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PHR Mailbag: Kraken, Player Development, Blackhawks, Bad Contracts, Flyers

December 25, 2025 at 9:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Topics in this edition of the PHR Mailbag include which of Seattle’s pending UFAs could be on the move, if some Chicago prospects could join the team this season, and more.  If your question doesn’t appear here, check back in our last two mailbag columns.

yeasties: The Kraken appear to be positioned well to be a deadline seller. Assuming they sputter out and become sellers, which of their pending UFAs do you think will be dealt and who will be kept and extended?

For those who aren’t too familiar with Seattle’s pending UFA list, it’s quite a big one, even after they moved Mason Marchment to Columbus on Friday before the roster freeze.  Up front, they have Jaden Schwartz, Jordan Eberle, and Eeli Tolvanen all set to hit the market in July.  They also have Jamie Oleksiak on the back end and since goaltender Matt Murray has been in the NHL all season, I’ll give him a mention here as well although I wouldn’t be shocked if he doesn’t get re-signed or traded by the early-March trade deadline.

Oleksiak is the one I’m most confident in saying will be moved.  His role on the depth chart has been reduced and it’s hard to imagine they’ll want to sign him to another multi-year deal around this price point.  On the other hand, teams want big defensemen with some snarl at the deadline and Oleksiak provides that.  Despite being in the midst of a down year, I expect they’ll get a strong market for his services.

Up front, I’d put Schwartz as the most likely to be dealt.  He has had some good moments when healthy (including this season) but he can’t stay healthy.  However, with salary retention, some contender will want him as a middle-six upgrade to bolster their offensive depth and maybe play on the power play.  On the flip side, I think Eberle stays.  Yes, he could go be a middle-six player somewhere but I think they’ll want to keep him around, assuming a reasonable extension could be worked out.

I could see Seattle taking a run at re-signing Tolvanen.  He isn’t having a great year so maybe they look to try to get him at a lower-market rate.  Failing that, he still has enough of a track record that there should be some teams that like him as more of a depth addition.

frozenaquatic: I hear a lot about prospect development with how bad the team I root for (the Rangers) is at it. I had heard that Tanner Glass and Jed Ortmeyer, two plugs, were in charge of “player development,” but saw some folks talking about how that just meant they were in charge of making sure prospects had proper housing and resources to financial management and things like that, and that they weren’t really coaches. I always hear the refrain that the “NHL isn’t a development league” in the sense that coaches aren’t expected to coddle young players (unless they’re in a full rebuild).

My question is: if a team has “bad player development,” is that more on the Department of Player Development, the scouts, the AHL coaches? Maybe even the skills coach? Let’s say, for instance, the Rangers wanted to get better at “player development” overall. Would that be an overhaul of the scouting department to look for different baseline skills in players? Or something else? I’m thinking of how Laf, Kakko, Kravtsov, Andersson, etc all panned out–is that just horrible scouting, terrible luck, or the mysterious player development?

In recent years, it feels like a lot of teams are adding Player Development coaches.  But most of the time, those are recently retired players.  It feels like these positions are created to give them a chance to see if a coaching position is something they might be interested in.  Meanwhile, they get to relay some pointers to the prospects and help them along.  From a starting point, that’s not a bad thing to have and it does allow those former players to slowly improve those coaching skills.  Ideally, you might want to have someone (or more) who can work on more specialized training for each player to maximize those efforts but Glass and Ortmeyer can certainly be part of a quality department.

As for where the blame might lie when it comes to a lack of proper player development, there’s plenty to go around.  The scouts may have misread the projectability of certain skills although I won’t critique them for the first two on that list as they were largely consensus picks at where they were selected.  Did the Player Development department work enough with the players?  I’d lump the skills coaches into that area in terms of coming up with the proper training regimens.  Then you have the coaching staffs at both the AHL and NHL levels.  Yes, the NHL is not a development league in theory but the reality is, a lot of development does happen at the top level.  Some of it also has to fall on the players.  Some train better than others over the offseason, some are more dedicated to the finer points of development.  I’m speaking generally here, not talking specifically about any of the players you listed.

There’s no simple fix or overhaul here.  Scouts can be evaluated based on their reports; did those players progress over time?  Keep the best ones and if there are some who haven’t been as strong, then you could look to make a change.  The same goes in the development department (more teams seem to be drifting toward adding more people rather than changing some) and with the coaching staffs although they have to balance winning and development at the same time.  In a perfect world, it’s probably a slow build over making a bunch of changes all at once.

Unclemike1526: Do you know when the KHL and SHL seasons end? Frondell will definitely be here after that and depending on whether the Hawks still have a shot at the Playoffs and could play more than 10 games and burn his 1st year of his ELC. Kantserov is not eligible for an ELC but hopefully comes over here and could help also. I doubt the Hawks will let Frondell play more than 10 games if they’re out of it entirely. They could use his size either on the wing or even at C. What do you think?

The KHL regular season ends on March 20th while the SHL ends on March 14th.  Also worth noting, last year, the KHL playoffs ended on May 21st and the SHL ended on May 1st.

Chicago has fallen off a bit since the callout for questions and are now hovering near the bottom of the league and don’t have Connor Bedard.  As things stand, I don’t think the playoffs are a realistic possibility.  However, there’s an outside shot that Anton Frondell could get in a game or two depending on how Djurgardens fares in the playoffs.  There probably won’t be more than ten games left by then so they’re not at risk of burning a year of his entry-level deal.

Roman Kantersov is actually eligible for an entry-level contract as he’s only 21.  It will just be a two-year pact instead of three.  But it might not matter anyway as Magnitogorsk is the top team in the league and likely heading for a long playoff run.  If they went out early enough, it’s possible they’d sign him and burn a year now.  They wouldn’t want to do that but that might be needed to convince him to sign, knowing he could exit the entry-level restrictions a year earlier.  I wouldn’t expect that to come into play but we’ll see what happens in the playoffs.

tucsontoro: Brian – we’re already hearing lots of chatter on who might be on the move. What do you consider the worst contracts in the league right now?

I don’t think the players on the worst contracts in the league are probably going to be on the move but let’s go over some of the bad ones.

Jonathan Huberdeau’s contract with Calgary has to be here.  Don’t get me wrong, I didn’t hate the trade for the Flames at the time it was made.  Getting what we thought was still a top-line winger and a strong defenseman wasn’t a bad return for Matthew Tkachuk.  Of course, Huberdeau is being paid like his best year with Florida while producing about half of the points, making it a well-above-market deal.  There’s a temptation to put Elias Pettersson here on the first year of his new contract but let’s let the season play out and see how he fares as the undisputed top player in Vancouver now.

On the back end, Darnell Nurse is being paid as an elite two-way defender.  He hasn’t been that.  Offensively, he’s more of a third option with them needing to pay to bring in Jake Walman to pick up some of the secondary slack since Nurse wasn’t producing.  Defensively, elite is not the word I would use.  He’s a serviceable top-four defender, sure, but not a number one like he’s being paid as.  On the lower end of the scale, Ryan Graves started the season in the minors after clearing waivers and is now a sixth or seventh option on most nights.  He still has three years left at $4.5MM and even if the Penguins retained the maximum 50%, there still wouldn’t be a trade market for him.

Now, since you referenced this question after mentioning chatter about players who could be on the move, I wanted to think of some bad contracts that could be dealt.  One that comes to mind is Barclay Goodrow.  He’s on an expiring deal at $3.64MM and is a fourth liner.  However, he’s the type of gritty role player some teams will covet and if there’s one with a lot of cap space, I could see him moving.  I’m also wondering about Patrik Laine ($8.7MM, pending UFA) in Montreal.  Since they’ve gone and added Alexandre Texier and Phillip Danault, is there a spot for him when the team is fully healthy?  If not, it wouldn’t shock me to see them try to move him with half retention to give him a chance to play down the stretch and help his case in free agency.  The return would be minimal but after blowing through their remaining room to add Danault, clearing half of Laine’s deal would give them some extra flexibility.

Emoney123: What’s the next move for Danny Briere? Seems Martone, Nesbitt, Luchanko, Bump, Barkey, and Bjarnason are a few years away and with only their own #1 pick this year, how does Briere keep the Flyers in the playoff hunt? Seen this before with big crash and burn late in the second half of the season. Rick Tocchet for Coach of the Year if the Flyers make playoffs?

Right now, the next move is likely patience.  At the moment, Philadelphia is right in the thick of the playoff race, one that no one seems to be making a push to run away with.  It’s great that they’re in it right now but will they still be in the hunt at the Olympic break?  I think that’s going to be the decision point for a lot of teams as to whether to buy, sell, or largely stand pat and the Flyers should be one of those.

If I’m being honest, I’m not sold on them being a viable playoff threat.  A bunch of overtime games have kept them in the mix which is fine but not necessarily sustainable over the course of a full season.  Accordingly, my inclination is that they largely hold or sell a bit, depending on if they can get Christian Dvorak signed to a contract extension or not in the new year.

That said, you asked me about a playoff scenario so there are two buying scenarios I can think of.  One I’ve written about in an older mailbag column and that’s one that sees them buying low on someone who could be around beyond the season.  In other words, another Trevor Zegras type of move where you’re hoping a change of scenery gets them going while knowing that a futures payment is justifiable given that the player isn’t a rental.  That’s still on the table.

The other one is where they’re a soft buyer and basically tell teams that they’ll take a contract off their hands.  With double retention off the table now, other buyers will need to move some bodies out to make the money work for other trades.  This is a good spot for GM Daniel Briere to tell teams that they can facilitate one of those moves by taking an expiring contract back.  Ideally, the player is a forward with a bit of offensive upside.  Frankly, the Laine scenario I mentioned above feels like something worthwhile doing in this instance, flipping a minor leaguer or futures in return.  It’s something that doesn’t jeopardize the future and sends a message to the players that they’re not giving up.  It’s not the route I’d probably go but if they’re buying, I think it’s going to be low-cost acquisitions that don’t jeopardize the future.

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Black Ace57: Five years from now, do you think the Flyers are going to regret not bottoming out this year and some of the previous years? I don’t see how they thread the needle on the lack of a 1C or 1D on this team without top-five picks.

While getting a top pick is the best pathway to getting one of those players, sometimes they do go a little later in the draft.  And, of course, some of the teams that have bottomed out completely haven’t been able to thread the needle in terms of getting back to contention.  It’s clear that there are some franchises that have taken notice of that and acted accordingly and the Flyers appear to be one of those.

Briere has assembled a quality group of prospects over his tenure and they have some extra picks coming in 2027 as well to try to further bolster that core.  If things pan out, they should at least be able to get back to being a legitimate playoff contender for a while with some years of being a bigger threat along the way.  That may not sound overly appealing but to ownership, consistent playoff revenue is great.

So, from that standpoint, I don’t think they will.  When the decision is made to not completely bottom out in the hope of being more competitive a little quicker, you’re taking the trade off of perhaps not getting as much of the upper-echelon prospects in exchange for more short-term playoff revenue if all goes well.  I think it will go well so no, I can’t see ownership regretting it and since they set the standard, the hockey operations staff are simply following their marching orders.  With that in mind, Briere and company probably wouldn’t be regretting things as well.

noname617: Too bad the NHL All-Star break won’t feature the same format as last year. What a wild success, I can’t imagine anything coming as unique and competitive.

It’s not the 4 Nations Face-Off but the Olympic tournament is going to feature most of the same players from that event in a best-on-best format.  Sure, there are some weaker countries participating in the event which will result in some games that aren’t quite as competitive but the semifinals could very well feature those countries in extremely meaningful games.  Those should be great.

The really sad time will be next year when we go back to the usual All-Star festivities in an exhibition game that a lot of them would rather not be in to begin with.  We’re really going to miss the best-on-best format in 2027.

Photo courtesy of Perry Nelson-Imagn Images.

NHL PHR Mailbag| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Snapshots: Evans, Misa, Horvat

December 25, 2025 at 7:12 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

While the Canadiens have not provided an injury update on Jake Evans after he was injured on Saturday against Pittsburgh in a knee-on-knee collision, it appears they’ve avoided the worst-case scenario, according to Sportsnet’s Eric Engels.  However, he could still be facing somewhat of an extended absence.  In the first season of a four-year, $11.4MM contract signed near the trade deadline last season, the veteran has seen his production taper off as he has five goals and five assists through 34 games.  He had been playing a big role defensively although the addition of Phillip Danault last week was in part intended to give him some help on that front.  Instead, it’ll be a while before Montreal gets to have both of them on the ice but it appears that Evans’ injury could have been much worse than it was.

Elsewhere around the hockey world:

  • While forward Michael Misa left Canada’s World Junior pre-tournament game on Tuesday due to injury, it shouldn’t keep him out of the lineup when things get underway on Friday, relays TSN’s Mark Masters. Misa was a late arrival after being loaned out by the Sharks and has only played in seven games this season where he has three points.  San Jose still has to decide if they’re going to bring the 18-year-old back after the tournament or loan him back to junior and not officially begin the first year of his entry-level contract.  If there are any lingering injury concerns by the time this tournament ends, that would certainly play a big role in their decision.
  • Islanders center Bo Horvat is tracking toward returning on Saturday from his lower-body injury, according to Stefan Rosner in his latest post for The Elmonters. He has missed the last two weeks with the issue and initially was expected to miss three weeks so if he is back this weekend, he’ll be a bit ahead of schedule.  The 30-year-old leads the Isles in goals (19) and points (31) in 32 games and his performance is believed to have him in consideration for one of the final spots on Canada’s Olympic roster.  Showing that he’s fully recovered from the injury could help his cause before rosters are due to be submitted on Wednesday.

Montreal Canadiens| New York Islanders| San Jose Sharks| Snapshots Bo Horvat| Jake Evans| Michael Misa

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NHL Players Who Can Veto Trades In 2025-26

December 25, 2025 at 4:45 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

Trade and movement protection is becoming increasingly common in the NHL. There are three forms. A no-movement clause, in addition to giving the player the right to veto any trade, allows them to block waiver placements and subsequent minor-league reassignments as well. No-trade clauses are the simplest, giving the player full veto power over a trade, but also the rarest.

The most common form of trade protection is the modified no-trade clause, which allows a player to submit a list of teams they can or can’t be traded to. An M-NTC can also include kicker dates that change the level of protection the player has. Most every team has at least one of these on their books.

To be eligible for an NMC, NTC, or M-NTC, the player must be at least 27 years old at the beginning of the league year or have accumulated seven years of service – in other words, the same requirements for unrestricted free agency.

With those criteria in mind, here are the players who must give their consent to some degree if their teams want to trade them during the 2025-26 league year. Players with M-NTCs have the amount of teams they can block a trade to in parentheses (with noted exceptions for rare ’yes’ or approved trade lists).


Anaheim Ducks

No-movement clauses: none

No-trade clauses:

  • C Mikael Granlund

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • D Radko Gudas (10)
  • RW Alex Killorn (15)
  • LW Chris Kreider (15)
  • RW Troy Terry (10)
  • D Jacob Trouba (15)
  • LW Frank Vatrano (7)

Boston Bruins

No-movement clauses:

  • RW Viktor Arvidsson
  • C Elias Lindholm
  • D Hampus Lindholm
  • D Charlie McAvoy
  • RW David Pastrňák

No-trade clauses:

  • LW Tanner Jeannot
  • D Nikita Zadorov

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • D Henri Jokiharju (8)
  • C Pavel Zacha (8)

Buffalo Sabres

No-movement clauses:

  • D Rasmus Dahlin

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • LW Jordan Greenway (5)
  • C Tage Thompson (5)
  • RW Alex Tuch (5)
  • LW Jason Zucker (5)

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Calgary Flames

No-movement clauses:

  • C Mikael Backlund
  • LW Jonathan Huberdeau

No-trade clauses:

  • D MacKenzie Weegar

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • D Rasmus Andersson (6)
  • RW Blake Coleman (10 approved)
  • C Nazem Kadri (13)
  • LW Yegor Sharangovich (10)

Carolina Hurricanes

No-movement clauses:

  • G Frederik Andersen
  • C Sebastian Aho
  • LW William Carrier
  • D Jalen Chatfield
  • LW Nikolaj Ehlers
  • LW Taylor Hall
  • D Jaccob Slavin
  • C Jordan Staal

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • G Frederik Andersen (20, reduces to 5 on Feb. 23 if he doesn’t play 1/3 of games by Feb. 15)
  • D Shayne Gostisbehere (15)
  • C Jesperi Kotkaniemi (10)
  • LW Jordan Martinook (10)
  • RW Eric Robinson (8)
  • LW Andrei Svechnikov (10 approved)
  • D Sean Walker (15)

Chicago Blackhawks

No-movement clauses: none

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • LW Tyler Bertuzzi (10)
  • RW André Burakovsky (10)
  • C Ryan Donato (10)
  • RW Ilya Mikheyev (12)
  • D Connor Murphy (10)
  • LW Teuvo Teräväinen (8)

Colorado Avalanche

No-movement clauses:

  • LW Gabriel Landeskog
  • C Nathan MacKinnon
  • D Devon Toews

No-trade clauses:

  • C Brock Nelson

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • G Mackenzie Blackwood (6)
  • LW Ross Colton (12)
  • D Samuel Girard (9)
  • LW Gabriel Landeskog (12)
  • LW Artturi Lehkonen (12)
  • D Josh Manson (12)
  • RW Valeri Nichushkin (12)
  • RW Logan O’Connor (6)

Columbus Blue Jackets

No-movement clauses:

  • C Charlie Coyle
  • C Sean Monahan
  • D Ivan Provorov
  • D Zach Werenski

No-trade clauses:

  • D Damon Severson

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • C Charlie Coyle (3)
  • D Erik Gudbranson (10)
  • C Boone Jenner (8)
  • LW Mason Marchment (10)
  • G Elvis Merzļikins (10)
  • RW Mathieu Olivier (10)
  • LW Miles Wood (6)

Dallas Stars

No-movement clauses:

  • LW Jamie Benn
  • C Matt Duchene
  • D Miro Heiskanen
  • C Roope Hintz
  • RW Mikko Rantanen
  • C Tyler Seguin

No-trade clauses:

  • D Esa Lindell

Modified no-trade clauses: none

Detroit Red Wings

No-movement clauses: none

No-trade clauses:

  • RW Patrick Kane
  • C Dylan Larkin

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • D Ben Chiarot (10)
  • C J.T. Compher (10)
  • C Andrew Copp (10)
  • LW Alex DeBrincat (16)
  • G John Gibson (10)
  • D Justin Holl (10)

Edmonton Oilers

No-movement clauses:

  • C Leon Draisaitl
  • C Trent Frederic
  • C Adam Henrique
  • LW Zach Hyman
  • C Connor McDavid
  • C Ryan Nugent-Hopkins
  • D Darnell Nurse
  • RW Jack Roslovic
  • D Jake Walman

No-trade clauses:

  • LW Andrew Mangiapane

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • LW Mattias Janmark (10)
  • G Tristan Jarry (12)
  • RW Jack Roslovic (4 approved)

Florida Panthers

No-movement clauses:

  • C Aleksander Barkov
  • C Sam Bennett
  • D Aaron Ekblad
  • D Gustav Forsling
  • D Seth Jones
  • LW Brad Marchand
  • RW Sam Reinhart
  • RW Matthew Tkachuk
  • LW Carter Verhaeghe

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • G Sergei Bobrovsky (16)
  • RW Sam Reinhart (16)

Los Angeles Kings

No-movement clauses:

  • LW Kevin Fiala
  • C Anže Kopitar

No-trade clauses:

  • RW Corey Perry

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • D Cody Ceci (10)
  • D Drew Doughty (7 approved)
  • D Brian Dumoulin (10)
  • D Joel Edmundson (10)
  • LW Warren Foegele (5)
  • RW Adrian Kempe (10)
  • G Darcy Kuemper (10)

Minnesota Wild

No-movement clauses:

  • C Joel Eriksson Ek
  • LW Marcus Foligno
  • G Filip Gustavsson
  • LW Kirill Kaprizov
  • D Jacob Middleton
  • RW Mats Zuccarello

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • C Joel Eriksson Ek (10)
  • C Ryan Hartman (15)
  • D Jared Spurgeon (10)
  • RW Vladimir Tarasenko (8 approved)

Montreal Canadiens

No-movement clauses:

  • RW Brendan Gallagher

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • RW Josh Anderson (5)
  • C Phillip Danault (10)
  • RW Brendan Gallagher (6)
  • LW Patrik Laine (10)
  • D Mike Matheson (8)

Nashville Predators

No-movement clauses:

  • LW Filip Forsberg
  • D Roman Josi
  • LW Jonathan Marchessault
  • G Juuse Saros
  • D Brady Skjei
  • C Steven Stamkos

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • C Erik Haula (6)
  • D Brady Skjei (15)

New Jersey Devils

No-movement clauses:

  • RW Jesper Bratt
  • D Dougie Hamilton
  • G Jacob Markström
  • RW Timo Meier
  • LW Ondřej Palát

No-trade clauses:

  • G Jake Allen
  • RW Connor Brown
  • D Brenden Dillon
  • D Johnathan Kovacevic
  • D Brett Pesce

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • RW Evgenii Dadonov (NTC until March 1, then 10)
  • D Dougie Hamilton (10 approved)
  • C Nico Hischier (10)
  • RW Stefan Noesen (10)
  • RW Ondřej Palát (10 approved)
  • D Jonas Siegenthaler (10)

New York Islanders

No-movement clauses:

  • G Ilya Sorokin

No-trade clauses:

  • LW Anthony Duclair
  • C Bo Horvat
  • D Scott Mayfield
  • RW Kyle Palmieri
  • D Ryan Pulock

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • C Mathew Barzal (22)
  • LW Jonathan Drouin (16)
  • LW Pierre Engvall (16)
  • LW Anders Lee (15)
  • C Jean-Gabriel Pageau (16)
  • D Adam Pelech (16)
  • G Semyon Varlamov (16)

New York Rangers

No-movement clauses:

  • D Adam Fox
  • D Vladislav Gavrikov
  • C J.T. Miller
  • LW Artemi Panarin
  • G Igor Shesterkin
  • C Mika Zibanejad

No-trade clauses:

  • D William Borgen

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • G Jonathan Quick (20)
  • D Carson Soucy (12)
  • C Vincent Trocheck (12)

Ottawa Senators

No-movement clauses:

  • RW Claude Giroux
  • LW Brady Tkachuk
  • G Linus Ullmark

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • D Thomas Chabot (10)
  • C Lars Eller (14 approved)
  • LW David Perron (15)
  • D Artem Zub (10)

Philadelphia Flyers

No-movement clauses:

  • C Sean Couturier
  • RW Travis Konecny

No-trade clauses:

  • D Travis Sanheim
  • D Nick Seeler

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • G Daniel Vladař (8)

Pittsburgh Penguins

No-movement clauses:

  • C Sidney Crosby
  • D Erik Karlsson
  • D Kris Letang
  • C Evgeni Malkin

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • C Noel Acciari (8)
  • D Ryan Graves (12)
  • C Kevin Hayes (12)
  • LW Danton Heinen (12)
  • RW Rickard Rakell (8)

San Jose Sharks

No-movement clauses:

  • G Carey Price

No-trade clauses:

  • D Dmitry Orlov
  • RW Tyler Toffoli

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • C Logan Couture (3 approved)
  • C Barclay Goodrow (15)
  • D John Klingberg (NTC until Feb. 1, then 14)
  • D Nick Leddy (16 approved)
  • LW Jeff Skinner (NTC until Feb. 1, then 8 approved)
  • C Alexander Wennberg (15 approved)

Seattle Kraken

No-movement clauses:

  • C Chandler Stephenson

No-trade clauses:

  • RW Jordan Eberle
  • D Adam Larsson
  • D Brandon Montour

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • G Joey Daccord (12)
  • D Vince Dunn (16)
  • C Frédérick Gaudreau (15)
  • G Philipp Grubauer (10)
  • D Ryan Lindgren (6)
  • LW Jared McCann (10)
  • D Jamie Oleksiak (16)
  • LW Jared Schwartz (16)

St. Louis Blues

No-movement clauses: none

No-trade clauses:

  • RW Pavel Buchnevich
  • RW Jordan Kyrou
  • D Colton Parayko
  • C Robert Thomas

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • G Jordan Binnington (14)
  • D Justin Faulk (15)
  • D Cam Fowler (4 approved)
  • D Torey Krug (15)
  • C Brayden Schenn (15)

Tampa Bay Lightning

No-movement clauses:

  • LW Jake Guentzel
  • D Victor Hedman
  • C Brayden Point

No-trade clauses:

  • D Erik Černák
  • C Anthony Cirelli
  • C Yanni Gourde
  • C Nick Paul

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • RW Oliver Bjorkstrand (10)
  • LW Zemgus Girgensons (16 approved)
  • RW Nikita Kucherov (10 approved)
  • D Ryan McDonagh (12)
  • G Andrei Vasilevskiy (10 approved)

Toronto Maple Leafs

No-movement clauses:

  • C Auston Matthews
  • RW William Nylander
  • D Morgan Rielly
  • D Chris Tanev
  • C John Tavares

No-trade clauses:

  • D Jake McCabe

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • D Brandon Carlo (8)
  • C Max Domi (13)
  • D Oliver Ekman-Larsson (16)
  • LW Calle Järnkrok (10)
  • LW Dakota Joshua (12)
  • G Anthony Stolarz (16)

Utah Mammoth

No-movement clauses: none

No-trade clauses:

  • LW Clayton Keller
  • D Mikhail Sergachev

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • D John Marino (8)
  • D Olli Määttä (10)
  • RW Nick Schmaltz (10)
  • D Nate Schmidt (10)
  • LW Brandon Tanev (10)
  • G Karel Vejmelka (10)

Vancouver Canucks

No-movement clauses:

  • RW Brock Boeser
  • LW Jake DeBrusk
  • D Filip Hronek
  • G Kevin Lankinen
  • D Tyler Myers
  • C Elias Pettersson
  • D Marcus Pettersson

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • C Teddy Blueger (12)
  • LW Evander Kane (16 approved)
  • LW Drew O’Connor (12)

Vegas Golden Knights

No-movement clauses:

  • C Jack Eichel
  • RW Mitch Marner
  • D Alex Pietrangelo
  • RW Mark Stone

No-trade clauses:

  • D Noah Hanifin
  • D Brayden McNabb
  • LW Brandon Saad
  • RW Reilly Smith
  • D Shea Theodore

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • LW Ivan Barbashev (8)
  • C Tomáš Hertl (3 approved)
  • G Adin Hill (10)
  • C William Karlsson (10)

Washington Capitals

No-movement clauses:

  • D Jakob Chychrun
  • C Pierre-Luc Dubois
  • LW Alex Ovechkin

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • D John Carlson (10)
  • LW Alex Ovechkin (10)
  • D Matt Roy (15)
  • G Logan Thompson (15)
  • RW Tom Wilson (14)

Winnipeg Jets

No-movement clauses:

  • LW Kyle Connor
  • G Connor Hellebuyck
  • C Adam Lowry
  • C Mark Scheifele
  • C Jonathan Toews

No-trade clauses: none

Modified no-trade clauses:

  • D Dylan DeMelo (10)
  • D Josh Morrissey (15)
  • D Neal Pionk (15)

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

3 comments

2027 NHL Free Agents

December 25, 2025 at 2:15 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

Pro Hockey Rumors’ up-to-date list of 2027 free agents is below. These are players who are eligible for restricted or unrestricted free agency after the 2026-27 season. The player’s 2027 age is in parentheses.

Players who are currently free agents or on our 2026 free agent list are not shown here. Players who have team or player options for the 2026/27 season aren’t listed below, but will be added to this list eventually if they remain on their current contracts.

This list will be continually updated. You’ll be able to access it anytime under the “Pro Hockey Rumors Features” menu on the right sidebar on our desktop site, or under the Flame icon on our mobile menu. If you have any corrections or omissions, please get in touch with us.

Updated Dec. 25, 2025 (2:13 p.m. CT)


Unrestricted Free Agents

Centers

  • Morgan Barron (28)
  • Nick Bjugstad (34)
  • Jesper Boqvist (28)
  • Sam Carrick (35)
  • Filip Chytil (27)
  • Casey Cizikas (36)
  • Andrew Copp (32)
  • Sidney Crosby (39)
  • Phillip Danault (34)
  • Nic Dowd (37)
  • Michael Eyssimont (30)
  • Morgan Frost (28)
  • Adam Gaudette (30)
  • Cody Glass (28)
  • Barclay Goodrow (34)
  • Filip Hallander (27)
  • Ryan Hartman (32)
  • Nico Hischier (28)
  • Pontus Holmberg (28)
  • William Karlsson (34)
  • Sean Kuraly (34)
  • Isac Lundeström (27)
  • Kyle MacLean (28)
  • Casey Mittelstadt (28)
  • Vladislav Namestnikov (34)
  • Thomas Novak (30)
  • Ryan O’Reilly (36)
  • Nicolas Roy (30)
  • Tyler Seguin (35)
  • Jordan Staal (38)
  • Sam Steel (29)
  • Ryan Strome (33)
  • Nico Sturm (32)
  • Pius Suter (31)
  • Dominic Toninato (33)
  • Pavel Zacha (30)

Left Wingers

  • Oskar Back (27)
  • Anthony Beauvillier (30)
  • André Burakovsky (32)
  • Blake Coleman (35)
  • Ross Colton (30)
  • Angus Crookshank (27)
  • Lawson Crouse (30)
  • Alex DeBrincat (29)
  • Jonathan Drouin (32)
  • Warren Foegele (31)
  • Zemgus Girgensons (33)
  • Jordan Greenway (30)
  • Mattias Janmark (34)
  • Chris Kreider (36)
  • Artturi Lehkonen (31)
  • Eetu Luostarinen (28)
  • Kurtis MacDermid (33)
  • Andrew Mangiapane (31)
  • Jordan Martinook (34)
  • Jared McCann (31)
  • Nino Niederreiter (34)
  • Liam O’Brien (32)
  • Drew O’Connor (29)
  • Ondřej Palát (36)
  • Cole Reinhardt (27)
  • Teuvo Teräväinen (32)
  • Maxim Tsyplakov (28)
  • Jason Zucker (35)

Right Wingers

  • Michael Amadio (31)
  • Josh Anderson (33)
  • Mason Appleton (31)
  • Joel Armia (34)
  • Drake Batherson (29)
  • Colin Blackwell (34)
  • Justin Brazeau (29)
  • Justin Danforth (34)
  • Brendan Gallagher (35)
  • Garnet Hathaway (35)
  • Alex Killorn (37)
  • Nikita Kucherov (34)
  • Stefan Noesen (34)
  • Kyle Palmieri (36)
  • Tyler Pitlick (35)
  • Taylor Raddysh (29)
  • Evan Rodrigues (33)
  • Mark Stone (35)

Left-Shot Defensemen

  • Simon Benoit (28)
  • Bowen Byram (26)
  • Declan Chisholm (27)
  • Jake Christiansen (27)
  • Brenden Dillon (36)
  • Vince Dunn (30)
  • Haydn Fleury (30)
  • Samuel Girard (29)
  • Shayne Gostisbehere (34)
  • Joel Hanley (36)
  • Quinn Hughes (27)
  • Caleb Jones (30)
  • Matt Kiersted (29)
  • Josh Mahura (29)
  • Dakota Mermis (33)
  • Dmitry Orlov (35)
  • Riley Stillman (29)
  • Tyler Tucker (27)
  • Urho Vaakanainen (28)
  • Parker Wotherspoon (29)

Right-Shot Defensemen

  • Brandon Carlo (30)
  • Alexandre Carrier (30)
  • Jalen Chatfield (31)
  • Drew Doughty (37)
  • Ty Emberson (27)
  • Justin Faulk (35)
  • Cale Fleury (28)
  • Erik Karlsson (37)
  • Ilya Lyubushkin (33)
  • Cale Makar (28)
  • John Marino (30)
  • Nikolas Matinpalo (28)
  • Dylan McIlrath (35)
  • Zach Metsa (28)
  • Philippe Myers (30)
  • Tyler Myers (37)
  • Brayden Pachal (27)
  • Nicklaus Perbix (29)
  • Rasmus Ristolainen (32)
  • Jared Spurgeon (37)
  • Jack St. Ivany (27)
  • Conor Timmins (28)
  • Artem Zub (31)

Goaltenders

  • Jordan Binnington (33)
  • Casey DeSmith (35)
  • Anton Forsberg (34)
  • John Gibson (33)
  • Philipp Grubauer (35)
  • Carter Hart (28)
  • Jonas Johansson (31)
  • Pyotr Kochetkov (28)
  • Darcy Kuemper (37)
  • Alex Lyon (34)
  • Elvis Merzļikins (33)
  • Sam Montembeault (30)
  • Arvid Söderblom (27)
  • Semyon Varlamov (39)
  • Daniel Vladař (29)
  • Scott Wedgewood (34)

Restricted Free Agents

Centers

  • Owen Beck (23)
  • Macklin Celebrini (21)
  • Ryan Greene (23)
  • Dominic James (24)
  • Oliver Kapanen (23)
  • Marco Kasper (23)
  • Marat Khusnutdinov (24)
  • Jiri Kulich (23)
  • Noah Laba (23)
  • Dawson Mercer (25)
  • Fraser Minten (22)
  • Oliver Moore (22)
  • Nikita Nesterenko (25)
  • Alex Newhook (26)
  • Noah Ostlund (23)
  • Aatu Räty (24)
  • Alex Turcotte (26)
  • Shane Wright (23)

Left Wingers

  • William Cuylle (25)
  • Adam Edstrom (26)
  • Tyson Foerster (25)
  • Gage Goncalves (26)
  • Emil Heineman (25)
  • Kent Johnson (24)
  • Tye Kartye (26)
  • Rutger McGroarty (23)
  • Matvei Michkov (22)
  • Bradly Nadeau (22)
  • Jake Neighbours (25)
  • Liam Ohgren (23)
  • Reid Schaefer (23)
  • Elmer Söderblom (25)
  • Dmitri Voronkov (26)
  • Matthew Wood (22)

Right Wingers

  • Braeden Bowman (24)
  • Ivan Demidov (21)
  • Luke Evangelista (25)
  • Simon Holmström (26)
  • Alexander Holtz (25)
  • Adam Klapka (26)
  • Ryan Leonard (22)
  • Kirill Marchenko (26)
  • Jani Nyman (22)
  • Gabriel Perreault (22)
  • Jack Quinn (25)
  • Matt Rempe (25)
  • Matthew Savoie (23)
  • Will Smith (22)
  • Jimmy Snuggerud (23)
  • Justin Sourdif (25)
  • Ozzy Wiesblatt (25)

Left-Shot Defensemen

  • Lian Bichsel (23)
  • Zeev Buium (21)
  • Adam Engstrom (23)
  • Ryker Evans (25)
  • Albert Johansson (26)
  • Wyatt Kaiser (24)
  • Tyler Kleven (25)
  • Yan Kuznetsov (25)
  • Emil Martinsen Lilleberg (26)
  • Mason Lohrei (26)
  • Denton Mateychuk (22)
  • Elias N. Pettersson (23)
  • Matthew Robertson (26)
  • Jayden Struble (25)
  • Adam Wilsby (26)

Right-Shot Defensemen

  • Hunter Brzustewicz (22)
  • Louis Crevier (26)
  • Drew Helleson (26)
  • Charles-Alexis Legault (23)
  • Artyom Levshunov (21)
  • Alec Regula (26)

Goaltenders

  • Yaroslav Askarov (25)
  • Jakub Dobes (26)
  • Colten Ellis (26)
  • Joel Hofer (26)
  • Jesper Wallstedt (24)

2027 Free Agency| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

4 comments

Assessing The Kraken’s Goaltending Situation

December 25, 2025 at 12:05 pm CDT | by Josh Cybulski 9 Comments

The Kraken entered the break on a strong note with three straight wins, but they’ve only won four of their last 14 games. Thanks to many of their tweener companions in the West struggling, they’re only three points out of a playoff spot with four games in hand on the Mammoth.

Seattle isn’t a surefire playoff team by any stretch at a record of 15-14-6, but given the level of goaltending they’ve received thus far from Joey Daccord, Philipp Grubauer and Matt Murray, they should be able to at least stay in the mix until the trade deadline. Seattle’s issue has clearly been its offense this year, which ranks third-last in the league at 2.54 goals per game. On the defensive side, Seattle’s 2.97 goals against per game rank 13th.

Earlier in 2025, two NHL contracts that seemed unmovable were those of Grubauer and Tristan Jarry. Jarry was dealt to the Oilers earlier this month after passing through waivers a year ago. However, his play this year opened the door for the Penguins to move him and his entire $5.375MM cap hit, even though it had another two years after this one.

Something that seemed impossible a year ago happened, and the Penguins netted two roster players and a second-round pick. The trade highlighted the limited goaltending options available across the NHL, which brings us to the Kraken and, specifically, Grubauer.

The 34-year-old has been a disaster since signing with Seattle as a free agent in 2021. The Stanley Cup winner signed a six-year deal worth $5.9MM annually, and he has never been able to give the Kraken anything close to the goaltending he provided to the Avalanche in his few seasons as their starter.

Grubauer was a Vezina Trophy finalist in his platform season, finishing third, and posted a 30-9-1 record with a .922 SV% and a 1.95 GAA. As impressive as those numbers were, his underlying numbers painted a clearer picture, minimizing Grubauer’s overall impact and suggesting a goaltender playing behind an excellent team. Grubauer still had to stop the saveable pucks and avoid the bad goals, and that’s precisely what he did, but he only registered 5.2 goals saved above expected (as per MoneyPuck), 11th in the league.

Fast-forward to that summer, when Seattle thought they were getting a netminder capable of backstopping them on deep playoff runs. Now, his contract has become one of, if not the, least movable agreements in the NHL, until perhaps this season.

Grubauer has started the season well, even though traditional metrics don’t necessarily reflect it. He has played 11 games this season, going 5-3-1 with a .911 SV% and a 2.59 GAA. Those numbers are nothing to write home about, but a deeper dive shows that Grubauer has 7.1 goals saved above expected on the year – the best figure on the Kraken.

That great start to the season could give Seattle the chance to move him, if he agrees. Grubauer has a modified no-trade clause in his contract, which further complicates a trade even if Seattle were able to find a dance partner.

To add to an already complicated dynamic, the third-string Murray is injured. Unfortunately, injuries have derailed a career that once looked incredibly bright. That said, when Murray returns to the lineup, the Kraken will presumably have three capable NHL goaltenders and will need to move one or assign one to the AHL.

This is where it gets really complicated. Losing Grubauer for Murray is a lateral move at this point, but is Seattle really willing to roll the dice with Murray as the backup? Hard to say, but talent-wise, Murray is more than capable, and the risk of moving Grubauer might just be worth it if it means shedding his massive contract, especially if the Kraken remain out of the playoff picture.

It’s not dissimilar to what the Penguins had to do to shed Jarry’s contract. They took back Stuart Skinner and are rolling with him and Arturs Silovs, but the big win is not having Jarry’s money on the books, which opens the door for Pittsburgh to do a lot next summer. Seattle could put itself in a similar spot if it moved all of Grubauer’s deal, which would bring it to $40MM in available cap room for 2026-27 with just six players to sign (as per PuckPedia)

Seattle has already begun selling off free agents, as evidenced by the Mason Marchment trade to the Blue Jackets, and is signalling that it plans to punt on this season. Murray is a pending free agent, but even if Seattle were to trade the two-time Stanley Cup Champion, it wouldn’t get much for him given his play in previous seasons and his long injury history. The Kraken’s best course of action is to try to move Grubauer for something, anything really, to clear the books and make some bigger moves next summer.

Now, teams are obviously desperate for goaltending, but that doesn’t mean Seattle can move all of Grubauer’s contract. They should be able to move half or more, but they have to do it soon, so his play doesn’t fall back to the level it was at in the last few seasons. They also need to be concerned that a team like Pittsburgh tries to move Skinner, which would further diminish Seattle’s trading partners.

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals| Seattle Kraken Joey Daccord| Matt Murray (b. 1994)| Philipp Grubauer| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

9 comments

2026 NHL Free Agents By Team

December 25, 2025 at 10:53 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 9 Comments

Pro Hockey Rumors’ up-to-date list of 2026 free agents by team is below. These are players who are eligible for restricted or unrestricted free agency after the 2025-26 season.

Restricted free agents are marked with (RFA). Potential Group VI unrestricted free agents are marked with the games played total they need to reach to be eligible for RFA status, if attainable. Players not currently on a team’s active roster, injured reserve, non-roster list, or buried list are not listed.

This list will continue to be updated throughout the 2025-26 season, so be sure to use it and our list of 2026 free agents by position/type as points of reference. Players are ordered by expiry status and cap hit.

Both lists can be found anytime under “Pro Hockey Rumors Features” on the right-hand sidebar of our desktop site, or under the Flame icon on our mobile menu. If you have any corrections or omissions, please contact us.

Updated Dec. 25, 2025 (9:52 a.m. CT)


Anaheim Ducks

  1. D Jacob Trouba
  2. G Petr Mrázek
  3. D Radko Gudas
  4. C Ryan Poehling
  5. LW Ross Johnston
  6. C Jansen Harkins
  7. LW Cutter Gauthier (RFA)
  8. C Leo Carlsson (RFA)
  9. D Ian Moore (RFA)
  10. D Pavel Mintyukov (RFA)
  11. D Olen Zellweger (RFA)

Boston Bruins

  1. RW Viktor Arvidsson
  2. D Andrew Peeke
  3. LW Jeffrey Viel
  4. D Jonathan Aspirot
  5. LW Alex Steeves (Group VI)
  6. LW Matěj Blümel (Group VI)
  7. D Michael Callahan (Group VI)
  8. D Jordan Harris (RFA)
  9. D Vladislav Kolyachonok (RFA)

Buffalo Sabres

  1. RW Alex Tuch
  2. LW Beck Malenstyn
  3. D Jacob Bryson
  4. C Joshua Dunne
  5. C Peyton Krebs (RFA)
  6. D Michael Kesselring (RFA)
  7. LW Zach Benson (RFA)
  8. RW Josh Doan (RFA)
  9. LW Isak Rosen (RFA)

Calgary Flames

  1. D Rasmus Andersson
  2. LW Ryan Lomberg
  3. D Jake Bean
  4. C Justin Kirkland
  5. G Devin Cooley
  6. D Daniil Miromanov
  7. C John Beecher (RFA)

Carolina Hurricanes

  1. G Frederik Andersen
  2. D Mike Reilly
  3. C Mark Jankowski
  4. G Brandon Bussi
  5. D Alexander Nikishin (RFA)

Chicago Blackhawks

  1. D Shea Weber
  2. LW Nick Foligno
  3. D Connor Murphy
  4. C Jason Dickinson
  5. RW Ilya Mikheyev
  6. G Laurent Brossoit
  7. RW Sam Lafferty
  8. D Matt Grzelcyk
  9. C Connor Bedard (RFA)
  10. D Ethan Del Mastro (RFA)
  11. LW Colton Dach (RFA)

Colorado Avalanche

  1. LW Victor Olofsson
  2. D Sam Malinski
  3. LW Joel Kiviranta
  4. D Brent Burns
  5. D Ilya Solovyov (Group VI)
  6. C Jack Drury (RFA)
  7. C Zakhar Bardakov (RFA)

Columbus Blue Jackets

  1. C Charlie Coyle
  2. LW Mason Marchment
  3. D Erik Gudbranson
  4. C Boone Jenner
  5. G Ivan Fedotov
  6. D Brendan Smith
  7. LW Zach Aston-Reese
  8. C Brendan Gaunce
  9. C Cole Sillinger (RFA)
  10. LW Yegor Chinakhov (RFA)
  11. C Adam Fantilli (RFA)
  12. G Jet Greaves (RFA)

Dallas Stars

  1. LW Jamie Benn
  2. RW Nathan Bastian
  3. D Kyle Capobianco
  4. LW Adam Erne
  5. D Alexander Petrovic
  6. LW Jason Robertson (RFA)
  7. D Nils Lundkvist (RFA)
  8. C Mavrik Bourque (RFA)
  9. LW Justin Hryckowian (RFA)

Detroit Red Wings

  1. D Ben Chiarot
  2. RW Patrick Kane
  3. G Cam Talbot
  4. D Justin Holl
  5. D Travis Hamonic
  6. LW James van Riemsdyk
  7. D Erik Gustafsson
  8. LW John Leonard
  9. D Simon Edvinsson (RFA)
  10. D Jacob Bernard-Docker (RFA)

Edmonton Oilers

  1. C Adam Henrique
  2. RW Jack Roslovic
  3. RW Kasperi Kapanen
  4. C David Tomasek
  5. G Connor Ingram
  6. LW Max Jones
  7. G Calvin Pickard
  8. C Curtis Lazar
  9. C Noah Philp
  10. D Spencer Stastney (RFA)

Florida Panthers

  1. G Sergei Bobrovsky
  2. G Daniil Tarasov
  3. D Uvis Balinskis
  4. LW A.J. Greer
  5. D Jeff Petry
  6. RW Luke Kunin
  7. C Tomáš Nosek
  8. LW Noah Gregor
  9. C Jack Studnicka
  10. RW Cole Schwindt (Group VI – needs 33 GP this season for RFA)
  11. RW Mackie Samoskevich (RFA)
  12. D Donovan Sebrango (RFA)

Los Angeles Kings

  1. C Anže Kopitar
  2. LW Andrei Kuzmenko
  3. RW Corey Perry
  4. G Pheonix Copley
  5. D Jacob Moverare
  6. LW Jeff Malott
  7. D Brandt Clarke (RFA)

Minnesota Wild

  1. RW Vladimir Tarasenko
  2. RW Mats Zuccarello
  3. D Zach Bogosian
  4. LW Marcus Johansson
  5. RW Vinnie Hinostroza
  6. D David Jiříček (RFA)
  7. D Daemon Hunt (RFA)

Montreal Canadiens

  1. LW Patrik Laine
  2. LW Sammy Blais
  3. C Kirby Dach (RFA)
  4. D Arber Xhekaj (RFA)
  5. LW Alexandre Texier (RFA)
  6. C Joe Veleno (RFA)
  7. RW Zachary Bolduc (RFA)

 Nashville Predators

  1. LW Michael Bunting
  2. C Erik Haula
  3. LW Cole Smith
  4. C Michael McCarron
  5. D Nick Blankenburg
  6. LW Tyson Jost
  7. D Justin Barron (RFA)
  8. C Fedor Svechkov (RFA)
  9. G Justus Annunen (RFA)

New Jersey Devils

  1. RW Evgenii Dadonov
  2. C Juho Lammikko
  3. D Dennis Cholowski
  4. C Luke Glendening
  5. RW Zack MacEwen
  6. D Colton White
  7. LW Arseny Gritsyuk (RFA)
  8. D Simon Nemec (RFA)
  9. LW Paul Cotter (RFA)

New York Islanders

  1. LW Anders Lee
  2. C Jean-Gabriel Pageau
  3. D Tony DeAngelo
  4. G David Rittich
  5. RW Max Shabanov (RFA)
  6. C Marc Gatcomb (RFA)
  7. D Adam Boqvist (RFA)
  8. D Marshall Warren (RFA)

New York Rangers

  1. LW Artemi Panarin
  2. D Carson Soucy
  3. G Jonathan Quick
  4. RW Jonny Brodzinski
  5. LW Conor Sheary
  6. D Braden Schneider (RFA)
  7. D Scott Morrow (RFA)
  8. LW Brett Berard (RFA)
  9. LW Brennan Othmann (RFA)

Ottawa Senators

  1. D Nick Jensen
  2. LW David Perron
  3. RW Claude Giroux
  4. C Lars Eller
  5. LW Nick Cousins
  6. D Jordan Spence (RFA)
  7. G Leevi Merilainen (RFA)
  8. C Stephen Halliday (RFA)

Philadelphia Flyers

  1. C Christian Dvorak
  2. LW Carl Grundström
  3. LW Nicolas Deslauriers
  4. D Noah Juulsen
  5. C Rodrigo Abols
  6. C Trevor Zegras (RFA)
  7. D Jamie Drysdale (RFA)
  8. RW Bobby Brink (RFA)
  9. G Samuel Ersson (RFA)
  10. D Emil Andrae (RFA)
  11. LW Nikita Grebenkin (RFA)
  12. D Egor Zamula (RFA)

Pittsburgh Penguins

  1. C Evgeni Malkin
  2. C Kevin Hayes
  3. D Connor Clifton
  4. D Brett Kulak
  5. LW Anthony Mantha
  6. G Stuart Skinner
  7. D Mathew Dumba
  8. LW Danton Heinen
  9. C Noel Acciari
  10. C Blake Lizotte
  11. C Connor Dewar
  12. D Ryan Shea
  13. G Arturs Silovs (RFA)
  14. LW Ville Koivunen (RFA)
  15. RW Philip Tomasino (RFA)

San Jose Sharks

  1. G Carey Price
  2. C Alexander Wennberg
  3. D John Klingberg
  4. D Nick Leddy
  5. D Mario Ferraro
  6. D Timothy Liljegren
  7. LW Jeff Skinner
  8. G Alex Nedeljkovic
  9. D Vincent Desharnais
  10. RW Ryan Reaves
  11. C Ty Dellandrea (RFA)
  12. RW Philipp Kurashev (RFA)
  13. D Shakir Mukhamadullin (RFA)
  14. RW Collin Graf (RFA)
  15. C Zack Ostapchuk (RFA)
  16. D Vincent Iorio (RFA)

Seattle Kraken

  1. LW Jaden Schwartz
  2. RW Jordan Eberle
  3. D Jamie Oleksiak
  4. LW Eeli Tolvanen
  5. G Matt Murray
  6. C Ben Meyers
  7. RW Ryan Winterton (RFA)
  8. RW Jacob Melanson (RFA)

St. Louis Blues

  1. RW Mathieu Joseph
  2. LW Alexey Toropchenko
  3. C Oskar Sundqvist
  4. LW Robby Fabbri
  5. D Philip Broberg (RFA)
  6. LW Dylan Holloway (RFA)
  7. RW Jonatan Berggren (RFA)
  8. D Logan Mailloux (RFA)
  9. D Matthew Kessel (RFA)

Tampa Bay Lightning

  1. RW Oliver Bjorkstrand
  2. D Darren Raddysh
  3. D Charle-Edouard D’Astous
  4. D Declan Carlile (Group VI)
  5. C Curtis Douglas (Group VI)
  6. D J.J. Moser (RFA)

Toronto Maple Leafs

  1. LW Calle Järnkrok
  2. C Scott Laughton
  3. LW Bobby McMann
  4. D Troy Stecher
  5. D Matt Benning
  6. LW Matias Maccelli (RFA)
  7. LW Nicholas Robertson (RFA)
  8. D Henry Thrun (RFA)

Utah Mammoth

  1. RW Nick Schmaltz
  2. LW Alexander Kerfoot
  3. D Ian Cole
  4. C Kevin Stenlund
  5. D Juuso Välimäki
  6. G Vítek Vaněček
  7. D Nick DeSimone
  8. LW Michael Carcone
  9. RW Kailer Yamamoto
  10. C Barrett Hayton (RFA)

Vancouver Canucks

  1. LW Evander Kane
  2. D Derek Forbort
  3. C Teddy Blueger
  4. RW Kiefer Sherwood
  5. C David Kämpf
  6. RW Linus Karlsson (Group VI – needs 53 GP this season for RFA)
  7. D Pierre-Olivier Joseph (RFA)
  8. C Lukas Reichel (RFA)

Vegas Golden Knights

  1. D Jeremy Lauzon
  2. LW Brandon Saad
  3. RW Reilly Smith
  4. C Colton Sissons
  5. D Ben Hutton
  6. LW Pavel Dorofeyev (RFA)
  7. G Akira Schmid (RFA)

Washington Capitals

  1. LW Alex Ovechkin
  2. D John Carlson
  3. D Trevor van Riemsdyk
  4. LW Sonny Milano
  5. LW Brandon Duhaime
  6. RW Ethen Frank
  7. C Connor McMichael (RFA)
  8. C Hendrix Lapierre (RFA)

Winnipeg Jets

  1. RW Gustav Nyquist
  2. D Luke Schenn
  3. C Jonathan Toews
  4. D Colin Miller
  5. D Logan Stanley
  6. LW Tanner Pearson
  7. LW Cole Koepke
  8. G Eric Comrie
  9. RW Cole Perfetti (RFA)

2026 Free Agency| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

9 comments

Salary Cap Deep Dive: Florida Panthers

December 24, 2025 at 9:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 5 Comments

Navigating the salary cap is one of the most important tasks for a front office.  Teams that can avoid total cap chaos by walking the tightrope of inking players to deals that match their value (or compensate for future value without breaking the bank) remain successful.  Those who don’t often see struggles and front office changes.

PHR will look at every NHL team and give a thorough look at their cap situation for the 2025-26 season.  This will focus more on players who are regulars on the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL.  All cap figures are courtesy of PuckPedia.  We’re currently covering the Atlantic Division, next up are the Panthers.

Florida Panthers

Current Cap Hit: $103,050,261 (above the $95.5MM Upper Limit)

Entry-Level Contracts

None who are on the active roster on a full-time basis.

Signed Through 2025-26, Non-Entry-Level

D Uvis Balinskis ($850K, UFA)
G Sergei Bobrovsky ($10MM, UFA)
F A.J. Greer ($850K, UFA)
F Noah Gregor ($775K, UFA)
F Luke Kunin ($775K, UFA)
F Tomas Nosek ($775K, UFA)
D Jeff Petry ($775K, UFA)
F Mackie Samoskevich ($775K, RFA)
D Donovan Sebrango ($775K, RFA)
F Cole Schwindt ($825K, UFA)
G Daniil Tarasov ($1.05MM, UFA)

Potential Bonuses
Petry: $250K

Greer has found a nice role in Florida, setting a career high offensively last season while more than doubling his career high in hits as well.  This season, he’s off to an even better start.  Given his role and Florida’s top-heavy salary structure though, they may not be able to afford to keep him if his price tag pushes towards the $1.5MM mark.  Schwindt was a waiver claim from Vegas last month but played sparingly (before being injured earlier this month) after being in and out of the lineup last season.  Unless his role changes considerably, he’s probably going to be capped at the league minimum on his next deal.  Realistically, the same can be said for any of Nosek, Kunin, and Gregor.

However, Samoskevich is a much different situation.  He accepted a one-way deal this past summer, taking less than his qualifying offer to get the guaranteed salary.  In doing so, he’s setting himself up to have salary arbitration rights next summer.  If he plays the middle-six role he currently has all season and beats his 31 points from a year ago, he should easily triple this price tag at a minimum; quadrupling it isn’t unrealistic if he has a big second half.

Balinskis performed well last season in his first full year on the third pairing and is being deployed similarly in the early going this year.  As is the case with Greer, he’d need to stay around the minimum to stay in Florida while his market value might be more in the $1.5MM range.

Petry had a tough year with Detroit last season which certainly hurt his market.  At 37, he’s best served as a third pairing or depth defender and this price tag reflects that.  He has four $50K bonuses tied to games played that are achievable if he stays healthy while the other $50K is dependent on a Stanley Cup victory.  There’s a good chance he stays near the minimum if he keeps playing beyond this season.  Sebrango was claimed off waivers with Florida dealing with injuries.  He’s just looking to get established as an NHL regular at this point but his arbitration eligibility could work against him if Florida thinks that filing for a hearing could push him into seven figures, a risk they might not want to take as he should also stay at the minimum.

There were times in this contract that Bobrovsky’s contract looked like a complete anchor on the books.  However, he has become a bit more consistent in recent years and when Florida traded Spencer Knight at the trade deadline last season, it suggested that their plan is to stick with Bobrovsky beyond this deal as they don’t have anyone else in their system that’s ready.  He’ll be entering his age-38 season in 2026-27 so a long-term deal isn’t likely.  However, a two-year pact could be doable, one that might land closer to half this amount.  Alternatively, if they were to go with a one-year offer, he’d be eligible for performance incentives which could give Florida some shorter-term wiggle room next season.

Tarasov had a rough year in Columbus, ultimately finishing as the third-string goaltender and getting moved for cheap in the summer.  If he can re-establish himself to the level he was at in 2023-24, he could make a case to land closer to $1.75MM or so on his next contract although that’s a price tag Florida likely can’t afford.

Signed Through 2026-27

F Jesper Boqvist ($1.5MM, UFA)
F Eetu Luostarinen ($3MM, UFA)
F Evan Rodrigues ($3MM, UFA)

Free agency hasn’t been kind to Rodrigues which helped explain why he signed a four-year deal for this price tag, a contract that had a chance to become team-friendly pretty quickly.  So far, so good on that front.  As a player who consistently passes 30 points and can play down the middle in a pinch, he should be able to land something in the $4MM range on his next contract.

Luostarinen has been a player who has produced a point total in the 20s in three of the last four seasons.  The production he had last playoffs (19 points in 23 games) was the outlier but for the most part, he has been a third liner making third-line money.  With his production generally being more limited, he might not be able to land as much as Rodrigues next time out.  Boqvist signed this deal near the trade deadline last season and he might have done better than he would have on the open market where he didn’t have a lot of luck in 2024.  As a fourth liner with a bit of versatility, his value should hover somewhere around this mark two years from now.

Signed Through 2027-28

F Jonah Gadjovich ($775K in 2025-26, $905K after)
D Dmitry Kulikov ($1.15MM, UFA)

Gadjovich hasn’t played a lot since joining Florida in 2023 but he has been a serviceable fourth liner who fits the physical style they want to play.  As a 13th forward in an ideal situation, keeping him at just over the minimum salary starting next season isn’t a bad deal for them.

The fact Kulikov received a four-year deal last summer was a surprise but he also left a fair bit of money on the table had he opted to go with shorter-term contracts.  The end result is that he gets a bit of security while the Panthers get a bargain deal for someone who, when healthy (which he currently isn’t), is still a pretty dependable third-pairing defenseman at this point.

Read more

Signed Through 2028-29

None

Signed Through 2029-30 Or Longer

F Aleksander Barkov ($10MM through 2029-30)
F Sam Bennett ($8MM through 2032-33)
D Aaron Ekblad ($6.1MM through 2032-33)
D Gustav Forsling ($5.75MM through 2031-32)
D Seth Jones ($7MM through 2029-30)*
F Anton Lundell ($5MM through 2029-30)
F Brad Marchand ($5.25MM through 2030-31)
D Niko Mikkola ($2.5MM in 2025-26, $5MM from 2026-27 through 2033-34)
F Sam Reinhart ($8.625MM through 2031-32)
F Matthew Tkachuk ($9.5MM through 2029-30)
F Carter Verhaeghe ($7MM through 2032-33)

*-Chicago is retaining an additional $2.5MM per season on Jones’ contract.

The days of Barkov being viewed as the NHL’s most underrated player have come and gone but he’s still one of the more underappreciated top-line centers in the league.  A legitimate top two-way player, he has also chipped in with more than a point per game in five straight seasons.  If he were on the open market following a normal year, he’d be making a few million more per season, especially as market value for players continues to escalate in this new cap era.  Of course, it’s worth noting that this is not a normal year.  A long-term knee injury has him on LTIR with the best-case scenario being a late-playoff return.  Assuming he can bounce back from that next season, Barkov should still be a bargain.

Florida GM Bill Zito made a bold move to get Tkachuk, sending two key contributors to Calgary to get him (Jonathan Huberdeau and MacKenzie Weegar), then signed him to this contract, a pricey one at the time.  It has worked out quite well as he has found another level with the Panthers, playing an instrumental role in their Stanley Cup titles.  With how the top winger market has moved in recent years, this deal is several million below market value already.  Reinhart followed up his career year with another year of more than a point per game last season and as long as he can stay near there (even if he doesn’t approach 57 goals again), this deal should hold up just fine for the.

With the playoff run Bennett had the last two seasons, someone was going to pay a big price to get him.  The price Florida paid is likely lower than what he would have gotten in free agency.  But, relative to his point production, it’s still a sizable overpayment.  But if he can keep playing at his postseason level in the playoffs for them, they’ll be happy with how the contract works out.  If that doesn’t happen, this will be a problematic deal for them.  Verhaeghe has been one of the NHL’s better bargains for several years now and even with this deal, if he stays in the 55-60-point range, it should age well, even if the contract isn’t the bargain it once was.

Considering Marchand is already 37, few would have expected a six-year contract but that’s what he was able to get with him taking a lower cap hit in return.  For now, he’s still a top-six forward and his price tag for that role is actually team-friendly for the time being.  The back few years could be an issue though as his age and playing style are likely to catch up to him.  Lundell is the one player at the other end of the spectrum; instead of being a veteran sticking around in his UFA years, Lundell signed this after his entry-level pact, only adding two years of team control.  His offense is still developing (getting a bigger role this season in Barkov’s absence will help there) but if he settles in as ‘Barkov-lite’ as some have suggested, this is going to be yet another club-friendly pact for a while.

Zito made a big splash near the trade deadline last season with the addition of Jones, a top-pairing all-situations player who had come under fire for some struggles in Chicago.  But counted on a bit less with the Panthers, he has settled in nicely and is effectively just making number two money for the portion Florida is paying.  That should give them plenty of value for a while.  The thought when Jones was acquired was that he might ultimately replace Ekblad but the former number one pick took a pay cut to stick around.  There’s some risk with the contract given the heavy workload he’s had in his career and some recent significant injuries so the final couple of years could be an issue.  But this is second-pairing money and he’s still holding his own in a top-pairing role.  They’ll be happy with his contract for a while.

Forsling will go down as one of the top waiver claims in recent memory, going from a depth piece in his previous stops to a legitimate top-four player who can chip in offensively and log big minutes.  This is already looking like a team-friendly pact with more than a half-decade to go; it should only get better value-wise from here.  Mikkola has fit in well since joining the Panthers in 2023 and has taken on a bigger role since then, making his current contract quite the bargain.  The new one looks a little on the high side now for someone who is a fourth defender but that should change as the market shifts over the next few years and that price point becomes more normal for someone in that role.

Buyouts

None

Retained Salary Transactions

None

Carryover Bonus Overage Penalty

None

Best Value: (non-entry-level) Samoskevich
Worst Value: Bennett

Looking Ahead

The biggest decision that Florida has to make on the cap front this season involves Barkov.  If it’s deemed that he won’t be able to play in the playoffs, he can go on season-ending LTIR, giving them an additional $6.2MM in their LTIR pool, plenty of space to get back to compliance when everyone else returns and add a piece or two.  If they don’t want to do that and keep him eligible for a possible late-playoff return, they’ll need to move out money at some point this season and be a money-in, money-out team after that.

At the moment, Florida has around $17MM in space for 2026-27 with around half a dozen players to sign, including a goalie tandem that could push to make around half of that.  That wouldn’t leave much flexibility to add but the core would be intact for another year.  That sentence should apply for a few more years, even when they already have more than $67MM committed for 2029-30.  A big chunk of their roster should be in a Panthers uniform for the long haul, mostly on contracts that should age relatively well.

Photos courtesy of Geoff Burke and Perry Nelson-Imagn Images.

Florida Panthers| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals| Salary Cap Deep Dive 2025 Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Sharks Reassign Ethan Cardwell To AHL

December 24, 2025 at 7:47 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

With the NHL now off for the next three days, there have been a handful of roster moves around the league today.  The new rule saying that players must play in at least one AHL game if they’re sent down has limited the number of moves but San Jose was among those to make one.  Curtis Pashelka of The Mercury News relays (Twitter link) that the Sharks have assigned winger Ethan Cardwell to AHL San Jose.

The 23-year-old was recalled a little more than a week ago following injuries to forwards Will Smith and Philipp Kurashev.  Since the promotion was so recent, Cardwell remained eligible to be sent down even with the roster freeze in effect.

Cardwell got into three games with the Sharks on this stint, bringing his season total to seven.  However, the most recent one – last night against Vegas – was particularly tough as he was on the ice for four goals against despite playing a season-low 9:48.  He didn’t pick up any points over those three outings, keeping his total for the campaign at one, a goal scored back in early November.

Cardwell has spent the bulk of the season with the Barracuda but injuries have limited him to just 14 games.  He has been productive in those outings, however, with three goals and six assists.

With the move, San Jose now has one open roster spot.  They can either choose to fill it by calling someone else up as early as Saturday or, if Kurashev is able to return, he can be activated into that vacancy.

AHL| San Jose Sharks| Transactions Ethan Cardwell

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Islanders Reassign Marcus Hogberg

December 24, 2025 at 6:29 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu Leave a Comment

Thursday: Hogberg has been returned to Bridgeport, per the AHL’s transactions log.  Given that he now must play in at least one AHL game before being recalled, it’s fair to suggest that Sorokin will indeed be able to return after the break.

Tuesday: The New York Islanders announced today that netminder Marcus Hogberg has been recalled from the team’s AHL affiliate, the Bridgeport Islanders, on an emergency basis. In their announcement, the Islanders added that incumbent starting goalie Ilya Sorokin “has a small nagging issue” and the club “is taking advantage of the holiday break to rest” Sorokin. The expectation is that Sorokin will be ready to play after the break.

The Islanders play the New Jersey Devils tomorrow, and then will wait until Saturday for their next game, which comes against the New York Rangers. Per Stephen Whyno of The Associated Press, this development indicates that backup netminder David Rittich will get the start tomorrow night against the Devils.

There have not been any reports of an injury to Sorokin prior to today, so this development comes as a bit of a surprise. Sorokin has received a substantial diet of starts so far in 2025-26, playing 24 games compared to Rittich’s 12. Sorokin’s performance hasn’t given any clear indication that he’s managing an injury, either, as he’s posted a solid .910 save percentage across his 24 games played.

Rittich, 33, is a veteran backup who the Islanders signed over the summer to a one-year, $1MM AAV deal. He’s served as the backup while former tandem goalie Semyon Varlamov has remained out with an injury. Rittich has gone 7-3-2 as an Islander with a .908 save percentage and 2.54 goals against average.

He’ll be backed up tomorrow by Hogberg, a 31-year-old netminder who served as Sorokin’s backup for much of last season. He posted a .878 save percentage across 15 games on Long Island last season, and has a .881 save percentage in 14 games for Bridgeport in 2025-26. He’s playing out the second year of the two-year deal that brought him to New York and his contract carries a one-way structure this season.

New York Islanders Marcus Hogberg

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The Flyers Need To Add A Goalie To Stay In The Hunt

December 24, 2025 at 5:17 pm CDT | by Josh Cybulski 20 Comments

As we push into the second half of the NHL season, we’ve seen more chatter about goaltending and the rare in-season goalie trade involving the Oilers and Penguins. While Edmonton is still in the hunt for a new backup option after acquiring Tristan Jarry, they likely aren’t the only ones looking to add depth. One team that should consider a goaltending acquisition is the Philadelphia Flyers.

At first glance, you might ask yourself why the Flyers need help. They are currently seventh-best in the NHL at limiting goals against, thanks mainly to the unbelievable play of Daniel Vladar.

He entered the holiday break with a 13-5-3 record, a .910 SV% and a 2.39 GAA. Vladar’s underlying numbers look even better, as he’s 10th in the league with 14.6 goals saved above expected (per MoneyPuck). These numbers are terrific, but there are concerns about Vladar’s longevity as he tracks to eclipse 30 starts in a season for the first time in his career.

He could surpass that mark before the end of January, starting 21 of 36 so far. The 28-year-old Vladar had been a career backup with the Flames and Bruins before this season.

He wasn’t a particularly good No. 2 option either, posting below-average numbers in almost every season of his career. He signed a somewhat surprising two-year contract with the Flyers this past summer worth $3.35MM per season. No one could have expected him to perform the way he has, which has to make one wonder whether he can carry this play throughout the season, or whether he has simply started the year on an extended heater.

The Flyers haven’t played playoff hockey since the bubble in 2020 and haven’t hosted a home playoff game since Jake Guentzel put up a four-spot against them in Game 6 of the first round in 2018. They are due for playoff action in Philadelphia, and it would be a disaster to let goaltending be their downfall, as it has been so many times before. Their hot start has them second in the Eastern Conference with a .625 points percentage, fueled by some of the league’s best defensive results at 5-on-5.

Outside of the team defense and Vladar, the bright spots are limited. Their offense ranks 24th in the NHL in goals scored. On top of that, Philadelphia doesn’t have a reliable goaltending option outside of Vladar to lean on.

Sure, Samuel Ersson has shown glimpses before. This year, in 14 games, he’s been middling with a 6-4-4 record, an .872 SV%, and a 2.96 GAA. Ersson’s numbers don’t tell the whole story, as he hasn’t played as poorly as those traditional numbers would suggest, but the Flyers need better goaltending than that if they hope to make a playoff push.

Behind Vladar and Ersson is Aleksei Kolosov, who has seen limited NHL action this season, playing just two games. Only one of those appearances was a start, and Kolosov lost it. Still, he played well overall, posting a .929 SV% and a 1.62 GAA.

It’s tough to get overly excited about Kolosov’s play, given his more conservative .900 SV% in the AHL this season. The 2021 third-rounder is still just 23 years old and has room to grow, but for a team with legitimate postseason aspirations, there isn’t a slot for him as a legitimate backup option with a starter as historically untested as Vladar.

All of that to say, the Flyers have to look outside the organization for one of two options. The first option would be to find a tandem goaltender to pair with Vladar and deploy a platoon. The other option would be to find a higher-ceiling traditional backup to play behind Vladar. This is where it could get complicated for Philadelphia, as goalie trades are notoriously tricky in-season. Still, they can be done, as evidenced by the recent Stuart Skinner-for-Jarry swap.

As for available options, there are few. If Philadelphia wants a platoon option, the only choices truly in the rumor mill have been Jordan Binnington of the St. Louis Blues or Skinner. Skinner is a less likely candidate given that the Flyers and Penguins rarely trade with one another, but moving Skinner to Philly could be a win/win for both teams.

There are some outside-the-box options for the Flyers, however. Cam Talbot of the Detroit Red Wings has been phenomenal this year, posting better numbers than partner John Gibson. But Talbot is a UFA this summer, and with Sebastian Cossa waiting in the wings, Detroit could look to move Talbot for the right price. A similar situation is unfolding in Carolina, where Brandon Bussi has effectively taken over for veteran Frederik Andersen. Depending on how generous the Flyers are willing to be in their trade offer, they could potentially pry one of those two away.

That being said, the tightness of the playoff picture in the East still makes it conceivable they’ll fall out of it entirely. They might not want to blow many future assets on a veteran netminder this year. They could look at lower-tier options as well, such as David Rittich of the New York Islanders, Elvis Merzlikins of the Columbus Blue Jackets, or even one of the Seattle Kraken’s backups, Matt Murray or Philipp Grubauer.

Merzlikins and Grubauer are two massive gambles, with term left on their contracts beyond this season, but the Flyers have cap space and could gamble on one of them returning to the form they showed earlier in their careers. While those moves might give the Philadelphia more depth, it’s probably not the best course of action for a team chasing a playoff spot. Murray could be the best fit of the bunch, but with his injury history, it would be hard to count on him regularly.

Philadelphia Flyers| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals Daniel Vladar

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