Maple Leafs Assign Matt Murray To AHL On Conditioning Loan
For the last several weeks, Maple Leafs goaltender Matt Murray has been skating with the team as he works his way back from bilateral hip surgery performed back in October. He’s now taking the next step in the rehab process as the team announced (Twitter link) that they’ve assigned Murray to AHL Toronto on an LTI Conditioning Loan.
At the time Murray had the surgery, the expected recovery timeline was six to eight months and it appears the 29-year-old will be on the shorter end of that. Last season, Murray was limited to just 26 games where he posted a 3.01 GAA and a .903 SV% and didn’t play at all in the playoffs after suffering a late-season concussion; he was relegated to third-string status upon his return.
That had the veteran as a speculative buyout candidate but the hip injury would have taken that option off the table had the team tried to pursue it. Instead, they elected to do with surgery, delaying that procedure until the start of the season which helped the Maple Leafs from a salary cap perspective as they were able to spend his $4.6875MM AAV in full on replacement players rather than having to keep it available for a midseason return.
With this being an LTI loan, there are some more stringent rules than a typical conditioning assignment. Murray can be with the Marlies for up to three games and six days and if he needs more time, the team can request a one-time two-game extension. That should be ample time to assess if Murray has indeed fully recovered and the original allotment is enough to get through the end of the regular season with him still on LTIR, removing any salary cap concerns.
Even if Murray does well in that stint, it would be surprising to see him see any action with the Maple Leafs in the postseason who are set with Ilya Samsonov and Joseph Woll as their tandem with veteran Martin Jones waiting in the wings as well. But a decent showing there could certainly help his cause as he’ll test unrestricted free agency for the first time this summer.
Blues Sign Dylan Peterson
With Boston University being eliminated from the Frozen Four on Thursday, some of their players are electing to turn pro. The latest of these is Dylan Peterson as the Blues announced late Friday that they’ve signed the center to a two-year, entry-level deal. Financial terms were not disclosed.
The 22-year-old was a third-round pick by St. Louis back in 2020, going 86th overall after spending the previous season with the U.S. National Team Development Program. He had a very limited role in his first two years with the Terriers, collecting just 22 points in 45 games and then followed that up with 18 in 39 appearances in his junior year. At that point, it wasn’t a certainty that the Blues would be looking to sign Peterson.
However, he saved his best performance for last as Peterson upped his output to 20 points in 35 contests this season which certainly helped his case for getting a contract. A 6’4 middleman, Peterson will begin his professional career next season, likely starting with AHL Springfield, and will look to work his way up the depth chart from there.
Bruins Assign Mason Lohrei To Minors
The Bruins announced Friday that blue-liner Mason Lohrei has been assigned to AHL Providence. He’ll get some game action in the minors starting tonight after being scratched in nine of Boston’s last 11 games.
A second-round pick in 2020, the 23-year-old Lohrei still holds the title of the best defense prospect in the organization. He made his NHL debut in November, and early returns suggest he’s well on his way to becoming a regular on the Bruins’ blue line. Through 41 games, the Louisiana native has 13 points (four goals, nine assists) with a -2 rating while averaging 16:57 per game. The Bruins’ possession metrics have been worse than you’d think, given their 107 points, and Lohrei’s individual ones are a tad below average, with a 46.3 CF% and a 49.1 xGF% at even strength. There’s room for improvement, but rookie defenders rarely dominate shot attempts or possession quality.
Lohrei has played spot duty on special teams, averaging around 30 seconds per game on both the power play and penalty kill. His power-play impact has been impressive, although he does have a goal and two assists with the man advantage. He has shone through on the penalty kill, posting a relative CF% of 10.7 and doing well in limiting shot attempts compared to his teammates. That’s a promising early sign of his ability to deal with increased minutes on the PK as he develops.
He’s played well enough that Bruins head coach Jim Montgomery likely won’t have any qualms about inserting Lohrei into the playoff lineup if injuries force Boston’s blue-line depth to step up. He’ll have the option to make postseason appearances for Providence, too, which has clinched a spot in the Calder Cup Playoffs. He has one year left on his entry-level contract with a $925K cap hit and will be an RFA in 2025.
Kraken Reassign Shane Wright, Logan Morrison, Ryan Winterton
The Kraken reassigned forwards Shane Wright, Logan Morrison and Ryan Winterton to AHL Coachella Valley this afternoon, per a team announcement. No corresponding transactions are anticipated for Seattle, which has been eliminated from playoff contention and has four games remaining on its regular season schedule. The three youngsters will now gear up for the Calder Cup Playoffs with one of the top teams in the minors after getting NHL trials down the stretch.
Wright’s two-week showing was easily his best so far in the NHL. The 2022 fourth-overall pick skated in five games, exploding for four goals and an assist while averaging 15:47 per game, the longest leash head coach Dave Hakstol has given him thus far. All four goals came at even strength, too – his assist was his only power-play point. It was his first stint in the majors since a three-game showing in November, during which he averaged less than 10 minutes per game and was held without a point.
It was surely a confidence booster for the 20-year-old, who was viewed as the consensus first-overall selection in 2022 for a number of years but has had a somewhat rocky development path since the COVID-19 pandemic. After doing well in Coachella Valley with 20 goals and 43 points in 56 games this season, he’ll throw his hat in the ring for a spot on the opening night roster next season.
Morrison and Winterton were on the Kraken roster for a tad longer, recalled together six days before Wright on March 25. It was Morrison’s first NHL recall and Winterton’s second. Morrison played more sparingly than his counterpart but was given a larger role when in the lineup, averaging 13:08 in four appearances. He was a healthy scratch in four of the Kraken’s last five games, though, and failed to record a point, posting a -1 rating and winning 14 of his 31 draws (45.2%).
The 21-year-old undrafted free agent signing has done quite well in Coachella Valley in his first professional season, ranking seventh on the team in scoring with 40 points (15 goals, 25 assists) in 60 games with a +12 rating. Both he and Winterton will likely report back to the minors to begin 2024-25 but should be in line for more call-ups throughout the year.
Winterton has totaled nine appearances across both of his recalls this season but has yet to record his first NHL point. He logged a -1 rating, four blocks, and 10 hits while averaging 9:20 per game. His 21 goals in 55 games for Coachella Valley are third on the team. All three players will see their entry-level contracts expire simultaneously in 2026.
Canadiens Sign Lane Hutson To Entry-Level Deal
2:49 p.m.: Hutson’s ELC carries the maximum $950K cap hit, per PuckPedia. The full breakdown is as follows:
2023-24: $855K base salary, $95K signing bonus
2024-25: $855K base salary, $95K signing bonus, $750K Schedule ‘A’ performance bonuses
2025-26: $885K base salary, $95K signing bonus, $850K Schedule ‘A’ performance bonuses
In a follow-up note, PuckPedia added that the maximum amount of ‘A’ cumulative bonuses Hutson can earn on the contract is $1.15MM over the two seasons.
1:26 p.m.: The Canadiens have signed top defense prospect Lane Hutson to an entry-level contract, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports Friday.
The 20-year-old’s sophomore season at Boston University ended yesterday when the Terriers were eliminated in the semifinals of the NCAA national championship, upset 2-1 in overtime by Denver. Hutson won’t make his NHL debut tomorrow against the Senators but could suit up in their two remaining contests against the Red Wings, says Sportsnet’s Eric Engels.
Montreal confirmed it’s a three-year deal beginning immediately for Hutson, meaning he’ll be an RFA upon expiry in 2026. They didn’t disclose financial terms.
Hutson, a left-shot, landed first in the Canadiens prospect pool in Scott Wheeler’s 2024 rankings for The Athletic, continuing a meteoric rise in the diminutive defender’s stock. Many public scouts viewed him as a potential first-round selection in the 2022 draft but slipped all the way to Montreal at 62nd overall, late in the second round, with many clubs scared off by his 5’8″ frame. He’s now listed at 5’10” and 161 lbs nearly two years later.
It’s been an exemplary two years for Hutson at BU. Serving as an alternate captain this season, he led all NCAA blue-liners in scoring with 49 points, tied with 2024 draft-eligible Zeev Buium, who’s now moving on to the national championship game tomorrow with Denver. His 1.29 points per game were solely in first place, making him a Hobey Baker Award nominee for the top collegiate player for a second straight season.
He put up quite similar totals in his freshman campaign, earning him Hockey East All-Star credits in both seasons. His 48 points in 39 games in 2022-23 broke Hall-of-Famer Brian Leetch‘s records for the most points by a U-19 defenseman in an NCAA season. The Illinois-born defender has also suited up for Team USA in each of the last two World Junior Championships, winning bronze in 2023 and gold in 2024 while totaling a goal and nine assists across 14 tournament games.
Some concerns remain about his undersized frame and his lack of ability to box out NHL forwards in front of his own net, likely dampening his long-term value only slightly. He’s still a possession monster and an incredibly high-volume shooter with excellent agility and playmaking skills, and he has first-pair upside if partnered with a larger, defensively intelligent blue-liner. Even if he can’t handle those minutes at even strength, he’s a slam dunk to quarterback the Habs’ top power play unit in the near future.
Hutson will likely remain in the NHL next season but will need to unseat other young Montreal defenders like Justin Barron, Jayden Struble, Arber Xhekaj, or the older Johnathan Kovacevic for a roster spot. All are either signed for next season or otherwise under team control.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports.
Predators Recall Troy Grosenick
The Predators recalled Troy Grosenick from AHL Milwaukee on Friday, per a team announcement. He’ll back up Kevin Lankinen tonight against the Blackhawks, allowing starter Juuse Saros to take a rest and avoid injury risk with three games left until the playoffs.
Grosenick, 34, has been one of the AHL’s premier goalies for most of the last decade. However, his success has never brought him close to a full-time NHL role. He’s only made four career top-level starts—two in 2014-15 with the Sharks and two in 2020-21 with the Kings.
The former Union College standout’s professional career began in 2013, inking an entry-level deal in San Jose as an undrafted free agent. He’s since bounced around on two-way deals with the Kings, Predators, Bruins, and Flyers. He returned to the Preds organization last summer on a one-year, two-way deal ($775K/$175K) to mentor top goalie prospect Yaroslav Askarov, his second contractual stint with the club after signing a one-year deal for the 2019-20 season.
That wasn’t his only previous campaign in Milwaukee, however. The Sharks loaned him there for a decent chunk of his time with the club, resulting in him playing 86 games with the Admirals between 2018 and 2020.
His return to Milwaukee has been solid but not overly triumphant. An injury kept him out for most of last season in the Flyers organization, limiting him to six appearances with Lehigh Valley. He’s failed to return to his former routine showings above a .920 SV%, posting a .907 mark and two shutouts with a 17-7-1 record in 28 games for Milwaukee this year. He’s only two years removed from a career-best campaign in the Bruins organization with AHL Providence when he led the league in GAA (2.00) and SV% (.933) in 30 appearances and earned a Second All-Star Team nod.
A pending UFA, Grosenick could make a fifth NHL start down the stretch if the Preds decide to let Saros rest for the remainder of the regular season. Entering tonight, Saros had started 11 of Nashville’s 15 games since the deadline. They’ve clinched a playoff spot and are guaranteed one of the two wild-card berths in the West.
Penguins Place Ryan Graves On LTIR, Recall Vinnie Hinostroza
The Penguins moved defenseman Ryan Graves to long-term injured reserve Thursday, Seth Rorabaugh of Tribune-Review Sports reports. The move rules him out of Pittsburgh’s four remaining regular season games, including a home tilt against the Red Wings tonight that, with a regulation win, could boost their playoff chances by nearly 20%. Placing Graves on LTIR creates the necessary cap space to add winger Vinnie Hinostroza, who Rorabaugh says was recalled from AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton in a corresponding move.
Graves, 28, hasn’t played since sustaining a concussion against the Blue Jackets on March 28. He’s been listed as day-to-day since and will miss his seventh consecutive game tonight.
The Nova Scotian has had a disappointing start to his Penguins tenure, which began after he inked a six-year, $27MM deal with trade protection in free agency last summer. The main drag has been his point production, registering 14 points (three goals, 11 assists) in 70 games after pacing at nearly 30 points per season over his previous two seasons with the Devils. His overall possession metrics haven’t been ghastly (48.7 CF%, 50.6 xGF%), although they’re south of his career average and don’t stand out much from his teammates. He’s been a turnover machine as well, logging 40 giveaways compared with 19 takeaways – the second-worst differential on the team. Erik Karlsson has him beat there but has compensated with some of the best possession metrics on the team, posting a +16 expected rating and 54.6 CF%.
Graves’ absence to end the regular season means more minutes for 24-year-old Pierre-Olivier Joseph, who has slid up to a top-pairing role alongside Karlsson as the Pens chase a playoff spot. He hasn’t been ruled out for postseason play, however, and could theoretically return as soon as Game 1 of a first-round series.
Hinostroza comes up as extra depth for the time being and won’t play against the Wings, per the team. The 30-year-old made 14 appearances with Pittsburgh earlier in the season, scoring a goal and two assists while averaging 9:45 per game. It’s the first recall for the Chicago native since he was added to the roster for three days in February without getting into game action. He hasn’t suited up for an NHL game since a 3-1 win over the Islanders on New Year’s Eve.
The diminutive winger is in his first season with the Pens after inking a one-year, one-way, league-minimum deal in July. He’s spent most of the season with WBS, where he’s been one of their most adept offensive talents. He’s taken on an alternate captain role with the farm club and is among their leaders in points per game with 32 points (15 goals, 17 assists) in 39 appearances.
Blackhawks Activate Connor Murphy From Injured Reserve
The Blackhawks announced today they’ve taken defenseman Connor Murphy off injured reserve ahead of Friday’s matchup with the Predators. He’ll return after missing 34 games with a groin injury, which he said last week was osteitis pubis, a type of chronic inflammation.
Healthcare providers term osteitis pubis a rare cause of inflammation in the groin and hip area, but Murphy isn’t the only NHLer dealing with it this season. Sharks captain Logan Couture‘s season ended because of it at the All-Star break after only six appearances. While rare, sports injuries are its most common cause due to repetitive strain on groin and hip joints, muscles and tissues, per the Cleveland Clinic.
Murphy, 31, is no stranger to injuries. Before skating in 80 games last season, Murphy missed over 10% of the season in four straight seasons in Chicago from 2019 to 2022. He’s in his seventh season with the Blackhawks, who acquired him and minor league forward Laurent Dauphin from the Coyotes in 2017 in exchange for declining premier shutdown defender Niklas Hjalmarsson.
The 2011 first-round pick has since become a steady presence on the Chicago blue line, sneaking into a consistent top-four role after being buried in bottom-pairing minutes in his first season with the club. He’s failed to control possession quality at even strength through much of his time in the Windy City but has often been tasked with taking on the most difficult defensive assignments, making nearly 60% of his zone starts in the defensive zone.
Murphy hasn’t played in nearly three months, last suiting up against the Stars in a 3-1 loss on Jan. 13. In 43 games before the injury, he notched two goals, six assists, eight points, a -19 rating, and 40 PIMs while averaging 19:51 per game. His core possession metrics, a 44.4 CF% and a 44.1 xGF% are up from last season by multiple percentage points. Despite the lengthy absence, he still ranks third on the Hawks with 105 blocked shots and sixth with 106 hits.
He may not be 100% recovered, but getting into game action to close out the season should help him and the Blackhawks assess his recovery and his ability to manage the inflammation. If necessary, surgery can address the issue.
The Blackhawks made a corresponding transaction earlier this week by assigning defenseman Wyatt Kaiser to AHL Rockford. After recalling rookie Ethan Del Mastro from Rockford earlier today, they now have eight defensemen on the roster.
Murphy, an alternate captain, is signed through 2026 at a $4.4MM cap hit. His four-year extension, signed in August 2021, includes a 10-team no-trade list. He and Seth Jones are the only Chicago blueliners signed to one-way deals next season.
Golden Knights Sign Noah Hanifin To Eight-Year Extension
The Vegas Golden Knights have signed Trade Deadline acquisition Noah Hanifin to an eight-year contract extension (Twitter link). The deal reportedly carries a $7.35MM cap hit, a six-year full-no-trade clause, and full signing bonuses, per Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic (Twitter link).
Hanifin is earning front-page news once again after his trade market dominated much of this year’s Trade Deadline prep. Vegas was a surprise landing spot for the top defender, acquiring him in a three-team trade that saw them send Daniil Miromanov and a 2025 first-round and third-round pick to the Calgary Flames and a 2024 fifth-round pick to the Philadelphia Flyers. Hanifin has since played 16 games with the Golden Knights, recording two goals and nine points. He’s recorded the second-most points among Vegas defensemen since joining, behind Shea Theodore‘s 11 points. The scoring brings Hanifin up to 13 goals and 44 points in 77 games, flirting with his career-high 48 points posted in the 2021-22 season.
Philadelphia’s brokerage of the deal reduced Hanifin’s cap hit to just $1.2375MM – just enough for Vegas to acquire Tomáš Hertl‘s $6.75MM cap hit. The Golden Knights now have just $1.464MM in off-season cap space, per CapFriendly, assuming an $87.5MM salary cap. They’ll have to negotiate with seven free agents, including Jonathan Marchessault and Alec Martinez, now the only expiring defenseman.
While they’re almost destined to face cap troubles down the line, the Vegas Golden Knights now have Hanifin, Theodore, Alex Pietrangelo, Mark Stone, Jack Eichel, and Hertl signed through the 2025-26 season. That’s not to mention the impactful supporting cast, like William Karlsson, Ivan Barbashev, and Zach Whitecloud, who are all signed through the next two seasons. Vegas wasn’t able to top 100 points this season, though they should be one of the final teams to secure a playoff spot. But they’ll have plenty of time for a more prolific season, with their core pieces – including three top defensemen – now locked up for the foreseeable future.
The deal is a shade cheaper than the rumored eight-year, $60MM deal Hanifin had discussed with the Flames earlier in the season. The AAV/cap hit on that would have come in at $7.5MM per year, meaning he’s taken $150K less annually and $1.2MM less in total over the life of the contract to extend in Vegas.
This was Hanifin’s chance to cash in on a long-term deal and his first offseason being eligible for unrestricted free agency if he chose. Fresh off his 27th birthday in January, he already has quite the career under his belt, accumulating 62 goals, 221 assists and 283 points with an even rating over 675 games with the Flames, Golden Knights and Hurricanes since his debut in 2015.
Hanifin is a definite top-pair threat but not an elite point producer or power-play contributor. That makes his cap hit, which is 8.8% of the ceiling at the time of signing, a tad steep when examining comparables. Players with similar roles and results, like the Bruins’ Hampus Lindholm and the Blue Jackets’ Damon Severson, signed eight-year extensions over the last two years with cap hits of $6.5MM and $6.25MM, respectively, which were between 7.5% and 8% of the cap ceiling at the time of signing. A slightly richer and older comparable is Maple Leafs blue-liner Morgan Rielly, who inked an eight-year, $7.5MM AAV extension in October 2021 that was 9.2% of the ceiling at the time of signing.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports.
Pacific Notes: Morin, Nesterenko, Turcotte
With his 2023-24 season coming to an end with the Moncton Wildcats of the QMJHL, the Calgary Flames announced that Etienne Morin has been reassigned to the organization’s AHL affiliate, the Calgary Wranglers. Having yet to sign his entry-level contract with the Flames organization, Morin will play with the Wranglers for the remainder of the season on an amateur tryout agreement.
Morin originally came to the Flames organization by way of the 48th overall pick of the 2023 NHL Draft. In his draft year, Morin was a very efficient defenseman for the Wildcats, scoring 21 goals and 72 points in 67 games while also achieving a +/- rating of 29.
While his year-on-year offensive production certainly took a dip in the 2023-24 season, Morin became even more effective as a physical player on the blue line. With the Wranglers having already clinched a playoff spot in the 2024 Calder Cup playoffs, Morin is set to receive valuable experience as the organization prepares for the postseason.
Other Pacific notes:
- After having spent five days with the Anaheim Ducks, Nikita Nesterenko is headed back down to the AHL as the organization announced they have reassigned back to their AHL affiliate, the San Diego Gulls. Nesterenko was able to make his season debut with the Ducks over this emergency recall, suiting up in three games while scoring one goal. Now returning to San Diego, the former sixth-round pick will look to build upon his 15-goal, 33-point campaign in the last few contests.
- Out of the lineup for the Los Angeles Kings for nearly a month, it appears that forward Alex Turcotte is close to returning for the club. In an update today, the Kings organization announced that Turcotte has been assigned to their AHL affiliate, the Ontario Reign, on a conditioning loan. Before going down with an undisclosed injury in March, Turcotte was not a heavily utilized player by Los Angeles, scoring one goal and four points in 20 games while only averaging 9:17 of ice time per night.
