Zach Werenski Wins 2025-26 Norris Trophy

The NHL announced this morning that Zach Werenski of the Columbus Blue Jackets has won the Norris Trophy, which is annually awarded to the defenseman who demonstrates the greatest all-around ability in his position.

Werenski finished the 2025-26 season scoring 22 goals for 81 points in 75 games this season. He received 113 first-place votes and 48 second-place votes with 16 third-place votes in the PWHA poll for a total of 1,589 points, and was a top-five pick on 194 of 198 ballots. A total of 14 defensemen received votes, with only Colorado’s Cale Makar eclipsing the 1,000-vote mark, second to Werenski and Buffalo’s Rasmus Dahlin, rounding out the top three with 13 first-place votes and 657 points.

The 28-year-old led the Blue Jackets in assists, points, points-per-game, and finished third in goals. He became the 10th defenseman in NHL history to lead his team in scoring in consecutive campaigns, scoring 82 points in 2024-25. Those back-to-back seasons helped him become the fifth U.S.-born defenseman in NHL history to record multiple 80-point campaigns and is the third to accomplish the feat in consecutive seasons, joining Phil Housley (1991-92 to 1992-93 in Winnipeg) and Brian Leetch (1990-91 to 1991-92 with the New York Rangers). In winning this season, he joins Rod Langway (2x), Chris Chelios (3x), Leetch (2x), Adam Fox, and Quinn Hughes as the sixth American player to win the Norris Trophy.

According to the Blue Jackets press release, Werenski is the seventh player in franchise history to win a major NHL award: joining Rick Nash – Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophy (NHL goals leader), 2003-04; Nash – NHL Foundation Player Award (Community Service), 2008-09; Steve Mason – Calder Memorial Trophy (Best Rookie), 2008-09; Sergei Bobrovsky – Vezina Trophy (Best Goalie), 2012-13 and 2016-17; Nick Foligno – King Clancy Award (Leadership & Community Service), 2016-17; Foligno – Mark Messier Leadership Award, 2016-17; John Tortorella – Jack Adams Trophy (Best Coach), 2016-17; Sean Monahan – Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy (Perseverance, Sportsmanship, Dedication to Hockey), 2024-25.

The Grosse Pointe, Michigan native is set to enter the fifth season of a six-year contract that he signed back in July of 2021 with a total value of $57.5MM (9.583MM AAV). He’s spent his entire career in Columbus, signing a three-year $15MM ($5MM) deal in 2019 and his entry-level contract, which paid him $925K annually from 2016 to 2019. After being taken eighth overall in 2015 by Columbus, Werenski spent his post-draft season with the University of Michigan, scoring 36 points in 36 games.

Photo Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images.

Predators To Hire Chris MacFarland As President Of Hockey Ops

According to Elliotte Friedman, the Nashville Predators are close to bringing on Chris MacFarland to be the organization’s new President of Hockey Operations & General Manager.

The Predators had been permitted to speak to Colorado Avalanche general manager Chris MacFarland regarding a front office role, as initially reported by Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic and Elliotte Friedman. Friedman also added that Predators owner Bill Haslam met face-to-face with MacFarland last night. The question had come down to what role and title MacFarland would be offered with Nashville, but it seems they’re going to ‘hand the keys‘ to him and want to close this quickly.

MacFarland is one of three finalists voted in contention for this season’s Jim Gregory award, which is given to the league’s best general manager. He has been with the Avalanche since the 2015-16 season, being promoted to general manager in Colorado after Joe Sakic was elevated to president of hockey operations shortly after the team’s 2022 Stanley Cup victory. That move came from the Avalanche’s yearning to keep MacFarland from interviewing for the Anaheim Ducks open position, later filled by Pat Verbeek. The 56-year-old had previously been with the Columbus Blue Jackets as a director of hockey operations and assistant general manager from 2000 up until the 2014-15 season. He spent the final two years in Columbus as the GM of the Springfield Thunderbirds, the AHL affiliate at the time.

In a previous 32 Thoughts podcast, it was said that the Predators were being patient in their search and were waiting to ask to converse with a top-tier candidate. The target that Friedman said was logical for Nashville, based on the length of their search, was MacFarland. Before this development, Friedman had spoken on Nashville’s radio show DMase, Vingan & Daunic on 102.5 The Game, saying that the Predators are standing pat for someone who they’re waiting to speak with, whether it be a member of a front office under contract or someone who is running a team that remains in the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

This was a development when the Avalanche were down three games to none in the Western Conference Finals against the Vegas Golden Knights. Friedman said that MacFarland wouldn’t likely depart from Colorado unless it was a ‘huge step up’, and added that Nashville might not offer that. He believed that the Predators would ask permission to talk to MacFarland in the event they’re eliminated.

Now that Colorado is in offseason mode, the Predators are taking a swing at grabbing a big front office name that has helped one franchise in the West. Nashville could use that help to get back to its Cup-contending ways that they haven’t seen for nearly a decade. The Predators have been looking for their next leader in the front office after it was announced mid-season that Barry Trotz was stepping down. Before that, they had David Poile, who served as the team’s GM from 1997 to 2023.

The Predators ended up sixth in the Central Division, missing the playoffs by four points in the 2025-26 season. With MacFarland set to step in, he’d begin his tenure with 12 draft picks in the upcoming 2026 NHL draft, starting with 10th overall and around $27MM in cap space to work with this upcoming offseason. Free agents the Predators will need to assess include the likes of forwards Erik Haula, Tyson Jost, and defenseman Kevin Gravel, rounded out by restricted free agent Justin Barron.

Despite missing the postseason for the past two campaigns, whoever inherits this team has a mix of youth talent among veteran stars in Filip Forsberg, Roman Josi, and Juuse Saros that can be supported in their quest back into the dance while still under contract. The salary cap rising to $104MM benefits everyone, but after the Predators inked Jonathan Marchessault, Steven Stamkos, and Brady Skjei to major contracts, they need to capitalize on the window they have with these notable names.

 

Why The Flames Should Root For A Golden Knights Stanley Cup Win

It may sting for Calgary Flames fans if you’re watching the Golden Knights succeed right now.

The young franchise that has taken the NHL by storm is en route to its third Stanley Cup final in its ninth season ever. Through its aggressive approach to making many ‘win-now’ moves to benefit this team’s contention window, it has been able to acquire many of the NHL’s top talents from other squads, and most have paid off in their time wearing gold and grey. A few of those acquisitions came from the blue line of the Canadian team north of Sin City.

The Flames are well set up in their current rebuild; they, in part, have Vegas to thank for that. Calgary currently has six total draft picks in the top-64 of the 2026 NHL draft. One of those 2026 selections in the top 32 came from dealing away Noah Hanifin to the Golden Knights for a 2025 first-round pick. That eventually resolved to Calgary’s second first-round selection coming up in this year’s draft because of a condition, as Vegas traded its 2025 first to San Jose in a package for Tomas Hertl. In 2025, the first was used by Nashville to select Ryker Lee via the Yaroslav Askarov trade.

So the conditions involved in Hanifin’s deal are resolved, and the Flames have a late first-round pick to utilize later in June. Along with that, a future selection in a later NHL Draft might go in favor of the Flames, depending on the outcome of this year’s Stanley Cup Final.

Back in the middle of January, the Flames traded defenseman Rasmus Andersson to the Golden Knights, retaining $2.275MM of his AAV for a package deal that highlighted a return of defensemen Zach Whitecloud, Abram Wiebe, and two draft selections added to the team’s cupboard. Both picks have conditions that could help the future of the Calgary Flames, but they’d have to witness their former players emerge victorious for a championship.

Both draft picks Vegas sent as of today reside as a 2027 first-round pick and a 2028 second-round pick, per Puckpedia. For the 2027 pick, it isn’t exactly locked in for Calgary yet. General Manager Kelly McCrimmon placed a top-10 protection on the 2027 selection. Although this outcome is unlikely, this means that if the Golden Knights end up finishing next season in the top-10 of the NHL Draft after the lottery, Calgary will instead receive a 2028 first-round pick. If Vegas ends up winning the Stanley Cup in 2026 and then they finish as one of the worst teams in 2027, Calgary would then receive a 2029 first from the Golden Knights.

The 2028 second also has a condition on it, but banks on the Golden Knights winning this year. If Vegas wins the 2026 Stanley Cup, the 2028 second-round pick will upgrade to a first-round pick for the Flames in that respective draft.

So if the Golden Knights are Stanley Cup Champions in 2026, all signs will point to the Flames receiving upgrades on their future capital. Barring a Vegas collapse in 2027, they’d own a Golden Knights first-round pick in each of the next three first rounds of the 2026, 2027, and 2028 NHL drafts, along with each of their own.

The Flames are set to begin their offseason with a selection at sixth overall in the 2026 NHL Draft in Buffalo, followed by a 30th or 31st overall selection, depending on the result of the Cup Final. Calgary finished this past season seventh in the Pacific Division with a record of 34-39-9, reaching just 77 points.

They have not made the Stanley Cup Playoffs since the 2021-22 season, but with these draft developments, it can add to a youthful prospect pool that can help them get back there in time. Most notably, their prospect pool will see two major additions alongside 20-year-old defenseman Zayne Parekh, 19-year-old NCAA centers in Cole Reschny and Cullen Potter, 20-year-old winger Matvei Gridin, and the 2025-26 NCAA scoring leader, Quinnipiac’s Ethan Wyttenbach.

Photo Credit: Sergei Belski-Imagn Images

Canucks Hire Manny Malhotra As Head Coach

According to a team announcement, the Vancouver Canucks have hired Manny Malhotra as their next head coach, as first reported by Frank Seravalli of Victory+.

Malhotra will be elevated from the coaching staff of the team’s AHL affiliate, the Abbotsford Canucks. This comes just shortly after the Canucks promoted Ryan Johnson to the position of GM. Johnson was previously GM in Abbotsford and an assistant GM in Vancouver.

Malhotra, 46, first became a member of the Canucks organization during his playing career. Malhotra played for Vancouver from 2010-11 to 2012-13, serving as a reliable bottom-six defensive specialist for the club.

He was a teammate of legendary Canucks duo Daniel Sedin and Henrik Sedin, individuals who will now oversee his work as head coach in their positions as co-presidents of hockey operations.

At the end of his playing career in 2015-16, Malhotra joined the coaching ranks in 2016-17 as a development coach in the Canucks organization.

Then, after just one season, he was promoted to the position of assistant coach, where he would remain for three seasons. Malhotra was an assistant on coach Travis Green’s 2019-20 Canucks team that made a run to the second round of the playoffs, the team’s first extended playoff run since reaching the Stanley Cup final in 2011.

Malhotra left Green’s staff to join the Toronto Maple Leafs as an assistant coach for the 2020-21 campaign, and he would go on to spend four seasons as an assistant on Sheldon Keefe’s staff. Prior to Malhotra’s arrival, the Maple Leafs had not won a playoff series since 2004. They finally broke that streak in Malhotra’s second season on Keefe’s staff, defeating the Tampa Bay Lightning in a hard-fought first-round series.

Keefe was fired as Maple Leafs head coach last summer, prompting Malhotra’s exit from Toronto. He returned to the Canucks organization, becoming head coach in Abbotsford. He was an instant success there. Led by some talented youngsters in Arshdeep Bains, Aatu Raty, and Arturs Silovs, as well as valuable veterans such as Sammy Blais and Christian Wolanin, the Canucks had a stellar 2024-25 season. They went 44-24-4, and won the Calder Cup for the first time in franchise history.

While Malhotra and the AHL Canucks took a step back this past season, it’s worth noting that the NHL Canucks’ plunge to the bottom of the league standings impacted the stability of the team’s AHL roster. Malhotra simply did not have the benefit of coaching a stable core group of players in 2025-26, the way he did in 2024-25.

In any case, Malhotra’s work as an assistant, and as a championship-winning minor-league head coach, clearly impressed the Canucks. He’ll take over a franchise that has undergone a significant amount of hockey operations change over the last year, and is expected to be in a rebuilding phase for the next few years.

Taking over a rebuilding Canucks team won’t be an easy task for a first-time NHL head coach (former head coach Adam Foote was fired after his rookie season behind the bench), but Malhotra’s player development background could pay real dividends for a team set to increasingly rely on young talent.

The Canucks are set to add a significant amount of youth as they rebuild over the next few years, an influx of promising, but inexperienced talent that could begin with the No. 3 pick in the draft later this month. The Athletic’s Corey Pronman wrote in his most recent mock draft that the “smart money is on” the Canucks selecting Brantford Bulldogs center Caleb Malhotra with the pick. Malhotra is the consensus top center in the upcoming draft, and is also, notably, Manny’s son. Whether this hire will in any way impact the Canucks’ draft plans is still unclear.

But looking beyond just the draft, the Canucks’ decision to promote Malhotra as their NHL head coach speaks to the organization’s desire to build a contending team from the ground up. The Johnson/Malhotra GM/head coach pairing already delivered championship results in the AHL, and the hope will be that they can do the same at the game’s highest level.

Photos courtesy of Jean-Yves Ahern-USA TODAY Sports

Minor Transactions: 06/01/2026

Today has been a busy day in the wider hockey world, in large part due to the fact that KHL contracts expire May 31. That made today effectively the first day of KHL free agency. This was reflected in the handful of KHL prospects signing their ELC’s earlier today, including New Jersey Devils first-rounder Anton Silayev. It also has led to numerous additional player moves.

Here, we’ll recap all of the notable transactions from the wider hockey world, largely focusing on player movement in the top professional leagues of Europe, involving several former NHL players:

  • There was a swap of quality young forward talent in the KHL today, as SKA St. Petersburg acquired 23-year-old scorer Vasily Atanasov from Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod in exchange for two-time KHL Rookie of the Month Matvei Polyakov. Depth defenseman Arseny Varlakov also went from Torpedo to SKA in the deal. Polyakov is fresh off a breakout rookie season for SKA, scoring 16 goals and 29 points in 63 games. Atanasov, who is under contract through the 2027-28 season, has been a lineup regular for Torpedo since 2022-23. His best season came in 2023-24, when he scored 19 goals and 49 points in 46 games. In two seasons since, Atanasov has 38 goals and 71 points in 121 games. There have been credible reports in the past that Atanasov was receiving NHL interest, but he elected to remain in the KHL. Now, he’ll continue his KHL career playing for a different franchise.
  • 2016 Philadelphia Flyers first-round pick German Rubtsov agreed on a three-year contract extension with the KHL’s Spartak Moscow, the team announced today. Rubtsov, 27, has been with the Spartak organization for the last four years. He was once a prized Flyers prospect but struggled to adapt to the North American professional game and played just three seasons in the Flyers’ system. But while Rubtsov failed to develop into an NHL player for Philadelphia, he has been a developmental success story for Spartak. He was a low-scoring forward playing in the second-tier VHL in 2022-23, and the following year, he scored just 10 points in 51 games as a full-time KHLer in Moscow. But he showed some signs of growth in 2024-25, scoring 13 goals and 25 points for Spartak. Then, he had a breakout 2025-26 season, potting 14 goals and 30 points in 50 KHL games, while winning 51.7% of his draws. His breakout has been rewarded with a new contract extension that will keep Rubtsov in Moscow until the summer of 2029.
  • Former Tampa Bay Lightning, Montreal Canadiens, and Calgary Flames defenseman Nikita Nesterov signed a two-year contract extension with CSKA Moscow. Nesterov has been a staple of the CSKA teams of the last half-decade, playing for the team from 2017-18 through 2019-20, and then 2021-22 through this past season. In 2022, he was named CSKA’s captain. While Nesterov’s attempt to return to the NHL with the Flames in 2020 lasted just 38 games, he’s been a quality KHL blueliner in Moscow. He’s a five-time KHL all-star and led his club to back-to-back Gagarin Cup titles in 2022 and 2023.
  • After two seasons playing minor-league hockey in North America, 2019 fourth-round pick Case McCarthy has elected to continue his career overseas. McCarthy signed a contract with the Stavanger Oilers, one of the top franchises in the Metal Ligaen, Norway’s professional hockey league. McCarthy’s professional career began in the spring of 2024, when he signed an ATO and two-year AHL contract with the Hartford Wolf Pack. McCarthy was finishing up a five-season career at Boston University, serving as captain as a senior. He played in two games for Hartford that spring, and for the last two seasons he has occupied a place on the AHL/ECHL bubble, getting into 27 AHL contests and 37 games in the third tier. He is likely to get a significant boost in playing time in Norway compared to what he received in his first two years of pro hockey.
  • Derek Barach, a consistent 20-goal, 40-point scorer in the KHL, has signed a two-year contract with CSKA Moscow. Barach was a point-per-game college forward during his time at Mercyhurst University, scoring 144 points in 150 career NCAA games. Those performances earned him a shot in the AHL with the Cleveland Monsters, but after scoring 31 points in 93 games across two AHL teams, Barach signed in the Finnish Liiga in the summer of 2021. He found instant success in Europe, scoring 18 goals and 32 points in 56 games for Ässät Pori in the 2021-22 season. He had a successful two-year run in Finland before signing in the KHL for 2023-24, with Vityaz Moscow Region. He has kept up his form from Liiga in the KHL, and has 118 points in 198 career KHL games. This past season, he scored 21 goals and 40 points for Metallurg Magnitogorsk, a season that earned him a deal with CSKA.
  • 2020 San Jose Sharks second-round pick Tristen Robins has signed a deal with the SHL’s IF Björklöven, ending his career in the Czech Extraliga after one season. The 24-year-old was a star WHL scorer who showed real promise in his rookie AHL campaign, scoring 17 goals and 38 points in 64 games for the 2022-23 San Jose Barracuda. But Robins struggled to be as productive in each of the following two seasons, paving the way for him to sign with Rytíři Kladno in Czechia last summer. He had a strong 2025-26 season, scoring 18 goals and 35 points in 45 games, and will hope to build on that momentum next season in the SHL.
  • Former Montreal Canadiens defenseman Darren Dietz has signed a two-year contract with Sibir Novosibirsk in the KHL. The 32-year-old defenseman spent last season with Dinamo Minsk, where he played in a top-four capacity and scored 23 points in 56 games. While Dietz’s North American career lasted just four years and consisted of 13 games in the NHL and 218 in the AHL, he has been a star for more than a half-decade. Dietz was named the KHL’s best defenseman in his second season in the league, scoring 53 points in 62 games in 2018-19. Since then, he’s racked up honors including KHL all-star and two Gagarin Cup titles.

Michigan Considered Frontrunners For Landon Dupont

As was the case with Gavin McKenna a year ago, there is plenty of speculation and excitement regarding where Landon Dupont will make his collegiate commitment. According to Scott Wheeler of The Athletic, the University of Michigan appears to be the frontrunner for his services.

That isn’t to say that things can’t change, as they oftentimes do. Wheeler himself admitted that nothing is firm since Dupont’s season just ended yesterday. He’s expected to make the jump to the NCAA ahead of the 2027 NHL Draft, where he is expected to go first overall, but he hasn’t made a concrete decision just yet.

Outside of the Wolverines, the usual suspects have also expressed interest. Listing the University of Denver, the University of Minnesota, and Michigan State University, Dupont is at least guaranteed he’ll go to a good program. According to Wheeler, few schools have the same need as Michigan for a top-pairing defenseman, and even fewer possess the financial resources that the B1G program can allocate to any requirement.

If the Wolverines land Dupont, there’s no question they’ll have landed their top defenseman. Before turning 18, the Calgary, Alberta native has spent two years with the WHL’s Everett Silvertips, scoring 35 goals and 133 points in 127 games. In this year’s postseason, Dupont registered five goals and 23 points in 17 games, helping the Silvertips to the Memorial Cup Final.

Multiple Players Have NHL Draft Rights Expire

According to PuckPedia, multiple prospects had their draft rights expire at the deadline today, meaning they’ll re-enter the 2026 NHL Draft or become unrestricted free agents.

Two distinct groups are impacted by this deadline. Prospects playing in the Canadian Major Junior leagues (OHL, QMJHL, or WHL) or those playing in Europe.

Of those players from the CHL who have played through their age-20 seasons, they’ll re-enter the 2026 NHL Draft, or become unrestricted free agents if they go undrafted. For the European players, they’ll become unrestricted free agents, though many typically stay in Europe to continue their professional careers.

The only other prospect whose draft rights expired, and didn’t meet either of the above requirements, was Toronto Maple Leafs 2025 draftee Matthew Hlacar. Hlacar was taken with the 217th overall pick of last year’s draft, and scored six goals and 12 points in 51 games for the OHL’s Kitchener Rangers this season. Toronto didn’t issue him a bona fide offer, which is simply tendering the player a league-minimum, entry-level deal to extend their signing rights.

The remaining prospects who will re-enter the 2026 NHL Draft or become UFAs are as follows:

D Ales Cech (Mammoth, 5-153, 2024)
D Simon Forsmark (Hurricanes, 4-101, 2022)
F Max Graham (Penguins, 5-139*, 2024)
F Petr Hauser (Oilers, 5-141**, 2022)
F Nils Juntorp (Hurricanes, 6-188***, 2022)
F Gustav Karlsson (Sabres, 6-187, 2022)
F Maximilian Kilpinen (Red Wings, 4-129, 2022)
D Kasper Kulonummi (Predators, 3-84, 2022)
F Hunter Laing (Flames, 6-170, 2024)
G Ryerson Leenders (Sabres, 7-219, 2024)
D Nathan Mayes (Maple Leafs, 7-225, 2024)
G Landon Miller (Red Wings, 4-126, 2024)
F Kaden Pitre (Lightning, 6-181, 2024)
F Joel Ratkovic Berndtsson (Sabres, 7-202, 2022)
F Santeri Sulku (Flyers, 7-197, 2022)
D Albin Sundin (Oilers, 6-183, 2024)
F Riku Tohila (Blackhawks, 7-199, 2022)
G Jakub Vondras (Hurricanes, 6-171, 2022)

* Originally drafted by the New Jersey Devils; traded to the Penguins in March 2025. 
** Originally drafted by the New Jersey Devils; traded to the Oilers in March 2025.
*** Originally drafted by the Chicago Blackhawks; traded to the Hurricanes in January 2025.

Central Notes: Korchinski, Prospal, Rodrigue

After keeping him in the AHL for most of the past two years, the Chicago Blackhawks face a difficult scenario regarding Kevin Korchinski and his future. A restricted free agent this summer, Scott Powers of The Athletic believes they’ll retain Korchinski, while letting Ethan Del Mastro walk this offseason.

That’s not to say there was any indication the Blackhawks would let Korchinski head to a new team, but it’s still a question of where he fits. Powers rightly pointed out that Korchinski has little trade value (compared to his draft positioning) at the moment, is likely too good to return to the AHL, and not good enough to warrant consistent NHL playing time.

Hopefully, for Chicago’s sake, Korchinski has a big summer and comes into training camp like a bat out of hell. It wouldn’t do much for his development to keep him as the team’s seventh defenseman next season, but that’s the way things are headed unless he takes a major step forward.

Other notes from the Central Division:

  • After spending the last three years with the AHL’s Rochester Americans, former player Václav Prospal may be headed to the NHL for the first time in his coaching career. On his 32 Thoughts podcast, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman indicated that Prospal may join the St. Louis Blues next season as an assistant coach. The last time we worked in the NHL was in the 2013-14 season when he served as a professional scout for the New York Rangers.
  • According to a team announcement, the Minnesota Wild have named Sylvain Rodrigue as the team’s Director of Goaltending, a newly created post. Rodrigue will be tasked with working closely with Minnesota’s goaltending coaches at all levels of the organization and creating development plans for all of the team’s netminders. Rodrigue spent the last two years with the AHL’s Charlotte Checkers after spending nearly a decade in the Edmonton Oilers organization.

Submit Your Questions For The #PHRMailbag

The calendar has turned to June and only two teams remain in the playoffs, Carolina and Vegas.  Beyond them, everyone else is in full offseason planning mode.  The draft is less than four weeks away and free agency right on the horizon after that.  With that in mind, it’s a good time to open up the mailbag once again.

Our last call for questions yielded enough queries to fill three columns.  Topics in the first included the Draft Lottery, possible fits for a Connor Hellebuyck trade, and impressive late-season rookie performances.  In the second, there were questions about Winnipeg’s second-line center situation, Chicago’s goaltending situation, and the President’s Trophy ‘curse’.  Meanwhile, in the third, topics included an ideal offseason for the Rangers, a Robert Thomas to Detroit trade scenario, and trying to find data to support the challenges presented offensively for teams in back-to-back games.

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.

Panthers Sign Matvei Shuravin To Entry-Level Contract

According to an announcement from his agent, Dan Milstein, defenseman Matvei Shuravin has signed a three-year, entry-level contract with the Florida Panthers. The entry-level deal is expected to begin in the 2026-27 campaign.

Shuravin, 20, was drafted with the 97th overall pick of the 2024 NHL Draft by the Panthers. He was coming off a season primarily spent with the MHL’s Krasnaya Armiya Moskva, tallying seven assists in 22 games. In 11 games with the KHL’s CSKA Moskva, Shuravin scored two assists.

His post-draft season was spent again with the MHL’s Krasnaya Armiya Moskva, where his offensive prowess appeared to blossom. After registering single-digit scoring totals the year before, Shuravin finished the 2024-25 campaign with four goals and 24 points in 38 games with a +26 rating.

Unfortunately, Shuravin had little stability this past season. The Moscow, Russia native skated in 21 games for CSKA Moskva (KHL), 12 games for Zvezda Moskva (VHL), and 15 games for Krasnaya Armiya Moskva (MHL). He failed to register more than three points in any of the leagues.

The Panthers’ desire to sign him is likely two-fold. After a season marred by injuries, Florida is prioritizing depth this offseason. Shuravin was an easy target considering he is physically ready for North American hockey, and the organization already held his signing rights.

Additionally, the team may believe that better stability could help get Shuravin’s development back on track. He’s unlikely to make the Panthers’ opening night roster out of training camp, and assuming the team has fewer injuries next year, he should be able to spend most of, if not the entire year, with the AHL’s Charlotte Checkers.