Golden Knights Sign Bronson Ride

The Golden Knights have added some size to the back end in their prospect pool.  The team announced that they’ve signed blueliner Bronson Ride to a three-year, entry-level contract.  Financial terms of the deal, which begins next season, were not disclosed.

The 21-year-old went undrafted in his three years of eligibility despite his six-foot-seven stature.  However, Vegas had some familiarity with Ride as he took part in both their development and rookie camps last year.  Clearly, he showed enough there to be monitored and has done enough this season to earn a contract.

Ride is in his fifth and final season at the OHL level and his third campaign with North Bay.  He has four goals and 17 assists in 57 games, setting new career highs in assists and points.  However, he’s more of a stay-at-home defender so offensive production won’t be his calling card at the professional level.

The Battalion are all but locked into a four-five matchup heading into the upcoming playoffs with the only question being who the home team will be between them and Oshawa.  Once North Bay’s postseason run ends, Ride will be eligible to join AHL Henderson if the Silver Knights are still playing at that time.

Utah Mammoth Reassign Maksymilian Szuber

Saturday: The Mammoth announced that Szuber has been sent back to the Roadrunners.  He did not see any game action while on recall.


Monday: The Utah Mammoth announced tonight that they have recalled defenseman Maksymilian Szuber from their AHL affiliate, the Tucson Roadrunners.

The recall was made just before the club began its contest against the Chicago Blackhawks, and was likely made with an eye to the injury currently being managed by defenseman Mikhail Sergachev.

Sergachev has been out since March 5 with a lower-body injury. With Sergachev unavailable for selection by head coach Andre Tourigny, the addition of Szuber gives the team an additional blueliner to work with in Sergachev’s absence.

This isn’t Szuber’s first recall in recent weeks for the 23-year-old defenseman, though he has not yet dressed for any games for the Mammoth. He has one NHL game to his name, coming in 2023-24 with the Arizona Coyotes. He’s been making a push for consideration for an NHL role in 2025-26, a development that has been underscored by his handful of recalls this year.

The 6’3″, 220-pound defenseman won a DEL Championship with Red Bull Munich in 2022-23 before crossing the Atlantic to cut his teeth in the North American pro game. He’s been a steady top-four defenseman at the AHL level over the past two years, and has had a strong season so far. In 50 games for the Roadrunners, he’s managed 10 goals and 25 points. He’s handling a solid diet of minutes for the Roadrunners, and is contributing on both sides of special teams.

While the Mammoth are looking to hold onto their current spot in the Western Conference playoff picture (their ceiling is likely the first Wild Card spot, given the substantial standings lead held by three Central Division juggernauts, the Minnesota Wild, Colorado Avalanche, and Dallas Stars), they stand to benefit if they can find a way to test Szuber in some NHL games down the stretch.

He’s a pending restricted free agent who will have the right to file for arbitration if he so chooses. If the Mammoth can get Szuber into some NHL games, they would likely have a better sense of how close he is to being firmly NHL-ready, which would then give them a better sense of what level of investment to commit to him on his next contract.

Additionally, from Szuber’s perspective, getting the chance to play in some NHL games could enhance his case for a more substantial contract this summer. It would potentially allow him to position himself in negotiations more as a player on the NHL-AHL bubble, rather than a full-time AHL talent.

Senators Recall Lassi Thomson

With a second defenseman now injured, the Senators need some extra defensive depth heading into a back-to-back set this weekend.  The team announced that Lassi Thomson has been recalled from AHL Belleville.

It’s the second recall of the season for the 25-year-old, who returned to North America this season after spending last season in Sweden.  Thomson has been quite productive in Belleville, tallying 14 goals and 11 assists in 55 games; his goal total leads all AHL defenders.  Unfortunately for him, it took until now to get an NHL opportunity.

A first-round pick by the Sens in 2019 (19th overall), Thomson has failed to get any sort of foothold at the NHL level.  His time with Ottawa has been limited to just 18 games, 16 of which came back in the 2021-22 season; he last suited up with the big club back in November 2022 as he didn’t play on his first promotion of the season.  Accordingly, it was reported back in January that Thomson was already eyeing overseas options for next season when he becomes a Group Six unrestricted free agent in the summer.

Thomson’s promotion comes on the heels of defenseman Nick Jensen being listed as day-to-day with a lower-body injury sustained against Montreal.  However, TSN’s Claire Hanna relays (Twitter link) that the injury is unrelated to the hip that the veteran had surgery on over the summer.  The 35-year-old logged just over 20 minutes a night last season in his first year in Ottawa but his second campaign hasn’t gone as well.  Jensen is down more than three minutes per game in ice time while chipping in with four goals and 13 assists in 61 games.

Lightning Recall Steven Santini

Saturday: Santini’s stint in the minors was short-lived as the team announced that he has been brought back up from the Crunch.  He suited up in their loss to Lehigh Valley yesterday, paving the way for him to be brought back up so quickly.


Friday: The Lightning announced today that defender Steven Santini has been reassigned to AHL Syracuse. He is right at the 10-game cutoff for losing his temporary waiver exemption, but has spent less than 30 days on the active roster since last clearing them during preseason, so he doesn’t need them to head back to the minors today. Any subsequent recall and game played will require him to go on waivers at the end of it, though.

Santini, 31, was recalled Tuesday in the wake of Erik Černák sustaining an apparent leg injury. He was scratched for last night’s win over the Red Wings as Darren Raddysh returned to the team from his bereavement leave, but did log 9:21 of ice time against the Blue Jackets earlier this week. The 6’3″ righty managed two shot attempts and one hit but was otherwise held off the scoresheet. His demotion today indicates Černák should be ready to go tomorrow against the Hurricanes after a two-game absence.

He’s now eight years removed from his days as a legitimate depth/bottom-pairing option with the Devils. More of an AHL journeyman now, his 134 games of NHL experience are still attractive to teams like the Lightning if they need him as an injury stopgap, as they’ve done several times this season. This was Santini’s fifth recall of the campaign, resulting in his most NHL appearances in a season since 2018-19.

Once named the Hockey East conference’s best defensive defenseman during his NCAA days with Boston College, he’s still an important stay-at-home conscience for Syracuse, where he has a +10 rating and six assists and 32 games this year while serving as the club’s captain. Signed through next season on a two-way deal, he’ll remain a recall option through then unless he’s claimed off waivers.

Lightning To Activate Nick Paul, Assign Conor Geekie To AHL

The Lightning made a roster move early this morning, announcing that they’ve assigned center Conor Geekie back to AHL Syracuse.  With the cap savings from that assignment, they now have enough money to activate forward Nick Paul off LTIR; head coach Jon Cooper confirmed to reporters, including team reporter Benjamin Pierce (Twitter link), that Paul will be activated before tonight’s game against Carolina.

Paul has missed the last 11 games with a lower-body injury sustained at the beginning of February against Boston.  The 30-year-old has been a strong secondary scorer since joining Tampa Bay back in 22 but his playing time and numbers have taken a dip this season.  Limited to just 34 games due to multiple injuries, Paul has notched just six goals and six assists so far in 2025-26 although he’s winning a career-high 54.4% of his faceoffs.  He’ll likely slot in on either the third or fourth line; the latter if he simply slides into Geekie’s spot in the lineup.

As for Geekie, this stint with the big club ends at five games, bringing his season total to 11 after he broke camp with the Lightning back in the fall.  He’s still looking for his first NHL goal of the campaign and has been limited to just two assists so far after notching 14 points in 52 games in Tampa Bay last season.  The team has prioritized giving the 21-year-old big minutes in the minors with the Crunch over playing in a depth role which certainly makes sense from a development standpoint.  Geekie has fared quite well in that situation, tallying 51 points in 47 games with Syracuse.  He’ll return there and help the Crunch as they continue to battle for the top spot in the AHL’s North Division.

With Paul’s pending activation, Tampa Bay is down to two players on LTIR, rookie center Dominic James and freshman defenseman Maxwell Crozier.

Philadelphia Flyers Recall Garrett Wilson

According to a team announcement, the Philadelphia Flyers have recalled veteran forward Garrett Wilson. The Flyers recently elevated Wilson to an NHL contract before the trade deadline.

Although he has never played a game for Philadelphia, Wilson, 34, has been a part of the organization for the last six years, exclusively playing for the AHL’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms. If he enters a contest for the Flyers, it’ll be his first NHL appearance since April 16th, 2019, when the Pittsburgh Penguins were eliminated in the playoffs by the New York Islanders.

Still, he has remained a consistent secondary scorer in the AHL and has served as captain of the Phantoms for the last three years. Throughout his six-year tenure with the club, Wilson has registered 62 goals and 148 points in 341 games with 789 PIMs.

Since the Flyers aren’t dealing with any new injury concerns, there’s no guarantee that Wilson will enter the lineup during his recall. Philadelphia is only five points back of the final wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference and has an important contest against the Columbus Blue Jackets this evening.

If he were to play, it would assuredly be on the Flyers’ fourth line. Since he doesn’t have much NHL experience as a center, it would mean that either Garnet Hathaway or Nikita Grebenkin would come out of the lineup.

Red Wings Recall John Leonard; Reassign Austin Watson, Eduards Tralmaks

March 14: The Red Wings announced they’ve brought Leonard back to the NHL under emergency conditions, meaning they could be without 12 healthy forwards on the active roster for tonight’s game. Larkin and Copp remain the only known injuries at the time of writing.


March 13: Watson, along with John Leonard and Eduards Tralmaks, who were also recalled under emergency conditions yesterday, were all reassigned to Grand Rapids following last night’s loss to the Lightning, per the NHL’s media site. None of the three played in the contest, and, since their emergency recalls stipulate they must be returned to the minors if their presence on the roster isn’t necessary to ice 12 forwards, it’s no surprise they’re back down today.


March 12: The Red Wings announced that they’ve recalled winger Austin Watson from AHL Grand Rapids under emergency conditions. He’ll be on hand for tonight’s game against the Lightning. Considering they already have two extra healthy forwards on the active roster, even accounting for Dylan Larkin and Andrew Copp‘s injuries, there might be even more trouble up front in Detroit.

Watson, a Michigan native, is now in his second season in the organization after signing with the Wings in 2024 following a successful PTO. They liked what he brought in a depth role enough to sign him to a two-way extension in March, so he didn’t get to free agency last summer. That may change this time around as he’s on an expiring deal once again.

The 34-year-old grinder has passed through waivers a few times since signing and has spent most of his time in Grand Rapids, but he did score three goals in 13 games last season. He’s yet to make an NHL appearance in 2025-26 but has been recalled twice this year, first for a few days in October and November and then again over the Olympic break as an extra practice player.

A former first-rounder by the Predators in 2010, Watson was never the top-nine power forward they hoped he could be but still carved out a lengthy NHL career for himself, recording 63 goals and 121 points in 528 career games to date. After departing Nashville via trade to the Senators in 2020, he made a one-year stop with the Lightning in 2023-24 before landing with Detroit.

He’s been an important minor-league presence for the club, enjoying a strong 19-23–42 scoring line in 60 games last year and now 11 goals and 20 points in 48 outings in 2025-26. He’s gotten into his fair share of fights down in Grand Rapids as well, ranking fifth in the league with 137 penalty minutes, while ranking 11th on the league-best club in scoring. With a 43-9-4 record, Grand Rapids is enjoying its best season in franchise history since its inception in the IHL in 1996.

Oilers Place Colton Dach On LTIR, Recall Max Jones

The Oilers added some grit to the bottom of their lineup earlier this month when they acquired Colton Dach from Chicago (along with Jason Dickinson for Andrew Mangiapane and a first-round pick).  However, they’ll have to wait a while yet for him to really make his mark.  The team announced today (Twitter link) that they’ve placed Dach on LTIR.  In a corresponding move, winger Max Jones has been recalled from AHL Bakersfield.

Dach sustained the injury on Tuesday against Colorado, exiting after just two shifts.  He played in three games after the swap, recording an assist in his second game with Edmonton.  The 23-year-old played in 53 contests with Chicago before the move, notching three goals and six assists along with 189 hits in a little under 12 minutes per game.

It’s unclear how long Dach’s undisclosed injury will keep him out for but the LTIR placement means he’ll miss at least 10 games and 24 days, backdated from when the injury occurred.  That means he’s out for the remainder of the month at an absolute minimum, hardly ideal as he’s set to become a restricted free agent this summer.

Dach’s LTIR placement gives Edmonton an extra $825K in its LTIR pool.  That, coupled with the minimal space they already had, was enough to add Jones and his $1MM price tag to the roster.  However, their LTIR pool is down to just $300K of full-season space, per PuckPedia.

This is the second recall of the season for Jones and his first of 2026, with his previous stint coming back in December.  The 28-year-old had a goal and an assist in eight games on the fourth line over that first stint, meaning he’s only two appearances away from needing to clear waivers again to return to Bakersfield.  Jones, a pending unrestricted free agent, has been reasonably productive with the Condors, potting ten goals and eight assists in 38 games so far this season.

Radko Gudas Receives Five-Game Suspension

After a knee-on-knee collision that ultimately ended Auston Matthews‘ season, supplemental discipline was widely expected for Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas.  After a phone hearing today, the Department of Player Safety announced (video link) that the blueliner has received a five-game suspension.  That is the maximum suspension for a phone hearing.

The incident occurred in the second period of Thursday’s game.  The initial call was five-and-a-game for kneeing which was upheld after video review.  In the Player Safety ruling, it was noted that Gudas, though trying to make a legal body check, was in full control on the play.  That puts the onus on him to deliver a legal check, which he did not do by leading with his knee, resulting in a “forceful, dangerous, and direct knee-on-knee collision.”

This is the fifth suspension for Gudas in his career, but the first since 2019 when he received a five-game ban for high-sticking.  As a result of the time between suspensions, he is not considered a repeat offender for the purpose of forfeited salary.  He loses five days’ worth of salary (5/192) as opposed to five games’ worth (5/82) of salary.  As a result, he will lose $104,166.65, which goes to the Players’ Emergency Assistance Fund.  With these five games, Gudas will now have been suspended for a total of 26 games in his career.  It’s the third-longest suspension he has received, following a 10-game ban in 2017 for slashing and a six-game suspension in 2016 for a late high hit.

It’s fair to say that Matthews’ agent, Judd Moldaver of The-Team (formerly Wasserman), is not a fan of the ruling.  Asked for comment by reporters, including Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman (Twitter link), Moldaver released the following statement:

In light of the obvious severity of the play, I am disappointed and shocked the league would allow such a ruling. A phone hearing and 5 games is laughable and preposterous.

While the process is set in our CBA, that this was the discipline is reckless and ridiculous.

This decision results in a further loss of confidence in the disciplinary process for all players.

Players and fans deserve better. The Player Safety Department should be suspended.

Meanwhile, the loss of Gudas is noteworthy for Anaheim.  The captain is a regular on their back end, taking a regular turn on the penalty kill.  With John Carlson still working his way back from a lower-body injury, the Ducks will have to dip a little deeper into their defensive depth for the time being, heading into a back-to-back road set this weekend.

Canucks, Oilers Swap Josh Bloom And Jayden Grubbe

With Friday representing the AHL’s trade deadline, which also sets roster eligibility for the rest of the season, there have been a handful of moves made in recent days.  The Canucks and Oilers were among them, with the latter announcing that they’ve acquired winger Josh Bloom in exchange for center Jayden Grubbe.

Bloom was a third-round pick by Buffalo back in 2021 but never played in their system.  Instead, he was flipped to Vancouver near the trade deadline two years later in exchange for blueliner Riley Stillman.  Since then, Bloom has primarily played at the ECHL level, getting into 70 games over parts of three seasons compared to half as many at the AHL level.  This season, the 22-year-old has 15 goals and 13 assists in 19 games with ECHL Kalamazoo but has been limited to just one goal in 19 appearances with AHL Abbotsford.  Bloom is a pending restricted free agent and will need a qualifying offer in June for his rights to be retained.

That’s the exact situation that Grubbe also finds himself in.  Originally a third-round pick by the Rangers (65th overall) in 2021, New York opted not to sign him and flipped his rights to Edmonton two years later.  The 23-year-old played exclusively in the AHL with Bakersfield over his first two professional seasons, notching nine goals and 24 assists in 129 games.  However, this season, he hasn’t seen any action at the AHL level, instead playing with ECHL Fort Wayne, where he notched seven goals and a dozen assists in 28 contests.

Since the swap occurred after the NHL’s trade deadline, both Bloom and Grubbe are ineligible to be recalled for the remainder of the season.