Jets Recall Isaak Phillips From AHL, Place Colin Miller On IR

Back in action tomorrow, the Winnipeg Jets announced this afternoon that Isaak Phillips has been recalled from AHL Manitoba, while Colin Miller has landed on injured reserve.

Winnipeg, finally finding their game after an 11-game winless streak which possibly has sunk their season, has to reach deep into the organization’s defense stock for Phillips, especially with Haydn Fleury out, and Miller now banged up. If able to suit up this week, it would be Phillips’ first action as a Jet.

Miller, who has struggled considerably in what will likely be his third and final season with the team, left mid-game against New Jersey with a lower-body injury. At this point it is unclear when he will return, but with the 33-year-old a healthy scratch often, playing in just 15 games so far, it is not the biggest impact for the Jets as they desperately look to turn things around.

Phillips, 24, was acquired from Chicago just three days shy of exactly one year ago, as the team gave up prospect Dmitri Kuzmin last January to in exchange for a respectable NHL-capable depth defender. The Ontario native was a fifth round choice of Chicago in 2020, making 56 appearances for the team from 2021-2025, recording 12 points. After solid contributions for the rebuilders despite being a former fringe prospect, Phillips became expendable as he was passed up in favor of prospects with higher upside.

Since then, Phillips has yet to appear with the Jets, playing in 72 games for Manitoba over the last two seasons. A physical lefty standing at 6’3″, he earned a two year extension with Winnipeg last summer, which will keep him around through next year, followed by restricted free agent status. Interestingly, he gets the nod over other notable defenders in Manitoba. Prospect Elias Salomonsson, who last got a look in early December, will remain in the AHL, along with former standout prospects Ville Heinola and Kale Clague.

For now, Winnipeg will move forward with Phillips as a seventh defender, as Luke Schenn has re-entered the lineup, who is eager to prove himself to suitors as last week it was noted that the 36-year-old pending free agent would be open to a trade.

Naturally, Phillips figures to be the best option to come up as depth, without rocking the boat in Manitoba. The Jets will host the Islanders tomorrow, looking for their third straight win.

Sharks Issue Injury Updates On Four Players

The San Jose Sharks have sorted out their injuries ahead of a four-game road-trip through the Eastern Conference. Winger Philipp Kurashev will not join the team on the trip, but could return at the tail-end, if he is able to recover from an upper-body injury sustained on December 13th. He was deemed week-to-week at the time. San Jose will have defensemen Shakir Mukhamadullin and Vincent Desharnais on the trip after both recovered from upper-body injuries. Finally, top forward Will Smith will be questionable for Thursday’s game against the Washington Capitals pending a return to full-contact practices. All updates were captured by NHL.com’s Max Miller.

Kurashev will continue to sit out of the lineup for at least a couple more games. He has already missed San Jose’s last 12 games, on top of a brief two-game absence in October. Kurashev was among San Jose’s hottest players through the turn into November. He racked up 11 points in 13 games between October 26th and November 20th – enough to earn top-six minutes through mutliple games. He cooled off significantly in the time since, with only three points in his next 12 games before going down to injury. Returning soon would give the Swiss winger a chance to get his legs back under him before going off to join Team Switzerland at the 2026 Winter Olympics. It will be Kurashev’s first Olympic games, though he has notched 15 points in 32 World Championship games, across four appearances. Kurashev will slot into San Jose’s bottom-six when he’s healthy enough to return.

The Sharks will have two more options on defense through their next stretch. Desharnais has been out since late November but returned to practice on January 4th. He has served as one of many veteran bruisers and fighters on the Sharks lineup and should maintain a low-usage role if slotted back into the lineup. Mukhamadullin will be a more interesting watch, after missing the last four games. The 24 year old was continuing to struggle in his depth role prior to his injury. He posted no scoring and a minus-six in his last five games, bringing his year long totals to six points and a minus-four in 23 games. A return to the lineup would be a chance to continue earning minutes on an increasingly-crowded Sharks blue-line.

Smith will bring the most excitement back to the lineup. The 20 year old hasn’t played since sustaining an injury on December 13th. He has been skating on the side and didn’t rejoin San Jose’s team practices until last Friday. The Sharks will certainly want to ensure Smith is back to 100 percent before slotting him into the lineup – but his impact will be hard to wait for. Smith has 12 goals and 29 points in 33 games this season, good for fourth on the team in scoring despite missing the last 12 games. He has proven a dynamic and capable driver of the offense, able to play with or behind star center Macklin Celebrini.

The Sharks have seen the emergence of rookie Igor Chernyshov – who has nine points in his first 12 NHL games – since Smith’s injury. That will bring up some interesting questions as the Sharks juggle young players at the top of their lineup. Smith should return next to Alexander Wennberg and Tyler Toffoli, which would push Pavel Regenda back into the bottom-six. When those changes will occur will depend on how soon Smith can return to full-contact practice.

2026 NHL Draft Will Be Held In Buffalo

1/12: The NHL has officially announced that Buffalo will host the 2026 NHL Draft on June 26th and 27th per NHL.com’s Adam Kimelman.

1/9: The NHL Draft could be returning to Buffalo, New York this year. The Buffalo Sabres have made an earnest push to host the First Round of the 2026 NHL Draft, sources told Mike Harrington of The Buffalo News. A potential return to draft day in Buffalo was first teased by broadcaster John Buccigross on Thursday.

Buffalo has hosted three other NHL Drafts. It became the third American city to serve as host in 1991, seven years after the NHL moved away from a yearly trip to Montreal. The Quebec Nordiques drafted centerman Eric Lindros first-overall in Buffalo, but the future Hall-of-Famer refused to sign with the club, prompting a trade to Philadelphia in 1992. Meanwhile, the NHL Draft didn’t return to Buffalo until 1998, when the Tampa Bay Lightning drafted Vincent Lecavalier with the top pick. By then, the league had begun traveling to a new city every year for the Draft, which kept the league from returning to Buffalo again until 2016, when Auston Matthews landed with the Toronto Maple Leafs at first-overall.

The 2026 Draft will be unlike any previously held in Buffalo, though. NHL general managers voted to decentralize the NHL Draft beginning last season. This format is more in-line with other professional sports leagues, like the NFL, and saw NHL management teams stay in their home city while draft prospects were greeted on stage by league personnel. The change in format was criticized by fans and media after the 2025 Draft wrapped up but NHL managers voted to uphold it headed into 2026.

That places a unique challenge on the next host to try and spark a format that landed flat last year. The heap of talent set for the first-round in 2026 could make that task a bit easier. The hockey world is in the midst of debating the first-overall chair after hopefuls Gavin McKenna, Ivar Stenberg, Keaton Verhoeff, and Chase Reid dueled out at the 2026 World Junior Championships. Stenberg – a standout in Sweden’s top pro league – earned the last laugh of the tournament with a Gold Medal win. Whether that trend will continue through June – and into host city Buffalo – is yet to be seen.

Blue Jackets Fire Dean Evason, Steve McCarthy; Hire Rick Bowness

The Columbus Blue Jackets have relieved head coach Dean Evason and assistant coach Steve McCarthy of their duties. In Evason’s place, the Blue Jackets have hired veteran head coach Rick Bowness, who last coached with the Winnipeg Jets in the 2023-24 season.

Evason will become the first head coach to lose his chair this season. His ousting comes right after Columbus snapped a four-game losing streak with an overtime win against the Utah Mammoth on Sunday. Despite the three-goal performance, the Blue Jackets’ brass will opt for a change. Columbus ranks dead-last in the Eastern Conference this season with a 19-19-7 record. That record is better than four Western Conference teams.

Blue Jackets general manager Don Waddell said on the firing:

This season has been a frustrating one for all of us and the bottom line is we are not performing at a level that meets our expectations… Dean did a tremendous job last year under extremely difficult circumstances and I thank him for that. I also want to thank Steve for his commitment to our club over the past five years.

Columbus hired Evason in July 2024 to replace rookie, interim head-coach Pascal Vincent after they were unable to bring on veteran coach Mike Babcock. Evason joined Columbus just two months after the GM chair was turned over to Waddell. The two inherited a Blue Jackets club that posted a dismal 27-43-12 record, scored the eighth-fewest goals, and allowed the second-most in the 2023-24 season.

New management faced an incredibly difficult task, made unimaginably worse by the passing of star winger Johnny Gaudreau in the months leading up to the 2024-25 season.

The Blue Jackets’ 2024-25 campaign seemed off to another rough start until a mid-season surge pushed them up the standings. Columbus posted a 10-3-1 record in the month of January, spurred by veteran Sean Monahan and a breakout from winger Kirill Marchenko. The club ended the season with a commendable 40-33-9 record, though they ultimately missed out on the playoffs by just one win.

That one win was the margin of error headed into the 2025-26 campaign. Even with the standout performances from Russian wingers Marchenko and Dmitri Voronkov, and a bit more reliability in net, the Blue Jackets have fallen well under their mark this season. The club seems well positioned for yet another top pick, a seemingly moot success for a lineup already younger than the NHL average. Much more important would be a return to the Stanley Cup Playoffs, which Columbus hasn’t seen since 2020.

With that motivation, the club will oust the rough-and-tumble Evason as well as assistant McCarthy, who has been on Columbus’ bench since 2021 and served on the AHL’s Cleveland Monsters bench for another five years. McCarthy, a former pro defenseman, was in charge of Columbus’ blue-line – which has finished in the bottom-seven for goals-allowed in every season under his helm.

The Blue Jackets will move forward under the lead of veteran Bowness, who brings over 40 years of coaching experience to Ohio. Bowness led the Jets to the postseason in both of his two years with the club, though lost in the first round both times. That was the same result he faced in his last of two-and-a-half years with the Dallas Stars – a tenure that kciked off with Bowness leading the Stars to the 2020 Stanley Cup Finals after being hired partway through the year.

Prior to his time in Dallas, Bowness was a career associate head coach, having spent five years in Tampa Bay, seven years in Vancouver, and seven years in Phoenix in addition to other roles. His last head coaching experience prior to 2020 was all the way back in 2003-04, when he led the Coyotes to a 2-12-3-3 record as an interim head coach. Before then, he served as the New York Islanders’ interim from 1997 to 1998, combining for a 38-50-12 record. Bowness has made two trips to the Stanley Cup Finals in his coaching career but didn’t take home the Cup.

Prior to his coaching days, Bowness was a hard-nosed bruiser in the minor-leagues, where he twice won the CHL Championship before minor-leagues merged into the modern AHL. He appeared in 173 NHL games over the course of an eight-year pro career and racked up 55 points and 191 penalty minutes.

Oilers Sign Quinn Hutson To Two-Year Extension

The Edmonton Oilers signed forward Quinn Hutson to a two-year, $1.775MM contract extension. The deal will carry an annual average value of $875K. Hutson was signed to a two-year, $1.75MM entry-level contract in April 2025, following the end of his career at Boston University. That deal was set to expire this summer after the Oilers burned the first year of it to allow Hutson to make his NHL debut last season.

An early end to his entry-level contract will come at no expense to the Oilers. Hutson’s next deal will carry the same cap hit and he has only proven his might at the pro level in nearly a year since signing his first deal. The eldest Hutson brother – related to defensemen Lane and Cole Hutson – went undrafted through two years in the USHL even despite posting 73 points and 83 penalty minutes in 59 games of the 2021-22 season. That scoring was enough to earn a three-year tenure at Boston University, where Hutson’s knack for keeping play alive in the offensive zone showed up big during the Terriers’ run to the 2025 National Championship. BU would ultimately lose that game but Hutson did enough to catch the eye of NHL scouts.

Hutson signed with the Oilers immediately after the National Championship and finished the 2024-25 seaosn in the NHL. He didn’t rack up any scoring, and added one penalty, but his presence in the depth chart nonetheless drew attention. He’s earned it so far this year, leading the AHL’s Bakersfield Condors in scoring with 23 goals and 38 points in 30 games and adding his first NHL goal in four more appearances with the Oilers.

Partway through the year, Hutson appears to be an ace up the Oilers’ sleeve. He has earned call-ups as an injury replacement and fared well in his NHL minutes, even despite the low-scoring. It appears only a matter of time before he receives an extended run in Edmonton’s bottom-six, which could be enough to spark his offense at the top level. That will be the upside Edmonton hopes for as they lock in Hutson for two more seasons, at a relatively cheap price.

Stars’ Jamie Benn To Return After Nose Injury

The Dallas Stars will add captain Jamie Benn back to the lineup in Monday night’s game against the Los Angeles Kings per Lia Assimakopoulos of The Dallas Morning News. Benn has missed the last three games with a nose injury sustained on January 4th.

Benn was seen sporting a visor during Monday’s practice, a surprising move for one of the league’s few remaining players who do not wear face protection. The NHL began requiring visors in 2013 but grandfathered in current players who choose not to wear one. 13 years later, three other players continue to not wear a visor: Ryan O’Reilly, Zach Bogosian, and Ryan Reaves.

Head coach Glen Gulutzan joked about Benn’s visor, having coached the captain in the AHL – where all players must wear visors – back in 2010, as captured by Owen Newkirk of DLLS Sports. Benn wore a visor during his rookie NHL season but hasn’t worn one since, save for one game in January 2017 after his nose was broken by a high stick, per Sam Nestler of DLLS Sports.

Dallas posted a 1-1-1 record in Benn’s absence and scored at least three goals in every game. They will welcome another offensive spark after losing Saturday’s game against the San Jose Sharks in overtime. Benn  hasn’t found his usual offensive spark this season, though. He missed the start of the year due to a collapsed lung and has only scored 14 points, split evenly, in 23 games since. Most of that scoring has come in chunks since December, with Benn sporting two four-game scoring droughts split by a four-game point streak over the last month-and-a-half.

Benn’s return could prompt some shifting in Dallas’ lineup. He has spent the bulk of his time this season alongside Roope Hintz and Jason Robertson – a role that was taken over by Mavrik Bourque over the last three games. Bourque scored one point in the trial run, likely low enough to bump him back to a tandem with Matt Duchene and Justin Hryckowian, while Colin Blackwell falls out of the lineup. Benn could also return to a role on the power-play in place of Bourque or Hryckowian.

Dallas will look to snap a recent lull with their captain back in the lineup. The Stars have posted a 1-3-4 record in their last eight games, a far fall from the 8-2-1 record they posted in their first 11 games of December. Benn was a core member of the lineup through that winning stretch and should bring the Stars lineup closer to normal, though they still face injuries to Tyler Seguin and Lian Bichsel.

Penguins Sign Blake Lizotte To Three-Year Extension

The Pittsburgh Penguins have signed depth centerman Blake Lizotte to a three-year, $6.75MM contract extension. The deal will carry an average annual value of $2.25MM. Lizotte was set to become an unrestricted free agent this summer, after spending the last two years on a deal that paid $1.85MM annually.

Lizotte has locked in his spot at the bottom of Pittsburgh’s lineup over the last two seasons. He has racked up 10 points in 35 games this season, to go with 19 shot blocks, 32 hits, and 36 shots on goal. He’s proven to be a chippy, defense-first center often tasked with pushing the Penguins out of their own zone. Lizotte ranks second on the team in defensive-zone shift starts, beginning 82.5 percent of all shifts in his own end. Despite that, Lizotte has posted a plus-six on the year – the third-highest plus-minus on the Penguins behind Ryan Shea and Anthony Mantha. Lizotte also has a 51.4 faceoff percentage, third-best among the team’s centers behind Sidney Crosby and Noel Acciari.

His knack on defense has pushed Lizotte into a prime penalty killing role. He leads the Penguins in shorthanded ice-time per-game. He has been on the ice for six power-play goals against, half as many as top penalty-killing defenseman Parker Wotherspoon. Tenacious defense has proven the marker of Lizotte’s eight-year career in the NHL. He has managed a positive plus-minus in half of those seasons, despite a routine presence on his team’s shorthanded units.

Lizotte was signed by the Los Angeles Kings asa a college free agent in 2019. He broke into the NHL right away and earned 23 points, 20 penalty minutes, and a minus-five in his first 65 career games. That was enough to keep Lizotte at the top level through the shortened 2020-21 season, where he added 10 points and a plus-two in 41 games. He continued to improve with the Kings – netting 24 points in 2021-22 and a career-high 34 points in 2022-23. Those numbers began to falter as Lizotte faced injury and healthy scratches in the 2022-23 season. He only scored 15 points in 62 games of the contract year, prompting L.A. to leave Lizotte unqualified for the 2024 summer. The Penguins signed the depth center out of the open market and have kept his NHL streak alive ever since. Through eight years in the pros, the undrafted Lizotte has only appeared in one AHL game.

It seems that streak will continue on as Pittsburgh dedicates more money to Lizotte’s role. Having his chippy, depth presence has helped the Penguins allow the 10th-fewest goals in the NHL this season, after they ranked in the bottom-three last year. He will continue on in a hard-nosed, aggressive role behind Pittsburgh’s young stars as they adjust into the NHL.

Blues’ Philip Broberg Day-To-Day With Concussion

1/12: The Blues have announced that Broberg is out day-to-day with a concussion and isn’t expected to be available for Tuesday’s game against the Carolina Hurricanes. Head coach Jim Montgomery added that the Blues’ medical staff is pleased with Broberg’s progress since sustaining his injury on Sunday.

1/11: A good day turned sour for the St. Louis Blues and a top defenseman. Philip Broberg was forced out of the team’s Saturday loss to the Vegas Golden Knights after getting checked against the boards by Vegas winger Mark Stone. Broberg was designated with an upper-body injury. The injury occured just 1:35 into the contest and came hours after Broberg put pen-to-paper on a six-year, $48MM contract extension with St. Louis.

Broberg recorded a primary assist on St. Louis’ first goal – scored by Robert Thomas 53 seconds into the game – before exiting. That mark brought the 24-year-old defenseman up to 15 points in 46 games this season, the second-most points on the blue-line behind Justin Faulk (21). Broberg has offered that hint of offense while continuing to command play outside of the offensive zone. Broberg uses his physical strength and an active stick to pinch opponents and control possession for St. Louis. His reliable, two-way status has stuck through his second year with the Blues. He ranks second on the defense in expected-goals-against (2.38) and third in takeaways (12) per MoneyPuck.

Broberg’s full-ice impact has earned him the Blues’ top left-defense spot this season. That could be a tough role to replace if Broberg is knocked out of the lineup. St. Louis’ only other left-shot defenders are Tyler Tucker, frequently a bottom-pair enforcer, and Cam Fowler, an aging veteran. Promoting Fowler to the top pair would reunite a pairing with Colton Parayko that worked incredibly well for the Blues last season.

St. Louis could mend the hole at the bottom of their lineup by icing extra defenseman Matthew Kessel on his off-hand, or by recalling first-round pick Theo Lindstein or veteran defender Calle Rosen from the AHL. Rosen leads the Springfield Thunderbirds’ defense in scoring with 15 points in 25 games. Lindsteim has eight points in 34 games. Neither has played in the NHL this season – but could end up the beneficiaries of another opening in the St. Louis lineup.

Maple Leafs Assign Dakota Mermis On Conditioning Loan

The Maple Leafs announced they’ve assigned defenseman Dakota Mermis to AHL Toronto on a conditioning loan. Since he is on long-term injured reserve, his conditioning stint is subject to added restrictions – he can only remain in the minors for up to three games or six days, whichever comes first, until they must activate him and/or place him on waivers.

Mermis has been rehabbing a lower-body injury for just over a month. The veteran depth option last played on Dec. 8 against the Lightning. While it was only ever publicly reported he was on standard IR, the team’s announcement implies they shifted him to LTIR at some point in the last few weeks for added breathing room under the salary cap.

Mermis, fresh off his 32nd birthday, is in his second season as a Leaf. He spent most of last year in the minors with the Marlies, aside from a few brief call-ups to Toronto and a short stint in Utah after getting claimed off waivers and subsequently being re-claimed by the Leafs. This season, though, he’s gotten into 11 contests for the Leafs amid their earlier rash of blue line injuries. It’s the second-most action the career minor-league option has seen aside from his career-high 47 games with the Wild two years ago.

The 6’0″ lefty has one goal with a -3 rating while averaging 13:02 per game. He’s generally been a net positive possession player in his short looks in the Leafs lineup, and with 554 games of NHL and AHL experience, there’s legitimate value in Mermis as a plug-and-play option.

While Chris Tanev remains on the shelf, Brandon Carlo‘s return from injury and Troy Stecher‘s inclusion in the lineup makes it likelier than not he’ll end up on waivers when his conditioning stint ends this weekend. He might also be kept around as an eighth defenseman while Matt Benning hits the wire, though.

Avalanche Recall Ivan Ivan

Jan. 12: The yo-yo continues for Ivan, who’s been added to the Avs’ roster once again ahead of tonight’s game against the Maple Leafs. He’s eligible for such a quick recall because he suited up for the Eagles on the 9th and 10th – playing three games in three nights across the NHL and AHL. Appearing tonight would make it four games in five days.


Jan. 9: The Avalanche announced they returned Ivan to the AHL following last night’s drubbing of the Senators. Ivan had a +1 rating in the win while skating 9:37 of ice time. A different name will likely be elevated tomorrow before their game against the Blue Jackets.


Jan. 8: The Avalanche announced they’ve recalled forward Ivan Ivan from the AHL’s Colorado Eagles. They were operating with an open roster spot after sending Taylor Makar down yesterday, so no corresponding move is required.

Colorado has shown a tendency to frequently rotate depth forward options on the roster when needing to dip into its minor-league depth to address injuries. With Gabriel Landeskog and Joel Kiviranta now sidelined, that hasn’t changed.

Ivan, 23, gets his second recall of the season and will presumably draw into the lineup tonight against the Senators as the fourth-line left wing. Makar had skated in that role alongside Zakhar Bardakov and Parker Kelly in two of the last three games.

The 6’0″, 190-lb Ivan made three appearances for the Avs near the end of November, scoring one assist with a +1 rating while averaging 8:19 of ice time per game. Initially an undrafted free agent signing by the Eagles out of the QMJHL’s Cape Breton Eagles in 2023, he quickly worked his way up toward landing an NHL contract and being a frequently relied-upon call-up option. He made 40 appearances for the Avs as a rookie last year, notching five goals and eight points.

While the Czech native stood out as a rookie with the Eagles in 2023-24, he hasn’t been able to recapture that offensive success in the minors. He went from a 12-19–31 scoring line in 67 games as a first-year pro to churning out just four goals and 20 points in 64 AHL games since the beginning of last year.

Ivan’s always profiled as more of a penalty-killing forward with good playmaking skills, though, so the lack of goal-scoring isn’t entirely unexpected. Nonetheless, for a talent who twice hit a point per game in high-level junior hockey, he’ll be looking for more production as the season rolls on.