Canucks Recall Ty Mueller

Ahead of tonight’s game against Colorado, the Vancouver Canucks announced that prospect Ty Mueller has been recalled from AHL Abbotsford.

A fourth round selection by the team in 2023, the center has developed nicely in the AHL right from the jump out of the University of Nebraska-Omaha. Mueller debuted last year with 39 points in 64 games, serving as a key rookie on the way to Abbotsford’s 2025 Calder Cup title. The efforts got him into two games with the big club, where he didn’t record any points.

This season the Edmonton, Alberta native has continued to progress, sitting second in team scoring with 35 points in 59 games. Abbotsford has iced a younger forward corps this year, and ranking 30th in the AHL, they won’t be defending their championship this spring. With that in mind, the similarly bottom-feeding Vancouver has little to lose in giving the 23-year-old another look.

With a forecast projected to land somewhere in the bottom six level, Mueller is not among the Canucks’ highest end prospects, hovering more in the 5-10 range. Yet for a player chosen 105th overall, the lefty has made a strong case to crack Vancouver’s lineup starting next fall, particularly as they’ll turn the roster over to more young players. Mueller’s AHL production has already surpassed his expectations, and with a season far lost, Vancouver fans will hope to watch a successful audition as he continues to grow into a future NHLer. At 5’11”, he brings a very well rounded game.

Evidently, Max Sasson is expected to return to the lineup tonight in a whimsical battle between the NHL’s best and worst team. As a result Mueller is not expected to play, but the youngster will enjoy the call-up nonetheless, looking ahead to tomorrow’s action in Minnesota as a chance to appear in his third NHL game.

 

San Jose Sharks Activate Ty Dellandrea

The San Jose Sharks announced that they’ve activated forward Ty Dellandrea from the injured reserve. Without a corresponding roster move, the Sharks will have 25 players on the active roster, 16 of whom are forwards.

Dellandrea, 25, has missed nearly two full months of action. On January 6th, in a game against the Columbus Blue Jackets, Dellandrea collided with a goal post and subsequently tore his posterior cruciate ligament (PCL). Although he managed to avoid surgery, his extensive recovery process cost him 30 games of the regular season.

Before the injury, Dellandrea was having a relatively solid season. In 42 games this year, his second in San Jose, Dellandrea registered two goals and 11 points with a -15 rating, averaging 14:24 of ice time per game. Still, he remains looking to recapture his form from a few years ago, when he scored nine goals and 28 points in 82 games with the Dallas Stars while averaging a similar ATOI.

However, if he had remained healthy, Dellandrea would have gotten fairly close to those totals. Even as a third-line forward, the Sharks still view Dellandrea as a part of the near future, as they made him one of seven forwards on the team to be signed through the 2027-28 season.

It’ll be interesting to see how Dellandrea’s role on the Sharks changes throughout his upcoming contract. San Jose has a glut of young forwards knocking on the door, and cuts will have to be made to make room. Still, with many veteran forwards playing on one to two-year deals, Dellandrea’s spot on the roster should be safe for now.

Panthers Recall Tobias Bjornfot, Mikulas Hovorka

The Florida Panthers need more depth with two additional defensemen out with injury. According to George Richards of Florida Hockey Now, the Panthers have recalled Tobias Björnfot and Mikulas Hovorka from the AHL’s Charlotte Checkers. Florida later confirmed the transaction.

It’s expected that both defensemen will be in the lineup tomorrow against the Boston Bruins. In the same report, Richards shared that Aaron Ekblad, who is dealing with a hand injury after blocking a shot, and Dmitry Kulikov, who took a puck off the face, are both being held out.

That will leave Seth Jones and Gustav Forsling as the only two defensemen who played on opening night this season to be in Florida’s lineup tomorrow. That’s without factoring in the multiple injuries to the forward corps, as the Panthers are also expected to be without Aleksander Barkov, Brad Marchand, Jonah Gadjovich, Evan Rodrigues, Sam Reinhart, and Anton Lundell.

It’s been the overarching theme of the 2025-26 season for Florida. Injuries have prevented the Panthers from achieving any success this year and will also prevent the team from defending their back-to-back Stanley Cup championships.

At any rate, it allows a pair of defensemen who haven’t played much for the team this season. Björnfot, 24, has scored two goals and one assist in 11 games for the Panthers this season, averaging 11:33 of ice time per night. Meanwhile, Hovorka, 24, has only one game of NHL experience under his belt, skating for 11:27 against the Tampa Bay Lightning on February 5th.

Edmonton Oilers Sign William Nicholl

According to a team announcement, the Edmonton Oilers have signed forward William Nicholl to a three-year, entry-level contract beginning in the 2026-27 season. Nicholl will presumably finish the rest of the 2025-26 campaign with the AHL’s Bakersfield Condors.

The contract details for his entry-level contract are as follows, as provided by PuckPedia:

Year NHL Salary Signing bonus Potential performance bonuses Minors salary
2026-27 $850K $85K NA $85K
2027-28 $900K $85K NA $85K
2028-29 $950K $85K NA $85K

Nicholl, 19, recently wrapped up his third season with the OHL’s London Knights. He did not start the season on time due to offseason surgery, which led him to finish with 15 goals and 26 points in 32 games, achieving a +10 rating.

Last season, in what would be his best performance in the OHL, Nicholl scored 21 goals and 57 points in 66 games with a +38 rating. He featured in the Knights’ postseason run last year, scoring one goal and totaling eight points in 17 games, which helped the team secure its third Memorial Cup championship in franchise history.

Still, there’s definitely an argument that Nicholl could use another year of seasoning at the OHL level. Edmonton selected Nicholl with the 196th overall pick of the 2024 NHL Draft, so he’s not necessarily a top prospect that needs to be rushed to the professional ranks.

Factoring in his recent injury history, it’s somewhat surprising that the Oilers don’t give him a year to dominate the junior level before turning professional next season. Even if they had waited a year, Nicholl would only have been 20 years old, with plenty of time to develop further.

Regardless, the top brass at Edmonton feels he is ready, which means he’ll have the opportunity to test his mettle through the last few weeks of the AHL season. Even if his offensive prowess isn’t quite ready, his stature certainly is. Nicholl stands at 6’0″, 183 lbs, and has never been shy to engage in physicality while in London.

Flyers Sign David Jiricek To Two-Year Extension

5:15 p.m.: The team over at PuckPedia revealed the financial details of Jiricek’s new two-year extension:

Year NHL Salary Signing bonus Potential performance bonuses Minors salary
2026-27 $850K $450K NA $1.3MM
2027-28 $1.7MM NA NA $1.7MM

3:43 p.m.: The Philadelphia Flyers will keep a Trade Deadline addition around for a few years longer. Defenseman David Jiricek has signed a two-year, $3MM extension with the club per his agent, Allan Walsh. Philadelphia has confirmed the extension. The deal will carry a $1.5MM annual-average-value. Philadelphia acquired Jiricek in exchange for winger Bobby Brink in early-March.

Jiricek hasn’t yet made his debut in the Flyers lineup, instead spending 10 games with the AHL’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms. He has two goals and 10 points in those appearances, matching his scoring in 24 games with the Iowa Wild to start the season. He also appeared in 25 games with the Minnesota Wild this season but managed no scoring, 14 penalty minutes, and an even plus-minus.

Jiricek’s young career has been a story of expectations versus reality. He was a popular draft prospect in 2022, hype that culminated in the 6-foot-4 defender being selected sixth-overall by the Columbus Blue Jackets. He joined the Blue Jackets’ ranks in the following season, beginning the year with the AHL’s Cleveland Monsters but receiving routine call-ups throughout the season. In total, Jiricek scored 38 points in 55 AHL games, and no points in four NHL games, in his first pro season in North America. That production, supported by seven points in seven games at the 2023 World Junior Championship, seemed to set Jiricek up for a breakout year in 2023-24.

Instead, the defender ran into a struggle to produce at the major or minor levels. He scored just 10 points in 43 NHL games, and 19 points in 29 AHL games, in his second season. He also had a negative plus-minus in both leagues. Quickly, the hype from Jiricek’s draft year seemed to be dwindling, as the puck-mover struggled to branch his game out against top-level competition.

As those struggles continued into his third season, Columbus made the decision to trade Jiricek to the Minnesota Wild in November 2024 in exchange for Daemon Hunt and one pick in each of the top-four rounds. Wild general manager Bill Guerin called the deal a “no-brainer” at the time and Jiricek was quickly pipelined into the NHL rotation. A move didn’t spark his scoring, though, and Jiricek was quickly assigned to the minor leagues. The struggling year hit a peak when his season was ended by a lacerated spleen in late-March.

Jiricek made a quiet return this season – but seems to finally be catching sparks in the Flyers organization. He has filled meaningful minutes in the minor leagues and could be primed for bigger minutes with a new extension under his belt. It is a one-way deal, which could ensure a trial run in the Philadelphia lineup next season, at the very least. With the Flyers, Jiricek will have a chance to learn from similar puck-movers like Rasmus Ristolainen and Jamie Drysdale. He’ll hope that mentorship can help him stick when he inevitably tries for a role with his third NHL club.

Flames’ Ethan Wyttenbach To Stay In NCAA For Sophomore Season

Calgary Flames fans will have to wait a little while longer to see a breakout prospect take pro ice. Winger Ethan Wyttenbach has announced he will return to Quinnipiac University for his sophomore season after leading the country in scoring as a freshman. It was a breakout performance for the 2025 fifth-round pick that culminated in a top-10 finish in Hobey Baker Award voting, awarded annually to the NCAA’s MVP.

Wyttenbach became only the fifth freshman to lead college hockey in scoring since 2000. He joins an exclusive list of NHL stars, including Jack Eichel, Kyle Connor, Adam Fantilli, and Will Smith. In each instance, the breakout performance was followed by an immediate pro contract. Wyttenbach will break that mold by returning for a second season.

The Quinnnipiac Bobcats led college hockey in scoring this season but fell well shy of an ECAC conference championship. They haven’t acheived that feat since 2016, despite winning the NCAA National championship in 2023. That is another course they were knocked off of this season, losing to the University of North Dakota in the first round this season.

Wyttenbach’s return will help the Cougars attempt to right both wrongs. He was a main play-driver all year long, playing well off of fellow freshmen Antonin Verreault and Markus Vidicek. Their support helped Wyttenbach reach a staggering 58 points in 40 games on the year. It also, more importantly, allowed Boston Bruins prospect Christopher Pelosi to remain in a second-line role, giving Quinnipiac a top-six that was hard to beat. Verreault and Vidicek are both expected to return to Quinnipiac next season, as is top defender and Bruins prospect Elliott Groenewold.

Those returnees will keep Quinnipiac’s lineup formidable into the 2026-27 season. Wyttenbach will undoubtedly continue on as the team’s top forward. He faces a tough challenge repeating his historic freshman season but managing the feat could go far in cementing his spot as one of Calgary’s top prospects. Wyttenbach is only two seasons removed from playing youth, AAA hockey in New England. Before moving to college, he scored 51 points in 44 games with the USHL’s Sioux Falls Stampede.

Sabres Sign Maxim Strbak To Entry-Level Deal

The Buffalo Sabres have moved forward with one of their top prospects. Defenseman Maxim Strbak has signed a three-year, entry-level contract following the end of his junior year at Michigan State University. The new deal will begin in the 2026-27 season, while Strbak will close out this season on an amateur try-out with the AHL’s Rochester Americans.

Strbak was an energy defender during his time with the Spartans. He contributed on both sides of the puck, passing 15 assists in each of the last two seasons and posting a postive plus-minus in all three years. That includes a plus-20 in 37 games this season, which co-led the Spartans’ blue-line alongside defense partner and St. Louis Blues prospect Colin Ralph. Strbak added 18 points and 10 penalty minutes to that stat-line. Despite a tendency for hard-hitting defense, Strbak only racked up 43 penalty minutes across 102 games at Michigan State. His knack for level-headed hockey made him a reliable piece of the Spartans’ penalty-kill, a role that helped him average just shy of 20 minutes a night this season.

Strbak has also been a major presence for Slovakia’s U20 international roster. He participated in the World Junior Championship in every season between 2021 and 2025. His initial appearances on the international stage were relatively quiet – marked by three points in nine games through his first two World Junior tournaments. He kicked that quiet scoring over his last two appearances, netting a combined 13 points in 10 games. Those performances helped Strbak plant his feet as a two-way impact, a style that carried into his final year with the Spartans.

Now Strbak will face the test of translating that impact to the pro level. The Americans have 10 games remaining on the schedule and sit just within playoff contention. That could extend Strbak’s runway for his first pro reps, before he prepares to try and push into the Sabres lineup next season. Buffalo has seen a rotation at the right-defense position in the face of injuries, ultimately icing 10 defensemen on their blue-line through points this season.

Flames Sign Axel Hurtig To Entry-Level Contract

The Calgary Flames have signed defenseman Axel Hurtig to a three-year, entry-level contract. The deal begins in the 2026-27 season. Hurtig was a seventh-round pick in the 2023 NHL Draft, after a year in Sweden’s U20 league. He played one more season in Sweden after his draft, before moving to the WHL’s Calgary Hitmen for the last two seasons.

Hurtig, 20, is a towering defenseman who took on a top-four role soon after joining the Hitmen. His 6-foot-5, 215-pound frame made Hurtig an effective rush-defender, where his long reach and strong physicality created little space for opponents to push past. He was quick to move the puck up ice after forcing turnovers but often left the role of joining the rush to his defense partners. In 119 games with the Hitmen, Hurtig only racked up 35 points – just narrowly more than the 21 points he scored in 77 games at Sweden’s U20 level.

Despite quiet scoring totals, Hurtig found his way towards routine impact. He played in all seven games of Sweden’s fourth-place finish at the 2025 World Junior Championships, recording 10 minutes of ice time on average to go with one point and a plus-two. That experience, and a knack for stepping up physically, helped Hurtig earn the Hitmen’s captaincy for the 2025-26 season. He became the first European captain in the team’s history. With a letter on his chest, Hurtig racked up 19 points, a team-best plus-21, and eight five-minute major penalties this season. His defensive presence helped the Hitmen finish the WHL season in eighth place.

Hurtig’s size should help him bridge the gap between junior and pro hockey. He will add another strong stick to the Flames’ left-defense depth chart and could fight for his NHL debut next season with an entry-level contract in place. The Flames have leaned heavily on young left-defenders, including Yan Kuznetsov and Kevin Bahl, through much of this season. They have also promoted puck-movers Zayne Parekh and Hunter Brzustewicz on the right-side. With a heap of young potential on the blue-line, Hurtig’s defensive presence will hope to round out Calgary’s future on the blue-line.

Blue Jackets Recall Zach Aston-Reese

The Blue Jackets have recalled forward Zach Aston-Reese from the AHL’s Cleveland Monsters under emergency conditions, the team announced Wednesday.

Aston-Reese, 31, spent the first several months of the season on the active roster before clearing waivers in January. He’s been with Cleveland ever since, but could get a look in spot duty here after center Isac Lundeström left last night’s loss to the Hurricanes with an undisclosed injury.

The Blue Jackets had made up significant ground in the Eastern Conference playoff race with their seemingly perpetual hot streak under new head coach Rick Bowness, but a rash of injuries has put a stop to that for now. Damon SeversonDmitri VoronkovMathieu Olivier, and now Lundeström have landed designations in recent days, leaving them winless in their last four while falling back into the second wild-card slot in the Eastern Conference.

Columbus recalled center Luca Del Bel Belluz from Cleveland on Monday. He was the lone extra forward for last night’s game, so it remains to be seen whether he or Aston-Reese will enter the lineup for tomorrow’s rematch against Carolina. Regardless, the Jackets will have an extra forward to spare even if Lundeström needs to sit out a game.

Aston-Reese, once a fourth-line mainstay for the Penguins, Ducks, and Maple Leafs, has swung between an NHL option and an AHL regular over the last few seasons. He logged just three NHL appearances while on a two-way deal with the Red Wings in 2023-24. He signed with the Golden Knights the following offseason but was claimed by Columbus during training camp. He stuck with the Blue Jackets full-time, rebounding to play in a career-high 79 games while tying his career high of 17 points.

The defensive-minded winger slipped down the depth chart to start this year, though. Amid their midseason pickups of Danton Heinen and Mason Marchment, Aston-Reese hit waivers again after only managing 1-4–5 scoring line in 26 outings while averaging just 9:37 per game.

He can still be a solid plug-and-play physical presence. Only Olivier has more hits per game among Columbus skaters this season than Aston-Reese at 2.73, and he’s been a top-nine factor in Cleveland with seven goals and 14 points there in 25 games. He is a natural center but has played mostly on the wing throughout his NHL career, in no small part due to his 35.5% lifetime faceoff win percentage.

Ducks Expected To Sign Roger McQueen To Entry-Level Deal

The Ducks are working to finalize an entry-level contract for top center prospect Roger McQueen beginning next season, PuckPedia reports on Wednesday. He is also expected to sign an amateur tryout with the AHL’s San Diego Gulls to make his pro debut in the coming days.

McQueen, 19, was one of last year’s most polarizing prospects. His 6’6″, 198-lb frame was of significant intrigue, plus the fact that he’d tallied nearly a point per game for the WHL’s Brandon Wheat Kings in his pre-draft year.

A power forward with great puck skills, he only ended up getting into 17 games last year. He missed most of his pivotal draft season because of a fracture in his lower back known as spondylolysis that was initially misdiagnosed as a bulging disc. The symptoms that accompanied had stretched as far back as August 2023, McQueen told Adam Kimelman of NHL.com last year, but were finally completely resolved by the end of the season, allowing him to participate fully in the draft combine.

Some viewed McQueen as a top-five talent. Obviously, with his injury concerns, that didn’t happen. Still, after managing a 10-10–20 scoring line in 17 games for the Wheat Kings in his difficult age-18 campaign, the Ducks had seen enough to take him 10th overall.

The latest addition to a deep stable of first-round forward talent in Anaheim that includes Leo CarlssonBeckett Sennecke, and Cutter Gauthier, McQueen opted not to return to juniors for 2025-26 and instead committed to Providence College, taking advantage of the new development path for players who came up through top-level Canadian juniors. The Saskatoon native hit the ground running and was among the Friars’ top talents this year, finishing with an 11-16–27 scoring line in 36 outings to rank third on the team.

In doing so, McQueen took home a Hockey East regular-season championship and won the conference’s Rookie of the Year Award. The team was upset by UConn in the quarterfinals of the conference tournament before bowing out to Denver in the regional semifinals of the national tournament.

The right-shot McQueen’s standout freshman year solidified him as Anaheim’s #1 prospect, Scott Wheeler of The Athletic writes. Last offseason, NHL.com had him at #3 behind the since-graduated Sennecke and defenseman Stian Solberg, so there’s been some real upward movement in his stock over the last 10 months.

In all likelihood, McQueen will still need a bit of AHL seasoning next season before he’s ready for an everyday NHL role. All four of the Ducks’ centers are either signed or under team control through next season, so there’s no huge rush to incorporate him, either – although it wouldn’t be surprising to see Mikael Granlund or Mason McTavish shift to the wing if McQueen does force his way onto the roster with a strong training camp.