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Central Notes: Brodin, Bolduc, Predators

March 24, 2025 at 6:01 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Minnesota Wild have opted to pull defenseman Jonas Brodin back out of the lineup with three games over the next four days, per Joe Smith of The Athletic. Brodin returned from a month-long absence on Friday, after recovering from missing 12 games with a lower-body injury. Head coach John Hynes told Smith that Brodin’s absence was precautionary, and that the defender hadn’t re-aggravated his previous injury.

The news that Brodin’s health hasn’t gotten worse will be a silver lining for Wild fans. But missing the top defender is still a tough pill to swallow. Brodin has played in just 39 games this season, but he’s looked strong when he’s on the ice – marked by 19 points and a plus-11 on the season. Brodin seemed to jump right back into play in Friday’s game, playing through 20 minutes of ice time and recording one assist and one penalty. But Minnesota will opt to be cautious with their top-pair guy – opting to not tempt fait with each of Marcus Foligno, Joel Eriksson Ek, and Kirill Kaprizov still out of the lineup. Jon Merrill and Declan Chisholm will man the minutes opened up by Brodin’s absence.

Other notes from the Central Division:

  • Top St. Louis Blues youngster Zachary Bolduc is continuing to reach new milestones in his young NHL career. The Department of Player Safety has penalized Bolduc with the first fine of his career, after he cross-checked Nashville Predators defenseman Nick Blankenburg in Saturday night’s game. Bolduc will forfeit $2,248.26 for the incident – the max allowable under the CBA. The young winger has been a focal point of the Blues’ league-best 12-2-2 record since the 4-Nations Face-Off break. He has four points in his last five games, and 11 points in 16 games since the league returned. Bolduc has managed those totals despite averaging just 13 minutes of ice time each night. With that in mind, St. Louis will breathe a sigh of relief that Bolduc was fined rather than suspended. He’ll continue to contribute on a nightly basis, as the Blues look to continue blazing their path to the playoffs.
  • The Nashville Predators have announced a four-year extension with AHL affiliate the Milwaukee Admirals per Predators beat reporter Brooks Bratten. The deal will run through the 2028-29 season and will mark 30 years of partnership between the two sides when it next expires. Nashville announced Milwaukee as an IHL affiliate immediately upon joining the NHL in 1998. The Admirals moved to the AHL three years later and have made the playoffs in 19 of 21 seasons since then. That includes winning the Calder Cup in 2oo4 and making the Finals in 2006. Milwaukee currently ranks second in the AHL’s Central Division and is one of just three minor league clubs to already clinch a postseason berth. Their success comes in part thanks to top Predators prospects such as Ozzy Wiesblatt, Joakim Kemell, and Ryan Ufko.

AHL| Injury| Minnesota Wild| NHL| Nashville Predators| Prospects| St. Louis Blues Declan Chisholm| Jonas Brodin| Zachary Bolduc

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Canucks’ Elias Pettersson, Nils Hoglander Out At Least Four Games

March 24, 2025 at 5:21 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Vancouver Canucks will be without star centerman Elias Pettersson and top-six winger Nils Hoglander for the remaining four games of their current road-trip per NHL.com’s Mike Morreale. Both players missed Vancouver’s team practice on Sunday after each leaving Saturday night’s game with injury. Pettersson exited with roughly five minutes left in the second period. He didn’t appear to sustain an injury, though none of his final five shifts lasted longer than 30 seconds. Hoglander exited with under two minutes left in the second and also didn’t appear injured, though he did get in a choppy stick battle in his final shift. Both players are out with undisclosed injuries.

The Canucks were two games into their second six-game road trip of the season. Pettersson and Hoglander were both pivotal pieces of the lineup in the road trip’s kickoff game against St. Louis on Thursday. Pettersson led all forwards with 20 minutes of ice time and recorded two assists, while Hoglander scored one assist in 17 minutes of ice time. Neither scored in their limited action on Saturday, and Vancouver will now be forced to fill two glaring holes in their top-six.

Rookie Aatu Räty is expected to earn an immediate promotion to the lineup. Räty hasn’t played since January 31st, which was itself a one-off start after not receiving routine NHL minutes since December. He’s appeared in 21 NHL games in total this season, netting just four points split evenly. Räty has been far more productive in the minor leagues, where he leads the Abbotsford Canucks in both total and point-per-game scoring with 39 points in 41 games. The Canucks recalled Räty ahead of Saturday’s game, and he’ll now have a golden chance at hardy minutes with Vancouver away from home for another week.

The Canucks are also carrying rookie Jonathan Lekkerimaki, who has rotated into the NHL lineup throughout March. He’s managed seven appearances and one assist through the month, bringing his season-long totals up to four points in 18 NHL Games. Lekkerimaki has also scored 19 goals and 28 points in 32 AHL games this year. He’s received as little as nine minutes of ice time through his recent stretch in the top flight, though Hoglander’s absence should break open at least a third-line role. Räty and Lekkerimaki could also be beneficiaries of the large chunk of power-play minutes that both Pettersson and Hoglander leave behind.

This will be a great chance for Vancouver’s top prospects to show they can shine. The Canucks will need all the support they can get, as they find themselves five points away from a Western Conference Wild Card with two games in hand. They’ve posted a menial 5-4-1 record over their last 10 games – not enough to get ahead the red-hot, 8-1-1 St. Louis Blues or the productive 5-2-3 record of the Calgary Flames. Even with opportunity at hand, it’s hard to imagine the rookies will live up to Pettersson’s 45 points in 64 games this season, which leads all Canucks forwards. Hoglander’s 21 points in 66 games, and gritty middle-six role, will likely be a bit more acheivable to match.

Injury| NHL| Newsstand| Players| Vancouver Canucks Elias Pettersson| Nils Hoglander

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WHL To Add Penticton Vees, Initiate Application For Chilliwack Chiefs

March 24, 2025 at 4:34 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 4 Comments

The Western Hockey League (WHL) has announced their first formal expansion in 18 years in a formal press release. They will absorb the BCHL’s Penticton Vees in 2025-26 and have begun the application process for the Chilliwack Chiefs to join in 2026-27.

Penticton will maintain their majority owner, Graham Fraser, but they will also add Winnipeg Jets star Mark Scheifele, former New York Ranger Mike Richter, and businessmen Joe Walters and Gord Kovacik as minority partners. In a ceremony welcoming the Vees to the WHL, Fraser shared that they began the process of moving leagues last season. He added that the move also required a unique lease agreement between the Vees and the city of Penticton, captured by Chelsea Powrie of the local Casanet. It did not necessitate any rink renovations. The BCHL has added that Penticton’s BCHL rights will be relocated with existing ownerhsip, including Fraser.

The Vees are will maintain head coach, general manager, and team president Fred Harbinson through the move. Harbinson has been Penticton’s coach and GM since the 2007-08 season. He led the club to a BCHL championship in his very first year at the helm. He’s appeared in the postseason in every season since, and added five more championship rings.

For all intents and purposes, the Vees are formally a WHL as of this announcement. They will participate in a WHL Expansion Draft on May 7th, as well as the upcoming WHL Prospects Draft and WHL U.S. Priority Drafts. Penticton is already recruiting for their 15-player list. Fraser mentioned that the Vees will try to maintain current players whose WHL rights aren’t currently owned, though only nine players on the current roster meet eligibility requirements. Penticton will need to expand that to a full 50-player list by May 7th.

Meanwhile, Chilliwack will return to the BCHL for one season while they entertain WHL expansion. The city of Chilliwack were a part of one of the WHL’s most recent expansion waves in the early-2000s, getting awarded a club in 2005 and relocating to Victoria in 2011. Since then, Chilliwack has appeared in two BCHL Finals and consistently ranked as a top-five team in the Coastal Conference. The Chiefs’ home arena, Chilliwack Coliseum, is city-owned and is also approved for a WHL club. Still, the city has announced plans to invest $3.7MM in upgrades to the arena before joining the WHL in 2026-27, as shared by Fraser Valley Today. These upgrades will include improvements to the scoreboard, lighting system, and dasher boards among other upgrades.

The Chiefs will next have to go through an official franchise application process that will be reviewed by the WHL Commissioner and Executive Commission. The outcome of this process is expected to be announced before the start of the 2025-26 season. Meanwhile, the BCHL has announced no further plans for the Chilliwack franchise at this time – pointing towards their commitment to the league for the foreseeable future.

This news would theoretically grow the WHL from 22 to 24 teams within the next two years. Penticton will likely join the B.C. Division of the WHL’s Western Conference. Integrating Chilliwack could be more of a challenge. The city is a bit too far from the league’s Eastern Conference, which could lead to 13 teams in the Western Conference and 11 in the Eastern Conference.

The news of BCHL clubs joining the WHL is substantial. The CHL recently agreed to a partnership with the NCAA that would allow CHL players to commit to American colleges – something previously outlawed by the NCAA’s professional sports policy. This news has allowed the CHL to become a pipeline for players with collegiate aspirations, a perk that used to only belong to non-CHL Canadian junior leagues like the BCHL, AJHL, and OJHL. Penticton and Chilliwack’s moves could be the start of the growing snowball that is CHL hockey, though it’s likely to be slowed down by eligibility concerns and logistical red tape. Still, the news will give hockey fans at all levels some action to anticipate as the WHL, and other CHL leagues, approach key dates this offseason.

CHL| Newsstand| WHL

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Rangers Recall Nicolas Aubé-Kubel

March 24, 2025 at 2:42 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

Per a team announcement, the Rangers have recalled winger Nicolas Aubé-Kubel from AHL Hartford. He could make his Blueshirts debut tomorrow against the Kings, but it’s far likelier he’s an extra body for injury insurance on their California road trip.

Aubé-Kubel, 28, was acquired from the Sabres in the trade that sent defenseman Erik Brännström to Buffalo before the deadline. After being waived by the Sabres on Jan. 27 and subsequently reassigned to the minors, he’s posted a combined 5-4–9 scoring line in 15 games between the two organizations’ AHL affiliates this year, including one goal in three games with Hartford since the swap.

A second-overall pick by the Flyers back in 2014, Aubé-Kubel was an NHL regular on a championship-winning team with the Avalanche three years ago. His stock has tumbled since, though, leading to multiple waiver placements and a handful of AHL stints for the first time since the pandemic.

He was a strong piece on the Capitals’ fourth line last season, posting 6-10–16 in 60 games with a plus-four rating and 159 hits. That landed the grinder a $1.5MM commitment from the Sabres on a one-year deal last summer, but he wasn’t nearly as effective in Buffalo. Injuries limited him to a goal and an assist in 19 games for the Sabres before he landed on waivers.

The 6’0″, 207-lb winger still counts $350K against the cap when he’s in the minors because of his salary checking in above the maximum buriable threshold, so the Rangers only add $1.15MM to their books with the recall. New York now has an active roster of 25 players, including the injured Arthur Kaliyev, who’s done for the year. Aubé-Kubel is a pending unrestricted free agent.

New York Rangers| Transactions Nicolas Aube-Kubel

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Jets’ Gabriel Vilardi Out Week-To-Week

March 24, 2025 at 1:42 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

Jets head coach Scott Arniel told reporters today that Gabriel Vilardi is out week-to-week with an upper-body injury (via the team’s Mitchell Clinton). While Arniel declined to say what exactly is ailing the winger, he confirmed it’s unrelated to the puck he took to the ear in yesterday’s loss to the Sabres. The injury will leave Vilardi out of the lineup for the first time this season and will lead to either David Gustafsson or Rasmus Kupari re-entering the lineup.

Who moves up to Vilardi’s spot on the top line with Kyle Connor and Mark Scheifele remains to be seen, especially since the line has barely been touched this year. Vilardi’s appeared with Connor and Scheifele in all 71 of his appearances this season, and their 907 minutes together makes them the most frequent forward line combination in the league, per MoneyPuck. No other forward unit has more than 650 minutes together.

A week-to-week designation could presumably end Vilardi’s regular season. Winnipeg has 11 games remaining, and even a two-week absence – likely optimistic – means he’ll return with only four games left. Without a firmer timeline, it’s possible he may remain unavailable for a portion of their first-round playoff series as well.

That’s bad news for a Jets team that didn’t land a big fish at the trade deadline, instead opting for depth pickups Luke Schenn and Brandon Tanev. The 25-year-old Vilardi has set career-highs across the board with his 71 appearances, 27 goals, 34 assists and 61 points. Averaging over 18 minutes per game, he seemed to have finally overcome his career-long injury bug that caused him to average just 40 games per season over the first five years of his NHL career.

He’ll now miss significant time again as the Jets teeter on the verge of clinching a playoff spot. They’re almost certainly slated for a Central Division title and a first-round matchup against the second wild-card team in the West, whoever that may be, but doing so without a player who accounts for 11% of their goals this season is a significant blow. Vilardi is humming at a 20.8% shooting rate but, as per usual for Winnipeg’s top line, has struggled to control possession at even strength. They’re all underwater in their shot-attempt numbers but have managed to control 52.6% of expected goals, per MoneyPuck.

Vilardi’s season hits pause amid a cold streak. He’d gone without a point in his last four games, compiling a minus-three rating during that stretch. Nonetheless, he’s a huge loss during the final month of the regular season as Winnipeg looks to seal the deal on their best regular season in franchise history.

Injury| Newsstand| Winnipeg Jets Gabriel Vilardi

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Stars Hopeful Tyler Seguin Can Return Before End Of Regular Season

March 24, 2025 at 12:59 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Stars forward Tyler Seguin will travel with the team on their upcoming road trip after recently returning to practice, head coach Peter DeBoer told reporters today (including Sam Nestler of DLLS Sports). He’ll still likely be sidelined well into April, but the possibility of him coming off long-term injured reserve – or at least getting a conditioning stint with AHL Texas – before the postseason is coming into view.

Seguin hit the injured list 19 games into the season, undergoing two surgeries on his left hip in December. He was initially given a four-to-six-month return timeline, so the possibility of April game action isn’t too surprising. It’s nonetheless a great sign for Seguin, who had multiple issues in his recovery from a similar surgery on his right hip at the beginning of the decade that threatened his career.

Getting Seguin acclimated in a forward group that’s since acquired Mikael Granlund and Mikko Rantanen is a legitimate priority for Dallas heading into the postseason. The 33-year-old started the season on a tear, posting 9-11–20 with a +14 rating in 19 games. Assuming he doesn’t add to that total, it will stand as his first season above a point-per-game pace since 2015-16. He did so on a line with Matt Duchene and Mason Marchment, a role that’s been filled by Granlund since his acquisition from the Sharks last month. The Finn hasn’t been quite as productive as Seguin was in those minutes, though, posting 3-9–12 in 18 games since the trade.

Even if Seguin’s playoff scoring over the past few years isn’t particularly outstanding, adding him back to a top-nine role – potentially bumping Granlund down or reuniting on a “third” line with Jamie Benn and Wyatt Johnston – is a mouth-watering prospect for DeBoer. Getting him back up to speed to kick off Game 1 of a likely first-round meeting with the Avalanche is paramount, especially since they’ll likely need to focus their efforts on outpacing Colorado’s similarly well-constructed offense to win the series. Star defenseman Miro Heiskanen likely won’t be returning from his knee injury until the second round if they make it.

Seguin still has two years remaining on his deal with a $9.85MM cap hit, so this playoff run won’t be a last hurrah with Dallas. They are, however, likely to lose nearly all of their pending free agents with just $5.32MM in cap room for 2025-26 and up to seven roster spots to fill, per PuckPedia. Since returning from his first hip surgery, Seguin has 79-92–171 in 244 games.

The Stars don’t quite have enough cap space to activate Seguin at present, but it’s doable if they send one player down to the minors. That would likely be rookie Mavrik Bourque, who was a healthy scratch this weekend.

Dallas Stars Tyler Seguin

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Flames To Sign Owen Say To Entry-Level Contract

March 24, 2025 at 12:22 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

The Flames have signed goaltender Owen Say to a one-year contract worth $872,500 for the 2025-26 campaign. While the team announced it as a two-way deal, it’ll be an entry-level one since his age on Sep. 15 of the calendar year the agreement was signed will be 24.

Say, who turns 24 in June, is an undrafted free-agent pickup out of Notre Dame. He started his collegiate career at Mercyhurst in 2022-23 but transferred to the Fighting Irish for his junior year last summer.

The 6’2″ Canadian has steadily upped his numbers in the NCAA ranks, averaging a .914 SV% and a 3.09 GAA across 69 career appearances for the two schools. He posted a .903 and .913 in his two seasons behind a weak Mercyhurst club before bettering himself with a 2.82 GAA and a .920 SV% in 27 games for Notre Dame. While they finished last in the Big 10, Say had a 10-15-0 record and posted those numbers behind the conference’s worst defense.

Assuming they filed this deal as a standard two-way contract, as they announced it, instead of an entry-level one, the league will likely reject it, and they’ll need to re-file it properly as an ELC. Calgary made the opposite mistake last season when attempting to sign forward Sam Morton out of college – while he was 24 at the time of signing, he turned 25 before Sep. 15. He was thus ineligible for the entry-level contract they attempted to sign him to. The league rejected the deal and had to re-file it as a two-way agreement.

Say will be a restricted free agent in the summer of 2026. Calgary now has 24 contracts on the books for next season.

Calgary Flames| Transactions Owen Say

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Blue Jackets Activate Erik Gudbranson, Sean Monahan

March 24, 2025 at 9:35 am CDT | by Josh Cybulski Leave a Comment

March 24: Gudbranson and Monahan will be coming off injured reserve and making their returns tonight, head coach Dean Evason confirmed. The team later announced they’ve both been activated.

March 23: Columbus Blue Jackets reporter Jeff Svoboda tweeted that center Sean Monahan and defenseman Erik Gudbranson may return to the lineup tomorrow night when the Blue Jackets take on the New York Islanders.

Monahan hasn’t played since January 7th, when he suffered a wrist injury in a game against the Pittsburgh Penguins. The 30-year-old was in the midst of a career year, having tallied 14 goals and 27 assists in 41 games. The Brampton, Ontario native signed with Columbus as a free agent last summer on July 1st, inking a contract that was largely panned by critics. However, Monahan has played well above expectations for the Blue Jackets and helped lead them into the playoff picture in a year where they weren’t expected to contend for the postseason. His return should give Columbus a boost as they try to snap a six-game losing streak.

Gudbranson hasn’t played since mid-October after he suffered a shoulder injury that required surgery. The 33-year-old has played just three times during the 2024-25 season, last suiting up on October 15th. The Ottawa, Ontario native had a career year last season, tallying six goals and 20 assists in 78 games while continuing to provide his usual physical presence.

The Blue Jackets sit four points back of Montreal for the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference and will certainly welcome the return of two veterans who should help them in their push for the postseason.

Columbus Blue Jackets Erik Gudbranson| Sean Monahan

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Lightning Sign Cooper Flinton To Entry-Level Deal

March 24, 2025 at 9:34 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Lightning have signed left-winger Cooper Flinton to a two-year, entry-level deal beginning next season, according to a team release. The forward just wrapped up his junior season at Dartmouth College. He will finish the season with the Bolts’ AHL affiliate in Syracuse on a tryout agreement.

Flinton, 21, was a seventh-round selection of the Lightning in the 2021 draft but barely played that year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He spent his post-draft season with the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders of the United States Hockey League before making the jump to Division I NCAA play with Dartmouth.

The 6’2″, 205-lb winger was more of a power forward in his junior days, but he’s shifted his game to be more scoring-oriented since joining the Big Green. In 2022-23, he made a decent impact as a freshman – ranking fifth on Dartmouth in scoring with 6-9–15 in 27 games. He’s upped that production over the last two years, posting 15-10–25 in 30 games last season and 11-13–24 in 32 games this year. He’s a strong top-six forward on a Dartmouth team coming off an 18-win season, its highest total since 2015-16.

Flinton doesn’t earn mentions in most public rankings of the Bolts’ prospect pool. A recall is certainly possible before his deal runs out at the end of the 2026-27 season, but he’s likely destined to play a full-time role with Syracuse. His performance there will dictate whether he receives a qualifying offer that summer to remain in the Tampa organization. The Bolts now have 28 out of the maximum 50 contracts on their books for next season, per PuckPedia.

Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions Cooper Flinton

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Canucks Expected To Activate Thatcher Demko

March 24, 2025 at 9:09 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Canucks are expected to reinstate goaltender Thatcher Demko from injured reserve today, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet said on today’s 32 Thoughts podcast. Vancouver plans to start the netminder for tonight’s Hughes bowl against the Devils.

Demko, 29, was a Vezina Trophy nominee for the first time in 2023-24 but sustained a knee injury in Game 1 of the postseason that ended his campaign. The injury, later revealed to be a complex issue with his popliteus muscle, also kept him on the sidelines through the first two months of 2024-25. Upon returning to the lineup, he wasn’t himself – posting a .881 SV% and a 2-1-3 record in seven starts before briefly exiting the lineup again with a back injury. That one only cost him a couple of starts, and he returned a week later. He logged an improved but still underwhelming .899 SV% in 10 appearances leading into the 4 Nations break.

In Vancouver’s final game before the break, Demko left midway through the first period of his start against the Maple Leafs with a lower-body injury and hasn’t played since. While unrelated to his popliteus muscle issues, it kept him off the ice for over a month. He only returned to practice as a full participant yesterday, but Friedman reports he’s been doing “a lot of work behind the scenes” in an attempt to return to play as soon as possible for the stretch run.

Demko’s return could make a considerable impact in the Western Conference wild-card race. Back-to-back losses have slashed Vancouver’s playoff chances to 11.3%, per MoneyPuck, now sitting five points back of the Blues with two games in hand, but the Flames are still ahead of them in the catch-up race. While Demko hasn’t been great this year, his season numbers are better than what Kevin Lankinen has given them since the break. After signing a five-year, $22.5MM extension last month, he’s posted a 5-6-1 record and a .885 SV% in 12 appearances. Fatigue has likely played a factor for Lankinen, who’s started 10 of Vancouver’s 11 games in March. His 44 starts and 46 appearances on the year are already career-highs by a significant margin.

Since we’re past the trade deadline, the Canucks won’t need to make a corresponding move to activate Demko from IR. Nonetheless, they’ll presumably return current backup Arturs Silovs to AHL Abbotsford unless they have a desire to carry three goalies.

Transactions| Vancouver Canucks Thatcher Demko

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