Central Notes: Manson, Zuccarello, Trenin
Despite taking a commanding 3-0 series lead against the Los Angeles Kings, the Colorado Avalanche are already dealing with injury concerns. According to Evan Rawal of The Denver Gazette, top-four defenseman Josh Manson is being evaluated for an upper-body injury and could miss Game 4.
Manson suffered the injury scare early in Game 3, being on the receiving end of a hit from Kings defenseman Joel Edmundson. Manson attempted to return to the game, though he was largely sheltered due to his discomfort. He finished the contest with one assist in 4:57 of ice time with one hit and one giveaway.
Although there is never a good time for injuries, the Avalanche have put themselves in a good position to absorb one. Yes, the team is potentially losing a formidable top-four defenseman. Still, with only one more win needed to advance to Round Two, they can likely sweep Los Angeles, giving Manson a larger gap to rest in between games. Colorado acquired Nick Blankenburg at the deadline for exactly this reason, who will likely fill in for Manson if he should be ruled out for Game 4. Blankenburg scored eight goals and 24 points in 61 games split between the Nashville Predators and the Avalanche this season.
Additional notes from the Central Division:
- According to Mike Morreale of the NHL, Minnesota Wild veteran winger Mats Zuccarello has been upgraded to a game-time decision for Game 4. Although he’s not the main driver of offense in Minnesota, the Wild didn’t win either of the two games that Zuccarello missed due to his upper-body injury. If he does return, he’ll look to pick up where he left off in Game 1, when he registered three assists in 16:41 of ice time.
- Unfortunately, it’s not all good news on the injury front for the Wild. In the same report from Morreale, the senior draft writer indicated that Yakov Trenin has been ruled out for Game 4. Throughout the entire regular season, Trenin played all 82 games and has not missed back-to-back games since last year. Still, he was fairly quiet during the first two games of the series, going scoreless in 16:38 of ice time, but he did deliver 16 hits.
Doug Armstrong, Alexander Steen Sharing GM Duties Through Draft
As previously announced a few summers ago, Alexander Steen will become the full-time General Manager of the St. Louis Blues on July 1st, 2026, while current General Manager Doug Armstrong will become the team’s President of Hockey Operations. In a new update from the team, although he’s still a few weeks away from taking over the role, Steen has been operating as a General Manager for the team for some time.
The team shared a quote from Armstrong, saying, “What I told the players right after the trade deadline is, for all intents and purposes that Alex is the GM as far as you’re concerned now. There are no more trades, there are no more waivers (this season). Now Alex has to put his stamp on the team in exit meetings and (set) his expectations.”
Armstrong stated that his sole responsibility moving forward will be to make the Blues’ selections at the 2026 NHL Draft, while Steen will manage all other aspects. If St. Louis makes any trades at the draft or leading up to it, Steen will have the final call, but will still have guidance from Armstrong. That appears to be how it will remain moving forward, unless Armstrong jumps to a different opportunity in the near future.
Steen will have his hands full in his first year with the reigns. Thanks to Armstrong’s work, the Blues really only have to focus on an extension for Dylan Holloway this offseason. Still, Steen will have to make a call on trade candidates Robert Thomas, Jordan Kyrou, and Colton Parayko, among others, to put his first touches on the team’s direction moving forward.
Now, even if Steen opts for a retool and trades some or most of the team’s veterans, Armstrong didn’t leave him in a bad spot if he wants to go that route. Scott Wheeler of The Athletic ranked all 32 teams’ farm rankings after the trade deadline, and the Blues clocked in at 10th, highlighted by Justin Carbonneau, Dalibor Dvorsky, and Adam Jirícek, with plenty of other prospects on their way up.
If Steen chooses to move on from Thomas, Kyrou, or Parayko, St. Louis could easily find themselves with a top-5 farm system, giving Steen plenty of flexibility moving forward. Still, there’s no telling what his thought process is, and we likely won’t know what direction he’ll want to take until he does something.
Blue Jackets Won’t Retain Mike Haviland, Scott Ford, Aron Augustitus
The Columbus Blue Jackets have announced that assistant coaches Mike Haviland and Scott Ford, as well as video coach Aron Augustitus, won’t be returning to the team for the 2026-27 season. This decision will allow recently-extended head coach Rick Bowness to bring on his own staff for his first full season with the team. Among the candidates to earn an assistant role with Columbus will be Cleveland Monsters head coach Trent Vogelhuber per Aaron Portzline of The Athletic.
Notably, these decisions will keep former Blue Jackets player Jared Boll in his assistant coach role. Boll retired from his playing career after the 2017-18 season and joined the Blue Jackets as an assistant development coach in the following year. He held onto that role until he was promoted to the Blue Jackets bench ahead of the 2023-24 season. Boll has played an integral role in developing many of the Blue Jackets’ young stars and should continue to oversee their paths next season.
Haviland will enter the coaching market with a substantial amount of experience under his belt. His coaching career began in the ECHL where he took home two Kelly Cups across four seasons as a head coach – one on each side of the rivalry between the Trenton Titans and Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies. He was promoted to the AHL with the Norfolk Admirals in 2006 and earned the league’s ‘Coach of the Year’ award in 2007. That accolade preceded a move to the Rockford IceHogs, which would represent a path into Haviland’s first NHL coaching role – as an assistant coach with the Chicago Blackhawks. He filled that role for four seasons, including Chicago’s Stanley Cup-winning 2009-10 campaign. Haviland was dismissed by Chicago in 2012 and returned to the AHL for two seasons, before taking on the head coach role at Colorado College for seven seasons. It was that role that Columbus pulled Haviland out of, first to serve as an AHL associate coach for two seasons and then to serve as an NHL assistant for the last two seasons. He will now search for a new gig with the ability to fill numerous roles.
Ford began his coaching career in 2015, after a minor-league career that spanned 552 AHL games and 172 ECHL games. He served as an assistant coach for eight seasons with the Milwaukee Admirals – a run that was briefly interrupted by one season with the Chicago Wolves. Ford earned his first NHL role – and his first NHL regular season game behind the bench – when he was hired as an assistant by Columbus in 2024. His hiring marked a reunion with then-head coach Dean Evason, who coached over Ford from 2012 to 2015, then coached alongside him from 2015 to 2018. Evason, like Ford, is on the open market after being dismissed by the Blue Jackets.
This will also mark a quick change for Augustitus. The 30-year-old coach was promoted to the Blue Jackets’ head video coach role last summer, after four years as an assistant video coach with the club. He first joined the organization in 2018.
Vogelhuber could be the first to take on a role on Columbus’ refreshed bench. The 37 year old has served as Cleveland’s head coach for the last four seasons, after four years as an assistant coach with the team. He has led the Monsters to a winning record, and three playoff appearances, in his time overseeing the bench. He was also named a coach at the 2024 AHL All-Star game. Cleveland’s performances under Vogelhuber have represented a quick turnaround for a team that posted a 68-76-23 record in the three seasons leading up to his promotion.
These changes will mark a turnover of the Blue Jackets’ bench after posting a 40-30-12 record and missing the postseason by six points. Bowness will have his chance to build a staff capable of making up that gap next season. How the Blue Jackets choose to assemble their new bench crew could tip off their plans for Bowness’ future with the club. The 71 year old is currently the oldest head coach in the NHL and came out of retirement to replace Evason earlier this season. He has signed a one-year extension with Columbus but may not have many seasons left beyond that. Columbus’ hires could suggest if a strong staff can support a few more years, or if they will lead to a warm handoff of head coaching duties.
Photo courtesy of Kyle Terada-Imagn Images.
Senators’ Jake Sanderson Out With Concussion
As the Ottawa Senators cling to their season in Game 3 of Round One against the Carolina Hurricanes, the team may have lost its top defenseman for the foreseeable future. In a report from Sportsnet, Senators defenseman Jake Sanderson left the game with an injury.
The morning after Sanderson’s exit, it was revealed that the star defenseman has sustained a concussion per TSN’s Bruce Garrioch. Head coach Travis Green told Garrioch that Sanderson is, “not doing well” and will be out for Game 4.
In a breakdown from Kevin Bieksa on Sportsnet, Sanderson seemed to have been injured from taking a hit to the head from Carolina Hurricane Taylor Hall.
In any case, Sanderson’s absence will be detrimental to the Senators’ chances for Game 4. As Bieksa noted, he is the team’s best defenseman, and his absence puts Ottawa in a nearly inescapable hole. Although they did return Tyler Kleven tonight, the team is already without Artem Zub and Nick Jensen.
Like the rest of the team, Sanderson was quiet in Game 1, but showed up in a big way in Game 2. He recorded an assist on both of Ottawa’s goals and has averaged over 35 minutes thanks to a nearly five-period contest on Monday.
Sanderson’s role as the team’s top defenseman is unquestioned. He led the team in scoring among defensemen, registering 14 goals and 54 points in 67 games with a +16 rating. Additionally, he led the team in ATOI by a significant margin with 24:50. The next was Thomas Chabot, who averaged 22:35 throughout the 2025-26 campaign.
Submit Your Questions For The #PHRMailbag
The regular season has come to an end with half the league heading home and the other half in the playoffs. We’ve already seen some fallout from teams missing the postseason with more to follow while there have been some big performances in the early going of the playoffs as well.
With that in mind, it’s time to open up the mailbag once again. Our last call for questions yielded enough for three columns. The first included the future of Tom Fitzgerald in New Jersey, Edmonton’s trade deadline activity, and some discussion on insured contracts. In the second, among the topics were Darren Raddysh’s next contract, some young Rangers finishing strong, and Steve Yzerman’s future in Detroit. Lastly, the third took a tour around the Pacific Division, while captaincy candidates for St. Louis and what Washington can do to fix their roster were also discussed.
You can submit a question by using #PHRMailbag on Twitter/X or by leaving a comment down below. The mailbag will run on the weekend.
Morning Notes: Boeser, Hall, Norris
Team USA is expected to add a goal-scoring punch to their roster for the 2026 IIHF World Championship. Top Vancouver Canucks winger Brock Boeser is expected to suit up for the Stars and Stripes in the summer tournament per Rick Dhaliwal of CHEK News.
Boeser notched 22 goals and 48 points in 75 games this season. The performance continued his downward turn after posting a career-high 40 goals and 73 points in 81 games of the 2023-24 season. Boeser earned All-Star recognition that season, an accolade that he hasn’t received since his rookie season in 2017-18. He followed the career year with just 25 goals and 50 points in 75 games last season.
This will be Boeser’s first chance to suit up for the USA’s men’s national team. He played in three international tournaments during his days in junior hockey, including captaining USA at the 2014 Hlinka Gretzky Cup. He scored eight points in five games at that tournament, then later notched five points in four games at the 2015 World Junior-A Challenge and three points in seven games at the 2016 World Junior Championships. Boeser has stood out as a shoot-first winger dating back to those international appearances and should bring a similar impact to USA’s middle-six at Worlds.
Other notes from around the league:
- Carolina Hurricanes forward Taylor Hall is not expected to receive supplemental discipline for his hit that injured Ottawa Senators defenseman Jake Sanderson, per hockey insider Frank Seravalli and TSN’s Bruce Garrioch. Senators head coach Travis Green criticized the decision, saying that the hit was blatantly high. Hall seemed to contact Sanderson’s head, and even knocked off his helmet, with a corner hit in the third period of Thursday night’s game. He was assessed a minor penalty on the play, while Sanderson left the game with 15 minutes to go. The star defenseman will now move forward with a questionable tag for the rest of the first round series. That will be a major absence with Ottawa at risk of being swept on Saturday. Sanderson is the only Senators defenseman to record a point this series. He has two assists.
- It seems the Buffalo Sabres could be without Joshua Norris for the foreseeable future. After being designated as out day-to-day, head coach Lindy Ruff shared that Norris is currently questionable to practice with the team. Norris sat out of Game 3 with an undisclosed injury. He has battled routine absence all season long and ultimately sat out of 38 games. Norris was a major part of the Sabres’ offense in his healthy stretches. He scored 34 points in 44 games and gave the team an extra motor in their top-six. Unfortunately, the Sabres will have to revert to their backup lineup with Norris again on the mend. His absence will be, in part, filled by rookie Noah Ostlund who scored two points in his Stanley Cup Playoffs debut in Thursday night’s win.
Mix Of Veterans And Prospects Is Helping Sharks Climb The Ladder
The San Jose Sharks have not been to the Stanley Cup Playoffs since 2019. They have spent six seasons since compiling one of the strongest prospect pools in hockey, using strategic late-round drafting and trades to stock the cupboards from their top forward position all the way through their starting goaltender. That draft capital has already begun to pay off. Will Smith and William Eklund are established, top forwards for the Sharks – while Macklin Celebrini became a household name and broke the team’s scoring record, all before turning 20. Their success helped San Jose finish outside of the Pacific Division’s bottom-three for the first time since their last playoff appearance – but how long will it take until San Jose takes another step forward and returns to the postseason?
The top six scorers from San Jose’s 2025-26 season feature two players above the age of 30 and four younger than 24. That balance of veteran leadership and inexperienced talent has headlined San Jose’s roster construction in recent years. Winger Tyler Toffoli helped to fill some of the gaps left by Celebrini’s all-over style, while Alexander Wennberg has proven to be an invaluable, two-way center while Smith finds his footing between wing and center roles. Both Toffoli and Wennberg are signed through 2028, which should keep the construction of San Jose’s top-six relatively the same. But much of the same may not be enough for a Sharks club that finished 17th in the league in goals scored this season, even with their electric performances.
It will take another X-factor in the top-six to jump San Jose’s offense to the heights its capable of. That could come through another veteran presence, like winger Kiefer Sherwood who earned an extension with the Sharks before his first complete season in San Jose – thanks to his unique mix of capable goal-scoring and overwhelming hitting. But Sherwood’s role will likely end up depth behind one of San Jose’s emerging youngsters.
Winger Igor Chernyshov vindicated a breakout performance in the OHL last year with 19 points in the first 28 games of his NHL career this year. He played a strong and aggressive style that proved to compliment Celebrini’s tactical playmaking well. The two outscored opponents 20-to-17 in their minutes together – an early mark of gold in Chernyshov’s first season in North American pros.
Still, Chernyshov’s impact stands out as complimentary. To find a true game-breaker, the Sharks will have to turn towards OHL phenom Michael Misa. After setting records with his age-18 season in juniors, Misa posted a lackluster rookie year. He strung together nine goals and 21 points in 45 games and seemed to spend more time adjusting to physicality than he did dominating possession. Those struggles have motivated the junior goal-per-game scorer, who told Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now that he is ready to show fans the “real me” next season. For a former OHL exceptional status grantee, that claim could carry a lot of weight. Misa commanded play at the junior level, flaunting a detailed ability to create offense. Misa taking over more play-driving at the NHL level could help to solidify one of Smith or Eklund on Celebrini’s wing next season, after the two rotated roles this year.
Once again, it will be the mix of veteran presence – Sherwood – and emerging talent – Chernyshov and Misa – that solidifies San Jose’s offensive group. But they will bring little without a solid defense to boot. The Sharks were again in the bottom-three of goals allowed this season. Part of that blame – though, certainly, not all of it – can be placed on young defenders like Sam Dickinson and Shakir Mukhamadullin. Neither carved out much of a role this season, with the end-of-year statline reading 14 points and 12 points for the pair respectively. Dickinson was another standout in the OHL but seemed to lack the same confident puck-moving in the NHL.
The Sharks may infuse some more confidence with the addition of Hobey Baker Award finalist Eric Pohlkamp, who has turned pro after winning a National Championship with the University of Denver. Pohlkamp also plays a commanding style, driving the puck on offense and throwing hits on defense. His game is more rooted in aggression than skill, which could help to carve out more space for Dickinson to drive the offense. At the least, it will give the Sharks a puck-moving defenseman on each of their top two pairs, while Mukhamadullin and Luca Cagnoni look to carve out roles behind them.
But while Dickinson and Pohlkamp both have potential to secure long-term roles, the Sharks are still missing a balance on the blue-line. Their veteran support has been led by Mario Ferraro, John Klingberg, Dmitry Orlov, and Nick Leddy. None of the four were at their best in the 2025-26 season. Orlov led the blue-line in scoring with 37 points – enough to guarantee a pillar role next season. No roles will be guaranteed for Ferraro, Leddy, or Klingberg – though. All three are set to become unrestricted free agents and San Jose has acknowledged their need to improve on the back-end. While interdivision rivals, and clear impacts, John Carlson and Jacob Trouba will be hitting the open marke,t the Sharks are more likely to find that impact through trades.
Exploring the trade market could be a wise way for San Jose to spend their eight draft picks this year, including two in the first and fourth round. Seeking out a defenseman like Colton Parayko, Dougie Hamilton, or even a longshot addition like Roman Josi could have the added benefit of pushing San Jose towards the cap floor, while adding a top defender who can take pressure off of the Sharks’ emerging youngsters. With their mix of prospect talent, draft capital, and cap space – the Sharks are uniquely positioned to try and catch big fish all summer long. If they land one or two, it could go far in stabilizing a blue-line in need.
San Jose will hope those additions, and continued breakouts from top prospects, will continue their climb next season. Celebrini has broken the century mark as a teenager – a feat only managed by two other players, Sidney Crosby and Connor McDavid, since 2000. That will give the team a franchise leader but it will take more juice on offense, and a pull out of the depths on defense, for San Jose to turn that into a playoff bid. The difference in postseason versus early summer was just four points for the Sharks this season – an easily surmountable gap if sparks fly next season.
Photos courtesy of Eakin Howard-Imagn Images and David Gonzales-Imagn Images.
Rangers Seeking Scoring Help This Offseason
Back in mid-January, the New York Rangers announced that the team would be undergoing another “retool”, specifically avoiding the word “rebuild”. Although more change is yet to come, the team is more inclined to contend sooner rather than later, rather than tearing the organization down to the studs.
Positing several questions about the franchise moving forward, Peter Baugh and Vince Z. Mercogliano of The Athletic opined that the Rangers should be active on the trade market this summer, particularly moving out defensemen for offensive help. The subject of trade rumors throughout the 2025-26 season, right-handed blue liner Braden Schneider, is the obvious candidate.
In their article, the pair wrote, “Drury is believed to be seeking a scoring forward, according to two league sources, with the San Jose Sharks among the forward-rich, defense-needy teams to watch.” Leading up to the trade deadline, the Sharks were one of the teams connected to Schneider.
As the Rangers have stated to the public, they are seeking a retool rather than a rebuild; however, it remains unclear what that really entails. If they want NHL-caliber players in a trade with San Jose, they’ll likely need to include more than just Schneider.
Schneider is a classic defensive defenseman, typically scoring in the upper teens for points each season while averaging over 100 blocked shots and hits per year. His possession metrics are subpar at best, but that could be attributed to New York’s play style over the last few years.
The Sharks could use a big-body defenseman in their top four, but it’s unlikely that they would be willing to part with the necessary assets. New York would likely target William Eklund or Collin Graf to increase scoring output. Still, there’s no indication that San Jose is ready to make those kinds of changes to their forward corps, especially with so many unproven assets moving their way up the depth chart.
An intriguing trade partner may be more north of the border. The Vancouver Canucks are in immediate need of young defensive help, and have a goal-scoring winger who wants out of town. Winger Jake DeBrusk, 29, has surpassed the 20-goal plateau in over half of his seasons at the NHL level, and has indicated he’d be willing to waive his no-trade clause for a move.
Depending on how the Rangers value Schneider, they may be able to make a few tweaks to the trade to increase the value, but DeBrusk may be one of the better options available on the trade market.
Still, there is always the possibility that the word “retool” was always meant to make their fans more content, and the Rangers were comfortable acquiring prospects instead of NHL-ready players. If that’s the case, the Rangers could dangle Schneider to a few more teams than just San Jose or Vancouver.
Transaction Notes: Miller, Okhotyuk, Robins
Montreal Canadiens prospect Quentin Miller transferred from the University of Denver to Western Michigan University a week ago, Brad Elliott Schlossman of the Grand Forks Herald reported. He is one of two Canadiens goalie prospects to transfer this week, as 2025 fifth-rounder Alexis Cournoyer left Cornell University to join the Wisconsin Badgers on April 20. Miller, 21, was a fourth-round pick of the Canadiens at the 2023 draft. He won a QMJHL title and Memorial Cup as a backup with the Quebec Ramparts, and has been a tandem goalie at multiple levels for much of his time since being drafted.
Miller went 12-10-2 in 25 games for Denver this season, posting a .916 save percentage and 2.39 goals against average, but lost the No. 1 goalie spot to freshman sensation Johnny Hicks. The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler recently ranked Miller the No. 14 prospect in the Canadiens’ system, writing “The Habs will likely want to see him be the guy somewhere before they commit to signing him.” Miller has a clear lane to being the undisputed No. 1 in Kalamazoo – last year’s starter Hampton Slukynsky has turned pro after two years in college and incoming freshman Owen Lepak hasn’t been a team’s starter since 2023-24, when he led the NAHL’s Maryland Black Bears to the Robertson Cup Final.
Other notes from around the hockey world:
- Former Calgary Flames and New Jersey Devils defenseman Nikita Okhotyuk signed a three-year contract extension in the KHL, keeping him in Russia through May 2029. The Flames still hold Okhotyuk’s signing rights since they qualified him when his last NHL contract expired. The 25-year-old defenseman played in nine games as a Flame and has played in 67 career games at the NHL level, split between Calgary, New Jersey, and San Jose. Over the last two seasons with CSKA Moscow, Okhotyuk has skated in 129 contests and scored 23 points.
- Former San Jose Sharks prospect Tristen Robins plans to sign in North America for 2026-27, according to an official announcement from his former club Rytíři Kladno. Robins was a second-round pick of the Sharks in 2020 and skated in a total of 150 AHL games while a member of the organization. Robins looked to be pushing for an NHL role as recently as 2023, when he scored 38 points in 62 games as an AHL rookie. He earned three NHL games that season and was ranked as the organization’s No. 7 prospect by Scott Wheeler of The Athletic. He wasn’t able to build on that rookie campaign and ended up dealt from the Sharks organization in 2025. Playing on a one-year deal in the Czech league, Robins scored 18 goals and 35 points in 45 games, and will hope to earn another shot in an NHL organization this fall.
Flyers’ Dan Vladar Questionable For Game 4
Philadelphia Flyers starting goaltender Dan Vladar‘s status is in question for game four against the Pittsburgh Penguins, head coach Rick Tocchet told the media today.
According to Kevin Kurz of The Athletic, Vladar “was shaken up” midway through the third period of game three after a collision with Penguins forward Bryan Rust. “He was seen flexing his right arm and hand while trainer Tommy Alva attended to him,” Kurz wrote. Vladar did not skate with the team today, though Tocchet indicated that was more of a maintenance absence than anything else.
Vladar’s status is of immense importance to both sides of the first-round Battle of Pennsylvania, as a healthy Vladar gives the Flyers the best possible chance of closing out a sweep against their arch-rivals on Saturday in game four. The 28-year-old won the Bobby Clarke Trophy as team MVP for his efforts this season, and his .946 save percentage in this series has backstopped Philadelphia to the precipice of a statement series victory. His performance in the regular season, his first campaign as a full-time No. 1, was similarly impressive. He went 29-14-7 with a .906 save percentage and 2.42 goals against average.
If Vladar is unable to dress on Saturday, 26-year-old Samuel Ersson would almost certainly get the start. Ersson was the Flyers’ No. 1 goalie for the last two years before ceding that job to Vladar. He has had his moments, but more often than not has struggled. His .870 save percentage in 33 games this season is the lowest of any goalie with at least 25 games played, and that’s even including a solid run of form he displayed after the Olympic break.
Although Ersson’s numbers have been less than ideal, Tocchet expressed faith in the Swedish netminder, telling the media “I’m not really worried if he had to play. I really wouldn’t. He’s locked in.” Ersson has yet to appear in the Stanley Cup playoffs but does have three postseason starts on record at the AHL level, from 2022-23.
If Ersson does end up getting a start, the elevated stage of the playoffs would provide him with a unique opportunity to put his sub-par regular season numbers behind him. Ersson is set to become an RFA with arbitration rights this summer, and his $1.6MM salary for this season makes him a legitimate non-tender candidate. The chance to impress in playoff hockey – however limited that chance may be – could help Ersson secure an NHL landing spot in case the Flyers do elect to cut him loose.
