Predators Assign Kieffer Bellows To AHL
The Predators have opened up a roster spot in advance of their game against Seattle on Thursday. The team announced that winger Kieffer Bellows has been assigned back to AHL Milwaukee.
The 26-year-old got into five games with Nashville after being recalled last month, his first taste of NHL action since the 2022-23 campaign. Bellows was held off the scoresheet in each of those contests while averaging just under 11 minutes a night of playing time. For his career, he has 14 goals and 14 assists in 100 NHL outings.
Bellows has spent the bulk of this season in the minors with the Admirals. Through 41 games with them, he has 14 goals and 15 assists. Those numbers are below his minor league output from a year ago when he had 27 goals and 22 helpers in 52 outings with AHL Toronto, a performance that earned him a one-year, two-way deal this summer after being strictly on an AHL pact last season.
With the demotion, the Predators now have two open roster spots. It seems likely that one or both of those will be filled relatively quickly, perhaps as early as Thursday.
Seattle Kraken Recall Ben Meyers, Jacob Melanson
After trading Yanni Gourde and Oliver Bjorkstrand to the Tampa Bay Lightning earlier today, the Seattle Kraken opened up a pair of roster spots. Newly acquired Michael Eyssimont will take one of those spots, and the Kraken announced they’re recalling Ben Meyers and Jacob Melanson for additional depth.
Meyers has been an infrequent depth option for the Kraken this season. Despite longer-term injuries to Gourde and captain Jordan Eberle throughout the 2024-25 campaign, Seattle hasn’t called upon Meyers too much. He signed a one-year, $775K contract last summer and has gone scoreless in seven games for the Kraken, averaging 8:10 of ice time per game.
He’s a completely different player in the AHL. He’s second on the Firebirds in scoring with 19 goals and 40 points in 45 AHL contests and continues to show the offensive potential he flashed during his last year at the University of Minnesota in 2021-22. At the time of writing, his production this season brings his career totals to 36 goals and 89 points in 107 AHL games.
Meanwhile, today’s roster move is the first call-up of Melanson’s career. Unfortunately, a lower-body injury cost him approximately the first 30 games of the season. Still, he’s performed adequately upon his return, scoring seven goals and 10 points in 27 contests for AHL Coachella Valley.
Should Melanson draw into the Kraken’s lineup tomorrow night, the former 131st overall pick of the 2021 NHL Draft will join James Malatesta (Columbus Blue Jackets) and Joshua Roy (Montreal Canadiens) as the only fifth-round picks from that draft to make their NHL debuts.
Devils’ Jack Hughes Done For The Season After Shoulder Surgery
The New Jersey Devils took a massive blow to their Stanley Cup aspirations. New Jersey announced that center Jack Hughes has successfully undergone shoulder surgery and will be placed on the team’s long-term injured reserve. The team noted he’s expected to fully recover and be ready for next year’s training camp, informally confirming he’s done for the 2024-25 season.
The news is nothing short of a disaster for the Devils. After missing the playoffs last season, the team has rebounded into postseason positioning this year, thanks to a healthier group.
Hughes is the leader of that resurgence, too. The former first overall pick of the 2019 NHL Draft was tied for the team lead in scoring with 27 goals and 43 assists in 62 games. Interestingly enough, Hughes will finish the 2024-25 campaign with nearly identical production from last season, scoring 27 goals and 47 assists in 62 appearances.
It also extends Hughes’ recurring injury issues from the last several years. Since the NHL returned to a full 82-game schedule after the 2020-21 campaign, Hughes will have only played in 76% of New Jersey’s regular season contests. The team is objectively better when he’s in the lineup, making the situation all the more unbearable for their playoff hopes.
The loss of Hughes will inevitably shift New Jersey’s trade deadline strategy. The Devils had already been rumored to be scouting the market for an upgrade at their third-line center position. They’ll now need two middle-six centers, assuming captain Nico Hischier steps into the first-line role.
If anything, this should make New Jersey more committed to buying. Although they don’t have their first-round pick for the 2025 NHL Draft, the Devils still have a trio of second-round picks and a few tradeable prospects. Defenseman Simon Nemec comes to mind as an obvious headliner for any trade of magnitude. Since the team is placing Hughes on LTIR, that will open up $8MM in cap space for the team to work with.
Still, it’s difficult to think highly of New Jersey’s chances even if they go big-game hunting. It’s improbable the team will have the capacity to acquire a player of Hughes’ caliber in the next two days.
According to James Nichols of New Jersey Hockey Now, the Devils have reportedly contacted the Carolina Hurricanes regarding Mikko Rantanen‘s availability for this circumstance. The Hurricanes are unlikely to move one of their best players to a divisional-rival and likely postseason adversary. Still, Rantanen is exactly the kind of player New Jersey should be pursuing to get reasonably close to filling the void left by Hughes.
Edmonton Oilers Reassign Matthew Savoie
Matthew Savoie‘s first opportunity with the Edmonton Oilers will be short-lived. The Oilers announced they’ve reassigned Savoie to their AHL affiliate, the Bakersfield Condors.
The former ninth overall pick in the 2022 NHL Draft was the key player Edmonton acquired in the trade that sent Ryan McLeod to the Buffalo Sabres last summer. Savoie was coming off a sensational final season in the WHL, scoring 30 goals and 71 points in 34 games split between the Moose Jaw Warriors and Wenatchee Wild. His playoff performance was arguably better, as he scored 10 goals and 24 points in 19 games for the Warriors, helping lead the team to a WHL championship and a berth in the 2024 Memorial Cup tournament.
Savoie also began his professional career last year. He showed promise in a brief stretch with the AHL’s Rochester Americans, scoring two goals and five points in six games. Those happened to be his only appearances in the Sabres organization.
The St. Alberta, Alberta native began the 2024-25 campaign with AHL Bakersfield. His transition to professional hockey couldn’t have gone better. Savoie is third on the Condors in scoring with 13 goals and 37 points in 45 games with a +16 rating. He won’t challenge the lead for rookie scoring, but it’s as good as the Oilers could have hoped for from their new prospect. Savoie registered one assist and a -4 rating in his four-game stint with Edmonton.
Tampa Bay Lightning Acquire Oliver Bjorkstrand, Yanni Gourde
The Tampa Bay Lightning announced a whopping trade a few days before the deadline. The full trade details are as follows:
- Tampa Bay acquires F Yanni Gourde (50% retained by Seattle, 25% retained by Detroit), F Oliver Bjorkstrand, the signing rights to D Kyle Aucoin, and Seattle’s 2025 fifth-round pick
- Seattle acquires F Michael Eyssimont, Tampa Bay’s 2026 first-round pick, Tampa Bay’s 2027 first-round pick, and Toronto’s 2025 second-round pick
- Detroit acquires a conditional 2025 fourth-round pick (the highest selection between Tampa Bay or Edmonton’s 2025 fourth-round pick)
As a final note on the two first-round picks headed to Seattle, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports that both are top-10 protected. If either of the picks are in the top-10, they slide back one year, theoretically meaning they could slide back to the 2028 or 2029 NHL Draft. If that happens to either draft selection, the Lightning will send a third-round pick to the Kraken for any year that it happens.
Tampa opened up some roster flexibility today after waiving forwards Cam Atkinson and Logan Brown on Tuesday, but the moves will only open $900K in cap space. We now know that the Lightning brought in the Detroit Red Wings as a third party for the deal, as they’ll help bring Gourde’s cap hit down to $1.29MM after retention.
Given the package returning to Seattle, this deal will inevitably have a downstream effect on the market. Although Bjorkstrand himself isn’t a rental, it’s a massive price to pay for two players projected to play in the Lightning’s middle-six. It’s a heavy price, but Tampa Bay is gambling that Gourde and Bjorkstrand will be more valuable than two draft picks later in the first round.
Still, aside from the price, it’s not easy to hypothesize better additions for the Lightning. Gourde returns to the organization where he won two Stanley Cup rings in 2020 and 2021 after a four-year hiatus in Washington state.
At the time of writing, Tampa Bay is 10th in the NHL with an 81.05% penalty kill and 18th with a team faceoff percentage of 50.32%. Furthermore, aside from the topical statistics, they are 16th in the NHL with a 50.5% CorsiFor% at even strength. Gourde is expected to help in all three areas. 
He’ll carry a 50.8% faceoff rate and a 52.2% CorsiFor% at even strength into his first game back with the Lightning. The move will also allow Tampa Bay to move Nick Paul to the second line and give Gourde third-line minutes next to a combination of different wingers. Given the firepower at the top of Tampa Bay’s forward core, Gourde won’t be counted upon as much for offense, which could even help improve his play on the defensive side of the puck.
The deal’s benefits don’t end there for Tampa. If the Lightning believe Paul is better suited on the third line, Bjorkstrand can immediately step into the second line. Dating back to his tenure with the Columbus Blue Jackets, Bjorkstand can generally be relied upon for 20 goals and 30 to 40 assists a year. Bjorkstrand is only one year removed from the best offensive production of his career, scoring 20 goals and 59 points for the Kraken in 82 contests.
Similarly to Gourde, Bjorkstrand is a solid possession player, evidenced by his career CorsiFor% of 52.0% at even strength. Given that Brandon Hagel and Anthony Cirelli have scored 30 and 20 goals already this season, respectively, Bjorkstrand will be an effective playmaker to put alongside them.
The only roster player headed to Seattle is Eyssimont. He’s spent the last three years as a bottom-six forward for the Lightning and is only one year removed from a career campaign himself. Eyssimont scored 11 goals and 25 points in 81 games for Tampa Bay last season, averaging 11:51 of ice time per game. Unfortunately, he hasn’t lived up to those standards this year, scoring five goals and 10 points in 51 contests, averaging 10:41 of ice time per game.
Meanwhile, the Kraken are on the horizon of complementing an already deep prospect pool. Seattle will have nine picks in the top 64 of the next three NHL Drafts alone. Should the Lightning continue winning, those first-round picks won’t fall till later. Still, it’s always better to have two picks in the first round rather than one.
The impact of this deal on the trade market cannot be overstated. Many have perceived that this year’s deadline has become a seller’s market, and this trade solidifies that notion. Clear-cut buyers such as the Dallas Stars, Edmonton Oilers, Toronto Maple Leafs, and Winnipeg Jets may have more difficulty improving their roster after this trade. Additionally, teams on the playoff bubble may have an easier time buying and selling before Friday’s deadline.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports images.
Friedman was the first to report that Seattle was acquiring two first-round picks in the deal.
TSN’s Pierre LeBrun was the first to report a majority of the trade details.
LeBrun was the first to report salary retention details and Detroit’s involvement.
PHR’s Brennan McClain contributed to this article.
Red Wings To Recall Carter Mazur
The Red Wings are recalling left-wing prospect Carter Mazur from AHL Grand Rapids, per Max Bultman of The Athletic. The 22-year-old will be making his NHL debut if he plays tomorrow against Utah. Detroit opened up a roster spot last night by reassigning veteran forward Sheldon Dries to Grand Rapids, per the league’s transactions log.
Mazur has become one of the more unheralded prospects in the Red Wings’ pipeline. Detroit selected Mazur with the 70th overall pick of the 2021 NHL Draft, just before he began his NCAA career with the University of Denver Pioneers.
He became an effective scorer with the Pios, scoring 36 goals and 75 points in 81 collegiate contests. Additionally, Mazur was rostered on the 2022 National Championship-winning roster, tallying two assists in the championship matchup against Minnesota State.
The Red Wings signed Mazur to his entry-level contract after the 2022-23 NCAA season, and he finished the year with three goals and three assists in six games for Grand Rapids. He continued impressing through his first full season in the AHL, scoring 17 goals and 37 points in 60 games for the Griffins, finishing second on the team in scoring.
Entering the 2024-25 season, there was an outside chance Mazur could crack Detroit’s roster out of training camp. Unfortunately, it wasn’t enough to break into a saturated Red Wings’ forward core, and he was sent to the Griffins just a few days before the start of the regular season. Injuries have limited Mazur to 20 AHL contests this season, but his scoring efficiency has only improved with seven goals and 15 points.
Given that the Red Wings are fully engaged in the Eastern Conference wild-card race, this shouldn’t be considered an informal tryout with Detroit. The Red Wings hope Mazur’s high motor and offensive talent will translate to the NHL to help them break an eight-year playoff drought.
PHR’s Brennan McClain contributed to this article.
Waivers: 3/5/25
Four players hit the waiver wire on Wednesday ahead of Friday’s trade deadline, per Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman.
F Christian Fischer (Red Wings) – Fischer, 27, has slipped down Detroit’s depth chart as the season’s progressed. He’s been a healthy scratch in four of their last eight games. His 11:09 ATOI is his lowest in five years, as are his 0.16 points per game (1-6–7 in 45 GP). On an expiring deal worth $1.125MM, he’ll cost $100K against the cap for Detroit if he clears and is sent to the minors. It’s unclear if it’s purely a performance-based demotion or if they’re waiving him to open up roster flexibility ahead of the deadline – likely a bit of both.
D Jordan Oesterle (Bruins) – Oesterle’s waiver placement comes after the 32-year-old scored his first goal since December 2022 in yesterday’s loss to the Predators. He’d been a healthy scratch in 10 straight games before re-entering the lineup for Ian Mitchell. The veteran depth piece has served as a bottom-pairing/depth option for a good chunk of the season with Hampus Lindholm and Charlie McAvoy missing significant time on the Boston blue line. He’s been rostered since late November, so today’s waiver placement is likely an effort to get him assigned to AHL Providence on deadline day to make him eligible for the Calder Cup Playoffs.
F Jesse Puljujärvi (Panthers) – Puljujärvi signed a tryout with Florida’s AHL affiliate in Charlotte last month after having his deal with the Penguins mutually terminated. Today’s waiver placement indicates he’s landed an NHL deal with the Panthers for the rest of the season. If he clears waivers and returns to Charlotte, he’ll now be a recall option down the stretch. It’s a two-way, league-minimum deal for the 2016 No. 4 overall pick, Chris Johnston of TSN and The Athletic reports. He has three assists in seven games with Charlotte after posting 3-6–9 in 26 showings with Pittsburgh earlier this season.
F Jakub Vrána (Capitals) – Vrána won’t necessarily be reassigned to AHL Hershey if he clears, at least not immediately. They’ll have a 30-day window to send him to the minors waiver-free to aid in salary cap flexibility around deadline moves, AP’s Stephen Whyno reports. Regardless, it’s been a tough year for the 29-year-old. He landed a PTO with Washington in camp and converted that into an NHL contract for his second stint with the Caps, who drafted him 13th overall in 2014. He’s been reasonably productive when dressed, posting 7-4–11 in 26 games despite seeing just 9:50 of ice time per game, but hasn’t found a regular role in Washington’s league-best offense. He’s suited up just three times since New Year’s, sitting almost exclusively as a healthy scratch. He’s on a one-way deal for 2024-25 worth the minimum $775K.
Lightning To Reassign Cam Atkinson, Logan Brown
March 5: Atkinson and Brown cleared waivers, according to Friedman. Both will be reassigned to Syracuse as the Lightning look to close a trade with the Kraken for forwards Oliver Bjorkstrand and Yanni Gourde.
March 4: The Lightning have placed forwards Cam Atkinson and Logan Brown on waivers for reassignment to AHL Syracuse, per Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports. Brown wasn’t previously under contract with the Bolts, so the move indicates he’s been promoted from his contract with Syracuse and signed to an NHL contract for the rest of the campaign.
It’s certainly eye-popping to see Atkinson, a veteran of over 800 NHL games, on the waiver wire. His performance after signing a one-year, $900K deal with the Bolts early in free agency, though, has left much to be desired. The 35-year-old has 3-5–8 through 36 games and is averaging a career-low 8:49 per night. He’s become an increasingly frequent healthy scratch as a result, sitting out a season-high four straight contests entering tonight’s game against his former team, the Blue Jackets.
Atkinson was still a semi-serviceable top-nine piece for the Flyers last year, posting 13-15–28 through 70 games. It wasn’t nearly enough to justify his $5.875MM cap hit, though, and Philadelphia opted to buy him out with one year remaining on his contract. The downturn in production from the diminutive yet skilled Atkinson came after he missed the entire 2022-23 campaign following neck surgery, one that unfortunately seems to have tanked his effectiveness in his career’s twilight.
Selected in the sixth round of the 2008 draft by the Blue Jackets, Atkinson was a top-six fixture in Columbus for a decade. He posted 402 points in 627 games with the club before they traded him to Philly in the 2021 offseason in a blockbuster one-for-one exchange that sent Jakub Voráček the other way. Injuries have derailed both players’ careers since, with Voráček since retiring due to concussions.
Now in Tampa, Atkinson has been superseded by players like Zemgus Girgensons and Gage Goncalves on their depth chart. He’s been tried at right wing on the second line with Anthony Cirelli and Brandon Hagel – a role that’s Tampa’s top priority this week to fill. Waiving Atkinson gives them additional roster and salary cap flexibility to achieve that goal.
They’ll also add Brown as a recall option down the stretch, assuming he clears waivers. The 26-year-old center will earn a pro-rated salary of $775K in the NHL and $350K in the AHL down the stretch, per PuckPedia.
The No. 11 pick in the 2016 draft, Brown hasn’t skated in an NHL game since making 30 appearances for the Blues in the 2022-23 campaign. He signed a two-way deal with Tampa for 2023-24 but ended up spending the entire season on injured reserve following an undisclosed surgery. He returned to the Bolts on a camp tryout and landed an AHL deal with Syracuse, where the 6’6″ pivot has 7-12–19 through 25 appearances.
Brown won’t count against the Bolts’ active roster since he was waived on the same day he signed a contract.
Panthers Acquire Vítek Vaněček From Sharks
The Panthers have acquired goaltender Vítek Vaněček from the Sharks in exchange for depth forward Patrick Giles, both teams announced. There is no salary retention in the deal, Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic confirms. Vaněček was held out of his scheduled start against the Sabres last night for injury prevention in anticipation of a move.
Florida has been searching for a backup netminder to reigning Vezina nominee Sergei Bobrovsky for the past few days after they dealt Spencer Knight to the Blackhawks in last weekend’s Seth Jones trade. They recalled veteran third-stringer Chris Driedger from AHL Charlotte to serve as Bobrovsky’s No. 2 in the interim, but the 30-year-old has just a .878 SV% in 20 minor-league appearances this season and wasn’t viewed as a reliable insurance option for Bobrovsky in case he sustained an injury down the stretch or in the postseason.
Vaněček grades out as a slight upgrade, albeit an expensive one at a $3.4MM cap hit. The 29-year-old is in the final year of his contract, though, so there’s no long-term burden on Florida’s books. They’ll still have $5.3MM in cap space to make other moves before Friday’s deadline after placing star winger Matthew Tkachuk on long-term injured reserve.
The Czech netminder’s short stint with the Sharks was underwhelming, even behind the league’s most porous defense group. Acquired from the Devils at last year’s deadline, he didn’t suit up for San Jose until the 2024-25 campaign due to injuries. More injuries, namely a cheekbone fracture, limited him to 17 starts and one relief appearance while serving as the primary backup to Mackenzie Blackwood and Alexandar Georgiev, who were traded for each other in December, when healthy. He mustered a 3-10-3 record with a career-worst .882 SV% and 3.88 GAA.
Advanced numbers aren’t kind to Vaněček’s performance this season, either. His -0.56 goals saved above expected per 60 is worse than Georgiev’s -0.34, and he’s allowed a cumulative nine goals above expected on the season, per MoneyPuck. Among 55 goalies with at least 18 games played, Vaněček ranks 48th in total GSAx and 53rd in GSAx/60. His raw GAA is also the worst among the group. He’s also allowing 0.072 rebounds per save, second-worst in the league behind the Devils’ Jake Allen.
The Panthers are banking on a slight return to form behind a defense that allows five fewer shots per game than San Jose’s. Vaněček has been a serviceable tandem option in the past, posting a 33-11-4 record in a career-high 52 appearances with New Jersey in 2022-23 with a .911 SV% and 2.45 GAA. He’ll only be relied upon for a few starts down the stretch to give Bobrovsky some rest as the Cats compete for a third Atlantic Division title in four years. However, if Bobrovsky sustains an injury, he will be Florida’s primary insurance option in the playoffs. He has a highly subpar .834 SV% in 10 playoff appearances with the Capitals and Devils.
As for the Sharks’ new backup, it won’t be top prospect Yaroslav Askarov – at least for now. He’s still dealing with a lower-body injury after being returned to AHL San Jose a few weeks ago and isn’t currently available for a recall. It’ll be 25-year-old Georgi Romanov coming up to serve as the No. 2 in the Bay Area in the interim, Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now reports.
In return for Vaněček, San Jose lands a low-ceiling depth center in Giles. The 25-year-old Maryland native made his NHL debut with the Cats at the beginning of the campaign, going without a point and posting a minus-one rating in nine games. He averaged 7:33 per game, won just 29.8% of his faceoffs, and recorded 16 hits while getting outshot 34-19 at 5v5 in sheltered usage, per Natural Stat Trick. Florida returned Giles to AHL Charlotte after Tomáš Nosek returned from an injury. The 6’5″, 216-lb forward has just 5-2–7 with a plus-three rating in 39 games since. He’ll now report to the Sharks’ AHL affiliate. He’s in the first year of a two-year, two-way deal and will be an RFA with arbitration rights in the summer of 2026.
Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet was first to report the Panthers and Sharks were working on a Vaněček deal. Tim Reynolds of the AP was first to report Florida was sending Giles to San Jose to complete the deal.
Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.
Bruins Recall Patrick Brown, Vinni Lettieri, Riley Tufte
The Bruins announced they’ve recalled forwards Patrick Brown, Vinni Lettieri, and Riley Tufte from AHL Providence – the second of whom comes up under emergency conditions. Defenseman Ian Mitchell is also back with the team after a paper transaction meant he wasn’t rostered for yesterday’s loss to the Predators. The club reassigned forwards Georgii Merkulov and Jeffrey Viel to Providence in corresponding moves to keep their active roster at the 23-player maximum.
Only two needed to be sent down because Boston opened an additional roster spot yesterday by trading Trent Frederic to the Oilers. While he comes up under emergency conditions, likely related to captain Brad Marchand‘s upper-body injury, Lettieri still counts against the roster limit. The Bruins only have to worry about their granular maneuvering until Friday’s deadline, after which the cap on roster sizes disappears.
Brown, 32, returns to the roster for the first time since January. The veteran of parts of nine NHL seasons has spent most of the year in Providence, only suiting up twice for Boston over a pair of recalls. He averaged 11:02 of ice time across those contests and posted a minus-one rating while going 2-for-5 on faceoffs and taking three shots on goal. The Michigan native will return to the lineup tomorrow against the Hurricanes as the Bs’ fourth-line center between John Beecher and Mark Kastelic, per Scott McLaughlin of WEEI. He’s served as the P-Bruins’ captain this season and is tied for second on the team in scoring with 16-28–44 through 52 games.
Ahead of Brown in AHL scoring is Lettieri, leading the club with 20-28–48 in 46 appearances. The 30-year-old made eight appearances for Boston in January, scoring twice while averaging 12:05 per game and recording 19 hits. The versatile 5’10” forward has been a decently productive depth piece when called upon for NHL minutes, posting 14-15–29 in 137 career games. He’ll get a shot in the top nine against Carolina on a line with Cole Koepke and youngster Matthew Poitras.
Tufte comes back up after being sent down in favor of Merkulov and Viel last week. The 6’6″ winger has also been reasonably productive for the P-Bruins this year, racking up 18-13–31 in 42 appearances. The 26-year-old former Stars first-rounder has averaged just 8:05 per game in five showings for Boston, though, posting no points and a minus-three rating with six hits. He’ll somewhat surprisingly get a shot in a second-line role with Charlie Coyle and Elias Lindholm, Marchand’s usual spot in the lineup.
Merkulov had been the one receiving Marchand’s minutes over the last few games, but no points and three shots on goal weren’t enough to keep him on the roster. The 5’11” natural center heads back to Providence, where he remains one of the club’s most effective per-game producers with 44 points in 47 outings.
The 6’2″ Viel had suited up in each of Boston’s last three games, averaging 7:29 per contest with a minus-one rating and eight hits. The depth power forward has 8-18–26 in 51 AHL games with a team-high 130 PIMs.
