Buffalo Sabres Sign Lindy Ruff To Contract Extension

The Buffalo Sabres announced today that head coach Lindy Ruff has been signed to a two-year contract extension. Ruff’s contract was set to expire this summer, so in signing him, the team has ensured he will return as their head coach for next season and beyond.

Whether Ruff would return behind the bench in Buffalo was never truly in question. While the 66-year-old bench boss could technically have been a candidate to retire, Ruff has shown no indication of slowing down, nor has he expressed even the faintest interest in concluding a coaching career that stretches back to the early ’90s.

Ruff is a singular figure in the modern history of the Sabres, far and away the franchise’s most meaningful off-ice figure in that time period. He first took charge of the Sabres for the 1997-98 season, and won two playoff series as a rookie head coach. The following year, he led Buffalo to the Stanley Cup final, where they would lose in six games to the Dallas Stars.

After a brief three-year downturn in the early 2000s, Ruff made consecutive runs to the Eastern Conference Final in 2006 and 2007, winning more than 50 games in consecutive regular seasons. He was given the Jack Adams Award in 2006 as the league’s coach of the year.

Now, Ruff could be positioned to win the second Jack Adams Award of his career, in what is his second stint behind the bench in Western New York. In 2024, Ruff took over a Sabres franchise that still had not reached the playoffs since 2011, when Ruff himself was still head coach. It was the longest playoff drought in the NHL. His Sabres overcame a slow start to the season and eventually caught fire, finishing with a 50-23-9 record and an Atlantic Division title.

Ruff had done what had seemed so impossible for much of the late 2010s and early 2020s: turned the Sabres into not just a playoff team, but a legitimate Stanley Cup contender. If not for an Alex Newhook shot in game seven of the team’s second-round series, Buffalo would be in the Eastern Conference Final with a legitimate chance at winning the Prince of Wales Trophy.

Without question, Ruff earned the extension he’s received. There are still problems for Ruff to sort out, of course. Despite his achievements, Ruff’s work in Buffalo isn’t done yet. He frequently swapped between netminders Alex Lyon and Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen in the second round against Montreal, suggesting the team doesn’t yet have a truly reliable No. 1 option in goal. And Ruff’s team was consistently let down by a struggling power play.

But the issues facing the Sabres are dwarfed by the enormity of the challenges Ruff inherited when he took the Sabres job. The simple fact that the Buffalo market will get to spend the summer discussing improving the power play, or finding more consistent goaltending, rather than the existential problem of a league-leading playoff drought, is a testament to the magnitude of what Ruff has accomplished in his two-year second tenure with the team.

Now under contract for an additional two years, Ruff will get the chance to continue coaching this ascendant Sabres team.

Photos courtesy of James Carey Lauder-Imagn Images

Cale Makar To Miss Game 1, Out Day-To-Day

The Colorado Avalanche will be without star defenseman Cale Makar for the first game of their Western Conference Final series against the Vegas Golden Knights, head coach Jared Bednar announced today. Bednar classified Makar’s undisclosed injury as day-to-day and said that he does expect Makar to return relatively quickly – but not in time for game one.

Makar’s health is one of the key storylines to track for the upcoming series given Makar’s importance to the Avalanche as well as his status as arguably the game’s top defenseman.

The status of Makar has been the subject of speculation since game one against the Wild, when he left the ice after taking a big hit from Wild forward Marcus Foligno. He was limited to just 17:11 time on ice per game in the team’s 9-6 win. It’s not known whether the injury Makar is currently dealing with is in any way related to what happened in game one of the previous round.

The loss of Makar – even for just a single game – is very significant for the Avalanche. As mentioned, he is arguably the top blueliner in the world. The 27-year-old is a two-time Norris Trophy winner, and has routinely elevated his game in the playoffs. His heroics in the 2022 postseason, when he scored 29 points in 20 games, resulted in a Stanley Cup championship for his team and a Conn Smythe Trophy win recognizing his individual efforts.

Colorado now sits as the favorites to win another Stanley Cup, but Makar hasn’t been leading the charge in quite the same way. The Avalanche’s power play has struggled all year, and that can partially explain why Makar’s production is down somewhat from prior campaigns. After two consecutive years reaching the 90-point plateau, Makar scored 79 points in 75 games this past season. That’s still exceptional production, of course, but a little shy of the normal standard he’s set. So far in these playoffs, Makar has five points in nine games.

His slight decline in numbers should not diminish the significance of his injury. The Avalanche have lost one of their very best players for the start of this series, and even though they are favored against the Golden Knights, they would surely prefer to navigate game one with one of their best players roaming the blueline.

Anthony Mantha, Penguins Reunion Unlikely

The Pittsburgh Penguins might lose a huge piece of their forward group this summer.

As first reported by Josh Yohe of The Athletic in his offseason writings, Penguins forward Anthony Mantha “was clear with his plans” after meeting with General Manager Kyle Dubas; it appears unlikely that Mantha will return to Pittsburgh. The 31-year-old is projected to eye free agency and capitalize on a career year.

Mantha was one of the most cost-effective players in the entire NHL based on scoring this past season. On a one-year, $2.5MM contract, he finished the 2025-26 season with a career-high 33 goals for 64 points in 81 games played. Crossing the 80-game threshold this season earned him an extra $2MM in performance bonuses per PuckPedia.

That production was fourth on Pittsburgh outside of Sidney Crosby, Erik Karlsson, and Bryan Rust. Most notably, it only cost the Penguins $39K per point that Mantha registered this season, the eighth most cost-effective UFA forward on the market this summer. In six playoff games against the Philadelphia Flyers, he added an assist in the first round.

He was also recognized as the Penguins’ Masterton Trophy nominee, which is given to the player “who best exemplifies the qualities of perseverance, sportsmanship, and dedication to ice hockey”. This nomination stems from his bounceback career-year that blossomed after suffering a right ACL injury that limited Mantha to just 13 games with the Calgary Flames in 2024-25.

Mantha has been a bit of a journeyman recently, with Pittsburgh being his fourth stop in the last four seasons of his 11-year NHL career. As a former first-round pick of the Detroit Red Wings, he spent six years wearing the winged wheel, three on an entry-level deal before signing a two-year, $6.60MM extension that took him through 2020.

The first year of a newly signed four-year, $22.8MM ($5.7MM AAV) deal, the Red Wings traded the 6-foot-5 forward to the Washington Capitals in April of 2021. He spent three seasons with the Capitals before being dealt to the Vegas Golden Knights in the final year of that deal in March of 2024.

The offseason for Dubas feels opportunistic, but in the Penguins’ end-of-season press conference, the message was clear that the front office is looking to internal and external options to grow their current roster, whether it be through young up-and-coming talent or via a trade. Pittsburgh has around $42MM in cap space to make further decisions on several expiring player deals after extending with Connor Dewar and Blake Lizotte in their forward group.

If Mantha were to test free agency, it would certainly make Dubas’s ability to keep him in black and gold difficult, not just because of the production, but considering the other members of the team that require addressing. It may not be as easy to allocate a decent portion of that cap space that Mantha would command. But for a player who was a key

Along with Mantha, the Penguins still have unrestricted free agents in forwards Evgeni Malkin, Kevin Hayes, and Noel Acciari, along with back-end expiring deals for Connor Clifton, Ryan Shea, and goaltender Stuart Skinner. As for restricted free agents, Dubas has forward Egor Chinakov and Arturs Silovs in net to figure out.

NHL Sets Offer Sheet Thresholds For 2026

The NHL announced the offer sheet tier list for this summer. Historically, players very seldom sign offer sheets. Since the beginning of the salary cap, over the last two decades, only 12 restricted free agents have signed offer sheets. Of those 12, only four went unmatched by the team that held the player’s arbitration rights.

Still, the last three offer sheets signed have all gone unmatched. The Carolina Hurricanes sent a 2022 first-round pick, a 2022 second-round pick, and a 2022 third-round pick to the Montreal Canadiens in 2021 for signing Jesperi Kotkaniemi. Additionally, the St. Louis Blues sent a 2025 second-round pick and a 2025 third-round pick to the Edmonton Oilers two summers ago for Philip Broberg and Dylan Holloway, respectively.

It’s always a gamble, especially considering that the highest tier of the threshold requires the signing team to part with four consecutive first-round picks, which very few General Managers, if any, have the stomach to do. That alone may stop teams from approaching Dallas Stars forward Jason Robertson about an offer sheet, but there could be other offer sheet-eligible RFA’s to keep an eye out for. Here are the offer sheet tiers for the 2026-27 season as provided by PuckPedia:

AAV Draft picks required
$1.57596MM or less No compensation
$1.57596MM to $2.387832MM 2027 Third-round pick
$2.387832MM to $4.775666MM 2027 Second-round pick
$4.775666MM to $7.163498MM 2027 First and third-round pick
$7.163498MM to $9.551332MM 2027 First, second, and third-round pick
$9.551332MM to $11.939166MM ’28 First, ’27 first, second, and a third-round pick
Over $11.939166MM ’30 First-round pick, ’29 first-round pick, ’28 first-round pick, ’27 first-round pick

 

Hurricanes Sign Noel Fransen To Entry-Level Contract

According to a team announcement, the Carolina Hurricanes have signed defenseman Noel Fransen to a three-year entry-level contract.

The 20-year-old will make $850,000 in 2026-27, $900,000 in 2027-28, and $950,000 in 2028-29 at the NHL level. If in the AHL, he will receive $85,000 for all three seasons. The deal will include signing bonuses worth $270,000. He signed this deal after finishing his 2025-26 season between two teams in Sweden. In the SHL, he scored two points in 13 games with Farjestad BK and also posted six goals for 14 points in 38 games on loan with BIK Karlskoga in HockeyAllsvenskan.

General Manager Erik Tulsky said in the team’s release, “Noel has all of the attributes we look for in a Carolina Hurricanes defenseman. He has the mobility to close quickly on a play, as well as the speed to be active on offensive transitions. We’re looking forward to seeing him in North America next season.

Leading into the 2024 NHL Draft, Fransen profiled as a prospect who prioritizes offense through his skating in both transition and in the offensive zone on the blue line. That mobility is emphasized in his transition ability to connect a play from defense through the neutral zone. Fransen was selected as a third-round pick at 69th overall by the Hurricanes in the 2024 NHL Entry Draft.

He dominated in the junior levels of his native country. In the J18 South and West regions he participated in, Fransen led his counterparts in scoring and overall points by a defenseman. Those same honors followed as he progressed into J20 Nationell play, where he led all defenders in the league in scoring in 2023-24. An honor previously held by other Swedish NHL defenders, including Erik Karlsson (2007-08) and Alexander Edler (2004-05), dating back to 2000.

Fransen graduates from a list of unsigned Hurricanes defensive prospects like Kurban Limatov, Timur Kol, and joins the likes of fellow 20-year-old defender Dominik Badinka in the system, and will compete as a potential NHL roster player on the Hurricanes’ back-end, like another former third-round pick in Alexander Nikishin, who Carolina will consider as a top-priority RFA signing this offseason.

Before this signing, the Hurricanes had around $11.9MM in cap space for the offseason that they’ll have to address towards their unrestricted free agents, which include Nicolas Deslauriers in the forward group, as well as defenseman Mike Reilly and goaltender Frederik Andersen.

Latest On Jesper Wallstedt, Wild Goaltending

The Minnesota Wild could be considering a shift in their crease.

After making the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time since the 2014-15 season, General Manager Bill Guerin is going to want to ensure he can elevate his team further beyond that threshold with the current core of players he has built. Among moves the Wild could make, Elliotte Friedman on the FAN Hockey Show said that he doesn’t think Minnesota is going to move off goaltender Jesper Wallstedt, and that Filip Gustavsson would be the netminder in consideration to trade. The discussion originated from an article in The Athletic, which reported that Minnesota had offered Wallstedt in a package deal for Blues center Robert Thomas at the 2026 NHL Trade Deadline.

The discussion originated from an article in The Athletic, which reported that Minnesota had offered Wallstedt in a package deal for Blues center Robert Thomas at the 2026 NHL Trade Deadline. Since opting to keep their 23-year old goaltender, Wallstedt split the workload down the stretch of the regular season, playing 10 games, as did Gustavsson. But Wallstedt earned his keep, tallying a .930 save percentage and a 1.98 goals against average to end the regular season. In the playoffs, Gustavsson saw one game to Wallstedt’s 10 in between the pipes, where the rookie goaltender averaged 29.9 saves throughout that stretch.

However, that workload didn’t come without reason. In Minnesota’s end-of-season press conference, it was announced that Gustavsson will undergo offseason hip surgery. Furthermore, the Wild are not sure if he’ll be able to play by the start of next season. This development brings complications to Minnesota and its approach to how it can progress in its offseason moves.

Gustavsson and Wallstedt took up only 6.2% of the Wild’s cap hit in 2025-26, but it won’t be that low for long. Amid Minnesota’s transition in net, having lost Marc-Andre Fleury to retirement, extended Gustavsson to a five-year, $34MM ($6.8MM) contract back on October 4th, 2025, which is set to kick in next year. Despite the decrease in workload due to his injury down the stretch, the 27-year-old Swede still went 28-15-6 through 50 games in 2025-26, posting a .904 save percentage and 2.69 goals against average. He started one playoff game, a 5-2 Game 2 loss to Colorado en route to Minnesota’s second-round exit.

Gustavsson’s extension carries a no-movement clause in the first two seasons of his deal, meaning Guerin would have to get him to waive that clause if a deal were to get done. However, based on comments made at the Wild’s presser, it doesn’t seem like they’re eager to move off either ‘No. 1 goalies,’ a combination that has been fruitful for them so far. Furthermore, the tandem has a good dynamic as natives of Sweden who both represented their country at the past Olympics in Milan.

However, despite the early commitment to having a solidified duo in net for the foreseeable future, Minnesota will have to decide if it is comfortable in keeping both netminders and risking the opportunity of trading for a big-name center pass them by if they decide to stand pat and wait for Gustavsson’s status post-surgery. Top-line centers don’t come across the market often, but management has recently demonstrated that they’re unfazed by making a move to acquire a star.

The Wild have a little over $13MM in cap space this summer, with the eight-year, $136MM ($17MM AAV) extension of Kirill Kaprizov beginning and the ability to extend another key piece in superstar defenseman Quinn Hughes. Some creativity will need to be employed as this contending window has elevated itself for the Wild in its quest for the State of Hockey’s first Stanley Cup.

Minnesota will need to make decisions on a hefty list of pending free agents, including unrestricted forwards Vladimir Tarasenko, Nick Foligno, Mats Zuccarello, Michael McCarron, Marcus Johansson, Robby Fabbri, and defensemen Zach Bogosian, as well as Jeff Petry. Add forward Bobby Brink, who they acquired at the deadline from Philadelphia, and defenseman Daemon Hunt as restricted free agents; that totals 10 skaters that will surely keep the front office pretty wild this summer.

Eastern Conference Final Preview

The Eastern Conference Final is set, with the Carolina Hurricanes hosting the Montreal Canadiens in Game 1 on Thursday night at the Lenovo Center. Both teams are four wins away from a trip to the Stanley Cup Final, and both arrive playing some of their best hockey of the season. Carolina returns to the Conference Final for the third time since 2022-23 under Rod Brind’Amour, while Montreal is back at this stage for the first time since their unexpected run in 2021, and the first with their head coach, Martin St. Louis.

Paths to the ECF

Carolina has been the story of the postseason. The Hurricanes swept the Ottawa Senators in Round 1 and followed it up with a four-game sweep of the Philadelphia Flyers in Round 2, becoming the first team to sweep the first two rounds since the NHL went to a best-of-seven format in all four rounds in 1987. Through eight playoff games, they’re 8-0 with a plus-14 goal differential, allowing just 10 goals total and never more than two in a single game.

That dominance comes with a question, though: will 12 days off be a gift or a curse? Carolina last played on May 9, and the layoff is the longest of any team in the conference finals. The history of teams with extended layoffs in the playoffs is mixed. Extra rest can mean fresh legs and full health, but it can also mean a loss of rhythm against a team that’s been in playoff intensity for weeks. Brind’Amour’s group used the time to get fully healthy, run extra video sessions, and skate without the wear of a daily playoff schedule. The Hurricanes have been playing the most cohesive, structured hockey of any team in the postseason, and there’s a real question about whether that timing holds up against an opponent that has been playing high-intensity playoff games for over a month.

Montreal’s path has been the opposite. The Canadiens needed seven games to put away the Tampa Bay Lightning in Round 1, including four overtime games, before grinding out another seven-game series against the Buffalo Sabres in Round 2. That series included an 8-3 Game 6 loss before the Habs bounced back in Game 7 on Monday night, where Alex Newhook was yet again the game seven hero, scoring the game-winner 11:22 into overtime. Montreal has played 14 games to Carolina’s eight; they arrive battle-tested but on shorter rest, with less than 72 hours between their Game 7 in Buffalo and Game 1 in Raleigh.

Head-to-Head

The 2025-26 regular season series belonged entirely to Montreal. The Canadiens swept Carolina 3-0-0, winning all three games in regulation and outscoring the Hurricanes 15-8. Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield, Juraj Slafkovsky, and Ivan Demidov each posted five points in the three games, with Slafkovsky scoring the game-winning goal in two of them. Lane Hutson added four points from the back end. Sebastian Aho led Carolina with six points (two goals, four assists), five of which came in one game, and Andrei Svechnikov added five (two goals, three assists).

The two franchises have met twice previously in the playoffs since Carolina’s relocation from Hartford, with the Hurricanes winning both. The most recent meeting was the 2006 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, a series in which Carolina trailed 2-0 before rookie goaltender Cam Ward took over the crease and helped the Hurricanes win the series in six games en route to a Stanley Cup. This is the first time these two have met in a Conference Final.

Key Players

For Montreal, scoring has come from across the lineup. Suzuki has 13 points (four goals, nine assists) in 14 playoff games, while Newhook (seven goals), Slafkovsky, and Caufield (four goals each) have all chipped in up front. On the back end, Hutson leads the entire team in points with 14, has been logging 26-plus minutes per game, and is the engine of the Canadiens’ transition offense. Mike Matheson and Noah Dobson round out a mobile defensive group.

Carolina’s depth has been the calling card. Taylor Hall has found another gear in his game, playing some of his best hockey since his MVP season back in 2018, and leads the team in scoring with 12 points.  Additionally, Jackson BlakeSeth Jarvis, Nikolaj Ehlers, Logan Stankoven, and Andrei Svechnikov all give the Hurricanes scoring threats across the top three lines. Defensively, Jaccob Slavin remains one of the NHL’s premier shutdown defensemen, and rookie Alexander Nikishin has emerged as a real puck-mover in his first full NHL postseason.

Goaltending

Frederik Andersen has been one of this postseason’s biggest stories. He’s 8-0 with a 1.12 GAA and .950 save percentage, leading all playoff goaltenders in both categories. He’s allowed only 10 goals in eight starts and has two shutouts. The catch: Andersen’s regular season was uneven. He went 1-9-2 over a 12-game stretch earlier in the season before bouncing back with a 9-4-0 record after the Olympic break. His two starts against Montreal came during that rough patch where he went 0-2-0 with a 3.73 GAA and .806 save percentage.

For Montreal, Jakub Dobes has stabilized the crease. He started all three regular-season games against Carolina and went 3-0-0 with a 2.67 GAA and .922 save percentage. His postseason numbers are more pedestrian (.910 SV%, 2.52 GAA), but he’s won when it has mattered and, aside from the full team collapse in game 6, was at his best in the Buffalo series. Dobes leads all goaltenders in saves through two rounds with 363.

Transition vs Forecheck

The cleanest stylistic clash of the postseason runs through the neutral zone. Carolina has been the NHL’s premier shot-suppression team for nearly a decade under Brind’Amour, leading the league in 5-on-5 Corsi at 59.77% during the regular season (via moneypuck.com) and allowing just 23.9 shots against per game, also a league best. The mechanism is their aggressive forecheck, which applies pressure on both the strong and weak sides of the ice, an approach that’s rare in the modern NHL. Their wingers crash hard, their weak-side defenseman pinches down the wall, and their defensive zone coverage relies on man-to-man assignments. The result is a team that spends almost no time in its own end and forces opponents into low-danger looks when they do break out.

Montreal is built to attack that structure in the one place it can be exploited. When Carolina’s forecheck is beaten with a clean first pass, their forwards play so deep in the offensive zone that recovery becomes difficult, and odd-man rushes in the other direction are the most common result. The Canadiens have the personnel to take advantage. They have one of the fastest lineups in the NHL: Suzuki, Newhook, Anderson, and Hutson all rank in the 90th percentile or better at their position in 20-plus mph speed bursts, per NHL Edge. The engine, though, is Hutson. The 22-year-old defenseman ranks among the NHL’s most prolific puck-transporters from the back end, but he’s 5-foot-9 and can be worn down on extended defensive shifts where physicality takes its toll. Carolina’s forecheck with guys like Stankoven, Jarvis, and Martinook is specifically designed to dump the puck to a defenseman’s side and hound him through long retrievals. If Hutson handles that pressure cleanly, Montreal’s offense unlocks. If Carolina grinds him down and forces turnovers in his own zone, the Habs’ best weapon becomes a liability.

The Canadiens’ three regular-season wins over Carolina were very likely powered by exactly this dynamic: clean breakouts, fast transitions, and high-quality looks generated against a team that thrives on grinding opponents down in the offensive zone. The shift-by-shift battle to watch: how Carolina’s forecheckers recover after offensive zone turnovers, and whether Montreal’s forwards consistently arrive in the neutral zone in time to punish those breakdowns.

X-Factors

The X-factors for these two teams are essentially mirror images of each other, both rooted in a longstanding tension between chance generation and chance conversion.

Finishing (Carolina): The Hurricanes are perpetually in this conversation, and 2025-26 was no exception. They led the NHL in shot attempts, scoring chances, and high-danger scoring chances at 5-on-5, yet finished with the 19th-best shooting percentage. The pattern showed up in the regular-season series with Montreal in vivid fashion; Carolina outshot the Canadiens 103-60 across three games and lost all three. Through eight playoff games, the Hurricanes’ shooting percentage has trended back toward the league average, which is a big reason they’re 8-0. Sustaining that against a goalie who has owned them is the question. If Carolina reverts to its season-long shooting struggles, the volume of chances they generate may not be enough to outscore Montreal’s opportunism.

Limiting Chances Against (Montreal): The flip side of Carolina’s chance-generation problem is Montreal’s chance-suppression problem. The Canadiens have been consistently outshot and outchanced through the first two rounds, surviving on goaltending and finishing rather than defensive structure. In the regular season, they ranked fifth-worst in the NHL in high-danger shots against (via moneypuck.com). That’s a manageable issue against the Lightning and Sabres, both of whom run conventional offensive systems. It’s a far bigger problem against a Carolina team specifically built to bury opponents under shot volume. Montreal doesn’t need to flip the underlying numbers; they need to keep Carolina to the perimeter, force them into the low-danger looks that have defined their finishing struggles all season, and trust Dobes to handle the rest.

Wrap Up

On paper, Carolina has every analytical advantage: better possession metrics, better penalty kill, dramatically more rest, and the hottest goaltender in the playoffs. But Montreal arrives with history on its side and a blueprint that’s already worked. They are the youngest team to reach a Conference Final in 33 years, since the 1993 Canadiens, and that team won the Stanley Cup. Add in the regular-season sweep, a stylistic matchup that gives Montreal a real path, and a young core playing with no fear, and the makings of a series far more competitive than the oddsmakers expect are all there. Game 1 drops Thursday in Raleigh. 

Evening Notes: Kulich, Burns, Canucks

Buffalo Sabres center Jiri Kulich offered the most encouraging update on Tuesday regarding his health, explaining that he underwent a procedure at the Mayo Clinic to remove a blood clot, as reported by Mike Harrington of TBN Sports. The clot kept him out of the Sabres lineup all but 12 games of his 2025-26 season, but thankfully Kulich said he expects to be back in the lineup next fall.

Speaking publicly for the first time since November at the Sabres’ end-of-season media availability, the 22-year-old said doctors in Minnesota fully extracted the clot roughly two months ago. He couldn’t skate for a month afterward and admitted he had put on weight during the layoff, but he is now in his fourth week back on the ice and said he can “do pretty much everything right now.” His message to fans was direct, saying, “I’ll be able to play hockey again.

The recovery cost him what would have been a major personal milestone. Kulich was widely projected as Czechia’s second-line winger at the Milan-Cortina Olympics. Additionally, Kulich missed his first taste of the Stanley Cup Playoffs as Buffalo pushed Montreal to a Game 7 overtime in the Eastern Conference semifinals. However, he stayed around the team throughout the run and said his teammates treated him “like family” through the ordeal.

His return matters significantly for Buffalo’s 2026-27 outlook. Kulich scored 15 goals as a rookie in 2024-25 and had three goals and five points in his 12 games this year before he was shut down. He remains on his entry-level deal at an $886,666 cap hit through next season, and slots back into a center group that now includes Zach Benson, Konsta Helenius, Josh Norris, and deadline addition Sam Carrick, giving Buffalo a much-needed depth and skill boost down the middle as the Sabres try to build on the franchise’s most successful season in 15 years.

Additional Notes:

  • Colorado Avalanche defenseman Brent Burns was a full participant in Tuesday’s practice, per Evan Rawal of the Denver Gazette. He had sat out some on-ice sessions following Colorado’s series-clinching 4-3 OT win over Minnesota in Game 5, and was listed as day-to-day after missing Saturday’s practice. He should be ready for Game 1 of the Western Conference Final against Vegas on Wednesday. Through nine playoff games, he has 3 assists, 14 SOG, 6 blocks, and 13 hits.
  • On a day that saw new general manager Ryan Johnson clean house behind the bench, firing head coach Adam Foote and assistants Scott Young, Kevin Dean, and Brett McLean after a 25-49-8 last-place finish, Johnson also confirmed that assistant general managers Cammi Granato and Émilie Castonguay will remain in their roles, per Harman Dayal with the Athletic. The retention provides a measure of continuity inside an organization otherwise gutted at the top this spring, with Jim Rutherford stepping down as president of hockey operations, GM Patrik Allvin dismissed, and now the coaching staff turned over. Castonguay became the first woman to serve as an NHL assistant general manager when the Canucks hired her in January 2022, with Granato, a Hockey Hall of Famer, joining not long after. Both received extensions in March 2024 under the previous front office and have handled significant responsibilities in scouting oversight, player development, and contract and cap management.

Offseason Checklist: Nashville Predators

The offseason has arrived for half of the league’s teams that aren’t taking part in the playoffs plus those who have already been eliminated. Accordingly, it’s now time to examine what they will need to accomplish over the coming months. Next up is a look at Nashville. 

A season which had no real expectations, the Predators improved from a brutal 2024-25 campaign, at times looking like they could sneak back into the playoffs. Coming up short where they’ll be rewarded with drafting 10th overall, even if they had made it, there was little optimism on their chances to get past a Western Conference powerhouse. Nashville has been at a crossroads for some time, but now with a new general manager set to come in, it could finally be time to embrace the dreaded tear down, a question which is already burning hot.

Hire A General Manager

It hardly requires analysis to determine the first order of business for the Predators as the clock ticks on their general manager search. The longer it drags on, the more speculation rises that they’re waiting on a candidate whose season has not yet ended. After David Poile’s 25 years with the organization, quickly followed by Barry Trotz whose tenure ended sooner than expected, it’s a feeling unfamiliar to the Predators to be in this position. Although uneasy, it presents a breath of fresh air. 

A stable franchise which has rounded the corner from their fragile standing in the 2000s, the tough truth is that Nashville has just one true playoff run in their history. They’ve kicked the can down the road avoiding a tear down for practically half a decade now. Giving up on 40-goal-scorers Filip Forsberg and Steven Stamkos, along with franchise legend Roman Josi is easier said than done, but if anybody is willing to make the tough choices to benefit the future, it would be a new outside voice. 

Former Devils GM Tom Fitzgerald is a natural candidate, given his ties to the organization as their inaugural captain who has ample front office experience. Yet it’s curious as to why the role remains open. Perhaps Carolina’s Darren Yorke has their interest? Colorado’s Kevin McDonald? Maybe after evaluating every option they’ll opt to go internal, promoting Jeff Kealty, who has worked his way up the organizational ladder since 2001.

Whoever they choose, the lucky hire will be at a crossroads on day one; either a tear down, or continuing to take on the uphill battle of supplementing an aging core without premium draft selections.

Attempt To Move Jonathan Marchessault

Even if the 35-year-old was still producing in the Music City, it’s time for the franchise to turn over a new leaf under new management. However, the key word here is “attempt”, as Jonathan Marchessault’s production has fallen off a cliff, and he’s signed 2028-29 at $5.5MM. 

Holding a 15-team no-trade list, it’s widely thought that the veteran is ready to move on. He won’t just do it anywhere though, seeking a favorable situation for both his family and career. With just 31 points in 62 games last year, and his worst possession metrics since being a fringe depth piece on Tampa Bay a decade ago, Nashville will have to retain salary. It’s no longer a matter of what they can fetch in return, as opposed to how much weight they can shed. 

Loosely linked to the Canadiens as a team he’d like to go to, but otherwise not known to have reached any real talks, there’s no telling what comes next. To Montreal’s credit, they lack anchors to offer up. To do their respected veteran right and get him to his home province, Nashville would have to not only retain, but add sweeteners. It’s anybody’s guess as to other hypothetical teams, but they’d have to greatly value the undrafted Conn Smythe winner’s intangibles to bring him aboard.

Shop For “Change of Scenery” Center

The Predators are dangerously thin down the middle, an issue which will probably remain in October. Ryan O’Reilly has been tremendous, finishing one point behind Forsberg for team lead this season (74). Still, at age 35, there’s no telling how long he can keep it up before aging gracefully into a strong 3C. 

Neither Fedor Svechkov or Brady Martin should be counted on for any meaningful time at 2C next season. Vitali Pinchuk’s signing as a KHL free agent was a big win, leaving fans optimistic he can fulfill an Erik Haula type role, but it’s no guarantee he will even make the roster out of camp. Finally, retaining Haula remains a possibility, but the 35-year-old has the chance to jump to a contender as one of few middlemen up for grabs with any real offensive ability.

After a short Trotz era mostly brought lateral trades, not making them much younger, the Preds would be wise to check in on Seattle’s Shane Wright or Anaheim’s Mason McTavish

The challenge Nashville would face in discussion for Wright is Seattle’s shopping list. Having no interest in getting older, it would require pieces from the Predators’ several recent first round selections going out to the Kraken, at that point solving one problem only to create another. 

That’s why McTavish stands out; his $7MM cap hit through 2030-31 is a stumbling block for most trade partners. Anaheim has shown willingness to bring in overpaid veterans in the past, and if Nashville could sell Marchessault on becoming the next, suddenly there’s a foundation. Salary retention aside, Frank Vatrano’s $4.57MM could come into play, and righty Nicklaus Perbix may be attractive to the Ducks. It’s a complicated deal to imagine, yet McTavish is the one diamond in the rough center the Preds could obtain without wrecking their prospect pool. It could also present an opportunity to shed Marchessault at the same time, sending the respected veteran to a favorable situation. 

Consider Making A Blockbuster Trade

No stranger to making the headlines with bold trades toward the end of Poile’s tenure, Trotz was less aggressive in that area. Now with a barren free agent market, it’s the perfect time for the Predators to cash in on at least one of their veterans, even if avoiding a full scale raze of the roster.

Especially if able to land a young center meeting the criteria above, and committing to an aggressive shake up, it would be a perfect time to find O’Reilly’s new home. Coming off his highest scoring campaign since his All Star days as a Blue, the center makes just $4.5MM for the next two seasons. Even assuming Nashville holds off on shipping O’Reilly to a divisional rival in Minnesota, it figures that Detroit, Carolina, or New Jersey would be aggressive in pursuit, and there’s no telling who else could make a call. The only road block; the Predators are treating the Stanley Cup Champion as if he has full trade protection, so it would have to be a destination favorable to the Ontario native.

The options don’t end there for the Predators, either. Stamkos’ 42 goals were a highlight of a relatively dull season in Nashville, showcasing what they are paying him $8MM until 2028 for. Now midway through the contract, he flipped the script from a brutal situation to one which the Preds could feasibly get out of. Even if the 36-year-old would play out the contract gold, it’s most likely that 2025-26 was his best season. Assuming it’s downhill from here, now’s the time to weigh options, although much like O’Reilly, Stamkos holds the cards in his future.

Even outside of O’Reilly and Stamkos, who most likely will make another stop before the end of their remarkable careers, there are more bold options. Forsberg, Josi, and Juuse Saros, pillars of the franchise, are serious long shots, holding control as well. Yet with aggressive teams turning to the trade market this summer, and a new general manager at the helm, it’s time to give it thought.

Sign a Bottom Six Center

Even with the playoffs in reach, the Predators opted to cash in on upcoming free agents Michael McCarron and Cole Smith at the trade deadline, bringing in a second and a third round pick. Depleting their fourth line, from there they came away with an 11-8-2 record, left watching the beloved teammates move on to the playoffs without them. 

Needing another penalty killing faceoff specialist, enter Utah’s Kevin Stenlund, 29-years-old, projected to fetch just $1.45MM according to AFP Analytics. The 6’3” righty won 54% of his draws this year, and could easily get back to double digit tallies as a Predator. Another option, Vancouver’s Teddy Blueger is slightly less dependable on the dot but makes up for it with his transition abilities, enough to offer third line contribution, and would come in under $3MM. 

With their issues revolving around the center ice position, the Predators should have no issue forking over the going rate to replace McCarron. Even if the team goes nowhere in the next few years, they’re vital pieces of the penalty kill who can be flipped for assets later on. Absolutely looking to avoid another July 1 of big spending, if there’s one hole to fill on that day, it’s a fourth line center. 

Image Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-USA TODAY Sports

Devils Announce Coaching Changes, Sheldon Keefe To Stay

The New Jersey Devils announced today that Goaltending Coach Dave Rogalski has been relieved of his duties, and Assistant Coach Sergei Brylin will assume a new role within the organization.

With Sunny Mehta getting to work on transforming the team, along with his new assistant Braden Birch who was hired earlier this month, it’s the first step in what will be more changes after a disappointing campaign.

Rogalski, 45, got started at St. Cloud State in 2010, eventually mentoring current Capitals netminder Charlie Lindgren. Jumping to the NHL in 2018 with the Blues as a development coach, his organization took home the Stanley Cup the next year. Moving along to goaltending coach with the Devils for the 2020-21 season, he held the role ever since. Somewhat synonymous with the team as a whole, New Jersey has declined in that department, most visibly with Jacob Markström‘s 3.07 goals-against-average and his .883 save percentage, both his worst marks in a decade. Jake Allen, with ties to Rogalski since St. Louis, performed better but also experienced slight statistical declines year-over-year. 

On the other hand, Brylin is much deeper connected within the team, playing 765 games as a Devil from 1994-2008. The Russian center helped New Jersey take home three Stanley Cups as a relentless two-way player who epitomized the Devils in that era. Upon retiring from the KHL, he promptly returned to the franchise, starting out with the AHL’s Albany Devils in 2012 and being promoted to assistant coach for the big club a decade later as part of Lindy Ruff‘s staff. Surviving the split and transition to Sheldon Keefe‘s tenure, Brylin was more involved with player development, not directly heading either of their special teams units.

A legend of the team, Mehta is showing loyalty and acknowledgement of his presence in the organization, keeping Brylin around in a new role which is not known at this point. James Nichols of New Jersey Hockey Now confirmed that the former player won’t retain any sort of coaching capacity.

With the departures aside, today’s news confirms that Keefe will stick around with two years remaining on his contract. Eager to assemble his own staff, it’s unfair to judge the 45-year-old for his shortcomings after a season so lost to injury, however, it’ll be interesting to see what sort of leash he has if things don’t turn around quickly next fall.