaged from 2019 to 2022.
Ottawa only has one defenseman set for free agency this summer – pending RFA Erik Brännström. They should have the rare chance to bring back every member of what was a well-rounded defense, even despite Ottawa allowing the sixth-most goals in the league. A healthy Chabot should help the Senators get and maintain the puck much more often, especially with the backing of Artem Zub – who often received top line ice time in Chabot’s absence.
Snapshots: AHL, Bennett, Lekkerimaki
The AHL will remain under stable leadership for next season and beyond. Current league president and CEO Scott Howson was on an expiring contract entering next season, but the AHL’s Board of Governors announced today that he’s agreed to a multi-year extension.
Before assuming his current role in 2020, the 64-year-old Howson was a mainstay in NHL front offices. Nearly a decade after his brief playing career concluded in 1986, Howson was appointed as the general manager of the Oilers’ AHL affiliate, then in Cape Breton, in 1994. He continued in the role when Edmonton reached an affiliation agreement with the Hamilton Bulldogs in 1996, and he was eventually promoted to an AGM role with the Oilers’ NHL staff in 2000.
He got his first shot as an NHL GM after helping construct the Edmonton squad that reached the 2006 Stanley Cup Final, signing on as the Blue Jackets’ GM for 2007-08. He lasted there for more than five seasons until he was fired shortly into the lockout-constricted 2012-13 season. Howson then immediately returned to Edmonton as a pro scout and eventually became their director of player development in 2017 before leaving for his AHL president/CEO role during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Other news and notes from around hockey:
- Panthers forward Sam Bennett remains out for Game 2 against the Bruins tonight as Florida looks to tie the series. But the top-six center may not miss much more time with his upper-body injury and could return when the series shifts to Boston for Games 3 and 4, per The Hockey News’ David Dwork. Bennett, 27, had a goal and assist against the Lightning in the first round before leaving with injury partway through Game 2. He’s now missed more than two weeks of action but has officially been upgraded to day-to-day.
- Canucks top forward prospect Jonathan Lekkerimäki is back with AHL Abbotsford for their playoff run, the team confirmed today. Lekkerimäki, 19, was assigned to Abbotsford in March to make his North American professional debut but was loaned to the Swedish national team in mid-April in advance of the 2024 World Championship. He didn’t make the cut for the final roster, though, and will suit up in a must-win Game 3 tonight against the Ontario Reign to keep their season alive. The 2022 first-round pick had a goal and an assist for Abbotsford during his earlier brief stint.
NHL-Affiliated Players Participating In The 2024 World Championship
May 8, 3:38 p.m.: Blue Jackets 2023 second-round pick Gavin Brindley has been added to Team USA’s roster.
May 8, 12:15 p.m.: A few notable changes were announced today, including Penguins netminder Alex Nedeljkovic heading to Czechia to complement Red Wings Trey Augustine and Alex Lyon in the crease. Sweden’s national governing body also confirmed their full roster for the tournament.
May 6: Nearly every one of the 16 countries participating has confirmed their whole roster ahead of the 2024 IIHF World Championship, which begins Friday in Czechia. The following is a full list of NHL-affiliated players, including those both under contract with teams in 2023-24 or on reserve lists, attending the tournament. For fans of non-playoff bound teams, the Worlds are always a great chance to watch your team’s players skate in competitive hockey in May. Countries without any NHL-affiliated representation are Great Britain, Kazakhstan and Poland.
There’s one notable change to report from already announced/reported rosters: Norris Trophy finalist Roman Josi has been added to Switzerland’s roster, per Elite Prospects. The Predators captain will participate in his first World Championship since 2019.
Anaheim Ducks
G Lukáš Dostál (Czechia)
D Radko Gudas (Czechia)
F Isac Lundeström (Sweden)
F Pavol Regenda (Slovakia)
F Trevor Zegras (USA)
D Olen Zellweger (Canada)
Boston Bruins
F Dans Locmelis (Latvia)
Buffalo Sabres
D Bowen Byram (Canada)
F Dylan Cozens (Canada)
D Rasmus Dahlin (Sweden)
F Victor Olofsson (Sweden)
F John-Jason Peterka (Germany)
D Owen Power (Canada)
Calgary Flames
F Andrew Mangiapane (Canada)
F Martin Pospisil (Slovakia)
Carolina Hurricanes
F Juha Jääskä (Finland)
F Felix Unger Sörum (Sweden)
Chicago Blackhawks
F Connor Bedard (Canada)
D Seth Jones (USA)
F Philipp Kurashev (Switzerland)
G Petr Mrázek (Czechia)
D Vili Saarijärvi (Finland)
D Alex Vlasic (USA)
Columbus Blue Jackets
F Adam Fantilli (Canada) REMOVED FROM ROSTER
F Johnny Gaudreau (USA)
G Elvis Merzļikins (Latvia)
D Damon Severson (Canada)
F Calvin Thurkauf (Switzerland)
D Zach Werenski (USA)
Dallas Stars
F Arttu Hyry (Finland)
Detroit Red Wings
G Trey Augustine (USA)
G Alex Lyon (USA)
D Olli Määttä (Finland)
D Jeff Petry (USA)
F Lucas Raymond (Sweden)
Florida Panthers
F Alexander True (Denmark)
Los Angeles Kings
F Carl Grundström (Sweden)
F Pierre-Luc Dubois (Canada)
F Adrian Kempe (Sweden)
Minnesota Wild
F Matt Boldy (USA)
D Jonas Brodin (Sweden)
F Joel Eriksson Ek (Sweden)
G Filip Gustavsson (Sweden)
G Samuel Hlavaj (Slovakia)
F Marcus Johansson (Sweden)
C Marco Rossi (Austria)
D David Špaček (Czechia)
G Jesper Wallstedt (Sweden)
F Mats Zuccarello (Norway)
Montreal Canadiens
F Cole Caufield (USA)
D Kaiden Guhle (Canada)
F Oliver Kapanen (Finland)
F Vinzenz Rohrer (Austria)
F Juraj Slafkovsky (Slovakia)
Nashville Predators
D Roman Josi (Switzerland)
New Jersey Devils
G Nico Daws (Canada)
F Nico Hischier (Switzerland)
D Luke Hughes (USA)
F Dawson Mercer (Canada)
D Simon Nemec (Slovakia)
F Ondřej Palát (Czechia)
G Akira Schmid (Switzerland)
D Jonas Siegenthaler (Switzerland)
New York Islanders
F Brock Nelson (USA)
Ottawa Senators
F Ridly Greig (Canada)
F Dominik Kubalík (Czechia)
F Shane Pinto (USA)
D Jake Sanderson (USA)
F Brady Tkachuk (USA)
Philadelphia Flyers
G Samuel Ersson (Sweden)
F Joel Farabee (USA)
G Matej Tomek (Slovakia)
Pittsburgh Penguins
F Raivis Ansons (Latvia)
F Michael Bunting (Canada)
D Erik Karlsson (Sweden)
G Alex Nedeljkovic (USA)
D Marcus Pettersson (Sweden)
F Jesse Puljujärvi (Finland)
F Valtteri Puustinen (Finland)
San Jose Sharks
F Mikael Granlund (Finland)
F Luke Kunin (USA)
D Jan Rutta (Czechia)
F Will Smith (USA)
F Nico Sturm (Germany)
F Fabian Zetterlund (Sweden)
Seattle Kraken
F Pierre-Édouard Bellemare (France)
F André Burakovsky (Sweden)
G Philipp Grubauer (Germany)
F Jared McCann (Canada)
F Oskar Fisker Mølgaard (Denmark)
D Jamie Oleksiak (Canada)
F Brandon Tanev (Canada)
F Tomas Tatar (Slovakia)
St. Louis Blues
G Jordan Binnington (Canada)
F Kevin Hayes (USA)
G Joel Hofer (Canada)
D Matthew Kessel (USA)
D Colton Parayko (Canada)
Tampa Bay Lightning
F Michael Eyssimont (USA)
F Brandon Hagel (Canada)
D Victor Hedman (Sweden)
F Nick Paul (Canada)
Toronto Maple Leafs
F Fabrice Herzog (Switzerland)
F Pontus Holmberg (Sweden)
F David Kämpf (Czechia)
NHL Utah
F Dylan Guenther (Canada)
F Milos Kelemen (Slovakia)
D Michael Kesselring (USA)
D Patrik Koch (Slovakia)
F Jack McBain (Canada)
D Maksymilian Szuber (Germany)
G Karel Vejmelka (Czechia)
Vegas Golden Knights
F Martins Dzierkals (Latvia)
Washington Capitals
D Martin Fehérváry (Slovakia)
G Antoine Keller (France)
F Ryan Leonard (USA)
Winnipeg Jets
F Nino Niederreiter (Switzerland)
Panthers’ Jack Devine Returning To University Of Denver
The Panthers will have to wait until next year to see right wing prospect Jack Devine turn pro. The University of Denver announced Wednesday that the 20-year-old is returning for his senior season in 2024-25.
Devine slipped to the late seventh round in 2022, where Florida happily picked him up with the 221st overall pick. A few public scouts expected him to go closer to the midway point of the draft after a solid freshman season at Denver, but the October-born forward garnered less interest than expected.
Not only has he outpaced his actual billing over the last two years, but he’s likely worked his way up to first- or second-round status in an early redraft. Devine’s collegiate resume was made more impressive this year with a second NCAA championship, but his individual stat sheet in his junior year was quite impressive, too. He was easily the Pioneers’ best player, leading them in scoring with 27 goals and 56 points in 44 games with a +29 rating. That showing earned him a nomination for the Hobey Baker Award for the top player in collegiate hockey, as well as First All-American honors for the NCAA’s West Region.
The Illinois native will now likely join the Panthers on an entry-level contract as soon as his senior season ends, assuming he intends to sign with Florida and not test free agency. The Cats will likely burn the first year of his ELC in 2024-25, allowing him to make his NHL debut down the stretch of the regular season or in the playoffs. Devine was ranked fifth in the Panthers’ prospect system by The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler in February.
Senators Retain Seventh-Overall Pick, Defer Penalty To 2025 Or 2026
The Senators have opted to retain the seventh overall pick in the 2024 NHL Draft after failing to win either draw during Tuesday night’s lottery, general manager Steve Staios confirmed today (via Postmedia’s Bruce Garrioch). Ottawa is now required to forfeit either their 2025 or 2026 first-round selection as a result of failing to properly inform the Golden Knights of winger Evgenii Dadonov‘s no-trade clause in a July 2021 trade.
As was the case this year, the Senators will need to inform the league within 24 hours after the 2025 NHL Draft Lottery if they wish to retain their 2025 first-round choice or surrender their 2026 top pick. With Ottawa planning on challenging for postseason action after another difficult campaign this season, choosing to retain this year’s choice – likely the highest-value pick – was widely expected.
There will be a multitude of high-ceiling talents for the Sens to choose from in what’s billed as one of the deeper top 10s in recent memory. Checking in at seventh overall in TSN’s Bob McKenzie’s recent polling of NHL scouts is dynamic defenseman Zayne Parekh, who lit up the Ontario Hockey League this season with 33 goals and 96 points in 66 games for the Saginaw Spirit. Both those figures led all OHL defensemen, continuing to take leaps and bounds forward in his development after earning All-Rookie Team honors with Saginaw the year before. The Toronto-area native is a right-shot blue liner and is ever-so-slightly undersized at 6’0″ and 181 lbs, but they should almost definitely step into the NHL by 2025-26 if not next season. He’d be a welcome addition to a Sens defense prospect pool that lacks much NHL upside outside of shutdown D-man Tyler Kleven.
Other options potentially available in the Sens’ range are two-way blue-liner Sam Dickinson, offensive defenseman Zeev Buium, Finnish forward Konsta Helenius, and quickly-rising winger Tij Iginla. All would likely be top-five locks in weaker drafts.
Oskar Lindblom Signs With SHL’s Brynäs IF
Sharks pending unrestricted free agent left wing Oskar Lindblom won’t return to the club as expected, instead opting to return to Sweden on a two-year deal with Brynäs IF of the SHL. Lindblom’s new agreement with his hometown team also carries a three-year extension option for a maximum total of five seasons.
Lindblom, 27, spent the last two seasons in San Jose after being bought out by the Flyers in 2022, subsequently signing a two-year, $5MM agreement with the Sharks in free agency. The three-time 10-goal scorer was limited to only six snipes and 15 points in 73 games last year, though, and he failed to crack the Sharks’ opening-night roster last October.
He spent nearly the entire season on assignment to AHL San Jose, where the Ewing’s sarcoma survivor had six goals and 18 points in 41 contests. Lindblom’s lone NHL appearance this season came on November 10 against the Golden Knights, recording a -1 rating and one hit in 11:56 of ice time.
Brynäs, which plays in Lindblom’s hometown of Gävle, receives significant reinforcement after earning promotion back to the SHL from the HockeyAllsvenskan a few weeks ago. Lindblom played all of his youth hockey in the Brynäs organization and was selected from them by Philadelphia in the fifth round of the 2014 draft.
He graduated to a full-time fixture for them in the SHL in 2014-15, spending three seasons there before leaving for the Flyers in 2017. Lindblom totaled 38 goals and 87 points in 141 games in parts of five seasons for Brynäs in SHL competition during his first stint, including a 22-goal, 47-point showing in 52 games in 2016-17 that earned him Swedish Forward of the Year honors.
Lindblom is the third NHL transfer Brynäs has picked up already this offseason, joining former Ducks winger Jakob Silfverberg and ex-Maple Leafs and Devils depth netminder Erik Källgren. Their brief stay in the HockeyAllsvenskan last season was their first season outside of the Swedish top division since 1959-60.
If it’s the end of Lindblom’s time in the NHL, he concludes his career with 56 goals and 56 assists for 112 points and a -1 rating across 337 games with the Flyers and Sharks.
Blues Sign Hugh McGing To Two-Year Extension
The Blues have signed forward Hugh McGing to a two-year, two-way contract extension, general manager Doug Armstrong announced Wednesday. He’ll earn $775K at the NHL level and $250K at the AHL level each season, per the team.
McGing, 25, spent most of last season on assignment to AHL Springfield. He led the Blues’ primary minor-league affiliate with 31 assists, adding eight goals for 39 points in 51 games with 40 PIMs and a +5 rating. In doing so, he matched his career-high points total set last season despite playing 20 fewer games. His 0.76 points per game were his highest since recording a point per game in his senior season with Western Michigan University in 2019-20.
The undersized forward also earned his second career NHL call-up on Dec. 9, remaining on the St. Louis roster for 11 days before being returned to Springfield. He made five appearances in that time, struggling mightily with no points, a -5 rating, poor possession metrics and going 1 for 7 on faceoffs. McGing averaged only 8:23 per game and was given advantageous offensive zone usage at even strength.
McGing was a fifth-round pick of the Blues back in 2018. While he hasn’t provided anything in his limited NHL time that suggests he can handle a major-league role, the Chicago native has turned into a good role player with Springfield with above-average playmaking skills. He served as an alternate captain for the Thunderbirds this year and is a good fit in their top six, providing the Blues organization with a quality linemate for some of their younger, higher-ceiling prospects.
He was set to be a Group Six unrestricted free agent this summer, as he’d played fewer than 80 NHL games while completing three or more professional seasons. His new deal earns him a $90K raise annually over his previous $140K minors salary, perhaps more if he spends additional time earning the $775K league minimum while on the NHL roster. McGing will be eligible for true unrestricted free agency when his extension ends after the 2025-26 season.
The Blues have one other Group Six UFA to deal with before July 1 – 25-year-old winger William Bitten, who posted 17 goals and 33 points in 68 games for Springfield this year. After McGing’s extension, they’re now at 36 of the maximum 50 standard player contracts signed for next season.
Hurricanes Sign Joel Nystrom To Entry-Level Deal
The Hurricanes have signed defense prospect Joel Nyström to a two-year, entry-level contract, per a team announcement Tuesday night. The 21-year-old Swede will earn a $832.5K base salary and $80K AHL salary for both seasons, with a $92.5K signing bonus each year for a $925K cap hit.
Selected with the sixth-to-last pick in the 2021 draft, the right-shot Nyström has been a promising offensive talent over his three full seasons with Färjestad BK in the Swedish Hockey League. He had his best campaign yet in 2023-24, totaling eight goals and 18 assists for 26 points in 51 games with a +12 rating.
That made him the highest-scoring defender for the SHL’s best regular-season squad, an impressive feat for a player still so early on in his development. He wasn’t deployed in terribly difficult minutes and rarely played more than 20 minutes in a game, but he was still an incredibly important contributor in a second and third-pairing role at even strength while seeing significant power-play usage.
Nyström fell into the Hurricanes’ laps in his draft year. Some public rankings, including Elite Prospects, had him tabbed as a late second-round talent. Early on, the last few picks of the 2021 draft mostly look to be gems. Nyström’s teammate with Färjestad this season, goaltender Carl Lindbom, was selected by the Golden Knights with the 222nd overall pick and is on track to have an NHL future after logging a solid .911 SV% in 26 SHL appearances this season. Utah forward prospect Sam Lipkin and Lightning right wing prospect Niko Huuhtanen were the final two picks after Lindbom and have also both exceeded the normal development curve of a seventh-rounder.
Nyström’s ELC contains a European assignment clause, per CapFriendly, so he’ll likely be loaned back to Färjestad next season instead of suiting up for AHL Chicago. Another strong season in Sweden should put him in consideration for NHL duties as soon as 2025-26. The Karlstad native will be a restricted free agent upon expiry and becomes the 27th player under contract for Carolina next season.
