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Sharks Rumors

Snapshots: Capitals, Schmidt, Buium, Celebrini

September 21, 2025 at 11:46 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

Training camp updates are rolling in as many teams approach their first round of cuts. The most pertinent updates came for the Washington ahead of an early-morning scrimmage. Superstar Alex Ovechkin didn’t take the ice with the team as he continues to face a day-to-day, lower-body injury per Sammi Silber of The Hockey News. Silber also reported that forward Justin Sourdif and defenseman Martin Fehervary continue to not take contact during practice, and thus didn’t take part in Washington’s scrimmage.

None of Washington’s updates are cause for much concern. Ovechkin is expected to continue progressing towards a return, and be held out of action as a precaution. Ovechkin will return to his perennial role on top of Washington’s lineup when the regular season kicks off. Fehervary is also still on an expected track, continuing to work his way back from a torn meniscus suffered late last season. He underwent surgery on the knee during the off-season, but has since been unable to kick minor inflammation. Once that goes down, he’ll return to a solid role in Washington’s daily lineup. Sourdif was facing illness, and should work back to full speed after taking a few laps with the non-playing group on Sunday.

Other notes from around the NHL:

  • Utah Mammoth defenseman Nate Schmidt was absent from the team’s Saturday practice. He was designated as day-to-day due to maintenance by head coach Andre Tourigny, per Cole Bagley of KSL Sports. That designation makes Schmidt’s availability over the next few days difficult, though it doesn’t seem the Mammoth are concerned about the long-term availability of their summer signing. Schmidt played a bottom-pair role on the Stanley Cup-winning Florida Panthers last season, working his way up to 19 points in 80 games. He’ll likely fill a similar role in Utah, though brings the experience of a 741-game veteran and one-time Cup-winner to the NHL’s newest club.
  • Continuing the list of absences was top Minnesota Wild prospect Zeev Buium, who missed his third-consecutive practice on Sunday per Michael Russo of The Athletic. Russo pointed out that Buium did skate with Jonas Brodin before practice started. Again, Buium’s ailment isn’t expected to be a serious issue, head coach John Hynes told Sarah McLellan of Star Tribune Sports. Buium will be pushing for a starring role on the Wild roster this season, after playing the first four games of his NHL career in the 2025 Stanley Cup playoffs. He recorded one assist and four penalty minutes in those outings. An extended absence will make a run to the NHL a bit tougher, but the one-time NCAA National Champion should have no problem convincing the Wild brass when he’s back to full health.
  • In a positive swing, San Jose Sharks star centerman Macklin Celebrini returned to the team’s practices after missing multiple days to illness, per Curtis Pashelka of The Mercury News. Celebrini won’t take part in San Jose’s first preseason game, though he’ll otherwise be fully on track to return to the role of San Jose’s top forward when the season kicks off. Celebrini scored 63 points in 70 games as a rookie last season, marking a franchise record in San Jose.

Injury| Minnesota Wild| NCAA| NHL| San Jose Sharks| Snapshots| Utah Mammoth| Washington Capitals Alex Ovechkin| Justin Sourdif| Macklin Celebrini| Martin Fehervary| Nate Schmidt| Zeev Buium

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Giles (Lower Body) Out A Couple Of Weeks

September 20, 2025 at 11:55 am CDT | by Brian La Rose 4 Comments

  • Sharks winger Patrick Giles recently underwent surgery on a lower-body injury and is at least a couple of weeks away from returning to the ice, relays Sharks Hockey Digest’s Max Miller (Twitter link). The 25-year-old split last season between Florida and San Jose, getting into 17 NHL contests combined between the two teams where he had a goal and 11 shots in a little over nine minutes a night of playing time.  If Giles isn’t healthy to start the season, the Sharks can place him on season-opening IR and have a reduced cap hit relative to the number of days he spent on an NHL roster in 2024-25.

Anaheim Ducks| Los Angeles Kings| San Jose Sharks Drew Doughty| Mason McTavish| Patrick Giles

4 comments

Western Notes: Sharks, Celebrini, Landeskog

September 19, 2025 at 7:02 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 1 Comment

The Sharks were also without right-winger Patrick Giles and defenseman Lucas Carlsson due to injury. Giles (lower-body) is still recovering from an offseason surgery that is expected to hold him out week-to-week, while Carlsson (lower-body) is day-to-day, per Curtis Pashelka of the Bay Area News Group. Both players are returning to the Sharks organization this season. Giles played eight games in both the NHL and AHL, before getting shut down by his injury. He scored four goals with the Barracuda and one goal with the Sharks. Carlsson stuck around a bit more – scoring 23 points in 45 games with the Barracuda, and four points in 13 games with the Sharks. It was the second-longest stint he’s had in the NHL, behind the 40 games he played with the Florida Panthers in the 2021-22 campaign. Both players will fight for top-end roles in the AHL when they’re back to full health.

Other notes from the Western Conference:

  • Star San Jose Sharks centerman Macklin Celebrini missed practice on Friday due to illness, per Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now. It was Celebrini’s second absence, after his illness was initially revealed on Thursday. There seems to be no concerns over his ability to play through the preseason, which will keep the second-year pro on track to return to a major role in the Sharks offense. Celebrini scored 63 points in 70 games last season – setting San Jose’s franchise record for the highest-scoring rookie season.
  • Colorado Avalanche fans shouldn’t expect to see captain Gabriel Landeskog on the practice sheet tomorrow. Head coach Jared Bednar told the media that Landeskog will have a scheduled day-off, per Jesse Montano of Guerilla Sports. It’s a sensible plan as the 32-year-old continues to work his way back from a long-term, lower-body injury. He played his first games since 2022 back in April, racking up four points in five postseason appearances. The 2025-26 season will mark Landeskog’s first chance to make a return that will stick and, hopefully, rack up strong scoring to boot. In his three most recent regular season appearances, Landeskog scored 59 points in 51 games; 52 points in 54 games; and 44 points in 54 games respectively. That level of lofty playmaking could prove to be an X-factor for Colorado.

AHL| Colorado Avalanche| Injury| NHL| Players| San Jose Sharks Gabriel Landeskog| Lucas Carlsson| Macklin Celebrini| Patrick Giles

1 comment

Sharks Notes: Ferraro, Eklund, Lund, Vlasic

September 18, 2025 at 9:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 3 Comments

Sharks defenseman Mario Ferraro has been involved in trade speculation for a couple of years now and with him entering the final year of his contract and San Jose still rebuilding, that speculation should only intensify in the coming months.  However, his preference appears to be to stick it out with the team that drafted him in the second round back in 2019.  Speaking with reporters including Max Miller of Sharks Hockey Digest, the 27-year-old stated “I’d love to sign long-term here, I want to win here.”  However, he also noted that no talks about an extension have started.  Ferraro is set to carry a $3.25MM cap charge for the upcoming season and should be in line to land a long-term deal in the $5.5MM to $6MM range next summer if he makes it to the open market.

More from San Jose:

  • Winger William Eklund suffered a wrist injury that required surgery in one of Sweden’s tune-up games for the Worlds last May, taking him out of the tournament. However, he told reporters including Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now (Twitter link) that he has fully recovered from the injury.  Eklund inked a three-year, $16.8MM extension on the opening day of free agency, taking away any possible distraction of being in a contract year.  He’ll look to build off the 17-goal, 58-point effort he had last season in his second full NHL campaign.
  • Winger Cameron Lund suffered an upper-body injury at last week’s rookie tournament but it doesn’t appear to be a long-term issue. Head coach David Warsofsky told reporters including Curtis Pashelka of The Mercury News (Twitter link) that Lund is listed as day-to-day.  The 21-year-old played in 11 games with San Jose down the stretch, picking up two goals and an assist in 11:30 per contest of playing time.
  • Earlier this offseason, veteran defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic voiced his displeasure about his buyout from San Jose, suggesting he was misled by the team at his exit interview. Asked to respond to that today, GM Mike Grier told reporters including Pashelka that he doesn’t have any regrets about how the situation was handled.  While declining to get into a who-said-what discussion, Grier noted that Vlasic was indeed given a bit of a heads-up before the buyout was completed while his interpretation of the end-of-season meeting with the blueliner was that the possibility of him being let go from the final year of his contract was discussed.  Vlasic is hoping to play this season but has yet to catch on with a team.

San Jose Sharks Cameron Lund| Marc-Edouard Vlasic| Mario Ferraro| William Eklund

3 comments

Sharks Sign Oliver Wahlstrom To PTO, AHL Deal

September 16, 2025 at 4:13 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 3 Comments

5:45 PM: The AHL’s San Jose Barracuda have announced Wahlstrom has signed a minor-league deal with the club. That will serve as his fallback, should he not earn an NHL deal out of camp.

4:15 PM: The San Jose Sharks will soon sign winger Oliver Wahlstrom to a professional try-out contract, per David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period. The report was later confirmed by PuckPedia. Pagnotta points out that Wahlstrom will have an AHL deal to fall back on, should he not earn an NHL contract. He was previously an unrestricted free agent after not receiving a qualifying offer from the Boston Bruins at the start of the summer.

Wahlstrom played his first games outside of the New York Islanders organization midway through last season. After six years of failed attempts to earn an everyday role in the top-nine, the Islanders made the decision to place Wahlstrom on waivers in mid-December. He was claimed by the Bruins the next day, and stuck with Boston for the rest of year, even clearing waivers with the club in February. Wahlstrom split his time between the NHL and AHL Bruins, beginning with 16 games in Boston where he racked up two points and 28 penalty minutes in a bottom-six role. He looked much more electric in 26 games with the Providence Bruins to close the year, netting 19 points and 14 penalty minutes in total.

But even in a move away from New York, Wahlstrom struggled to earn routine NHL minutes. The former 11th-overall selection has fallen a long way since making his NHL debut in 2019. He quickly struggled to score at the NHL level, with 12 goals and 21 points in 44 games of his rookie season standing as the highest scoring pace of Wahlstrom’s pro career. He posted a career-high 13 goals and 24 points in 73 games of his second NHL season, but fell to menial scoring and routine healthy scratches soon after that.

The Islanders rotated Wahlstrom around the lineup, but couldn’t find the right match for his flashy puck-skills and hard shot. Those traits did come to life during his stint with Providence at the end of last season, though. That fact commanded the attention of AHL clubs looking for a boost in scoring. It’s also commanded the attention of one of the NHL’s true bottom-feeders. San Jose is looking to bring in as much veteran presence and leadership as they can, to help guide a roster that’s sure to be one of the youngest in the league. Wahlstrom will be in direct competition for minutes with young wingers like Collin Graf, Ty Dellandrea, Philipp Kurashev, and Quentin Musty. Each of those players face the test of proving they can stick in the NHL. The Sharks will be the beneficiaries of that competition, whether through awarding rookies strong minutes or finding the positives out of struggling veterans. They’ll hope Wahlstrom can be the one to emerge above the rest, and finally bank on his long-lauded potential.

AHL| NHL| Players| San Jose Sharks| Transactions Oliver Wahlstrom

3 comments

Lund Injured In Rookie Game

September 13, 2025 at 12:39 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

  • Sharks winger Cameron Lund left Friday’s rookie tournament game in the third period after taking a hit to the head, notes Max Miller of Sharks Hockey Digest. The 21-year-old signed with San Jose late in the season after his college campaign came to an end and fit in relatively, picking up two goals and an assist in 11 appearances in 11:30 per night of action.  While Lund probably wasn’t going to be in serious contention to break camp with the big club, this injury could take any chance of that happening off the table.

Edmonton Oilers| San Jose Sharks| Vegas Golden Knights Cameron Lund| Jack Eichel| Roby Järventie

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Sharks Sign No. 2 Overall Pick Michael Misa

September 10, 2025 at 11:33 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

The Sharks have signed No. 2 overall draft pick Michael Misa to his entry-level contract, the team announced. Unsurprisingly, he receives close to the maximum allowable compensation. Per PuckPedia, he’ll receive the maximum base salary of $877.5K, signing bonus of $97.5K, and up to $1MM in Schedule “A” performance bonuses each year. His potential Schedule “B” bonuses are up to $2.25MM, $250K short of the max.

Misa was essentially a slam-dunk selection for San Jose after the Islanders took defenseman Matthew Schaefer with the first pick, although there was some smoke that the Sharks were also considering Swedish center Anton Frondell, who ended up going No. 3 to the Blackhawks. Misa, an OHL Saginaw product, was the early favorite for the top choice in the 2025 draft, gaining exceptional status and beginning his OHL career with the Spirit at the age of 15. However, a semi-conservative showing in his pre-draft year had tempered projections for Misa entering last season.

But in 2024-25, Misa looked more like the franchise-level phenom that his early hype awarded him. The left-shot center served as Saginaw’s captain and clicked at nearly a goal per game, totaling a 62-72–134 scoring line in 65 appearances to lead the entire CHL in points and, unsurprisingly, received CHL First All-Star and OHL MVP honors. He was also named the league’s Scholastic Player of the Year. That had him as the consensus No. 2 prospect in the class behind Schaefer, according to every major public ranking, by the time the season came to an end.

There will still be those out there who argue Misa deserved the top selection, especially considering Schaefer’s season ended after just 17 appearances due to a collarbone injury in December. He was the first OHLer to crack 130 points in nearly 20 years, and the last player to score more points in that league as a draft-eligible player was Patrick Kane’s 145 points in 58 games in 2006-07. Elite Prospects’ Lauren Kelly even labeled him the most complete forward in the class in June.

He thus enters his first professional season with a similar level of hype to San Jose’s No. 1 overall pick in last year’s draft, Macklin Celebrini, had 12 months ago. While the Sharks’ flurry of forward pickups in free agency indicates they aren’t necessarily banking on him being on their opening night roster, there’s plenty of flexibility for him to play meaningful minutes or, at the very least, earn a nine-game trial to start the season before burning the first year of his deal.

Newsstand| San Jose Sharks| Transactions Michael Misa

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Injury Notes: Sharks, Power, Seguin

September 9, 2025 at 5:01 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

There was some concern for Sharks up-and-comer William Eklund’s health over the summer after he sustained a wrist laceration while playing in a pre-tournament game for Sweden at the World Championship. He needed surgery, and while the skate cut didn’t damage any vital nerves, it did carry a lengthy three-month recovery window. During that time, he also inked a three-year, $16.8MM extension.

Since Eklund’s injury occurred in May, the expectation was that he’d be ready for training camp. That looks to be the case as he was on the ice for an informal skate Monday and was taking contact, Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now relays. That’s great news ahead of what could be even more of a breakthrough season for Eklund. He turns 23 next month and carried a 17-41–58 scoring line through 77 appearances in his sophomore year in 2024-25, up from 45 points in 80 games as a rookie (with a horrifying -45 rating) the year prior.

With the 2021 No. 7 overall pick on the mend, another first-rounder in their system also skated after ending last season on injured reserve. Defenseman Shakir Mukhamadullin was on the ice yesterday “without obvious limitation,” Peng wrote. The 23-year-old had shoulder surgery in the closing days of the regular season after logging nine points and a -7 rating in 30 regular-season appearances, a career-high. The 2020 first-rounder, previously acquired from the Devils, will be in a tight battle with fellow first-rounder Sam Dickinson and depth righty Jack Thompson for a roster spot in camp. He’ll need waivers to head to AHL San Jose, likely a matter of high concern to the Sharks’ front office.

Other injury updates as players begin to return to their team bases for training camp:

  • Sabres defender Owen Power is fully healthy after rehabbing a lower-body injury that ended his 2024-25 season prematurely, telling the team’s Justin Alpert he’s “back to doing everything” and is “ready to go.” He said he’s looking forward to how the increased time in the gym over the summer due to his rehab affects his game as he heads into his fourth full NHL season. The 2021 top pick hit a career-high in points with 40 last year, but also saw career lows in plus/minus (-13) and time on ice (21:19 per game).
  • After telling reporters following the Stars’ playoff elimination that he was dealing with a shoulder injury, Tyler Seguin is 100% after some “relatively easy” rehab, he tells Robert Tiffin of D Magazine. He told Tiffin the injury was caused by a hit from Oilers defender Darnell Nurse in Game 1 of the Western Conference Final. Seguin had 29 points in 38 combined regular-season and playoff games last year, losing most of his regular season to a significant hip procedure.

Buffalo Sabres| Dallas Stars| San Jose Sharks Owen Power| Shakir Mukhamadullin| Tyler Seguin| William Eklund

2 comments

Ryane Clowe Steps Down From Sharks’ Assistant GM Role

September 7, 2025 at 1:32 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 4 Comments

In a surprising bit of news, former NHL forward Ryane Clowe has announced he has resigned from the San Jose Sharks’ assistant general manager role. Last season was Clowe’s first in a role with the Sharks front office. In a statement released through the Sharks social media, Clowe said:

I truly loved being back in San Jose and working with Mike Grier and his entire team, but at this point, this decision is in the best interest of my family. The franchise has an exciting future ahead and is set up to be successful for a long period of time…

Last summer, Clowe returned to the Sharks organization for the first time since 2013. His last tenure with the Sharks spanned 12 years, beginning with a sixth-round selection in the 2001 NHL Draft. Clowe moved to the Sharks’ pro ranks two seasons later, joining the AHL’s Cleveland Barons in the 2003-04 season. He was an instant force – netting 102 points and 198 penalty minutes over his first two seasons, and 146 games, in the minor-leagues. That earned him a full-time role in the NHL by 2006, and Clowe quickly became a core piece of the San Jose roster. He rivaled 50 points and 100 penalty minutes in every season between 2008 and 2012 – and served as the club’s assistant captain for the latter three years.

His time with San Jose came to a close when he was controversially traded to the New York Rangers for a heap of draft picks in 2013. Clowe didn’t find the same groove with the Rangers, and couldn’t rediscover it with a move to the New Jersey Devils later in his career. He played his final NHL game in 2015 and joined the Devils as an assistant coach in 2016.

Clowe worked backwards with his playing days behind him. He served two years on the Devils’ bench, before serving three in a team consultant and senior advisor position with the Rangers, and then moving to the Sharks last summer.

Now, Clowe steps away from important roles with San Jose’s  NHL and AHL rosters. His duties will likely be distributed among fellow assistant GMs Joe Will and Tom Holy, unless the Sharks opt to hire a replacement. At the time, it’s not clear why Clowe chose to step away from the Sharks, though it’d be hard to imagine he stays away from the sport for too long. Clowe recorded 309 points and 618 penalty minutes in 491 games, and 13 seasons, in his NHL career. He’s pushed through six more NHL seasons in a staff position.

AHL| NHL| San Jose Sharks Ryane Clowe

4 comments

Summer Synopsis: San Jose Sharks

September 6, 2025 at 6:25 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 5 Comments

With training camps now just a couple of weeks away, 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 San Jose.

Expectations weren’t particularly high for the Sharks heading into last season as their extended rebuild continued with their struggles to land another top draft pick.  This summer saw GM Mike Grier be quite active overall, although expectations for the upcoming season will once again be low, as the bulk of their summer activity was adding short-term veterans who could potentially be flipped later in the season.

Draft

1-2 – F Michael Misa, Saginaw (OHL)
1-30 – G Joshua Ravensbergen, Prince George (WHL)
2-33 – D Haoxi Wang, Oshawa (OHL)
2-53 – F Cole McKinney, U.S. U18 (NTDP)
3-95 – F Teddy Mutryn, Chicago (USHL)
4-115 – D Ilyas Magomedsultanov, Yaroslavl (MHL)
4-124 – D Zack Sharp, Western Michigan (NCHC)
5-150 – F Max Heise, Penticton (BCHL)
7-210 – F Richard Gallant, U.S. U18 (NTDP)

Arguably the best forward, if not the best player, heading into the 2025 NHL Draft, Misa adds to an already elite group of Sharks forward prospects. In his third season with the OHL’s Saginaw Spirit, Misa recorded 62 goals and 134 points in 65 games with a +45 rating. Displaying a skating ability reminiscent of former MVP Nathan MacKinnon, San Jose could have one of the scariest forward cores in the league with Misa, Celebrini, and Smith headlining.

Despite having mixed results throughout the 2024-25 season, Ravensbergen is a prototypical goalie prospect, standing at 6’5″ and having the movement between the pipes as if he’s a foot shorter. Throughout his rookie campaign with the WHL’s Prince George Cougars, Ravensbergen managed a 26-4-1 record in 38 games with a .907 SV% and 2.46 GAA, along with six shutouts. Although it’s difficult to project him as a consistent threat for the Vezina Trophy, Ravensbergen has the size and ability to be an above-average netminder at the NHL level.

Outside of their top two selections, the Sharks’ next four picks are all projected to play NHL minutes throughout their careers. It’s a fool’s errand to accurately project the players beyond the first four rounds in any year of the draft, but most pundits consider San Jose’s 2025 draft to be an overwhelming success.

Trade Acquisitions

F Shane Bowers (from New Jersey)
G Alex Nedeljkovic (from Pittsburgh)
F Oskar Olausson (from Colorado)
G Carey Price (from Montreal)
F Ryan Reaves (from Toronto)

Acquiring some insurance for Askarov, the Sharks will become the fourth team of Nedeljkovic’s career. After failing to become an everyday goalie for the Detroit Red Wings, Nedeljkovic spent the last two years with the Pittsburgh Penguins, managing a 32-22-12 record in 76 games with a .898 SV% and 3.05 GAA. While that production doesn’t exhibit much stability, it’s worth noting that Nedeljkovic nearly led the Penguins to the postseason in the 2023-24 campaign, with an 8-2-2 performance to end the season.

Outside of Nedeljkovic, San Jose didn’t add too much on the trade market. Reaves holds nearly zero value as an everyday player, but will add some protection for the Sharks’ crop of young talent. Meanwhile, although each used to be an above-average prospect, Bowers and Olausson have a lot of work cut out for them should they become consistent NHL talents.

One of the Sharks’ biggest trades of the summer came only yesterday, when they acquired Price’s contract from the Montreal Canadiens. Although he’ll never play with San Jose, he affords them a $10.5MM salary cushion should they hope to trade any current veterans for prospects or draft capital. The best part is, despite having a $10.5MM cap hit, the Sharks only owe Price $2MM throughout the regular season since much of his salary was paid out via a signing bonus on September 1st.

UFA Signings

D Cole Clayton (one year, $775K)*
F Adam Gaudette (two years, $4MM)
F Jimmy Huntington (one year, $775K)*
D John Klingberg (one year, $4MM)
F Philipp Kurashev (one year, $1.2MM)
F Samuel Laberge (one year, $775K)*
D Dmitry Orlov (two years, $13MM)
F Pavol Regenda (one year, $775K)*^
G Jakub Skarek (one year, $775K)
F Jeff Skinner (one year, $3MM)
F Colin White (one year, $775K)*^

*-denotes two-way contract
^-denotes re-signing

Heading into the summer months, the Sharks had the cap space to supplement their young roster. In doing so, the team added Klingberg and Orlov to expensive deals to bolster the blue line, while also adding depth forwards like Gaudette, Kurashev, and Skinner.

After scoring one goal and four points in 19 postseason games for the Oilers during the 2024-25 Stanley Cup playoffs, Klingberg doesn’t appear to be the health question mark he was heading into last season. Regardless of his limited availability over the past several years, Klingberg immediately becomes the Sharks’ top option on the right side.

Meanwhile, Orlov lands in the Bay Area after four solid seasons split between the Washington Capitals, Boston Bruins, and Carolina Hurricanes. Throughout that stretch, Orlov scored 31 goals and 125 points in 300 games with a +57 rating, averaging more than 20 minutes of ice time per night. Although he did have a shaky performance with the Hurricanes last postseason, he’s now one of the most accomplished defensemen on the Sharks.

Along with the youngsters who will undoubtedly compete for a roster spot during training camp, the trio of Gaudette, Kurashev, and Skinner should make up for the exodus of depth forwards the team sustained this offseason. Even if they don’t have career years, they’ll raise the Sharks’ floor at the very least, and keep some stability in the bottom six of the forward core.

RFA Re-Signings

F Egor Afanasyev (one year, $800K)
G Gabriel Carriere (one year, $795K)*
D Shakir Mukhamadullin (one year, $1MM)
D Jack Thompson (one year, $800K)*

*-denotes two-way contract

There wasn’t a lot of work to be done on this front this summer. With Mukhamadullin and Thompson still adjusting to the NHL, a short-term contract was the best option for both parties while the team evaluates their potential roles in the future. Meanwhile, the return of Afanasyev from the KHL was a little unexpected. He’ll have a chance to push for a roster spot in training camp and will be waiver-eligible for the first time this fall.

Key Extension

F William Eklund (three years, $16.8MM)

It’s not very often that a team will sign a player to a bridge contract a year before their contract actually expires, but that’s the route Eklund and the Sharks took this summer. The 22-year-old forward has shown lots of promise in his first two full NHL seasons, including putting up 58 points in 2024-25, good for second on San Jose in team scoring. Eklund, the seventh overall pick in 2021, remains a big part of their long-term plans and will be pencilled into a top-six spot once again this season. But he’ll have to wait a little while longer to secure the long-term contract that some thought might have been coming his way next year, while both sides will have more time to assess his long-term upside.

Waiver Claim

D Nick Leddy (from St. Louis)

For the second straight summer, the Sharks executed a rare waiver claim to add a veteran, this time on the back end after getting Barclay Goodrow last year. Leddy dealt with some injury issues last season and didn’t fare particularly well when he was in the lineup. Still, he adds some veteran depth on the back end, and if San Jose can get his game back on track, he could become a viable trade candidate late in the season.

Departures

F Carl Berglund (signed in Czechia)
F Thomas Bordeleau (trade with New Jersey)
F Nolan Burke (unsigned)
F Brandon Coe (unsigned)
F Walker Duehr (signed with Winnipeg, one year, $775K)*
G Alexandar Georgiev (unsigned)
F Noah Gregor (unsigned)
F Daniil Gushchin (trade with Colorado)
F Klim Kostin (unsigned)
F Nikolai Kovalenko (signed in KHL)
D Gannon Laroque (trade with Montreal)
F Andrew Poturalski (contract termination, signed in KHL)
G Georgi Romanov (PTO with New Jersey)
F Mitchell Russell (signed in ECHL)
D Jan Rutta (signed in Switzerland)
D Scott Sabourin (signed with Tampa Bay, one year, $775K)*
D Jimmy Schuldt (signed with Vancouver, two years, $1.55MM)*
D Henry Thrun (trade with Toronto)
D Marc-Edouard Vlasic (bought out, unsigned)

*-denotes two-way contract

Although the Sharks weren’t in a position to lose any big names this offseason, they lost plenty of depth. Still, given the number of additions and influx of young talent, San Jose was in a comfortable position to sustain every departure.

The most notable, if any, will undoubtedly be Vlasic. Becoming a shell of himself since the start of the 2019-20 campaign, Vlasic had only scored 17 goals and 68 points in his last 358 games as a Shark with a -90 rating while averaging 17:09 of ice time per game. Still, giving 19 years of his life to the organization, Vlasic will always be remembered as one of the best defensemen to ever wear the teal.

Outside of Vlasic, the combination of Bordeleau, Duehr, Gregor, Gushchin, Kostin, Kovalenko, Poturalski, Rutta, Sabourin, Schuldt, and Thrun provided the Sharks with 11 goals and 45 points in 223 combined games last season. Arguably, San Jose should be able to replicate, if not improve upon, that production with their additions and promotions this summer.

Salary Cap Outlook

Even with taking on a $10.5MM cap charge with Price, the Sharks still have plenty of cap flexibility heading into the season, with more than $9MM in cap space, per PuckPedia. With them being widely expected to sell at some point, the addition of Price should help keep them comfortably above the $70.6MM salary floor. Meanwhile, with just over $41MM on the books beyond the upcoming season and only one player signed beyond 2027-28 (Eklund), San Jose has arguably the most cap flexibility of any team moving forward.

Key Questions

How Much Will Askarov Play In His First Full NHL Season? When Grier acquired Yaroslav Askarov from Nashville last offseason, he secured what he hopes will be their long-term solution between the pipes. However, he will enter the year with just 16 NHL appearances under his belt, and generally speaking, throwing a young netminder to the wolves on a team that’s not expected to be particularly competitive is risky from a development standpoint. The addition of Nedeljkovic gives them some insurance, but how they split the starts will be interesting to see. Do they try to push Askarov with more of a traditional starting workload, or will it be more of a split so that they don’t throw too much at the young player too quickly?

What Will Happen With Ferraro? For the last two years, defenseman Mario Ferraro has been a speculative trade candidate leading up to the trade deadline, but no move has come to fruition. Now, the 26-year-old is entering the final season of his contract, one that carries a respectable $3.25MM AAV. Grier will need to decide in the coming months leading up to the March 6th trade deadline if he views Ferraro as a longer-term building block, meaning that contract extension talks will be needed. Otherwise, perhaps the third time will be the charm on the trade front.

How Big Of A Next Step Will Celebrini Take? While he didn’t win the Calder Trophy last season (he finished third in voting), 2024 top pick Macklin Celebrini had an impressive rookie year, leading the Sharks in scoring with 63 points (25 goals and 38 assists) in 70 games. Widely viewed as an elite two-way center of the future, can Celebrini take a step forward offensively while also shoring up his defensive play? The sooner he becomes the all-around player he has been touted to become, the sooner one of the hardest positions to fill in a rebuild will be in place. A significant leap could prompt Grier to transition from rebuilding to acquiring long-term additions for the team.

Photo courtesy of Charles LeClaire and David Gonzales-Imagn Images.

PHR’s Brennan McClain also continued to this post.

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals| San Jose Sharks| Summer Synopsis 2025

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