Nashville Predators Sign Vitali Pinchuk
Earlier today, agent Dan Milstein shared that his client, Vitali Pinchuk, had agreed to a one-year, entry-level contract with a mystery team. A few hours later, Milstein announced that the Nashville Predators had won the sweepstakes. The Predators confirmed the signing, though they didn’t release any financial details of the one-year pact. According to PuckPedia, the entry-level contract carries a $922,500 base salary, $102,500 signing bonus, $85K AHL salary, and $1MM in potential performance bonuses.
Pinchuk, 24, has been the topic of much speculation over the last two years. Despite going undrafted through his years of eligibility, the Belarusian has made quite a name for himself with the KHL’s Dinamo Minsk. Last month, reports indicated that nearly every team, 29 in fact, had contacted Pinchuk’s representation about bringing him to North America.
His production speaks for itself. Over the last two years, Pinchuk has scored 56 goals and 109 points in 131 games, with an additional seven goals and 18 points in 19 postseason contests. It wasn’t enough to lead the league in scoring, but Pinchuk was the only under-25 player to finish top-10 in KHL scoring this past season.
Pinchuk stands at 6’3″, 203 lbs. He is overtly physical, but uses his larger frame to protect the puck. Still, he largely utilizes his offensive skill, which he has plenty of, to make the most impact.
Unless something unexpected happens, Pinchuk should begin the 2026-27 season on the Predators’ opening night roster. Still, depending on training camp and preseason play, he could use a month of seasoning with the AHL’s Milwaukee Admirals, though the expectation is that he spends most of the year in Nashville.
Given his frame, he won’t be out of place starting on the third line. He has the offensive firepower to offer Nashville tertiary scoring immediately, and the team could easily move him up the lineup if he performs well. Still, the Predators will want to make some room for him, as they already have 14 forwards signed for next season (including Pinchuk) with others looking to crack the roster.
Prospect Notes: Oswald, Pattersson, Pinchuk
The Edmonton Oilers are again looking overseas to bolster their forward core. According to Frank Seravalli of Victory+, the Oilers are the betting favorites to land forward Veit Oswald this summer, despite other teams having interest.
Oswald, 21, has spent the last several years playing for the DEL’s EHC München. He wasn’t on most people’s radar a few years ago, scoring 10 goals and 17 points in 38 games. He was included on Team Germany’s U20 team for the 2023-24 IIHF World Junior Championship, where he scored three goals and five points in four games. Oswald’s output was decent for the tournament, but his 27 PIMs caused too much negative attention for any additional interest.
However, he broke out in a big way this year. Oswald finished the 2025-26 campaign with 12 goals and 26 points in 38 games with a +16 rating, adding another two goals in six postseason contests. Although he didn’t challenge for any scoring leaders, he continues to improve on both sides of the puck, making NHL teams more willing to afford him an opportunity in North America.
Additional prospect notes:
- The AHL’s Abbotsford Canucks announced that the team has recalled forward Riley Patterson from the OHL’s Niagara IceDogs. Patterson, 20, was drafted 125th overall by the Vancouver Canucks in the 2024 NHL Draft. He had an impressive 2025-26 season with the IceDogs, registering 40 goals and 84 points in 60 games. If he plays down the stretch for Abbotsford, it will be the first professional contest of his career.
- A few weeks ago, reports indicated that nearly the entire league had shown an interest in forward Vitali Pinchuk, who scored 31 goals and 66 points in 65 games as a 24-year-old for the KHL’s Dinamo Minsk this season. Unsurprisingly, Anthony Di Marco of the Daily Faceoff shared that the Philadelphia Flyers are one of the 29 teams to have contacted Pinchuk about playing in North America next season. Pinchuk hasn’t played in North America since the 2019-20 campaign, when he appeared in 54 games for the OHL’s Kitchener Rangers.
Several Teams Showing Interest In Vitali Pinchuk
March 11, 2026: Fast-forward to nearly the end of the KHL’s regular season, and Pinchuk’s output has only improved throughout the year. He’s now up to 30 goals and 62 points in 61 games for Minsk. Now, Thomas Drance of The Athletic reports that virtually every team in the league – 29 of them, to be exact – has reached out to Pinchuk’s camp to try to get him landed on an entry-level deal.
Nov. 6, 2025: There are still several months to go until the end of the regular season, when the international free agent market begins to pick up. Nonetheless, European leagues start their seasons earlier than the NHL, meaning sample sizes are large enough by the time November rolls around for teams to begin to identify breakout targets.
One of those names to keep an eye out for is Belarusian center Vitali Pinchuk, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports. “Several teams” have made contact with his representation as he mulls a jump to North America following the conclusion of his season with Dinamo Minsk of the Kontinental Hockey League, where he’s spent the vast majority of his professional career.
Pinchuk, 23, isn’t a total stranger to North American hockey. He was initially draft eligible in 2020 and spent that season in the Ontario Hockey League in hopes of boosting his chances of being picked. The 6’3″, 203-lb pivot recorded 13 goals and 34 points in 54 games with a -12 rating, but wasn’t picked. When the OHL closed its doors for the 2020-21 season due to the pandemic, Pinchuk returned to Belarus, where he has remained ever since.
He made his KHL debut for Dinamo the following year. He was a fixture of Belarus’ teams at the World Juniors until the country was banned from international competition by the IIHF for its part in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – in fact, he was named the country’s top young player in 2021. His development has been a slow burn, but he had his first meaningful breakthrough in the 2023-24 season. After posting limited point totals in bottom-six jobs over the previous few years and struggling to stay in the lineup, he worked his way into a top-nine job with Dinamo with nine goals and 22 points in 43 games.
It was last season that Pinchuk began to take on star status in the KHL. Dinamo’s 39-21-8 record last season was its best in eight years, and Pinchuk finished second on the club with 25 goals and fifth with 43 points in 66 games. This season, the club is off to a torrid 13-5-3 start with Pinchuk clicking at a point per game, logging a 9-12–21 scoring line through 21 contests.
A point-per-game season in the more offensively conservative KHL is no small feat. Only three players hit the mark last season after seven achieved it in 2023-24. Keeping up that pace will be challenging for Pinchuk, but even still, he’s one of only 13 names with at least five games played at this point in the year to be at or above the mark.
Pinchuk turns 24 in January, so that will be his signing age if he inks an NHL contract next summer. That limits him to landing a one-year, entry-level contract that would make him a restricted free agent in 2027.
