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Kraken Place Jared McCann On IR, Recall Jacob Melanson

December 13, 2025 at 10:00 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Seattle Kraken have once again placed their top forward on the shelf. Center Jared McCann has been placed on injured reserve with a lower-body injury that is expected to hold him out for three weeks. With the available roster spot, Seattle has recalled forward Jacob Melanson from the AHL’s Coachella Valley Firebirds.

McCann has only appeared in 11 of Seattle’s 29 games this season. The Kraken have found a way to squeak by in McCann’s absence – with an 8-6-4 record in games he’s missed – but it’s clear how much the lineup misses him. Seattle only scored 44 goals in 18 games without McCann, the sixth-fewest in total and second-lowest on average in the NHL on the days that he’s missed.

The slowing offense is no surprise. McCann has led the Kraken in scoring in every season so far. He scored a then-career-high 50 points in 74 games with Seattle during their inaugural 2021-22 season. That was followed by a 40-goal, 70-point season in 2022-23 that still stands as McCann’s personal best. He’s continued to rival 20-to-30 goals and 60 points over the last two seasons. Even better, McCann had only missed 13 games in Seattle’s first four seasons, stamping him as the focal piece of the offense on a nightly basis.

That focus has been broken up by injury this year. Seattle has instead turned towards Jordan Eberle, Matty Beniers, and Vince Dunn to command their scoring – though none of the three have reached 20 points through 29 games this season. That’s pushed the Kraken to try and find a spark out of rookies like Berkly Catton, Jani Nyman, and Oscar Fisker Molgaard.

Melanson would be another rookie in the lineup, though he’s more likely to find a spot on the other side of the scoresheet. He ranks fourth on the Firebirds with 26 penalty minutes through 23 games this season. That’s been balanced with seven goals and 14 points, already more than Melanson scored in 42 games of last season. He has also posted a plus-five, up from the minus-three he carried through 104 career AHL games entering the season. He’s found a spot as a checking-forward and should give Seattle another option for their fourth-line wings.

AHL| Injury| NHL| Seattle Kraken| Transactions Jacob Melanson| Jared McCann

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Elias Pettersson Out, Marco Rossi Could Make Canucks Debut

December 13, 2025 at 9:20 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 5 Comments

The whirlwind around the Vancouver Canucks will continue into Sunday’s game against the New Jersey Devils. Vancouver will be without their star forward Elias Pettersson, but could return Marco Rossi back from injury, per Thomas Drance of The Athletic. Rossi has missed over a month of action with a lower-body injury. He has been considered as day-to-day over the last week and could now get the chance to make his Canucks debut in the first possible opportunity.

Rossi should be a major addition to a Vancouver side that’s struggled to fill their top-center role all season long. He scored 13 points in 17 games with the Wild to start the season, and is coming off a career year with 24 goals and 60 points last season. He was a fringe top-line center to start the year, rotating with Joel Eriksson Ek for minutes. That’s a standing he earned in the latter half of last season, when injuries to Eriksson Ek and Ryan Hartman pushed Rossi into a premier role. He hung onto it, despite a playoff series with minimal usage, and now has a chance to grow into a much larger role for Vancouver. The 24 year old scored 49 goals and 114 points in 202 games, and five seasons, in Minnesota.

Even with that production, Rossi could face an immediate challenge stepping in for Pettersson, who hasn’t played in over a week due to an upper-body injury. Pettersson has continued to serve as Vancouver’s top forward. He led the offense in average ice time (20:37) prior to injury and continues to lead the forwards in points (22). Vancouver has struggled in his absence, with only six goals in their last three games – tied for third-worst in the league over the last week.

With a return from injury and recent move weighing him down, Rossi likely won’t be the one to relight Vancouver’s offense out of the gates. His return will be a great indication of what Vancouver will have to offer on the heels of a historic trade. They acquired three young and promising pros and could slot two of them – Rossi and defenseman Zeev Buium – into top-line roles right away. How they’re able to perform under the pressure of a losing season could go far in forecasting Vancouver’s next era, now shaped around three former Minnesota Wild, Pettersson, and inevitably high draft capital.

Injury| Vancouver Canucks Elias Pettersson| Marco Rossi

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Four-Time Cup Champion Bobby Rousseau Passes Away At Age 85

December 13, 2025 at 8:31 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 1 Comment

Former Montreal Canadiens forward Bobby Rousseau has passed away at the age of 85, after a long battle with Alzheimer’s disease. Rousseau was a part of the Canadiens’ push to two rounds of back-to-back Stanley Cup wins, in 1965 and 1966, then 1968, and 1969. He also won the Calder Trophy as the NHL’s best rookie in 1962, after posting 21 goals and 45 points in 70 games.

Rousseau, born Joseph Jean-Paul Robert Rousseau, began his career in the QMJHL. He led the league in scoring as a rookie, with 85 points in 44 games. Montreal acquired his rights soon after, and loaned him to the Hull-Ottawa Canadiens of the Eastern Professional Hockey League for the 1960-61 season. That same year, Rousseau was also loaned to the Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen, who represented Team Canada at the 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley. He would take home a Silver Medal from that tourney, in a year where USA won Gold and the Soviet Union won Bronze.

All of that came before Rousseau’s NHL career, which kicked off in-full in the 1961-62 season. He took home the Calder that year, en route to planting his feet as a routine 20-goal, 50-point challenger in the Canadiens’ lineup. He held that role through his age-24 season in 1964-65, but broke out in the 1965-66 season with 30 goals and 78 points in 70 games – all career-highs. Rousseau bounced between 60 and 70 points for the next three seasons, before dipping back to 58 points in the 1969-70 campaign.

That was enough to turnover his position in the Canadiens’ lineup. Rousseau was traded to the Minnesota North Stars, where he spent one season before again being traded to the New York Rangers. He was technically a later-named future considerations in the latter trade, a move that would prove foolish after Rousseau posted 157 points in 236 games, and four seasons, with the Rangers. His career came to a gradual close in the 1973-74 season, and officially in 1975 – the same year that his Montreal Canadiens would kick off another spree of Stanley Cup wins.

Rousseau is remembered for his fast skating and hard shot. More than that, he’s remembered for taking over games with bouts of skill, and the dynamic option that skill offered Jean Béliveau and Henri Richard in some of their best years. Rousseau was a key winger for Montreal, alongside the links of Gilles Tremblay and Claude Provost.

Rousseau’s older brother, Roland, also won the Memorial Cup. The family completed the Memorial Cup hat-trick when Rousseau’s grandson, William Rousseau, won the 2023 Cup with the QMJHL’s Quebec Remparts. William went on to win the QMJHL’s ’Goaltender of the Year’ award in 2024 and now plays professionally with the ECHL’s Iowa Heartlanders.

Bobby Rousseau will forever be rememebred as one of 119 players to have their name on the Stanley Cup four different times. He leaves behind his wife, Huguette, as well as eight grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. His name is among Montreal’s true greats. Pro Hockey Rumors sends our condolences to Rousseau’s family, friends, and the Montreal faithful. For more insights and quotes, visit NHL.com’s story remembering the Canadiens legend.

Montreal Canadiens| NHL| New York Rangers| Newsstand| Players Bobby Rousseau

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Jets Activate Connor Hellebuyck

December 13, 2025 at 6:18 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 1 Comment

The Winnipeg Jets will get an MVP-boost to Saturday’s match against the Washington Capitals. Reigning Hart Trophy winner Connor Hellebuyck was activated off of injured reserve just in time for Hellebuyck to take on the starting role. He underwent an arthtroscopic knee procedure on November 21st that was originally expected to hold him out for four-to-six weeks. He now returns just three weeks later.

This will be some great news for the Jets, who have posted a dismal 2-7-1 record since Hellebuyck’s exit. They’ve been among the NHL’s worst performers in that stretch, allowing the second-most goals against (38) and the third-worst goals-against per-game average (3.80) of any team. Their offense has struggled just as much, only scoring 24 goals, or 2.40 goals-per-game.

Winnipeg was rock solid before losing their superstar goaltender. They had a 12-7-0 record and 64-to-52 goal-differential prior to Hellebuyck’s absence. The three-time Vezina Trophy-winner himself had eight wins and a .913 save percentage in 14 games. That’s his lowest save percentage since the 2021-22 season, but still ranks as the sixth-highest in the league among goalies with 14-or-more starts.

Hellebuyck’s precedent often sits far above sixth-best. He led the NHL in wins (47), save percentage (.925), and goals-against-average (2.00) among goalies with at least 35 starts last season. It was enough to earn Hellebuyck MVP acknowledgement, making him the first goaltender to take home the Hart since Carey Price in 2015. Hellebuyck certainly sits in-line with that company – boasting a career-long .918 Sv% in 582 games, to Price’s career .917 Sv% in 712 games.

The Jets’ goalie room quickly dries up with their starter on the shelf. Eric Comrie took on the starting role over the last few weeks, but only managed to bring his stat line up to six wins and a .886 Sv% in 15 appearances. Thomas Milic also posted a .871 Sv% in three appearances. The 22-year-old is only one season removed from an extended run in the ECHL. With these shifts, Hellebuyck will return to an unrivaled role in Winnipeg’s starter’s crease, while Milic heads back to a competition for the AHL starting role.

NHL| Newsstand| Transactions| Winnipeg Jets Carey Price| Connor Hellebuyck| Thomas Milic

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Finland Announces Roster For 2026 World Juniors

December 13, 2025 at 5:39 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

Finland has become the second-to-last country to announce their roster for the 2026 World Junior Championships. This news leaves Team Latvia as the only country yet to announce their tournament roster. Finland’s roster features 25 players, indicating that no cuts will be made from this group. Finland will be led by returnees Emil Hemming, Heikki Ruohonen, and Aron Kiviharju, who joined the country for a Silver Medal finish last year. The full roster is as follows:

F Emil Hemming (Stars, 2024, 1-29)
F Atte Joki (Stars, 2025, 5-146)
F Onni Kalto (2026 re-entry draft eligible)
F Aatos Koivu (Canadiens, 2024, 3-70)
F Jasper Kuhta (2026 draft eligible)
F Julius Miettinen (Kraken, 2024, 2-40)
F Kasper Pikkarainen (Devils, 2024, 3-85)
F Heikki Ruohonen (Flyers, 2024, 4-107)
F Joona Saarelainen (Lightning, 2024, 5-149)
F Oliver Suvanto (2026 draft eligible)
F Leo Tuuva (2026 re-entry draft eligible)
F Matias Vanhanen (2026 re-entry draft eligible)
F Roope Vesterinen (2026 re-entry draft eligible)
F Max Westergard (Flyers, 2025, 5-132)

D Lasse Boelius (Ducks, 2025, 2-60)
D Mitja Jokinen (2026 re-entry draft eligible)
D Aron Kiviharju (Wild, 2024, 4-122)
D Daniel Nieminen (Predators, 2025, 6-163)
D Niklas Nykyri (2026 re-entry draft eligible)
D Juho Piiparinen (2026 draft eligible)
D Veeti Vaisanen (Mammoth, 2024, 3-96)
D Arttu Vailila (2026 re-entry draft eligible)

G Patrik Kerkola (2026 draft eligible)
G Petteri Rimpinen (Kings, 2025, 5-152)
G Kim Saarinen (Kraken, 2024, 3-88)

The Finns will bring yet another formidable group to what’s shaping up to be a fantastic World Juniors tourney. Their offense and top powerplay units will be led by volume-shooter Hemming and playmaking-center Ruohonen, who both scored four points in seven games. They built out the team’s second-line, in rotation with Lightning prospect Benjamin Rautiainen and Sharks prospect Kasper Halttunen. Hemming has ramped up to above point-per-game scoring in the OHL this season, while Ruohonen has taken on the third-line center role as a freshman at Harvard University. That should be a nice boost for both forwards as they look to take on push forward Finland’s offense.

The duo of returning forwards will get a ton of help from Finland’s new additions. Aatos Koivu, son of 1,124 NHL game-veteran Saku Koivu, is in his second season of routine pro minutes. He brings a hot shot and quick playmaking, attributes that have helped him score eight points in 10 games with Finland’s international juniors roster already this season. Miettinen and Vanhanen have taken on star roles with the WHL’s Everett Silvertips, where their mix of chemistry, hard hits, and quick passing have overwhelmed junior competition. The side will also be supported by top draft eligible Suvanto – one of the youngest players in Finland’s Liiga, and the 2026 draft class. He has matched Koviu’s Liiga scoring this season, and is considered a top-25 prospect by many public scouts.

More important than their returning forwards will be Finland’s returning starter. Rimpinen played in the most games, and posted the second-highest save percentage, in last year’s tournament with five wins and a .933 Sv% in seven games. His performance was pivotal to Finland’s tournament success and quickly earned him attention from NHL scouts. Rimpinen went on to win the Liiga’s ’Rookie of the Year’ award at the end of the 2024-25 season. He has cooled slightly after posting a .912 Sv% in 40 games last year, now down to an .894 Sv% in 23 games this year. But that shouldn’t keep Rimpinen from fortifying Finland’s net at the World Juniors. Saarinen, who has 48 games of Liiga experience, will serve as backup.

The question marks around this lineup will be concentrated around the defense. No one defender brings a full-ice impact, leaving Finland to take a bit of a committee approach. Kiviharju and Boelius will dominate puck-movement for the top defender pairs and power-play units, while Nykyri, Piiparinen, and Vaisanen bring a physical and shutdown presence. The rest of the bunch will fall somewhere in between, looking to help control the neutral zone for a Finnish squad that isn’t expected to dominate transition. Piiiparinen will be a particular name to watch. He is another top prospect in the 2026 draft, with commendable shutdown qualities and a quick jump. He’s been graded as a first-round talent by many public scouts.

This lineup notably exlcudes Buffalo Sabres top prospect Konsta Helenius, who is no longer expected to be loaned out for the tournament despite previous reports. Helenius ranked second on the team in scoring at last year’s tournament with six points – all assits – in seven games. He would be a serious addition to the lineup should Rochester have a change of heart. That seems unlikely, though, as Helenius has racked up a team-leading 23 points in 25 AHL games this season while serving as the team’s top center. Should he be added late, it would likely be Tuuva or Kuhta cut to make space.

Photo courtesy of Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images.

Team Finland

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Central Notes: Bedard, Vanacker, O’Connor, Kiviranta

December 13, 2025 at 3:59 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 4 Comments

Blackhawks center Connor Bedard was injured in a last-second faceoff in last night’s game against St. Louis.  Ben Pope of the Chicago Sun-Times notes that the 20-year-old has already been ruled out for today’s game against Detroit with there not yet being enough information to make any determinations beyond that.  More information is expected on Monday before the team embarks on a three-game road trip.  Bedard, the number one pick in 2023, is in the middle of a breakout season as he has 19 goals and 25 assists in just 31 games, a level of play that has him as a speculative candidate to play for Canada at the upcoming Olympics, assuming that this injury isn’t a long-term one.

Elsewhere in the Central:

  • Still with Chicago, Hockey Canada announced (Twitter link) that Blackhawks prospect Marek Vanacker has been added to its training camp roster for the upcoming World Juniors. The 19-year-old was the 27th pick in the 2024 draft and is in the middle of a dominant season with OHL Brantford.  Through 26 games with the Bulldogs, Vanacker has 26 goals and 15 assists.  Considering the fact he wasn’t on the original invite list, he has some work to do to try to secure a spot on the final roster.
  • The Avalanche have been without winger Logan O’Connor all season as he works his way back from offseason hip surgery. However, as Aarif Deen of Colorado Hockey Now relays, the 29-year-old is now dealing with another issue that head coach Jared Bednar says is still being evaluated.  The team hopes to know more about his status within the next week or two.  While he has been cleared from the hip injury, it appears that Colorado will be without one of their key bottom-six forwards for a while yet.  O’Connor is currently on LTIR although the Avs have a low enough team payroll at the moment that they’re not actually using it at the moment.
  • Meanwhile, the news is better for winger Joel Kiviranta. The 29-year-old exited Thursday’s game with an eye issue but Meghan Angley of Guerilla Sports mentions (Twitter link) that Kiviranta will suit up tonight against Nashville.  Kiviranta had a breakout year for the Avalanche last season, scoring 16 goals in 79 games but offense has been harder to come by this year as he has been limited to just a goal and an assist in 14 outings so far.

Chicago Blackhawks| Colorado Avalanche| OHL Connor Bedard| Joel Kiviranta| Logan O'Connor| Marek Vanacker

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Sabres Recall Noah Ostlund, Assign Trevor Kuntar To AHL

December 13, 2025 at 3:28 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

Trevor Kuntar’s first NHL stint was short-lived.  After his minor league deal was converted to an NHL pact back on Wednesday, his time in Buffalo is up for now as the team announced that they’ve assigned him to AHL Rochester and recalled center Noah Ostlund.

Ostlund has spent the bulk of the season up with Buffalo but with the team needing a seventh defenseman earlier in the week, he was the odd player out with his waiver exemption allowing for a quick solution.  The 21-year-old has played in 20 games with the Sabres this season, picking up three goals and three assists while averaging 12:45 of ice time per contest.  Ostlund has also gotten into seven games with the Amerks, collecting three goals and seven assists; three of those points came in his game on Wednesday, a mandatory outing before he could become recall-eligible again.

Kuntar is in his first season in Buffalo’s organization after coming over as an unrestricted free agent following his being non-tendered by Boston in June.  The 24-year-old leads Rochester in goals this season with nine while also chipping in with four assists in 24 appearances.  He made his NHL debut on Thursday, playing 5:12.  Now that he’s on an NHL deal, there should be an opportunity for him to come back at some point later in the season whenever injuries arise.

AHL| Buffalo Sabres| Transactions Noah Ostlund| Trevor Kuntar

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PHR Mailbag: Atlantic Division, Rangers, Kadri, Cooper, Binnington

December 13, 2025 at 2:52 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Topics in this edition of the PHR Mailbag include a look around the Atlantic Division, the potential for the Flames to trade Nazem Kadri, and more.  If your question doesn’t appear here, check back in last weekend’s column while we’ll have one more mailbag from our last call for questions as well.

PyramidHeadcrab: Let’s do a mini Atlantic lightning round:

  1. Buffalo is floundering at the bottom of the East again, and bafflingly looking at offloading another top pick. How short of a leash does Kevyn Adams and the rest of the front office have at this point?
  2. Toronto sans Marner has been a clown show. How much of this is thanks to Stolarz regressing, and how much is due to broader roster management?
  3. Who’s on the rise and who’s declining in Montreal?
  4. Does Ottawa find the next gear and lock in a playoff spot?
  5. What’s the timeline on Barkov and Tkachuk returning in Florida? And if they recover in time, do we see another Cup Final run despite the below-average season thus far?
  6. Anyone else surprised at how Tampa continues to be competitive so consistently?
  7. When does Boston “blow up the team”?
  8. Detroit has fallen off a cliff in recent weeks–do they recover and push for a playoff spot, or extend the drought?

Let’s get right into it with some rapid-fire answers.

1) It looks like a pretty short leash with open speculation that the team is starting to talk about a potential change.  Whether that’s just promoting Jarmo Kekalainen when he’s able to return from a personal leave or going external needs to be seen.  But if ownership has decided that it’s time to make a change, they’re better off making it instead of dragging this out any longer.

2) It seems pretty clear to me that Anthony Stolarz was trying to play through something and the fact his return timeline keeps getting pushed back tells me it was something pretty significant.  But yes, poor goaltending at the start of the season hurt them.  But quietly, they’re scoring at a slightly higher rate than last year (3.3 goals per game versus 3.26 last season) and Joseph Woll – when healthy – gave them good enough goaltending to get back into the mix.  Some of their moves this summer haven’t panned out which isn’t great but they’re in better shape than it might seem at first glance.

3) I’ve been really impressed by Oliver Kapanen this season.  On the bubble to make the roster out of training camp, he has come in and exceeded expectations to the point of being tied for the lead in rookie goals.  That hasn’t solved the second-line center problem but it’s bought them time.  He and Ivan Demidov have shown some promising chemistry early on.  On the decline is their goaltending.  A decent tandem last season, Sam Montembeault and Jakub Dobes (despite a 6-0 start) have fallen off the proverbial cliff.  It’s impressive that the Canadiens are still right in the thick of it in spite of their goaltending.

4) It’s surprising that Ottawa hasn’t picked it up since Brady Tkachuk’s return although they’re still a good week away from probably being in a Wild Card spot.  I had them as a playoff team going into the season and I still think they do get there.  Linus Ullmark has been a little better lately but if he can even get close to the form he’s capable of being, they should be fine.

5) Aleksander Barkov is done for the regular season with the team eventually needing to make a call on if he could be ready late in the playoffs or if he lands on season-ending LTIR.  Matthew Tkachuk has been skating for a couple of weeks now but there’s no firm timeline for a return beyond that he should be good to go in the Olympics.  I don’t want to write them off entirely but with the injuries they have and the fatigue of two long playoff runs, them getting back there again this season would surprise me.

6) The fact that Tampa Bay is consistently strong isn’t too shocking given their core talent and coach (more on him shortly).  That they’re this good this year with a long list of injuries is particularly impressive though.

7) Considering the Bruins are exceeding expectations, I don’t think they’d be looking at blowing things up.  If anything, it wouldn’t surprise me if GM Don Sweeney sees this as evidence that his approach to the summer was correct and they’re on the right track.  That isn’t to say that pending UFAs like Viktor Arvidsson and Andrew Peeke won’t be moved if they’re out of contention in early March but any subtraction would be more limited compared to last season.

8) I think the drought gets extended (and I say this as they’re in a playoff spot).  I liked the John Gibson pickup but he hasn’t panned out as planned as goaltending remains a big sore spot.  The offense has been improved so far but it wouldn’t shock me to see that regress as the season goes on.  I could easily be wrong with how tight the division is but I don’t think this group is quite good enough to really make a run.

Schwa: NYR plans with the Fox injury? How would you play rank the following scenarios in terms of likeliness…

– Let Morrow take the PP1 and hope internal options will get by.

– Drury gets aggressive and mortgages the future to try and save another season stuck in the middle.

– Long-term focused move – maybe something like trading for Mintyukov. Could you see the Ducks being interested in Othmann plus a piece?

Also, a long-term focused idea… could you see Drury trying to move Panarin early – either for someone more long-term focused or for picks and see what Perreault can do?

We know the Rangers are looking to see if there are any affordable options to bolster their firepower on the back end.  Of course, with them not having much in the way of non-LTIR cap room available (when everyone is healthy), their options are pretty limited so I’m not sure they’ll have a ton of success there.  They’ve tried option one a bit already without a lot of success.  I think option three (long-term focused) is the likelier of the remaining two as with the struggles they’ve had at times, it’s hard to see GM Chris Drury think that this is the time to push in some trade chips.

With Pavel Mintyukov’s situation, I think back to a former Ranger in Nils Lundkvist.  A youngster with some perceived potential that consistently seems to be on the borderline on the depth chart although Mintyukov has still been in the lineup more regularly than Lundkvist was in New York.  The return for Lundkvist was a first-round pick and a fourth-round selection.  Yes, Brennan Othmann was a first-round pick but I don’t think he holds that type of value now.  He’d be more of the secondary inclusion at this point and that’s a price the Rangers don’t need to be paying.

As for the potential of moving Artemi Panarin early, it depends on the standings.  If New York is in the thick of the playoff hunt, it’s harder to see them moving him and punting on the season.  But if they slide a little further in the standings and the best-case scenario becomes squeaking into a Wild Card spot, then yes, I do think Drury will at least investigate the options.  If Panarin isn’t willing to take a team-friendly extension (which appears to be what the Rangers are offering), then it would make sense to move him earlier with retention and maximize a trade return with a future asset (either a top pick or strong prospect) coming their way.  It’s too early to make that call but if they keep underachieving, I do think that will be on the table.

@RobG64: Will Kadri get traded?

I know the question doesn’t say should but I’m going to comment on that first.  He should be moved.  The worst thing that happened to Calgary last season was Dustin Wolf dragging them so close to a playoff spot that the Flames think they’re close.  I know they’ve been a bit better as of late but they’re not close to a playoff spot and further away from contending.  Nazem Kadri is 35 years old and isn’t going to be part of the core group (or at least as impactful) by the time they get to that next level.  So, from a logic standpoint, he absolutely should be moved.

But you asked will he be moved.  That, I’m not so sure about.  As long as management in Calgary believes that a playoff berth is reasonably within reach, they’re probably going to want to keep him as making the postseason would be easier with him than without.  On the other hand, their hand is going to get forced sooner or later with pending UFA defenseman Rasmus Andersson as they won’t want to risk losing him for nothing on the open market.  (Or at least they shouldn’t want that.)  So maybe when Andersson goes, they reassess on Kadri.

If I’m handicapping it, I wouldn’t go higher than a 60% chance that Kadri gets moved.  The Flames should get several substantial offers for his services in a market that doesn’t have many sellers and has a lot of buyers looking for centers.  The situation is there for them to get a premium return but I don’t sense their willingness to take it is as it as it probably should be.

FeeltheThunder: Do you think Jon Cooper should be a major contender for the Jack Adams Award this season? Why he hasn’t won it in the past is borderline asinine. He’s taken a Tampa team that surprisingly stumbled out of the gate in early October to start the season and was at the bottom of the Eastern Conference and then by late October changed gears. They go on a win streak and continued it through the majority of November going 11-3 and that is in spite of countless injuries to key players during it. Much more, Tampa’s depth has proven to be significant as this looks like the deepest they’ve been in a few years. What do you think of Cooper’s chances?

While the Lightning have been perhaps a bit streakier than they’d like this season, on the whole, it’s hard not to be impressed.  Despite a litany of injuries (many of which have been to their top players), they have been at or near the top of the Atlantic Division.  If you’d have said to me that they’d be there despite having six of their top seven scorers missing time along with Andrei Vasilevskiy, I’d have had a hard time believing that.  Should he be a contender as things stand?  Absolutely.

Will he be one?  I’m not as confident in saying that.  A lot of years, voters have leaned toward the coach of a team that has taken a big jump in the standings and really exceeded expectations.  That’s not Tampa Bay.  They’re a steady contender which is a big compliment to Cooper and the job he’s done but doesn’t necessarily earn him much support in a one-year award.

Off-hand, there are a couple of teams that fit the usual criteria of being a big improver and surprising in the standings.  One is in the division in Boston’s Marco Sturm.  Few had them as a playoff team and they’re right up there with the Lightning.  Meanwhile, there was an expectation that Anaheim would be better but they’ve been atop the Pacific a lot early on this season which should push some support to Joel Quenneville.  There’s lots of time for the potential contenders to change but as of today, Cooper’s streak likely continues.

vincent k. mcmahon: Does Jordan Binnington eventually get moved to the Oilers (with all the rumors surrounding a potential trade) or barring a huge turnaround he doesn’t get moved?

Assuming he were to be traded, would the return be S. Skinner and picks to St. Louis?

One of the great things with the mailbags is that we get enough questions to break them into multiple columns.  The challenge is picking which ones are safe to push back.  It often works out well but sometimes, well, this happens and kills the question before I have a chance to really answer it.

Clearly, the answer is now a trade to Edmonton isn’t happening.  Honestly, I don’t think it would have anyway, just because of Binnington’s $6MM AAV.  Yes, it’s only $625K higher than Tristan Jarry’s but the hoops the Oilers are jumping through money-wise to stay cap-compliant are significant as it is with three players on LTIR.  That small difference in cap charge might have been enough for them to need to move another player or two out to create the savings to absorb Binnington’s extra cost.

I don’t get the sense that there’s a great trade market out there for Binnington at the moment.  Yes, there are teams looking for goaltending help but right now, how much of a help would he be?  With a save percentage of just .869, he’s already near the bottom of the league so teams aren’t looking at him and thinking he’s a sure-fire upgrade.  They can hope he could be but fitting that money in plus whatever the acquisition cost is likely going to be too much grief for another team to justify right now.

Photo courtesy of David Gonzales-USA TODAY Sports.

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals PHR Mailbag| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Capitals Activate Charlie Lindgren, Assign Garin Bjorklund To AHL

December 13, 2025 at 2:19 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The Capitals have made a pair of roster moves between the pipes heading into tonight’s game against Winnipeg.  The team announced that goaltender Charlie Lindgren has been activated off injured reserve.  To make room on the active roster, Garin Bjorklund has been assigned back to AHL Hershey; the roster remains full at 23 players.

Lindgren was placed on injured reserve back on Sunday, retroactive to December 5th so he winds up missing just the minimum amount of action.  The 31-year-old has played in 10 games so far this season, putting up a 2.90 GAA and a .893 SV%, numbers that are slightly worse compared to a year ago.  His best season came back in 2023-24 when he had a 2.67 GAA, a .911 SV%, and a league-best six shutouts in 50 games but was relegated to backup status when Washington acquired Logan Thompson at the 2024 draft.

As for Bjorklund, he received his first NHL recall on Monday but ultimately didn’t see any game action.  The 23-year-old is in his fourth professional season with the first three primarily being spent with ECHL South Carolina.  That hasn’t been the case this year, however, as he has only played for Hershey so far, posting a 3.01 GAA along with a .895 SV% in nine games.

AHL| Transactions| Washington Capitals Charlie Lindgren| Garin Bjorklund

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Blackhawks Recall Nick Lardis

December 13, 2025 at 1:45 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

It has been a very promising first rookie season for Blackhawks prospect Nick Lardis.  A strong showing with AHL Rockford has now been rewarded as the team announced that they’ve recalled the winger from the IceHogs.  With the move, their roster is now at the maximum of 23 players.

It’s the first recall of his young career.  The 20-year-old was a third-round pick by Chicago back in 2023 and has quickly surpassed that draft standing.  Lardis had a dominant showing last season in his final year of major junior, collecting a league-high 71 goals and 46 assists in 65 regular season games with OHL Brantford before averaging more than two points per game in the playoffs.

While Lardis hasn’t been able to produce at quite the same rate with Rockford, he has still been quite productive.  Entering play today, he sits sixth in AHL scoring and tops among rookies with 13 goals and 13 assists in 24 outings.  In a league where only a handful of veterans typically surpass the point-per-game mark, having a first-year pro do so like Lardis is particularly impressive.

Considering how impactful he has been in the minors, it will be interesting to see how Chicago chooses to deploy Lardis.  It wouldn’t make sense to pull him up to simply be an extra forward so it stands to reason that he should get his first taste of NHL action soon, perhaps as soon as tonight against Detroit.

AHL| Chicago Blackhawks| Transactions Nick Lardis

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