Utah Signs Jaxson Stauber To Two-Year, Two-Way Extension
Pending Group VI unrestricted free agent goaltender Jaxson Stauber has inked a two-year, two-way extension to keep him in Utah through the 2026-27 campaign, the team announced (X link). If Stauber is in the NHL, the contract will carry the league minimum cap hit of $775K, Belle Fraser of the Salt Lake Tribune reports.
Since Stauber is a likely candidate to land on waivers to begin next season, his signing doesn’t impact Utah’s salary cap projection for 2025-26 at present. 2024-25 was Stauber’s last year of waiver-exempt status. He becomes the 35th player under contract with the Club for next year.
Stauber, fresh off his 26th birthday, spent the season as Utah’s No. 3 in the net after getting non-tendered by the Blackhawks last summer. He inked a two-way deal with an $80K AHL salary and $100K guarantee in the first week of free agency last summer and, while he didn’t make the opening night roster, spent a solid chunk of the season up with the NHL team as Karel Vejmelka‘s backup with Connor Ingram missing significant time due to injury and an active stint in the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program.
Across his four starts and two relief appearances with Utah this year, the 6’3″ netminder posted a 2-1-1 record, .892 SV%, and a 3.26 GAA. It was his second season of NHL experience after starting six games for Chicago in 2022-23. He recorded his first NHL shutout in his season debut against the Golden Knights on Nov. 30 with a 29-save performance.
The Minnesota still primarily played with AHL Tucson this season. He backstopped the Roadrunners to a 12-7-2 record in 21 appearances with a .897 SV% and 3.14 GAA. He started two of Tucson’s three games in their first-round loss to Abbotsford, humming with a .935 SV% and 2.61 GAA.
Stauber will be eligible to test standard unrestricted free agency upon expiry.
Utah Signs Michal Kunc to One-Year Contract
The Utah Hockey Club has signed Czech forward Michal Kunc to a one-year, two-way contract for the 2025-26 season. The move will send Kunc to North America after six seasons in the Czech Extraliga. Kunc’s Olomouc just survived relegation with a 4-0 sweep of Jihlava.
The 24-year-old Kunc was the top forward for Olomouc this season. He tied for second on the team with 13 goals, and led the team outright with 35 points, scored in 49 games. The marks were both career-highs for Kunc, lapping the 11 goals and 23 points he posted in 48 games last season.
Kunc made his pro debut with Brno Kometa in the 2019-20 season. He spent 25 games and scored two points with the club before a mid-season move to Olomouc in 2020-21. Kunc quickly found a scoring groove with the move – netting seven points in his first 17 games in the new setting – but he wasn’t able to keep it up through the next two seasons. That’s what has helped his performances since 2023 stand out so proudly – as the young, bottom-of-the-lineup finds his pro footing.
Kunc is a sturdy forward who plays responsibly in all three zones. He brought a physical presence to play along the boards, and a hard-working motor to drives into the low-slot. Those attributes – and his ability to fill the pest role – should help Kunc earn a strong role in a Utah organization that’s already found ways to utilize bump-and-grind forwards out of Czechia.
Utah Hockey Club Notes: Cooley, But, Simashev, Maccelli, Ingram
After managing a 38-31-13 record in their first season in franchise history, the Utah Hockey Club will be an exciting team to follow this upcoming offseason. They have abundant financial flexibility, and some of those dollars will undoubtedly go to a player they’ll look to build around for the long haul.
Brogan Houston of Deseret News shared a note from Utah General Manager Bill Armstrong earlier, indicating the team will look to begin extension negotiations with center Logan Cooley this summer. Cooley becomes eligible for an extension on July 1st, as he enters the last season of his three-year entry-level contract signed in 2023.
There’s no questioning the desire for an extension from Utah’s perspective. Cooley has been flat-out electric since jumping from collegiate to professional, scoring 45 goals and 109 points through his first 157 contests, with a 19-point improvement year-on-year. All four of Utah’s top-scoring forwards are signed to contracts at or below $7.15MM per year, so they may be ready to make Cooley their highest-paid player as well.
Other updates out of Utah:
- Just over two weeks ago, Armstrong suggested that Utah’s two 2023 first-round selections, Daniil But and Dmitri Simashev, might debut for the team next season. In a follow-up, Cole Bagley of KSL Sports received confirmation from Armstrong today that the team would begin contract negotiations with the pair once their KHL season had concluded. Those negotiations could start relatively soon, given that their current team, Lokomotiv Yaroslavl, will play Avangard Omsk in Game 7 of Round Two of the Gagarin Cup playoffs on Wednesday.
- After notching 78 assists in his last 146 games, much was expected from Matias Maccelli this season. Unfortunately, the 2024-25 season became one to forget, as Maccelli finished with eight goals and 18 points in 55 contests, becoming a frequent healthy scratch. The diminished production sparked trade rumors regarding Maccelli around the deadline, and that doesn’t appear likely to fade this offseason. Concerning Maccelli’s future with the organization, Belle Fraser of The Salt Lake Tribune quoted Armstrong saying, “We’ve got some evaluation to do. Your team becomes better every year. There are certain things that happen — sometimes your players have to keep up, sometimes roles change.“
- Fraser also received a quote from Armstrong about netminder Connor Ingram‘s status, who entered the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program on March 9th. Armstrong said, “A lot of it is unknown. When players go into the program, we don’t have any contact with him so it’s hard for us to speculate. The good news for us as we sit here in this room is we know he is in a good place at the program. We wish him the best.” Ingram’s starting status for Utah’s 2025-26 season is uncertain, but he is signed through next season with a cap hit of $1.95MM.
Michael Carcone Will Test Free Agency
Utah winger Michael Carcone isn’t interested in re-signing with the Club and will test unrestricted free agency this summer, he told reporters during today’s exit meetings (via Brogan Houston of Deseret News).
Carcone said he was looking for more consistent playing time, something he definitely didn’t get in Utah following his breakout 21-goal season with the Coyotes last year. The 28-year-old was in the press box for long stretches of the campaign, including an eight-game streak near the beginning of the season. He also spent nine of Utah’s final 10 games as a healthy scratch as Utah chased but ultimately fell short of a postseason berth.
When dressed, Carcone was similarly productive on a per-game basis as he was last year in Arizona. He wasn’t scoring goals at the clip he did in 2023-24, but upped his assist tally to make up for it. He finished the year with 7-12–19 in 53 games, a 29-point pace over a full season. That’s fine production for a diminutive third or fourth-line scoring forward like Carcone. He averaged 11:26 per game and shot at a 9.3% clip, less than half of the 18.9% finishing rate that fueled last year’s goal-scoring performance.
The Ontario native is two years removed from an AHL scoring title, posting 31-54–85 in 65 games with Tucson in the 2022-23 season. He’s stuck on NHL rosters in Arizona and Utah since then on the two-year, $1.55MM contract he signed in the 2023 offseason. He’s shown enough staying power at the NHL level to earn a small pay bump this summer. AFP Analytics projected a one-year, $1MM extension if he was to stay in Utah, a deal he could likely improve upon slightly on the open market.
Thus, look for teams in need of a tertiary scoring option to look to Carcone as a high-upside option that won’t break the bank. Cap-conscious teams looking to augment their depth scoring next year like the Predators, Bruins, and Wild could be fits of mutual interest.
Utah Assign Kailer Yamamoto, Matt Villalta To AHL
The NHL season has come to an end, or soon will, for teams around the league that missed out on this year’s Stanley Cup Playoffs. That fact has driven many to begin the process of assigning their waiver-exempt players to more successful teams in the minor leagues. We’ll cover the bulk of those assignments here:
- In a rare move with playoff implications, the St. Louis Blues have assigned top forward prospect Dalibor Dvorsky to the minor leagues. Dvorsky hasn’t played since April 9th, when he made his second career appearance in the NHL. He has no points and an average of nine minutes in ice time over his first two games. This move will return him to a star role in the minor leagues, where his 20 goals and 44 points in 59 games rank third and fourth on the Springfield Thunderbirds respectively. Springfield have squeaked into the Calder Cup playoffs with 74 points in 70 games this season. Dvorsky will be a major boost to their postseason roster, unless the Blues opt to include him in their inevitable wave of Black Ace recalls.
- The Chicago Blackhawks have assigned top defense prospects Kevin Korchinski and Artyom Levshunov to the AHL after the end of their season, per a release from the Rockford IceHogs. Both players have manned dominant roles in the IceHogs lineup this season – Korchinski looking to find his comfort after a hard NHL role last season, and Levshunov looking to vindicate his second-overall selection in last year’s draft. They lead the Rockford blue-line in scoring, with Korchinski netting 27 points in 54 games and Levshunov scoring 22 points in 50 games. Levshunov proved the more productive in all three zones at the NHL level. He recorded six assists, eight penalty minutes, and a minus-13 in his first 18 games in the NHL. Korchisnki only scored two points in 16 NHL games this season, though his minus-five was the fourth-best on the Chicago defense. The duo will offer a well-rounded impact to Rockford’s playoff push – Korchinski bringing strong offense and Levshunov showing strong two-way play.
- The San Jose Sharks have assigned defenseman Luca Cagnoni back to the minor leagues after recalling him to play in their latest game, per Curtis Pashelka of the Bay Area News Group. Cagnoni recorded an assist and two penalties in roughly 18 minutes of Monday’s overtime loss to the Vancouver Canucks. The score was his second assist in six NHL games this season, on top of eight penalty minutes and a minus-four. Cagnoni was named to the AHL All-Rookie Team on Wednesday – high praise after he led all rookie defensemen in scoring with 14 goals and 49 points in 62 games this season. Cagnoni had a breakout season in his first professional campaign, and already seems to be outperforming his fourth-round selection in the 2023 NHL Draft. He will look to keep a good year going as the San Jose Barracuda prepare for a playoff push.
- Winger Kailer Yamamoto represents the first veteran on this list. He’s headed back to the Tucson Roadrunners alongside goaltender Matt Villalta, after the end of the Utah Hockey Club’s inaugural season, per Cole Bagley of KSL Sports. Yamamoto has been a force in the minor leagues. He leads Tucson in scoring this season with 53 points in 52 games. It’s been a valiant performance that earned the depth forward 12 appearances in the NHL. He scored three points in those games. Villalta has stood tall as Tucson’s starting goaltender as well, with a team-leading .906 save percentage in 41 games this season. He played in just the third NHL game of his career this season and recorded a win, with 28 saves on 31 shots. Yamamoto will return to Tucson’s top-line, while Villalta will likely return to the starter’s role ahead of Jaxson Stauber.
- The Nashville Predators have assigned Ryan Ufko back to the minor leagues, per Alex Daugherty of The Tennessean. Ufko made his NHL debut on Monday. He didn’t manage any notable stat changes in 15:37 of ice time. Ufko has emerged as a top-four defender for the Milwaukee Admirals this season. His eight goals and 29 points in 71 games lead the Admirals blue-line in scoring. Ufko is still rounding out the physical and two-way aspects of his game, but his emergence as an AHL rookie has proven promising on a Preadtors team well capable of honing defenders into NHL talents.
Utah Injury Notes: Marino, O’Brien
Utah Hockey Club defender John Marino will miss tonight’s game against the Kraken due to an illness, per Brogan Houston of Desert News Sports. Houston adds that there is an illness circulating through the locker room, so it will be interesting to monitor if additional players are impacted to the point of missed time. Just yesterday head coach Andre Tourigny noted Marino would be day-to-day with an upper body injury after taking a puck to the head in Saturday’s contest against the Jets, also per Houston.
In 34 games on the year, Marino has recorded one goal and 14 points. It’s been a tough first season with the franchise for Marino, as he sustained an injury in training camp that eventually resulted in surgery in October. Marino didn’t appear in a game until January.
Utah acquired Marino, 27, from the Devils during the 2024 draft in exchange for a second-round pick. Marino burst onto the scene as a member of the Pittsburgh Penguins, who then signed him to a six-year, $26.4MM contract in 2021. The Penguins then dealt the defender to the New Jersey Devils, where he established himself as an anchor on their back end, and Marino has slowly taken on that responsibility for Utah during the second half of this season. Although he’s missed more than half of the team’s games this season, his current average of 21:10 of ice time per night represents the highest average of his six-year career. While the club is all but assured to miss the playoffs this season, Marino will be a key piece for Utah moving forward.
Tourigny also provided an updated on injured forward Liam O’Brien, noting “there’s a chance” he returns before the end of the season, per Belle Fraser of the Salt Lake Tribune. The enforcer sustained a lower-body during a March 13 contest against Seattle, and the team announced his recovery time would be four-plus weeks, putting his return in question.
On the season, O’Brien has two points and 50 penalty minutes in 27 games. After recording a career-high 14 points and league-leading 153 PIMs in 75 games for the Coyotes last season, Utah signed O’Brien to a three-year, $3MM extension in June.
Utah Recalls Kailer Yamamoto
The Blues are one of two teams eligible to clinch a playoff spot tonight. They and the Oilers can book their ticket to the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs if the Flames lose to the Sharks in regulation. St. Louis will need to hold up their end of the bargain by defeating the Jets in regulation to wake up tomorrow morning with an “X” next to their name in the standings. Doing so would mark their 13th straight win, the longest winning streak since Edmonton won 16 straight last year between Dec. 21 and Jan. 27. The Blues haven’t lost since a 5-3 defeat at the hands of the Penguins on March 13. They’re now 34-16-6 since replacing Drew Bannister with Jim Montgomery behind the bench in November and are two points ahead of the Wild for the first wild card in the Western Conference. Both St. Louis and Minnesota have four games remaining. The Blues have a 64% chance of holding onto the WC1 spot, a 33% chance of falling back behind the Wild and finishing in the WC2 slot, and a 1% chance of lapping the Avalanche for third place in the Central, per MoneyPuck. Their streak has been fueled by top-line center Robert Thomas, who leads the league in scoring since March 15 with 4-19–23 in 12 games.
More from the Central Division:
- Utah has recalled winger Kailer Yamamoto from AHL Tucson after papering him down to the minors yesterday. The 26-year-old righty has a goal and an assist in five games since being recalled from Tucson on March 26, his first time on the NHL roster since clearing waivers early in the year. The 2017 first-round pick signed a rich two-way deal with Utah at the end of training camp following a successful professional tryout, although he’s spent most of the year in the minors for the first time since the 2019-20 campaign. While he only has those two points to show for eight NHL appearances this year, he’s Tucson’s leading scorer with 19-34–53 in 52 games with a +14 rating. He’s recently seen time in a second-line role with Barrett Hayton and Nick Schmaltz and will presumably return there when Utah hosts the Kraken tomorrow.
- Despite iffy boxcar stats this season, the Blackhawks are pleased with how 2022 No. 7 overall pick Kevin Korchinski has developed in 2024-25. “We forget how young he is,” Blackhawks interim coach Anders Sörensen told Mark Lazerus of The Athletic. “His development curve this year overall has been a positive one, and it’s going up.” Korchinski highlighted his own defensive improvement – a must this season, considering his lack of offensive production. The 20-year-old lefty is a passer first and foremost and was dominant offensively in juniors, but he has no points to speak of in 13 NHL games this season and has been underwhelming with AHL Rockford with 3-24–27 in 54 games.
Utah Hockey Club Could Be Busy This Summer
The Utah Hockey Club surprised many people at the NHL Trade Deadline by signing several veterans to contract extensions rather than trading them for prospects and draft picks. This indicates they plan to contend very soon and could be a team to watch this summer.
Utah locked up veteran forward Alexander Kerfoot and defensemen Ian Cole and Olli Määttä to short-term deals in the one- to three-year range. Also, it extended goaltender Karel Vejmelka to a five-year contract worth $4.75MM a year. While the moves surprised some people, they make sense on a longer timeline as Utah aims to make the playoffs next season after contending for a postseason spot this year. Utah has a good mix of young homegrown players and veterans who have won in other markets and will likely be busy this summer trying to shore up some holes in their roster.
Some folks might expect Utah to spend big on the free agent market, given that they project to have $21.5MM in cap space this summer (as per PuckPedia) with 20 players already signed for next season. Realistically, Utah needs just three players to fill out a lineup and could have more prospects join the fray on entry-level deals for under $1MM. The door is wide open for Utah to make some noise, and given that the team is just a year old, they will be looking to make their presence known in the Western Conference.
Utah will need to be cautious on the free agent market; while there is plenty of talent to be had, the team has to avoid the same fate that happened to the Nashville Predators last year after they signed several high-profile free agents then flopped this season and have already been eliminated from playoff contention. The other issue facing Utah in free agency is that they must leave room to sign their younger stars, who will eventually finish their ELCs. Logan Cooley will need a new deal after next season, as will Josh Doan and, eventually, in a few years, Tij Iginla. The money goes quickly when high draft picks pan out; ask the Toronto Maple Leafs. Of those three, Cooley is the only one on course to earn a monster long-term deal, but Iginla was just drafted and has the pedigree to get there.
Utah is well positioned to be aggressive this summer and likely will be, according to David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period, who believed in February that Utah would pursue forwards Mitch Marner and Mikko Rantanen. Now, the latter of those two is off the table after signing an extension with the Dallas Stars, but Marner hitting free agency is very much in play, and Utah could offer an attractive landing spot for the 27-year-old. Acquiring a dynamic playmaker like Marner would significantly boost Utah’s offense and fill out their top six, which lacks a second-line winger and currently has Kailer Yamamoto filling in. Signing Marner would likely push youngster Dylan Guenther to the second line, opening up more opportunities for him to flourish offensively.
If Utah strikes out on Marner, plenty of secondary free-agent options could boost them. Winnipeg forward Nikolaj Ehlers will almost certainly be available, as he has stated that he would welcome a change of market (according to Pagnotta). The 29-year-old would slide nicely onto the second line for Utah, and his versatility, speed, and skill could help an offense that currently ranks 22nd in the NHL. Ehlers can play on both wings, which might be a better fit than Marner; he will also come in at a significantly lower cap hit.
Another name that should be out there is Brock Boeser of the Vancouver Canucks. Boeser is a proven goal scorer who could fit in well on the second line next to Nick Schmaltz and Barrett Hayton. It’s hard to gauge what kind of a market there will be for Boeser as interest at the trade deadline appears to have been tepid at best. Boeser may be looking at a short-term deal depending on what the market is giving him, something that might suit Utah just fine as it lines up with when their younger players will need extensions.
If Utah wanted to bump Hayton to a third-line center, they could look to Florida center Sam Bennett, who appears poised to test the market. The 29-year-old has developed into a physical center that offers a unique skill set and could bring valuable experience and leadership to Utah. Bennett will be a hot commodity on the free agent market and could sign a contract that becomes an albatross when his physical style eventually catches up with him.
Many players will be available on the trade front, and Utah has the assets to acquire just about anyone. Rickard Rakell of the Pittsburgh Penguins will likely be out there, although Pittsburgh will be looking for a king’s ransom to let one of Sidney Crosby’s preferred wingers go. Other veterans, such as Blues center Brayden Schenn, Pens defenseman Erik Karlsson and Islanders middleman Jean-Gabriel Pageau, could be available again. However, given Utah’s timeline, targeting younger players with upside might be preferred.
Marco Rossi would be a name that makes a lot of sense for Utah. The 23-year-old has had his name thrown around in trade rumors for over a year and would be a good fit in Utah. The trickier part with Rossi is that Minnesota general manager Bill Guerin has stated publicly that he wants to keep Rossi in the fold, so any move for Rossi might require an overpay on Utah’s part.
Another name that could fit in Utah is New Jersey defenseman Simon Nemec. The former second-overall pick has not been a fit with the Devils and voiced his displeasure in December, although he eventually walked his comments back. Nemec is a promising puck mover who probably shouldn’t be playing in the top four at this early stage of his career. In Utah, he could be slotted into the third pairing and have an opportunity to flourish while having his minutes sheltered. The tricky part in a trade for the 21-year-old is that New Jersey won’t be looking for futures, meaning that Utah would have to subtract off of their current roster to facilitate a move or get a third team involved.
Utah will be a team to watch as the excitement grows in the market this summer. They likely aren’t ready to be a Stanley Cup contender next year, but with a summer of new additions, they could be a team to watch as they try to build a winning culture.
Photo by Rob Gray-Imagn Images
Armstrong: Simashev, But Could Debut For Utah Next Season
The Utah Hockey Club could only be a summer away from seeing their top two prospects debut. In a report from Belle Fraser of The Salt Lake Tribune, team General Manager Bill Armstrong believes there’s a good chance defenseman Dmitri Simashev and forward Daniil But will join the roster next season.
Both players are rostered on the KHL’s Lokomotiv Yaroslavl, helping sweep their opening round matchup against the Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod in this year’s Gagarin Cup playoffs. Unfortunately, the former isn’t coming off a promising season and could benefit from another developmental year overseas.
Simashev was considered a lengthy reach at the time of his selection. He was ranked as the 19th best European skater by the NHL Central Scouting Bureau before the draft. However, the Arizona Coyotes selected Simashev with the sixth overall pick. He’s been rostered with Lokomotiv since, scoring five goals and 16 points in 119 regular season contests.
It’ll be interesting to see how Utah utilizes him if he were to make the jump to North America. The team already has six defenseman signed to NHL contracts for the 2025-26 season, and it doesn’t make sense to bring him over just to practice with the NHL squad.
Meanwhile, But has shown more promise between the two. Selected 12th overall in the same draft, But is coming off a season where he scored nine goals and 28 points in 56 games, which is good for seventh on the team in scoring.
Luckily, no matter how well their game translates to the NHL level in the immediate future, both have professional size and are willing to play physically. Still, Utah may have to thin out the roster this summer to create space for the pair.
Injury Notes: Tkachuk, Guenther, Thrun, Penguins
The Ottawa Senators will be without team captain Brady Tkachuk for a second straight game on Thursday night per Bruce Garrioch of the Ottawa Citizen. Senators head coach Travis Green told Garrioch that there was no update on Tkachuk’s injury after his first missed game. The top-line forward continues to carry a day-to-day injury designation after sustaining an upper-body injury in the overtime period of Ottawa’s Sunday’s loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Ottawa suffered a tough 5-2 loss to the Buffalo Sabres without Tkachuk on Tuesday. Fabian Zetterlund held onto a top-line role, and David Perron into a second-line role, in Tkachuk’s absence. Perron has managed four goals and five points over his last 10 games, while Zetterlund has recorded just one assist – hardly enough to make up for Tkachuk’s 11 points in 15 games since the start of march. The Senators’ captain is up to 29 goals and 55 points in 71 games on the season. Tkachuk is on pace for 64 points on the season – which would be the lowest he’s scored since breaking out with 67 points in the 2021-22 campaign. But even in a down year, the Senators will need to find a way to make up for Tkachuk’s net-front presence in his absence. They currently have a firm grip of the Eastern Conference’s first Wild Card.
Other notes from around the league:
- Utah Hockey Club forward Dylan Guenther is going to stick in the lineup despite breaking his nose in Tuesday night’s loss to the Florida Panthers, shares Belle Fraser of the Salt Lake Tribune. Guenther took a puck to the face but opted to play through Tuesday’s game, telling Fraser after that his nose is a far away from his legs after the game. He added earlier today that he had to get nine stitches and that his breathing is at about 70 percent, but neither fact will hold him out of the lineup on Thursday. Guenther has three points in his last five games, and a dazzling 26 goals and 52 points in 63 games this season. He stands as Utah’s leading goal scorer – at the young age of 21 – and should continue to contribute to Utah’s playoff race. Utah currently sits nine points out of the Western Conference’s second Wild Card, with one game in hand.
- San Jose Sharks defenseman Henry Thrun has confirmed that he’ll be returning to the lineup on Thursday, per Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now. Thrun has been out of the lineup since February 27th with an upper-body injury, save for making a spot start on March 8th where he reaggravated his injury. Thrun was finding his NHL legs in the games leading up to his injury, and even played in a career-high 24 minutes of action in San Jose’s February 24th loss to the Winnipeg Jets. He’s recorded 10 points, 30 penalty minutes, and a minus-16 in 52 games this season. Those marks fall just narrowly shy of his 11 points, 16 penalty minutes, and a minus-22 in 51 games last season. Thrun is expected to return to San Jose’s third pair alongside veteran Marc-Edouard Vlasic on Thursday.
- The Pittsburgh Penguins embarked on a three-game road trip on Thursday. They brought with them star Evgeni Malkin, who hasn’t played since March 23rd, while leaving behind Thomas Novak and Pierre-Olivier Joseph, per Penguins play-by-play voice Josh Getzoff. The pair of depth skaters will be forced to miss the next few games with undisclosed injuries. In the meantime, Malkin will look to make his return on Pittsburgh’s final multi-game road trip of the season. He’s continued to be a force in the Penguins lineup, with 15 goals and 46 points in 62 games this season. That’s the lowest scoring pace of Malkin’s career, though he still ranks fifth on the team in total scoring. Of the missing duo, only Joseph has managed a point – netting one assist in 24 games -while Novak has no scoring in two games with Pittsburgh. With two holes to fill, Pittsburgh is expected to enter Joona Koppanen and Ryan Shea back into the lineup.

