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  • ECHL Players To Strike
  • Maple Leafs Fire Assistant Coach Marc Savard
  • Sharks’ Will Smith Out Week-To-Week, Collin Graf Questionable
  • Rangers’ J.T. Miller Out Week-To-Week
  • Oilers’ Tristan Jarry Out Week-To-Week, Frederic Scratched
  • Blackhawks’ Frank Nazar Expected To Miss Four Weeks With Injury
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Pacific Notes: Kuemper, Pettersson, Ohgren

December 22, 2025 at 9:53 pm CDT | by Bradley Keith 2 Comments

Earlier today Zach Dooley, Manager of Editorial Content for the Kings, shared that Darcy Kuemper returned to practice and faced shots, working 1-on-1 with the team’s goaltender coach. 

Los Angeles’ #1 netminder landed on injured reserve six days ago, after exiting mid-game with an apparent head injury, as Stars forward Mikko Rantanen fought to create a screen, and they collided. In the meantime, veteran Anton Forsberg has held things down, including a great performance in a win over Tampa Bay, and one loss to Florida. Phoenix Copley, once a Kings full-timer, was called up from the AHL but has yet to see action. Forsberg, 33, is a serviceable backup who had success at times over the past few seasons in Ottawa, but is still working to reach expectations from his two year deal worth $2.25MM inked over the summer with the silver and black. 

Kuemper, now 35, has been a tremendous fit with the Kings. Originally a sixth-round pick, and eventually a Stanley Cup Champion, the Saskatoon native has been a model of determination throughout many highs and lows in his career. He has a .917 save percentage on the season, ranking among the league’s best. Thankfully, it appears Kuemper is gearing up for a return soon. 

Elsewhere across the division:

  • Canucks Head Coach Adam Foote told reporters, including Thomas Drance of The Athletic, that Elias Pettersson (center) had a setback from his upper-body injury and his return will be delayed past Christmas, if not slightly longer. The Swede has been out since early December, now eight games. During that timeline major changes have come to the organization, and with 22 points in 28 games, the club will be eager to welcome back their star and try to continue stringing together wins in their new era of sorts. 
  • Also in Canucks news, The Athletic’s Thomas Drance published an article on the team’s surge post-Hughes trade, focusing on things that have stood out, including Liam Ohgren’s play. Although the Canucks fell to the Flyers tonight, they had won four games in a row previously. Many had written them off, and the team appeared dead in the water, without their franchise star, no less. With all the rumors out of the way, and three young but immediate contributors coming over, it has brought fresh air to the group. Ohgren, a former first round pick, appeared to be more of a “throw in” that might end up in the AHL to try and find his game. The 21-year-old had no points in 18 games with the Wild. Instead, Ohgren has turned the page as a Canuck, with three points in five games, enough to be an instant middle-six contributor with untapped potential. 

Los Angeles Kings| Vancouver Canucks Darcy Kuemper| Elias Pettersson| Liam Ohgren

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Evening Notes: Berggren, Sabres, Predators

December 22, 2025 at 8:31 pm CDT | by Bradley Keith 2 Comments

St. Louis’ Jonatan Berggren has been off to a hot start after being claimed off waivers from Detroit, and Jeremy Rutherford of The Athletic published an article looking into the surge, and how sustainable it can be. The new Blue jumped right up to the team’s first line with Robert Thomas and Pavel Buchnevich, posting four points in three games so far. 

The Blues, with a forward core ravaged by injuries of late, would likely have been keen to add any NHL capable player from waivers. One such as Berggren was especially hard to pass up. After several years of lighting up the AHL but not quite putting it all together at the highest level, the 25-year-old became the latest former top prospect to hit the wire. 

While many such players catch headlines, have some success early on, and eventually regress back to the mean, Berggren has caught high praise from Head Coach Jim Montgomery, and has a chance to have real success in a more low pressure environment for the time being. Interestingly in Rutherford’s article, an anonymous scout said his team also had interest in submitting a claim, as a player with valuable tools, who also had moments of being invisible. 

Given the results so far, Berggren has likely found a home in St. Louis to finish the season at his $1.825MM cap hit. With pending restricted free agent status, he could become useful piece in their future as well if able to evolve his game a bit and strengthen ability in his own end. 

Elsewhere across the league:

  • Another figure could be joining the Sabres’ revamped front office, as Mike Harrington of Buffalo News Sports shared that Blue Jackets scouting director Ville Siren has generated a lot of “chatter” about rejoining new Buffalo GM Jarmo Kekäläinen. Siren was mentioned as a possible target of Kekäläinen just last week. The Finland native has been with Columbus since 2013, as well as nine seasons in St. Louis beforehand, where he played a large role in the team’s selection of longtime star Vladimir Tarasenko, among others. In Columbus, Siren has continuously stocked the small market team with young talent, most recently helping assemble a promising young core in the post-John Tortorella era. Nothing is set, as he remains firmly with Columbus, but Siren would be another notable addition to Kekäläinen’s brass as they look to turn things around in Buffalo. 
  • Pierre LeBrun published an article with The Athletic in which he discussed the Predators’ turnaround, staying calm despite rumors surrounding Head Coach Andrew Brunette as the season started to get off the rails. Winners of seven out of their last 10, Nashville is starting to find their game, and while fans may prefer the team go into a full rebuild route, veterans such as Ryan O’Reilly and Steven Stamkos are naturally intent on winning. As a former coach himself, Trotz has continuously stressed the importance of culture to develop young players. Even if veterans such as Stamkos or Jonathan Marchessault could still be shipped out in 2026, it is hard to imagine Trotz will want his group to totally bottom out, especially as long as Juuse Saros stands in net. Nashville will have a big opportunity tomorrow against Minnesota to prove they have turned the page and maybe push for a Wild Card berth. 

Buffalo Sabres| Nashville Predators| St. Louis Blues Jonatan Berggren

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ECHL Players To Strike

December 22, 2025 at 7:58 pm CDT | by Bradley Keith 3 Comments

7:15 PM: Sure enough, in an update shared by the Professional Hockey Players’ Association (Twitter Link), the ECHL players will go on strike effective December 26, after concerns on unfair labor practices have not been heard, and their new Collective Bargaining Agreement has not yet materialized.

In the announcement, PHPA Executive Director Brian Ramsay emphasized that members are simply wanting basic fair standards for working conditions, and that they are eager for a resolution, remaining hopeful the ECHL will negotiate, make an agreement, and soon resume play. Teams are currently inactive until 12/26 due to the holidays, raising speculation of the strike today before it became official.

Later in the evening, the ECHL posted an official update in response to the strike. They outlined their goal to reach an agreement that supports the players, while maintaining a “sustainable business model” that can remain accessible for fans. Although it touches on a potential 16.4% salary cap increase, travel limits, and holiday breaks, there is no such discourse on the equipment issue raised by the players.

5:00 PM: Amidst ongoing negotiations for a new Collective Bargaining Agreement, the ECHL Players released a statement, shared through the Professional Hockey Players’ Association (Twitter Link). Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet also shared that a possible five-year deal on a new CBA is closing in, but there has been little progress between the ECHL players, and the league, and a strike may occur as a result. 

The message emphasized that, despite bargaining efforts which have gone on for nearly a full calendar year, a new collective agreement has not been secured. The players noted the ECHL’s “unlawful conduct”, in which they made changes related to mandatory subjects of bargaining, even engaging in regressive bargaining. 

Ultimately, the players’ concerns on health and working conditions continue to be disregarded. The statement also mentioned that recently, the league sent out direct communications “in an attempt to bully and intimidate players with tactics that violate US labor law”. Therefore, it appears that the latest development has only further widened gaps between the league and its players in possible negotiations, and a strike could be on the horizon.

The statement ended with “The ECHL appears by their behavior to prefer bullying to bargaining and does not respect the process nor the players’ right to negotiate a fair settlement”. 

One such concern voiced by the players is helmets which properly fit. The ECHL has an equipment deal with Warrior, a major supplier of ice hockey equipment, which originated in 2019-20. Such deals in minor league hockey are not uncommon, as the AHL also has a deal with CCM. However, outside of not being able to select their preferred option, ECHL players say they have even been supplied with used equipment, which is simply unacceptable at such a level of professional hockey. 

In regard to player conditions, travel schedules are a major concern. According to the players, the ECHL considers bus trips home as days off, where travel time can be nine hours, or even more. Thankfully, it appears that the league has shown willingness to now give players one day off each week, however, they have shown no interest in negotiating a proper holiday break. 

Teams have not played since December 21, which especially puts them into the spotlight for a possible strike, however they are scheduled to jump right back into action on December 26, an especially short turnaround considering the rigorous travel schedules, if players were to have any chance to spend time with family and friends for the holidays. 

Overall, such developments are extremely unfortunate for the league. Over the past decade, the ECHL has expanded all over the country, far outside just the East Coast, even going north of the border into Quebec. New franchises in Rio Rancho, New Mexico, and Augusta, Georgia have been announced coming in 2026, however, given the recent news, it may be a turbulent start. 

Besides offering another level of professional hockey closer to home for those coming out of the NCAA, CHL, and USports, allowing lower level players to follow their dreams and play for a living, the ECHL brings the sport to dozens of communities across North America. With most teams operating on razor-thin profit margins, heavily relying on ticket sales, the league offers a tightly-knit community-first culture. It offers market testing for cities to make their case, and although the league’s Utah Grizzlies are set to move to New Jersey, they played a vital role in setting the foundation for hockey in Utah, building up to the state taking in the Utah Mammoth. 

Additionally, while any NHL-signed prospect who finds themselves assigned to the ECHL faces a serious uphill battle to reach the highest level, that is not to say it does not happen. To start the 2025-26 NHL season, 60 ECHL alums were on opening-night rosters. The number continues to grow. Today, many NHL organizations lean on the ECHL to send overlooked young AHL prospects down another level to get vital ice time in a bid to extend their careers. 

Late bloomers such as Carter Verhaeghe, Yanni Gourde, and Jordan Binnington, all longtime NHLers who have won Stanley Cups, spent time in the ECHL on their path to the top. For any player in the ECHL, such hope persists, that they could be next in line. 

Now at a crossroads, as they’ve grown into 32 teams to be, the hope is that the ECHL will hear the concerns of its players, who help drive so much development of the game in North America in smaller communities, and work out their differences for a better tomorrow. For now, eyes will be on the ECHL for a possible strike, which could occur as soon as December 26. 

ECHL| Newsstand

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Hurricanes Recall Joel Nystrom From AHL, Place Slavin On IR

December 22, 2025 at 6:00 pm CDT | by Bradley Keith Leave a Comment

This afternoon the Carolina Hurricanes shared that Joel Nystrom has been called up from AHL Chicago, while Jaccob Slavin has been placed on injured reserve. 

Given that he was listed as week-to-week earlier today, with Nystrom the most likely candidate to get the call, the word is not a big surprise. Just over one week ago, the two were swapped for each other when Slavin was activated, only now to be injured again. 

The season so far has not been kind to Slavin, who has dealt with a lower-body injury for the past few months. After an activation eight days ago, he was eased back gradually, a jump in ice time in each of three games. However, the vital defenseman was absent last Saturday in Tampa Bay, and now appears set to miss even more time. As such is categorized as an upper-body injury, it does not appear both are linked, instead simply brutal luck for the defender, who has never been thought to be injury prone. Now 31, he has played in no fewer than 76 games in the past five seasons, however, with only five so far, that streak will end this season. 

Meanwhile, Nystrom finds himself back with the big club after a short stint with the Chicago Wolves. Besides being called up and down, December has been a busy month for the Swede, as he inked a four year extension just 10 days ago, avoiding restricted free agency status after the campaign. In limited North American experience so far, his stats haven’t jumped out, with two assists in nine games for Chicago, and five assists in 24 games for Carolina. However, the 23-year-old is just getting started on smaller ice, and clearly the organization is high on him. A right shot, Nystrom has shown no fear of carrying the puck, and transition is the name of his game. A major steal, chosen in the seventh round by Carolina in 2021, Nystrom figures to be an everyday player for the team into the future, and they’ve certainly already leaned on him to this point. 

Carolina offers a deep blueline, relieved of their offseason acquisition of K’Andre Miller in times like these. Miller is currently averaging over 22 minutes of ice time, more than he ever had as a Ranger, and looking the part. Even so often without Slavin, the Canes boast a 22-10-3 record this season, good for fourth in the league. 

While Slavin’s presence is undeniable, and another setback is especially frustrating, his Olympic status for the United States is not thought to be in jeopardy, meaning hopefully he will gear up for a return by mid-January. 

Carolina Hurricanes| Injury| Transactions Jaccob Slavin| Joel Nystrom

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Maple Leafs Fire Assistant Coach Marc Savard

December 22, 2025 at 5:24 pm CDT | by Bradley Keith 26 Comments

The struggling Toronto Maple Leafs have finally made a move to shake things up, as Assistant Coach Marc Savard has been relieved of his duties, as per the team. According to TSN’s Pierre LeBrun, the team is expected to turn in-house for the time being, with no immediate replacement. 

The longtime NHLer was in his second season behind the bench on Head Coach Craig Berube’s staff. The two were reunited from one year together in St. Louis during the 2019-20 season, although Savard went on to serve as Head Coach of the AHL’s Windsor Spitfires for two seasons, as well as a stop in Calgary, before ending up in Toronto starting in 2024-25. 

Savard oversaw the the team’s power play, which has been at an abysmal 13.3%, dead last in the league. Going 12-for-90 is simply unacceptable for a team with as much firepower as Toronto. It was a different story last season, as with Mitch Marner in the fold, and the Leafs still firmly a 50+ win team, they ranked ninth-best, at 24.8%. Injuries have been a major factor in the Leafs’ struggles so far, but the likes of Anthony Stolarz, Chris Tanev, and Brandon Carlo are obviously unrelated.

All-world sniper Auston Matthews should be feasting on the power play, but he has just three such tallies to date. In order to put things into perspective, he had 18 power play goals two seasons ago. The captain’s play has been scrutinized throughout, with many wondering if he is dealing with lingering injury issues, but things could not be much worse.

As tired as the Marner talking point is by now, without him, the Toronto power play unit just does not evoke as much fear. Savard had deployed players such as Nicholas Robertson, Matias Maccelli, and Nicholas Roy, none of whom have made much of an impact. Robertson and Maccelli have the skill, and certainly need to play in such a role to maximize their abilities, but that does not necessarily bring enough results. Suffice to say, there may be more going on than what meets the eye, but regardless, Savard has caught the blame. His system emphasized rapid puck movement and creativity, and it clearly such was not a fit.

Currently in a skid which has left them in last place in the Atlantic Division, with many more tough questions on their future, Savard is the first in what could be more moves in 2026 for the blue and white. Despite his inability to get the most out of Toronto’s stars, Savard had strong results as a head coach in the OHL, and the highly respected former player could catch on with another NHL club down the road. Yet for now, today’s news, so close to the holidays, is a tough blow for the 48-year-old. 

Newsstand| Toronto Maple Leafs Marc Savard

26 comments

Sharks’ Will Smith Out Week-To-Week, Collin Graf Questionable

December 22, 2025 at 3:56 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

Luck was not on the San Jose Sharks’ side during Monday’s practice. Head coach Ryan Warsofsky designated top young forward Will Smith as out week-to-week with an upper-body injury and won’t be re-evaluated until 2026, per Max Miller of Ssan Jose Hockey Digest. Smith has been out since sustaining an injury in San Jose’s December 13th matchup against the Pittsburgh Penguins.

On top of that injury, top-line winger Collin Graf had to get stitches during Monday’s practice, after an erant puck hit him in the face. The puck avoided Graf’s eye and seemed to injure his cheek, per Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now. The Sharks aren’t yet sure if Graf will be available for their three-game road trip that runs through a December 29th matchup against the Anaheim Ducks.

The Sharks will continue to face an uphill battle without Smith in the lineup. He has driven the offense when he’s on the ice, netting 12 goals and 29 points in 33 games this season, good for second on the Sharks in scoring behind Macklin Celebrini. San Jose has lost two of their three games since Smith’s injury, painting his importance to the lineup even amid a scoring surge for the Sharks.

In Smith’s absence, Graf has emerged as a key factor and scoring compliment to Celebrini. He has four points in three games without Smith, and six points in his last five games. That hot streak has brought Graf up to 19 points in 35 games this season, eight more than he managed in 33 games of his rookie year last season. Graf has also contributed 29 shot blocks and 34 hits, ranked third and sixth among Sharks forwards respectively.

The 23-year-old Graf has carved out a nightly role in the top-six in December. His absence would force San Jose to push either William Eklund or Jeff Skinner – who has recently served as a healthy scratch – into a top-line role. The Sharks could also push Adam Gaudette or Tyler Toffoli into elevated minutes, if they’re willing to shake up their wingers.

One piece that will make the shakeup a bit easier is the emergence of rookie Igor Chernyshov, who has been playing on the top-line next to Graf and Celebrini and recorded three assists in his first three NHL games. Chernyshov was a breakout scorer in the OHL last season and leads the AHL’s San Jose Barracuda in scoring with 23 points in 25 games this year. He could quickly be leaned on as San Jose looks to mitigate injuries to a pair of high-impact forwards.

Injury| NHL| Newsstand| San Jose Sharks Collin Graf| Will Smith

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Los Angeles Kings Sign Jimmy Lombardi To Entry-Level Contract

December 22, 2025 at 3:17 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu Leave a Comment

The Los Angeles Kings have signed prospect forward Jimmy Lombardi to a three-year entry-level contract, according to an announcement from Lombardi’s agent Dan Milstein as well as a team announcement. This news will coincide with Lombardi decomitting from the Big Ten’s University of Michigan – where he was slated to play next season – per Matthew Auchincloss of Michigan Daily Sports.

Lombardi, who turns 19 in February, was a fourth-round pick (No. 125 overall) by the Kings at the 2025 NHL Entry Draft. The No. 29 overall pick at the 2023 OHL Priority Selection, Lombardi scored 13 goals and 45 points for the Flint Firebirds in his draft year, ending the draft season with mixed rankings from public-facing scouting outlets. He was ranked as high as No. 59, by McKeen’s Hockey, and as low as No. 120, by Future Considerations. NHL Central Scouting ranked Lombardi No. 84 among North American skaters.

The Kings ultimately landed Lombardi a little bit later than his rankings from public sources. The early returns from their fourth-round choice have been uniformly positive. Lombardi entered the season ranked as the No. 9 prospect in the Kings’ system according to the team at Elite Prospects, and his performance in the OHL so far this season has likely increased his stock notably.

Flint is currently one of the top offensive teams in the OHL, led by New York Rangers prospect Nathan Aspinall, who leads the entire OHL in scoring. Lombardi’s 21 goals and 41 points tie for eighth in league scoring, alongside four other players, two of whom were first-round draft picks.

It’s entirely plausible that Lombardi’s jump in production was enough to motivate the Kings to sign Lombardi to his entry-level deal. What’s somewhat curious about this signing is the impact it has on his development path. Lombardi announced a commitment to play college hockey at the University of Michigan in June that he will now forgo.

That does not come as a huge surprise, of course, as the fact that he is now signed to his entry-level deal eliminates the possibility of Lombardi heading to the NCAA. While the door now appears to be open for players who have signed pro contracts in lower leagues such as the ECHL to play college hockey — Bemidji State, for example, now rosters 2021 Calgary Flames pick Jack Beck, who has 40 games of pro experience across the ECHL and AHL — there does not appear to be the same possibility for a player who signs an NHL deal.

While it’s often wise to not read too much into the simple signing of a prospect to an entry-level deal, Lombardi’s signing, due to his prior commitment to the Wolverines, does suggest something about how the organization — or Lombardi himself — views his pro readiness. Starting next season, NHL teams are expected to be able to loan one 19-year-old player to the AHL, under the terms of a new agreement between the league and the CHL.

Lombardi would have traditionally been ineligible to play in the AHL until 2027-28, due to the fact that he will turn 20 in February 2027. Under the new rule, the Kings could elect to make Lombardi their one allotted 19-year-old AHL reassignment, and today’s ELC signing paves the way for Lombardi to be able to do so.

Of course, it’s also possible that Lombardi plays in the OHL until the traditional point of becoming AHL-eligible, rendering this whole aspect of the conversation moot. But given the evolving dynamics of player development across the hockey world, these are aspects of ELC signings that are worth considering.

Pro Hockey Rumors’ Gabriel Foley also contributed to this article.

Los Angeles Kings| NHL| OHL Jimmy Lombardi

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Ducks’ Leo Carlsson Day-To-Day With Lower-Body Injury

December 22, 2025 at 2:13 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Anaheim Ducks will be without a top forward in Monday’s match against the Seattle Kraken. Star center Leo Carlsson has been announced as out day-to-day with a lower-body injury, head coach Joel Quenneville told Derek Lee of The Hockey News. He is expected to return in Anaheim’s first game back from the NHL’s Christmas break – a December 27th matchup against the Los Angeles Kings.

It isn’t clear when or how Carlsson sustained his injury. He has been leaned on heavily over Anaheim’s recent stretch, appearing in at least 20 minutes of ice time in four of his 11 games this month, including three games north of 22 minutes. That’s a heavy load for a 20-year-old pro and it appears it’s beginning to get to Carlsson. He has gone without any scoring in his last three games, after starting the month with four goals and seven points in eight games. It’s tied for the longest scoring drought of Carlsson’s season alongside a dry spell in November.

The Ducks will use a soft matchup against the Kraken, and an upcoming four days off, as a chance to give Carlsson a bit of a break. His absence is expected to be precautionary, more than anything, per Zach Cavanagh of The Sporting Tribune. The Ducks will promote Mikael Granlund to the top-line in Carlsson’s absence. Granlund, who has five points in his last three games, is expected to assume top-center duties while Troy Terry moves to the top right-wing slot.

Carlsson leads the Ducks in scoring with a staggering 41 points in 36 games this season, third-most of any player under the age of 21 in the NHL, behind Macklin Celebrini (54) and Connor Bedard (44). Even without their emerging franchise focal piece, Anaheim should be in good shape for Monday night. They got back on the right side of the scoresheet on Saturday, toppling the Columbus Blue Jackets to bring their record to 6-4-1 in December. Anaheim has been slightly outscored in that span – by a combined score of 36-to-40 – but have averaged 3.5 goals-per-game over their last four games.

With an improved performance on defense, and continued hot play in more minutes from Granlund, Anaheim should be in for a strong game against a Seattle club that’s gone 1-4-0 in their last five games and ranks dead-last in goals scored this season.

Anaheim Ducks| Injury| NHL Leo Carlsson

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Seattle’s Brandon Montour Out Week-To-Week

December 22, 2025 at 12:50 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu Leave a Comment

The Seattle Kraken announced today that defenseman Brandon Montour will miss approximately four weeks after undergoing successful hand surgery. Montour left the Kraken’s game last Tuesday with what was at the time an undisclosed injury, and didn’t dress for either of the team’s next two games. He has been placed on injured reserve.

With today’s announcement, the reason for Montour’s unavailability has become clear. The 31-year-old defenseman has become a key part of the Kraken blueline since signing a $7.14MM AAV deal with Seattle in 2024. He currently ranks No. 2 on the Kraken in time on ice per game, averaging 21:55 per game with 2:02 per game on the power play, just behind No. 1 defenseman Vince Dunn in each category.

Montour scored 18 goals and 41 points in his first season in Seattle, and has managed six goals and 16 points in 27 games this season, a scoring rate that is a slight tick above where he landed in 2024-25. Montour paired with lefty Ryan Lindgren to form Seattle’s second defensive pairing on Dec. 16, the date Montour suffered his injury.

With Montour sidelined, head coach Lane Lambert elevated Jamie Oleksiak off of the team’s third pairing into Montour’s role, electing to play Oleksiak on his off hand next to Lindgren. The elevation of Oleksiak paved the way for Josh Mahura to re-enter the Kraken lineup on the third pairing next to young defenseman Ryker Evans. Mahura, who averages 15:15 time on ice per game this season, had been a healthy scratch the prior two games and sat out most of November.

This injury to Montour will challenge the Kraken’s ability to re-enter the Western Conference playoff race. They sit seven points behind the Utah Mammoth, who hold the conference’s second wild card spot, though they have only played in 33 games compared to Utah’s 38. Seattle has gone 2-8-0 in its last 10 games, and losing a key veteran defenseman for four weeks certainly won’t help them reverse that trend.

Injury| Seattle| Seattle Kraken Brandon Montour

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Jaccob Slavin, Seth Jarvis Out Week-To-Week

December 22, 2025 at 11:41 am CDT | by Ethan Hetu 3 Comments

The Carolina Hurricanes announced today that two key players are out week-to-week with respective upper-body injuries: Jaccob Slavin and Seth Jarvis.

The announcement of Jarvis’ injury does not come as any great surprise. His injury occurred on Friday and it was immediately clear that he would miss at least some time as a result of what happened. Head coach Rod Brind’Amour told reporters immediately after the game that Jarvis was “going to be out for a while.” He was placed on IR the following day, and today the Hurricanes confirmed that he’ll be out on a week-to-week basis.

The more surprising development is the injury to Slavin. Slavin missed two months due to a lower-body injury, and the Hurricanes only activated him on Dec. 14, which was about a week ago. The Hurricanes appeared to be easing Slavin into his return to game action as he played 14:31 time on ice in his first game on Dec. 14, 16:47 in his second game on Dec. 17, and 18:36 on Dec. 19, with all three numbers coming well below his traditional usage level as the team’s top defenseman.

Slavin was held out of the second game of the Hurricanes’ set of back-to-back games on Dec. 20, but at the time, his absence did not raise any eyebrows, as it was attributed to being part of his recovery process. It’s not abnormal for a player who only recently returned from a two-month injury absence to be rested for the second half of a back-to-back.

But the fact that Slavin is now slated to miss time on a week-to-week basis with a new upper-body injury throws into question whether the player suffered this injury during any of his three NHL games since returning on Dec. 14. Per The Raleigh News & Observer’s Chip Alexander, Brind’Amour said today that he assumes Slavin suffered the injury as a result of a hit from Florida Panthers forward A.J. Greer, one that came during the team’s Dec. 19 contest in Sunrise.

Regardless of when exactly he became injured, the reality is the Hurricanes are now once again without their most reliable and important defenseman. Slavin is widely considered to be one of the game’s best shutdown defensemen. Despite offensive production that is relatively pedestrian in comparison to his defensive excellence, Slavin has landed on Norris Trophy ballots in every season of his 11-year career other than his first. That’s a testament to just how highly regarded Slavin is as a defensive defenseman. Slavin is also a two-time Lady Byng Trophy winner, an extraordinarily difficult task for a blueliner asked to go up against the opposing team’s top offensive weapons on a nightly basis.

As the Hurricanes continue to push for their third Metropolitan Division title since 2021, Slavin’s absence will add some additional stress to the team’s defensive plans. The Hurricanes ran a left-side defense of K’Andre Miller, Alexander Nikishin, and Shayne Gostisbehere in Slavin’s absence on Saturday, and could continue to run that defense with Swedish import Joel Nystrom the most likely candidate to be recalled in the event Slavin once again lands on IR. Veteran Mike Reilly is also on the roster as the No. 7 defenseman.

Slavin is widely considered to be a lock to be selected to the United States’ roster for the upcoming Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina, and The Athletic’s Michael Russo reported that “the belief is this won’t impact” Slavin’s availability for that tournament.

Carolina Hurricanes| Players Jaccob Slavin| Seth Jarvis

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    ECHL Players To Strike

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    Blackhawks’ Frank Nazar Expected To Miss Four Weeks With Injury

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