NHL Announces 2026 All-Rookie Team
Earlier today, the NHL announced the All-Rookie Team from the 2025-26 season, with no surprises. The team is as follows:
F Ivan Demidov, Montreal Canadiens
F Beckett Sennecke, Anaheim Ducks
F Jimmy Snuggerud, St. Louis Blues
D Matthew Schaefer, New York Islanders
D Alexander Nikishin, Carolina Hurricanes
G Jakub Dobes, Montreal Canadiens
The group is highlighted by the three Calder Trophy finalists: Demidov, Sennecke, and Schaefer. In a runaway performance, Schaefer ultimately took home Rookie of the Year honors, but Demidov and Sennecke each had exceptional seasons in their own right.
The final forward spot came down to the wire between Snuggerud and Ryan Leonard of the Washington Capitals. Snuggerud barely surpassed Leonard in scoring, finishing with 21 goals and 51 points in 70 games to Leonard’s 20 goals and 45 points in 75 games. The higher point totals in fewer games likely pushed Snuggerud over the edge.
Unlike the voting at forward, Nikishin made it fairly easy to round out the defense. He finished well short of Schaefer’s totals with 11 goals and 33 points in 81 games, but he plays a much different game. Nikishin’s +18 rating was only three behind Fraser Minten‘s rating with the Boston Bruins for the highest in the league among rookies.
The goaltending vote could have gone either way, and maybe should have. Not to knock Dobes, who had a quality year, but Jesper Wallstedt of the Minnesota Wild was fairly dominant this season. The former first-round pick finished with an 18-9-6 record in 35 games with a .916 SV% and 2.61 GAA.
Not only did Wallstedt’s save percentage finish as the top among rookie netminders, but he also finished second in the league among qualified goaltenders, only slightly behind Scott Wedgewood of the Colorado Avalanche.
Still, Dobe’s entry onto the All-Rookie Team was well deserved. He had a heavier workload than Wallstedt, finishing with a 29-10-4 record in 43 games with a .901 SV% and 2.78 GAA.
NHL Coaching Staff Directory
Below is Pro Hockey Rumors’ directory of NHL bench coaching staffs, pieced together from team websites and credible reports. Active vacancies compared to clubs’ 2024-25 staffing numbers are noted.
Updated 6/12/26
Anaheim Ducks
Head coach: Joel Quenneville
Assistant coaches: Ryan McGill, Jay Woodcroft, Tim Army, Andrew Brewer
Goalie coach: Peter Budaj
Boston Bruins
Head coach: Marco Sturm
Assistant coaches: Steve Spott, Chris Kelly, Matt McIlvane
Goalie coach: Bob Essensa
Buffalo Sabres
Head coach: Lindy Ruff
Assistant coaches: Marty Wilford, Seth Appert, Matt Ellis
Goalie coach: Mike Bales
Calgary Flames
Head coach: Ryan Huska
Assistant coaches: Dave Lowry, Cail MacLean, Trent Cull
Goalie coach: Jason LaBarbera
Carolina Hurricanes
Head coach: Rod Brind’Amour
Assistant coaches: Jeff Daniels, Tim Gleason
Goalie coach: Paul Schonfelder
Chicago Blackhawks
Head coach: Jeff Blashill
Assistant coaches: Mike Vellucci, Anders Sorensen, Michael Peca
Goalie coach: Jimmy Waite
Colorado Avalanche
Head coach: Jared Bednar
Assistant coaches: Nolan Pratt, Dave Hakstol
Goalie coach: Jussi Parkkila
Columbus Blue Jackets
Head coach: Rick Bowness
Assistant coaches: Jared Boll
Goalie coach: Niklas Bäckström
Dallas Stars
Head coach: Glen Gulutzan
Assistant coaches: Alain Nasreddine, Neil Graham, David Pelletier
Goalie coach: Jeff Reese
Detroit Red Wings
Head coach: Todd McLellan
Assistant coaches: Trent Yawney, Alex Tanguay
Goalie coach: Michael Leighton
Edmonton Oilers
Head coach: (Vacant)
Assistant coaches: Paul Coffey
Goalie coach: Peter Aubry
Florida Panthers
Head coach: Paul Maurice
Assistant coaches: Jamie Kompon, Sylvain Lefebvre, Tuomo Ruutu
Goalie coach: Robb Tallas
Los Angeles Kings
Head coach: Peter Laviolette
Assistant coaches: Derik Johnson, D.J. Smith, Newell Brown, Matt Greene
Goalie coach: Mike Buckley
Minnesota Wild
Head coach: John Hynes
Assistant coaches: Jack Capuano, Patrick Dwyer, Jason King
Goalie coach: Frederic Chabot
Montreal Canadiens
Head coach: Martin St. Louis
Assistant coaches: Trevor Letowski, Stéphane Robidas
Goalie coach: Marco Marciano (interim)
Nashville Predators
Head coach: Andrew Brunette
Assistant coaches: Darby Hendrickson, Luke Richardson, Derek MacKenzie, Lawrence Feloney
Goalie coach: Ben Vanderklok
New Jersey Devils
Head coach: Sheldon Keefe
Assistant coaches: Jeremy Colliton, Brad Shaw
Goalie coach: (Vacant)
New York Islanders
Head coach: Peter DeBoer
Assistant coaches: Bob Boughner, Rocky Thompson
Goalie coach: Sergei Naumov
New York Rangers
Head coach: Mike Sullivan
Assistant coaches: Joe Sacco, David Quinn, Ty Hennes
Goalie coach: Jeff Malcolm
Ottawa Senators
Head coach: Travis Green
Assistant coaches: Mike Yeo, Nolan Baumgartner, Ben Sexton, Daniel Alfredsson
Goalie coach: Justin Peters
Philadelphia Flyers
Head coach: Rick Tocchet
Assistant coaches: Todd Reirden, Yogi Svejkovský, Jay Varady
Goalie coach: Kim Dillabaugh
Pittsburgh Penguins
Head coach: Dan Muse
Assistant coaches: Todd Nelson, Mike Stothers, Rich Clune, Nick Bonino
Goalie coach: Andy Chiodo
San Jose Sharks
Head coach: Ryan Warsofsky
Assistant coaches: Doug Houda, Brian Wiseman, Jeff Ulmer
Goalie coach: Thomas Speer
Seattle Kraken
Head coach: Lane Lambert
Assistant coaches: Chris Taylor, Aaron Schneekloth, Pascal Vincent
Goalie coach: Colin Zulianello
St. Louis Blues
Head coach: Jim Montgomery
Assistant coaches: Ryan Stacey
Goalie coach: David Alexander
Tampa Bay Lightning
Head coach: Jon Cooper
Assistant coaches: Rob Zettler, Jeff Halpern, Dan Hinote
Goalie coach: Frantz Jean
Toronto Maple Leafs
Head coach: (Vacant)
Assistant coaches: Derek Lalonde, Steve Sullivan
Goalie coach: Curtis Sanford
Utah Mammoth
Head coach: André Tourigny
Assistant coaches: Blaine Forsythe, John Madden, Mario Duhamel
Goalie coach: Corey Schwab
Vancouver Canucks
Head coach: Manny Malhotra
Assistant coaches: (Vacant)
Goalie coach: Marko Torenius
Vegas Golden Knights
Head coach: John Tortorella
Assistant coaches: Dominique Ducharme, John Stevens, Joel Ward
Goalie coach: Sean Burke
Washington Capitals
Head coach: Spencer Carbery
Assistant coaches: Ray Bennett, Patrick Wellar, Scott Allen, Brett Leonhardt, Kenny McCudden
Goalie coach: Scott Murray
Winnipeg Jets
Head coach: Scott Arniel
Assistant coaches: Davis Payne, Dean Chynoweth, Marty Johnston
Goalie coach: Wade Flaherty
List Of 2026 Unrestricted Free Agents
This summer’s free agency period is on the horizon. Below is a complete list of the upcoming class of unrestricted free agents, with their 2026 ages listed in parentheses. Undoubtedly, several players will have signed extensions, departed for opportunities overseas, or retire, and this list will be amended to reflect those changes. The complete list of upcoming UFAs is as follows:
Centers
Rodrigo Abols (30)
Noel Acciari (34)
Teddy Blueger (31)
Jonny Brodzinski (32)
Nick Cousins (32)
Jason Dickinson (30)
Joshua Dunne (27)
Lars Eller (37)
Brendan Gaunce (32)
Claude Giroux (38)
Luke Glendening (37)
Jansen Harkins (29)
Kevin Hayes (34)
Adam Henrique (36)
Boone Jenner (32)
Ben Jones (27)
Tyson Jost (28)
David Kampf (31)
Alexander Kerfoot (31)
Justin Kirkland (29)
Luke Kunin (28)
Trevor Kuntar (24)
Joseph LaBate (33)
Tanner Laczynski (29)
Sam Lafferty (31)
Scott Laughton (32)
Curtis Lazar (31)
Zack MacEwen (29)
Marc McLaughlin (26)
Lane Pederson (28)
Noah Philp (27)
Kevin Rooney (33)
Jack Roslovic (29)
Colton Sissons (32)
Kevin Stenlund (29)
Jack Studnicka (27)
Oskar Sundqvist (32)
Jonathan Toews (38)
T.J. Tynan (34)
Flames Are Positioned For A Busy Offseason
The Calgary Flames could be one of the NHL’s most fascinating teams this summer, as they remain among the few teams firmly entrenched in a rebuild. What makes Calgary unique is not that they’re rebuilding, but where they are in the process. They are in a position to accelerate their timeline over the next 12-18 months through shrewd trades involving their remaining veterans, a process general manager Craig Conroy has been pursuing over the past few years, moving out older veterans while stockpiling draft picks, prospects, and salary-cap flexibility. The real heavy lifting begins now.
The Flames enter the offseason with a strong core of young players, including Dustin Wolf, Zayne Parekh, Matthew Coronato, Connor Zary, and Matvei Gridin. Conroy has said most players are available via trade, but one would have to believe Calgary remains committed to building around its younger core rather than executing a full teardown or chasing quick fixes in free agency.
This summer, Calgary is in a strong position to do a lot of business if they are so inclined. The Flames have a ton of cap space, which they could use in any number of ways, whether it’s to acquire pricey young talent to upgrade the NHL roster or to take on unwanted contracts in exchange for additional assets. The Flames could go either way but combining their cap flexibility with their draft capital would give Conroy many options to improve in the future.
Then there are the veterans who will attract significant interest on the trade market. Forward Blake Coleman will certainly be available and should draw interest given his playoff experience and leadership qualities. He is entering the final season of his current contract, and it’s hard to imagine him having a future in Calgary beyond this season. Ryan Strome is another player who could be moved, but his market may be limited after a poor showing last year. Strome is in the final year of his contract, so he could be moved near the NHL Trade Deadline, but it’s hard to imagine him having much of a market unless he can return to the level of play, he showed in the seasons before last year.
The best pending UFA in Calgary is probably Morgan Frost, who remains an intriguing two-way option at just 27 years old. Frost isn’t going to wow anyone offensively, but he is a consistent 40-point forward and a solid defender. Given his age, he could be an extension candidate in Calgary if they are looking to keep some of their younger veterans in the fray.
Beyond a few pending UFAs, Calgary has some veteran players with term remaining on their deals who could be of interest to teams seeking short-term upgrades. Defenseman Zach Whitecloud, a former Stanley Cup Champion, came to the Flames in the Rasmus Andersson trade and would be sought after if Calgary makes him available. He is just 29 and has two years remaining on his deal, with a cap hit of $2.75MM, making him a strong option for a third-pairing role. Whitecloud won’t score much or wow anyone, but he plays an honest game and can take on the defensive role alongside a more offensively minded partner.
Speaking of defensive defensemen, Olli Maatta is also an option for Calgary to move, as he has two years left on his deal at $3.5MM per season. Maatta is a two-time Stanley Cup Champion who has bounced around the league a lot since the Pittsburgh Penguins traded him seven years ago. He is playing for his fifth team since then but remains a steady presence. He probably isn’t suited for top four duties anymore but can fill in if needed. Maatta played sparingly in Utah last year before being dealt, but after the trade he logged 22:30 minutes a game with Calgary and fared reasonably well, posting two goals and 12 assists in 21 games.
Now, with Calgary in its current position, there isn’t much pressure to win, which should allow management to show some patience and perhaps capitalize on more desperate teams looking to acquire talent this summer. The Flames have a few players on long-term deals who aren’t veterans but may not fit Calgary’s current timeline. Yegor Sharangovich is a name that comes to mind, as he is signed to a lucrative long-term deal and didn’t produce much offence last season. With four years left on his contract at $5.75MM per season, the Flames need more than 29 points from the centre and could look to move him if teams are seeking a struggling player with offensive upside. Sharangovich is just 28, so he could still turn things around, but the last two seasons have been an offensive grind for the Minsk, Belarus, native.
Outside of moving guys out, the Flames have a pile of draft capital and could move up in this year’s NHL Entry Draft or turn picks into prospects or young, NHL-ready players who can play alongside Calgary’s young, NHL-ready prospects. The Flames have some good young pieces in Wolf, Zary, Coronato, and 2024 9th overall pick Parekh, and much of their timeline will hinge on the development of those four players. Zary and Coronato look like future top-six wingers, and they will need to be supported by other young, NHL-ready players to take the next step. Gridin is another intriguing young player in the Flames pipeline who will have a big role when Calgary emerges from this rebuild.
One thing the Flames are unlikely to do is spend heavily in free agency. That doesn’t mean they won’t make any moves, but at this stage of their rebuild, they will be looking to add pieces who can complement their core players beyond this season or serve as short-term options to move for future assets. The Flames could also use their sizeable cap space to bring in older players on bad contracts to grab assets from cash-strapped teams, as the Pittsburgh Penguins have in recent seasons, but it remains to be seen whether they will pursue that.
For the Flames, at the end of the day, this summer is about using their flexibility to set the table for next summer and beyond, when they can begin to push their chips all in around this core, which should see an infusion of young talent in the coming seasons.
Patrick Brown Signs With DEL’s Adler Mannheim
The Boston Bruins have lost some of their organizational forward depth. According to a team announcement, the DEL’s Adler Mannheim have signed Patrick Brown for the 2026-27 season.
In all fairness, at 34 years old, Brown’s professional career in North America was likely nearing its end, anyway. He was signed as a collegiate free agent by the Carolina Hurricanes ahead of the 2014-15 campaign, and has primarily been an AHL talent for the last 11 years.
Although the Bloomfield Hills, MI native didn’t challenge for any scoring awards throughout his time in the AHL, his North American career is defined by his leadership. Brown was named captain for the Boston College Eagles for the 2013-14 NCAA season, and wore the ‘C’ for three different AHL organizations, including the Providence Bruins, for the past two years.
Despite carving out a consistent role in the AHL, Brown didn’t go without his NHL opportunities, either. Highlighted by a two-year stint with the Philadelphia Flyers in which he played 87 games from 2021 to 2023, Brown played parts of nine seasons with the Hurricanes, Golden Knights, Flyers, Senators, and Bruins. Assuming his NHL career has finished, Brown ends with 10 goals and 26 points in 164 appearances.
Understandably, his performance in the AHL has been much better. Beginning with the Charlotte Checkers in 2014-15, Brown has registered 111 goals and 286 points in 572 career games. Additionally, he captained the Checkers to a Calder Cup championship in 2019.
Morning Notes: Hellebuyck, Karlsson, McIlvane
While most eyes will be on this summer’s center trade market, the trade market for goaltenders should be fairly active as well, particularly for the Edmonton Oilers and Florida Panthers. According to David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period, the latter has reached out to the Winnipeg Jets to gauge the trade possibility of one of, if not the league’s best.
Much of the trade speculation surrounding Connor Hellebuyck stems from his end-of-season media availability, where he questioned Winnipeg’s ability to build a true Stanley Cup contender, especially given that no other top-level talent has any interest in joining the organization. Still, Hellebuyck added in the same monologue that he loves playing for the Jets and wants to play a part in drawing other players to the organization.
Additionally, Pagnotta noted that Winnipeg has no interest in trading Hellebuyck, but if the three-time Vezina winner were to quietly request a trade, they would navigate the trade waters. Despite the gold medal win in February, Hellebuyck arguably had the worst season of his career, finishing with a 23-23-11 record in 57 games with a .895 SV%, 2.86 GAA, and -0.3 Goals Saved Above Average.
Other morning notes:
- In last night’s Game 5, the Vegas Golden Knights suffered more than just a loss. In the second period, after being hit by Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Sean Walker, Golden Knights forward William Karlsson left the game entirely (Video Link). It’s a difficult blow to Karlsson, who already missed 68 games in the regular season due to a lower-body injury. He’s scored three goals and nine points in 15 games during the playoffs, but his postseason may have come to an abrupt end.
- According to a team announcement, the Boston Bruins have hired Matt McIlvane as an assistant coach, replacing Jay Leach. McIlvane had been the head coach of the AHL’s San Diego Gulls for the past three years, guiding them to an 88-97-31 record, with a berth in the Calder Cup playoffs this season. Unfortunately, the postseason run was short-lived, as the Colorado Eagles quickly dispatched the Gulls in the First Round.
Free Agent Focus: New York Rangers
Free agency is under a month away, and teams are looking ahead to when it opens. Even with the UFA crop being thinned out in recent months, there will be some quality veterans set to hit the open market in July, while many teams also have key restricted free agents to re-sign. We continue our look around the NHL with an overview of the free agent situation for the Rangers.
Key Restricted Free Agents
D Braden Schneider – The 24-year-old has missed just three regular season contests for the Rangers over the past four seasons, most recently coming away with 18 points in 82 games. Schneider’s possession metrics aren’t glowing, starting most of his work on his own end with a -4.6 corsi for percentage (relative). Even then, durable young right-handers capable of playing over 20 shutdown minutes a night don’t grow on trees, and Schneider is a big asset for the Rangers to handle carefully. It’s been speculated the righty would fetch a surprising amount on his next contract, at least $4MM but as much as an $6MM AAV on a long-term pact. A name floated around trade rumors this season, on paper the defenseman is the exact player the Rangers should not be moving out, but facing a large commitment, it’s more about New York’s belief in him as a long term piece, and hopefully not another near-sighted trade which would make them older. If Schneider is able to obtain as much as $6MM, it would put him alongside the likes of Sean Durzi, Mike Matheson, and Martin Fehérváry. The 6’4″ rearguard should have no problem doubling his expiring $2.2MM AAV, and if it won’t be from general manager Chris Drury, other teams would line up to trade and do so themselves.
G Dylan Garand – Long mentioned as a standout prospect, the 24-year-old has had to wait patiently for his time in the NHL. Finally making his debut late this season after several years with AHL Hartford, Garand was excellent, coming away with two wins of his three starts with a .948 save percentage and 1.62 goals-against-average. Too small a size of work to fairly judge yet, thankfully the door has finally opened for the 2020 draftee (103rd overall). With Jonathan Quick‘s retirement, it’s already thought that Garand will take over backup duty, fitting nicely into their direction. A two-year deal at the NHL level worth around $1MM per year is most likely. Playing in nearly 150 regular season AHL contests, at least New York has not rushed the netminder in his development, and they can benefit from having a promising #2 who hardly takes up anything against the cap.
D Scott Morrow – A talented righty as a standout character in the Rangers plan to get younger, Morrow had a slow start to his New York tenure in 2025-26. In 29 games, the 23-year-old came away with six points, averaging 15:40 a night. Facing more of a challenge than his early days in Carolina, Morrow’s zone starts were less sheltered, effectively a split between both ends. Even then, he came away with a corsi-for percentage at just over 50% at five-on-five, when things could have certainly been worse. Watching K’Andre Miller‘s impact in the Stanley Cup Final has to sting for New York, and they’ll need Morrow to step up next season into a full time NHL role. With his ELC now in the past, the defender should fetch a two-year contract worth around $1.75MM.
F Brett Berard – Another youngster who has generated hype but struggled to find his stride yet, the 23-year-old looked to be a useful piece for head coach Mike Sullivan coming off notching six goals in his first 35 NHL games. Instead 2025-26 was a year to forget for the 2020 fifth rounder, bouncing between the NHL and AHL all year, only making 13 appearances for the Rangers and coming away scoreless. It would be a different story if he was rolling for the Wolf Pack, but Berard had 22 points in 41 games, not very encouraging for a player who’d been expected as a real third line contributor. Unable to improve his stock, the winger should expect under $1MM in a prove-it deal, with optimism that he’ll do exactly that.
Other RFAs: G Talyn Boyko, F Brendan Brisson, F Karl Henriksson, D Vincent Iorio, G Hugo Ollas, F Lauri Pajuniemi
Key Unrestricted Free Agents
F Jonny Brodzinski – Drafted by the Kings back in 2013, the veteran who will soon turn 33 found a home in New York, playing in over 50 games for the Rangers over the past three seasons, originally joining the franchise in 2020. Working on contracts around the league minimum throughout that time, AFP Analytics projects that Brodzinski is worth just over $1MM on a hypothetical one-year deal for next season. The Rangers have no shortage of young candidates for their bottom six, and it’s already thought that a departure is coming. Assuming so, the Minnesota native should have an opportunity to add veteran depth elsewhere, proving scrappy penalty killing with a knack for timely goals.
F Conor Sheary – The 34-year-old reunited with Sullivan on Broadway, needing 27 games to find the back of the net for the first time, but coming away in the end with 18 points in 62 games. It was solid production for the veteran considering that he came in on a tryout agreement. At times drawing the ire of fans for his continued placement in the lineup over younger players, Sheary started to find the score sheet more and more by the spring as a glue winger, even appearing on the power play at times. Still needing a few veterans in the mix, it wouldn’t be a shock if the Rangers brought him back for another year on a contract somewhere around a $1MM AAV. The Sullivan connection aside, though, those minutes would probably be best served to players such as Noah Laba, Tye Kartye, among others.
Other UFAs: F Trey Fix-Wolansky, D Casey Fitzgerald, D Connor Mackey, G Jonathan Quick (Retired), D Brandon Scanlin
Projected Cap Space
The Rangers enter this offseason with $26.57MM in cap space, 11th most in the NHL, and good enough where they’re sometimes thrown out as a suitor for top free agents. If they do move on from Schneider, the potential exists to sign a puck moving righty to help out their top four. Still, if Drury has learned anything from previous years, it’s probably best to stay the course on the retool and proceed with caution on July 1. Either way, there’s plenty of space to take care of an RFA class which is abundant with the exact type of players who fit into the youth movement. Next, there’ll be no issue mixing in veteran depth however they please. Depending on what happens with Vincent Trocheck this summer, and his $5.625MM AAV, the options are wide open for Drury, who won’t have a quiet summer one way or another.
Photos courtesy of Brad Penner-Imagn Images (Garand) and Danny Wild-Imagn Images (Brodzinski). Contract information courtesy of PuckPedia.
Avalanche Notes: Bednar, Makar, Practice Facility
With Colorado President of Hockey Operations and General Manager Joe Sakic addressing the media today, several topics emerged as the team looks ahead to the future. First off, Sakic confirmed that head coach Jared Bednar will return to the bench in 2026-27, along with his entire staff, speaking to continuity.
Falling flat in the Western Conference Finals to Vegas and being swept was a brutal ending from a Presidents’ Trophy-winning 121-point campaign; enough to at least sprinkle some speculation on if the Avalanche would make a bold move. No news yet slowed any momentum of such talk, and sure enough Sakic emphasized his belief in Bednar today. With a .617 win percentage in 10 years with the Avalanche, and dropping just 16 games in regulation this year, it’s not hard to see why.
Bednar’s club approaches an offseason where they’ll be dead last in cap space ($2.97MM) and needing to round out their defense corps. Still, the roster is largely intact in an attempt to run it back.
Also in Colorado:
- 27-year-old superstar Cale Makar approaches free agency after next season, but Sakic didn’t offer up any changes on the horizon there either, saying he will “end his career here”, relayed by Vic Lombardi of Altitude TV. Coming to the end of his six-year pact worth $9MM per season, the sky is the limit in terms of what his next contract could look like. Projected by AFP Analytics to command eight years with an AAV north of $15 million, it’s already evident that cap trouble is brewing just one year after dealing Mikko Rantanen, sooner than initially hoped. Sakic’s comments today help quash any thought of the top player hitting the open market next summer. Yet even if not, the question that remains is what it will take for Makar finish his career in Denver. Expected to become the highest paid defenseman in league history, naturally there will be ramifications on the rest of the roster.
- A brutal playoff run which left Makar banged up along with others, Sakic says that all players who were injured during the 2026 playoffs are set to be healthy and good to go for training camp next fall, reported by Bailey Curtis of DNVR Avalanche. Besides the player they’ll hope to lock up for the rest of his career, center Nathan MacKinnon was also far from full strength, along with the key Artturi Lehkonen missing time, and finally, Valeri Nichushkin. All but Nichushkin were in the lineup for the deciding fourth game against Vegas, but that’s not to say they were healthy by any means.
- Joining Sakic on the podium today was President Josh Kroenke of Kroenke Sports & Entertainment. The executive spoke on the latest developments for a new practice facility for the Avs, also shared by Curtis. His comments suggest that an official deal with the city is “very close”. Currently practicing at the Family Sports Ice Arena in Centennial, Colorado, Kroenke envisions a new state-of-the-art facility for both the Avalanche and the NBA’s Denver Nuggets to share.
Canucks Hire Richard Seeley As Assistant General Manager
This evening the Vancouver Canucks shared that Richard Seeley has been named Assistant General Manager of the team as well as General Manager of the AHL’s Abbotsford Canucks.
The 47-year-old British Columbia native had spent the past decade with the Los Angeles Kings organization, following an unlikely path which began as head coach of their ECHL affiliate the Manchester Monarchs. After three seasons behind the bench, also serving as Director of Hockey Operations, Seeley jumped up to the scouting suites. Promoted to General Manager of the Ontario Reign of the AHL, he’d held the title since 2018. This year was one to remember for the Reign, winning the Pacific Division regular season title with a 47-20-3 record which was their franchise’s best.
He caught the eye of new Canucks general manager Ryan Johnson as a cross-divisional rival of the Pacific in the AHL. Winning the Calder Cup in 2025, Abbotsford regressed this season and missed the playoffs, and now they’ll look to replicate Ontario’s success from Seeley as the best in the division. If the past few weeks have been any indication, it’s a great starting place on the way to the NHL, as the Canucks have promoted both Johnson as well as their new head coach Manny Malhotra to the big club from their work in Abbotsford.
On Seeley, Johnson said “Rich understands our values and vision, and I believe his mindset and mentality will fit in nicely with what we are trying to establish with our organization in both Abbotsford and Vancouver”. In terms of what they are trying to establish, Seeley will likely seek out some higher impact veterans for the farmhand Canucks. This past season their leading scorer Nils Åman had 41 points in 55 games, nice production for the 26-year-old but nowhere near what it takes to be among the league’s best teams. They finished dead last in the AHL with just 173 goals scored. Widely considered as a middle-ground prospect pool, that’ll change later this month with the third overall selection having bottomed out after years of being intent on contention.
Seeley was a defenseman himself, selected in the sixth round of the 1997 draft by Los Angeles on the way to an AHL career which included stops in Manchester, Bridgeport, and Norfolk. He was a captain for three seasons, but never was able to crack the highest level as a player. Now he’ll do so with a well deserved promotion to his home province club.
Nikita Kucherov Wins 2026 Hart Trophy
Tampa Bay Lightning forward Nikita Kucherov has been named the 2026 Hart Trophy winner, the annual award for the top player in the National Hockey League. The honors were announced this evening on ESPN’s “The Point” prior to Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final.
Awarded to the player selected in a poll of the Professional Hockey Writers Association in all NHL cities upon the end of the regular season, Kucherov takes home the MVP for the second time in his career, the first coming in 2019. The soon-to-be 33-year-old beat out other finalists Nathan MacKinnon and Connor McDavid.
Final voting totals were revealed by The Athletic’s Chris Johnston, with Kucherov’s 1,436 points just ahead of McDavid’s 1,426, a razor thin margin. His four more first-place ballots over the Edmonton captain were the difference. MacKinnon came away with 1,297 points, while San Jose’s Macklin Celebrini finished fourth (625 points, five first-place votes) and Montreal’s Nick Suzuki rounded out the top five (102 points), netting one first-place vote.
Kucherov continues to produce at an incredible level, coming away second in the league with 130 points (44 goals, 86 assists) in 76 regular season games. Dishing out an absurd number of helpers, he always evoked fear in goaltenders when looking toward the net instead, shooting at a 19.0% clip, with 44 goals as eighth highest in the NHL. The Russian winger’s 1.71 points-per-game stands out as the league best out of qualified players, and on that rate, had he not missed six contests Kucherov would have been on track to surpass the first ranked McDavid’s 138 points in 82 games. The fourth straight season in which he recorded at least 80 assists, the winger came away second behind McDavid in that statistical category.
Based on those metrics, Kucherov stood out to voters after a 2025-26 where he helped carry the Lighting through what was an injury-riddled campaign along their way to 50 wins. He wasn’t the only Tampa Bay star to take major honors, as Andrei Vasilevskiy won the 2026 Vezina Trophy as the league’s top goaltender. As if that wasn’t enough, head coach Jon Cooper received honors as the 2026 Jack Adams Award winner for best coach. Despite the regular season hardware, the Lightning’s season ended in a Game 7 defeat of the opening round at the hands of the tenacious Montreal Canadiens.
The unceremonious ending aside, Kucherov’s tremendous campaign adds to an already deep trophy shelf, with two Stanley Cups and three Art Ross trophies as top league scorer. Even at age 32, he beat out point totals from his 2018-19 Hart-winning season, going nuclear then in year six of his NHL career with 128 points in 82 games.
An award reserved for the best of the best, Kucherov is in an exclusive company for his position. Only he and Corey Perry (2011) are forwards who won the award in the past 20 years who were not chosen in the top three selections of the NHL draft. A heist by the Lightning at 58th overall in 2011, one has to look back to 2004 as the last time a non-first round forward won the Hart besides Kucherov, that being fellow franchise legend Martin St. Louis.
An unrestricted free agent after 2026-27, Kucherov needs just 13 more points to beat out Steven Stamkos as #1 all time in Tampa Bay franchise history. At the pace he’s going, that should be another accolade in his pocket very soon next fall. From there, he’ll look to lead the Bolts back into a deep playoff run for the first time since 2022, as there’s little doubt they’ll continue to be among the NHL’s best teams next season, boasting the top head coach, best goaltender, along with the most valuable player.
Image Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images



