Panthers Reassign Mikulas Hovorka
2/6/26: The Panthers reassigned Hovorka back to AHL Charlotte today. He played 11:27 time on ice in Florida’s loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning yesterday.
2/5/26: With the Panthers dealing with several injuries for their final game before the Olympic break against Tampa Bay, they needed some help on the back end. Accordingly, the team announced (Twitter link) that they’ve recalled Mikulas Hovorka from AHL Charlotte. To make room on the roster, blueliner Tobias Bjornfot was placed on injured reserve.
The 24-year-old is in his second season in North America since signing as an undrafted free agent with Florida back in 2024. Prior to tonight’s game, he had exclusively played in the minors with the Checkers. This season, Hovorka has two goals and eight assists in 30 games, meaning he has equaled his rookie-season output in half the games he played in 2024-25. However, given that the break is coming after tonight’s game, it’s a lock that he’ll be returned to Charlotte in the very near future.
As for Bjornfot, the nature of the injury is currently undisclosed but he sustained it on Wednesday against Boston. The 24-year-old was recalled last month and has seen fairly regular action since then. Bjornfot has played in 10 games with Florida this season, picking up two goals and one assist in 11:20 per night of playing time. Meanwhile, he hasn’t been much more productive in Charlotte as he has a goal and six helpers in 22 games with them. Bjornfot will be eligible to be activated in time for Florida’s next game on February 26th against Toronto.
Snapshots: CHL/NCAA, Hovorka, Tiefensee
The NCAA is facing major pressure to lift one of its biggest barriers to entry for men’s ice hockey after a class-action lawsuit was levied against them on Monday, alleging the association is “violating antitrust laws by preventing hockey players who appeared in Canadian Hockey League games from competing for NCAA teams.”
Today, Sean Gentille of The Athletic broke down the potential implications of the suit. The elimination of the rule preventing CHL players from making the jump to Division I hockey has been in discussion for a while, at the very least dating back to a report from Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet in March.
However, if CHL players were allowed to move to NCAA play at any given time, it would likely necessitate a revision of the NHL’s transfer agreements with both organizations. Players drafted out of the three CHL sub-leagues have a two-year exclusive signing window after being drafted by an NHL club. In contrast, players on the college track have their signing rights stay with their NHL team until Aug. 15, following the year they’ve graduated from their program.
The suit’s basis alleges that the NCAA’s rule barring CHL players from entrance isn’t to protect amateurism. It’s to “harm the CHL — the NCAA’s primary competition for elite young players — and that, in practice, it constitutes a ‘group boycott’ that violates U.S. antitrust law. It’s also a ‘carve-out’ of sorts that exists in men’s hockey and skiing, but no other sport,” Gentille writes.
Yet removing the rule would severely handicap other high-level junior leagues in North America, such as the USHL and other Canadian junior leagues, who routinely have their players go on to have successful Division I careers. They’d be at greater risk of losing their primary talent to the three CHL leagues. “Avoiding that, along with more generally making changes during what has been a profitable and positive run for college hockey, would seem to be the reason the rule is still on the books in 2024,” Gentille says.
Elsewhere from around the sport:
- The Panthers are looking for undrafted free-agent signing Mikulas Hovorka to take major strides in his development in his first season in North America, AHL head coach Geordie Kinnear told George Richards for NHL.com. “His size is obvious, but his passion to practice and to play is infectious,” Kinnear said. “The coaches just gravitated to him due to his willingness to be coached. He may have been going against teammates and peers, but you could see his physicality, which is how we want him to play. We think he will take a big step, but we also know it is a process.” Hovorka, 23, is a right-shot defenseman who checks in at 6’6″ and nearly 230 lbs. He spent last season in his native Czechia, recording 16 points and a +14 rating in 51 games with Extraliga club Motor Ceske Budejovice.
- Early into his post-playing career, Stars player development coordinator Ben Bishop is already making an impact. The two-time All-Star netminder has been working closely with Dallas 2023 fifth-rounder Arno Tiefensee, he tells NHL.com’s Taylor Baird, traveling to the player’s native Germany to work with him throughout last season. It’s panned out so far, as the 22-year-old took over as the starter for the DEL’s Adler Mannheim last year with a .907 SV% and 2.43 GAA in 32 games. Tiefensee must put pen to paper on an entry-level contract before June 1 of next year before the Stars lose his signing rights.
Panthers, Mikulas Hovorka Agree To Terms On Entry-Level Deal
The Panthers have agreed to terms with right-shot defenseman Mikulas Hovorka on a two-year, entry-level contract beginning next season, per a team release. Hovorka had drawn interest from multiple teams throughout the season, and he gets his wish of signing in the Eastern Conference.
The 22-year-old Hovorka spent the last two seasons with Motor České Budějovice of the Czech Extraliga. Undrafted, the Prague native has played 90 games at the top level, recording eight goals and 14 assists for 22 points with a +2 rating and 66 PIMs. The shutdown blue-liner’s main appeal is his size – if he cracks Florida’s roster over the next two years, he would be one of the bulkier defenders in the league at 6’6″ and 229 pounds.
Hovorka was under contract with Motor through 2026, but the transfer agreement between the ELH and the NHL allows the Panthers to buy out his overseas contract. They did not disclose the terms of his entry-level deal.
This is the second straight year that Cats GM Bill Zito has gone defense shopping out of the ELH. He picked up Latvian blue-liner Uvis Balinskis from Bílí Tygři Liberec in April last year, a low-risk signing that’s largely panned out. Balinskis logged 23 games of largely solid NHL minutes this season, has been productive with AHL Charlotte, and inked a two-year extension to remain in South Florida.
Hovorka seems a likely candidate to start next season in Charlotte, especially since his game is less developed than that of the elder Balinskis. He’s still a low-risk, medium-upside acquisition for the Panthers, who will hold his rights if they choose to qualify him and make him an RFA when his deal expires in 2026.
Mikulas Hovorka In Advanced Discussions To Sign With NHL Team
While college free agency garners a good chunk of attention at this time of year, it’s not the only avenue that teams can take to add to their prospect pool during the spring. Several international players are also going to be looking to make the jump to North America. Among those is defenseman Mikulas Hovorka who, according to hokej.cz’s Marek Hedbavny, has generated interest from quite a few NHL teams this season.
The 22-year-old has been a regular in the Czech Extraliga the past two seasons with Ceske Budejovice and is coming off a decent showing this year which saw him record five goals and 11 assists in 51 games before suffering an ankle injury early in the playoffs, one that could take him out of consideration for the Worlds next month. He’s under contract with them for two more years but since there is a transfer agreement in place between the Czech Ice Hockey Federation and the NHL, Hovorka is free to sign with an NHL team.
While Hovorka didn’t provide any specifics as to who he might be signing with, he did acknowledge in an article on his club team’s site that he’s in advanced discussions and that his preference is to sign with an Eastern team. He also identified that there were 11 teams that he knew of that had been scouting him during the season.
Wherever he signs, Hovorka will be capped at signing a two-year, entry-level contract and there’s a good chance he’ll be starting off at the AHL level next season to adapt to the North American style of play. But with his improvement this season and an intriguing 6’6 frame, he will be an interesting addition to the prospect pool for whichever team winds up signing him.
