Canucks’ Filip Chytil Out Indefinitely With Facial Fracture
Canucks center Filip Chytil sustained a facial fracture in Wednesday’s practice and will be out indefinitely, Jeff Paterson of Rink Wide: Vancouver reports.
Considering Chytil’s long history of concussions, a simple fracture is far from the worst-case scenario after he was dazed by taking a puck to the face in the session. The 26-year-old has only been good for 12 appearances this season, missing three months early in the season with an upper-body injury that was suspected to be at least his third concussion in the last three years. He returned for a six-game stretch before the Olympic break, before sitting out of Vancouver’s last contest with migraine headaches.
Concussions and facial injuries have now limited Chytil to less than a full season’s worth of games over the past three years. He’s only played in 78 of 221 possible regular-season games, equal to 35.3%, since the beginning of the 2023-24 campaign. That window of inavailability came just after the Czech center finally seemed to break through into a top-nine role with the Rangers, rattling off a career-high 22 goals and 45 points in 74 games in the 2022-23 campaign.
That type of production might just be too far gone for Chytil to get back to that level, though. Acquired from New York in last year’s J.T. Miller trade, he’s suited up 27 times for Vancouver in the last 13 months with five goals and four assists for nine points with a -18 rating. That’s a 15-goal, 27-point pace over 82 games – closer to fourth-line production than the second-line role behind Elias Pettersson they were initially hoping he could fill.
More to come…
Maple Leafs Reassign Bo Groulx, William Villeneuve
Feb. 20: Groulx is headed back to the AHL today along with defenseman William Villeneuve, who was summoned two days ago, per a team announcement.
Feb. 19: The Maple Leafs announced they’ve recalled center Benoit-Olivier Groulx from AHL Toronto. He’ll join the team for today’s practice with forward Max Domi absent due to personal reasons, in addition to Auston Matthews remaining unavailable as he looks to captain Team USA to a gold medal at the Winter Olympics.
Groulx, 26, was a second-round pick by the Ducks in 2018. He has 65 NHL games to his name, all coming with Anaheim from 2021-24. After making a career-high 45 appearances in the 2023-24 campaign, the Ducks non-tendered him. He’s spent the last two seasons exclusively in the AHL on NHL. deals, first on a two-way pact with the Rangers in 2024-25 before signing a two-year, one-way, league-minimum deal with Toronto last summer.
The 6’2″, 205-lb pivot has only demonstrated limited offensive upside in the NHL but has been one of the best two-way forwards in the minors over the last two seasons. Once named the QMJHL’s best defensive forward during his junior days, he’s racked up 22 goals and 42 points in 47 games to lead the Marlies in scoring, along with a +9 rating.
He’ll now look to make a strong impression in whatever practice deployment he gets to boost his chances of a call-up heading into next season. Since he signed a two-year deal, his $812,500 cap hit next season will actually be less than the new league minimum of $850,000.
Bruins Linked To Theodor Niederbach
With European regular seasons near their ends, now is the time when many NHL teams start seriously demonstrating their interest in international free agent signings. One of those names is 23-year-old pivot Theodor Niederbach, whom Johan Svensson and Mattias Persson of Expressen report has received interest from “more than half the league” – including the Bruins, who sent a team of scouts to Gothenburg recently to watch him suit up with his club team, the SHL’s Frölunda HC.
Niederbach is far from an unknown in NHL circles. It wasn’t that long ago that he was a fairly highly-touted prospect. He ended up going midway through the second round of the 2020 draft to the Red Wings, but after he failed to demonstrate much progression over four years in the SHL and HockeyAllsvenskan, they didn’t sign him by their June 2024 deadline and lost his signing rights.
The 6’0″ center immediately responded with a statement campaign for MoDo Hockey, tying for the team lead in scoring with a 10-23–33 line in 51 games. While he’d played a role in helping the club gain promotion from the HockeyAllsvenskan two years prior, he couldn’t help them avoid relegation last season. He thus left MoDo in the offseason and signed a two-year deal with Frölunda, with whom he’s registered 11 goals and 28 points with a +12 rating in 44 outings. He’s now slotting comfortably into a top-six role there, and he has the benefit of being teammates with potential 2026 first-overall pick Ivar Stenberg – ensuring he’ll have plenty of eyes on him down the stretch.
Evidently, Niederbach’s deal with Frölunda contains an NHL out-clause. He was drafted more as a two-way center, but has ended up as more of an offensively-inclined playmaker from the middle of the ice as he’s found his way into more responsibility in the SHL.
For the Bruins, Niederbach would join an already large group of young centers with offensively moderate, top-nine ceilings. Marat Khusnutdinov, Fraser Minten, and Matthew Poitras are already in the mix, and with all four of Boston’s current pivots under contract through next season, it’s hard to envision Niederbach making a legitimate play for a roster spot out of the gate. If he’s focused more on finding an organization that has a long-term home for him rather than finding a place where he can jump into the NHL right away, though, the Bruins’ hodge-podge of journeyman forwards and mid-tier prospects could provide an opportunity for him to break through the noise eventually.
Penguins’ Sebastian Aho Linked To SHL
Before long, the NHL won’t have two Sebastian Ahos. The Penguins depth defender is expected to sign with Växjö Lakers HC of the Swedish Hockey League when he becomes an unrestricted free agent at season’s end, Adam Savonen of Norran reports.
It’s far from a surprise. Aho inked a two-year, league-minimum contract with Pittsburgh in 2024 but hasn’t played a single NHL game for the Penguins. He’s cleared waivers twice and has spent the entire deal with AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, where injuries and adherence to veteran maximums have limited him to just 39 games over the last two years.
The 30-year-old Swede has long been an intriguing puck-mover near the bottom of a lineup, but his 5’10” frame has limited NHL teams’ willingness to deploy him, even in sheltered situations. A fifth-round pick by the Islanders in 2017, he spent his entire career with them before leaving for Pittsburgh in free agency. He made 190 appearances for the club from 2017-24, notching 11 goals and 39 assists for 50 points with a -10 rating.
He’s kept up his respectable point production in the minors. He had 14 assists in 27 games with the Baby Pens last year and has a goal and five points in 12 outings this year. He returned to the lineup this week for the first time in a month and a half, so while he may have some time down the stretch to boost his stock, it wouldn’t be surprising to see him opt to return to his home country regardless to play out the back half of his pro career.
Kings Looking For Middle-Six Winger
The Kings are looking to add a middle-six scoring winger before the March 6 trade deadline in the wake of Kevin Fiala‘s season-ending leg injury, The Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta said on “Daily Faceoff Live” yesterday.
A lack of offense has been the only thing holding Los Angeles out of a playoff spot this season. They’ll come out of the break trailing the Ducks by three points for the second wild-card spot in the West without any games in hand. That’s despite owning the league’s sixth-best defense at 2.77 GA/GP. The Kings’ shot generation numbers aren’t awful, checking in at 19th in the league at 27.6 per game. Their team shooting percentage is down at 9.2%, though, only ahead of the Flames’ and Devils’ 8.6% mark. That poor shooting percentage is, to some degree, a byproduct of poor shot selection and a failure to generate high-danger chances. L.A. creates 2.31 expected goals per 60 minutes at 5-on-5, 25th in the league, per MoneyPuck.
General manager Ken Holland has clearly identified their scoring problem as a sore spot. He already moved to acquire the top forward target on the market in Artemi Panarin before the Olympic roster freeze, inking him to a two-year extension for good measure. But with Fiala now unavailable for the stretch run and any potential playoff series, they’re essentially back to square one. Fiala was the team’s second-leading goal-scorer (18) and point-getter (40) and was essentially their only stable source of top-six offense this season outside of Adrian Kempe.
Getting Panarin with an extension certainly lowers the urgency to sell the farm further to make the postseason this year, with two more tries with him under contract. Nonetheless, missing the playoff picture entirely isn’t what anyone envisioned for captain Anže Kopitar‘s final NHL season, and it would be an abject disappointment in a weak Pacific Division following four straight postseason berths.
Nonetheless, with close to a 50-50 shot at making the cut, it’s hard to justify the Kings paying the acquisition cost of acquiring another Panarin-type talent. They’re better off paying standard rental prices for a pending UFA to see if they can catch lightning in a bottle – they did so with Andrei Kuzmenko last year, after all – to help them get their offense to at least a passable postseason level.
There are plenty of options out there. Jeff Skinner can be had for free after having his contract terminated with the Sharks. The market for Canucks power winger Evander Kane has been sluggish, so he could easily be picked up for a mid-to-late-round pick. Other rental options include the Predators’ Michael Bunting, the Maple Leafs’ Bobby McMann, and the Canadiens’ Patrik Laine, although Toronto appears to be setting a high price tag that could knock L.A. out of those conversations.
Mammoth Recall Several Players From AHL
Feb. 20: All these players were returned to Tucson on Friday morning aside from McCartney, the team announced.
Feb. 17: Earlier this afternoon, the Utah Mammoth announced that Daniil But, Ben McCartney, Dmitri Simashev, Matt Villalta, and Maveric Lamoureux have been recalled from their AHL affiliate, the Tucson Roadrunners. As NHL teams return to practice today, several clubs have added players to have the opportunity to skate with the big club this week while the Olympics come to a conclusion.
All bring NHL experience to the table, with But, Simashev, and Lamoureux standing out as top prospects chosen in the first round.
But is in his first North American season, coming over from the KHL. At just 21, he was reassigned prior to the Olympic Break in order to get more ice time. But appeared in just one game, not finding the score sheet, but otherwise, he’s been quite productive in the AHL with 17 points in 20 games. In the NHL, the Russian forward has played a variety of roles, recording a respectable seven points in 28 games. It’s all solid production for the former 12th overall selection in 2023. At 6’5″ with a wicked shot, But is still coming along, but he has intriguing upside.
Simashev, a defenseman, stands out as the highest drafted of the bunch, sixth overall in 2023. Similar to But, he came from Russia, as the two were teammates with Yaroslavl Lokomotiv, taking home the KHL title last season. Simashev has had a great start to his North American career, with 23 points in 25 games for Tucson. That strong performance has earned 24 games with Utah this season, but the 21-year-old has just one assist. Still, he has serious top-four potential.
Lamoureux also has a striking frame at 6’6″. The former 29th overall selection by the Arizona Coyotes in 2022 has 20 NHL games so far. Not surprisingly, given his stature, the righty has a simple game which may lead to a more high-floor, low-ceiling outlook. Lamoureux has dealt with various injuries in his young career, but when healthy, he has looked the part in Tucson.
McCartney, 24, is not a prospect at this point, but the Manitoba native has carved out a nice career with the organization. Chosen in the seventh round by the Coyotes in 2020, he leads Tucson with 46 points in 47 games in 2025-26. McCartney managed to get into two NHL games as a ‘Yote in 2021-22, and is now vying to make his debut as a Mammoth at some point. As is important for any such player trying to break through into the NHL, McCartney is a relentless forechecker not afraid to get under opponents’ skin.
Villalta, a goaltender, was drafted by the Kings in 2017 before catching on with the Mammoth organization. The 26-year-old has three NHL games under his belt between the Coyotes and Mammoth, otherwise playing in the AHL. This season, Villalta has split duty with Jaxson Stauber, where he has held the edge with a better record and statistics. Standing at 6’4″, he is a free agent this summer, but until then, he will serve as an extra body in practice this week as #1 netminder Karel Vejmelka is representing Team Czechia.
Utah currently has one open roster spot, so in theory, one of the five could stay aboard post-Milan, before the next game on February 25 against Colorado. Most likely, though, the prospects, AHL top scorer, and respectable netminder will be evaluated and return to the 17th-ranked Roadrunners after the Olympics.
Bruins Recall Michael DiPietro
Feb. 20: Boston has assigned DiPietro back to Providence, Conor Ryan of the Boston Globe reports.
Feb. 18: The Bruins announced Wednesday that they’ve recalled goaltender Michael DiPietro from AHL Providence on an emergency basis. He’ll serve as Boston’s lone NHL-contracted practice netminder for the time being, as Jeremy Swayman (USA) and Joonas Korpisalo (Finland) are still representing their respective countries at the Olympics.
Back during training camp, there was concern DiPietro wouldn’t make it through waivers on his way to Providence. The 26-year-old had emerged as one of the AHL’s top netminders over the previous two seasons, including a .927 SV% in 40 games last year that earned him the Baz Bastien Memorial Award as the league’s best goaltender.
He’s well on his way to taking home that hardware for a second straight season. In 28 appearances for the P-Bruins, he’s put up a downright ridiculous .942 SV% and 1.64 GAA with a 21-5-0 record – but somehow only has one shutout to his name. Nonetheless, he has a 12-point lead in save percentage on the second-place netminder with at least 20 appearances.
He’s signed through next season at a $812,500 cap hit, giving the Bruins almost no choice but to work with Korpisalo’s 10-team no-trade list and find a new home for the veteran backup this summer. If they can’t, they’d essentially be forced into trading DiPietro to avoid the near certainty of losing him for nothing on waivers next October.
Wild Recall Boris Katchouk, Ben Gleason
Feb. 20: The Wild announced they’ve reassigned Kiersted to Iowa. Katchouk and Gleason remain with the club for now.
Feb. 18: The Wild announced they’ve recalled forward Boris Katchouk and defensemen Ben Gleason and Matt Kiersted from AHL Iowa. All will likely be on their way back to Iowa once Minnesota’s Olympians return stateside.
Katchouk started the season with the Lightning, kicking off his second stint with the team that drafted him 44th overall in 2016 by signing a two-way deal in free agency. All three of his NHL appearances this season – his first in two years – came in a Tampa sweater back in November. He went pointless while averaging 12:11 of ice time per game, going 7-for-19 (36.8%) on faceoffs.
After being returned to the minors, Katchouk remained in the Bolts organization for a month before being sent to the Wild in exchange for Michael Milne shortly after Christmas. The Wild were looking to jumpstart their AHL affiliate’s hapless offense with Katchouk’s veteran presence and 179 games of NHL experience, but it hasn’t worked out that way. An injury kept Katchouk out of the lineup for nearly a month in January, and he’s been limited to a goal and an assist in five games for Iowa as a result.
Gleason and Kiersted are also in their first years in the organization, although both of them arrived in free agency last summer rather than via trade. Gleason, 28 next month, hasn’t played in the NHL since his four-game debut with the Stars in 2018-19 but has been a desirable minor-league asset for the past eight years thanks to his steady two-way game. The cousin of longtime Hurricanes rearguard Tim Gleason has one goal and 17 points with a -16 rating in 44 outings for Iowa, tied for sixth on the team in scoring and second among blue-liners.
Kiersted is the only one of the group to see NHL time for the Wild this season. He’s suited up four times as an injury fill-in, posting one assist and a -1 rating with five blocks while averaging 13:42 of ice time per game. The Minnesota native hasn’t had much of an offensive impact on the farm, though, only notching six points and a -7 rating through 31 games.
Lightning Aiming To Add Right-Shot Defenseman
One of the Lightning’s priorities before the trade deadline is supplement their blue line, David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period said on Thursday’s edition of “Daily Faceoff Live.”
“The right side of that ‘D’ corps has been something that they’ve been looking to add. [I] wouldn’t be surprised if [Lightning GM Julien] BriseBois pulls that off. Now, one of the things he did tell me during the Stadium Series was that if they make a move, they don’t just want it to be for this season. They view it as adding now and impacting the roster moving forward. So, to me, that means somebody with term or at least somebody controllable.”
Short-term, adding to the blue line in a season where they’re arguably the clear favorite to come out of the Eastern Conference is arguably a requirement for BriseBois to address. While they’ve gotten consistently strong play out of their call-ups this season, they’ve been plagued by injuries. That won’t change after the Olympic break. Maxwell Crozier won’t be an option until the first round of the playoffs after undergoing core muscle surgery. Victor Hedman has been limited to just 21 games this season and sustained another lower-body injury while warming up for Sweden in yesterday’s Olympic quarterfinal loss to the United States.
The short and long-term pictures are thin on the right side. Crozier, when healthy, had emerged as an NHL-capable third-pairing option. Behind their top three of Darren Raddysh, Erik Černák, and Crozier, they don’t have any other righties in the organization that they’d want playing postseason minutes.
There’s also the question of whether Raddysh, a pending unrestricted free agent, will opt to extend with Tampa. The 29-year-old may be the top pending UFA available at this stage after Artemi Panarin signed his extension with the Kings. His incredible breakout campaign has him sixth in the league in scoring among defensemen with 52 points (17 goals, 35 assists) in 49 games. He’s also now Tampa’s No. 1 on the blue line in terms of deployment, averaging 22:33 of ice time per game. AFP Analytics projects a four-year extension in the mid-$5MM AAV range if he sticks around, but as his earning potential will never be greater than it is now, it’s hard to imagine him not at least wanting to test the market.
With Černák serving as their only top-four piece on the right side signed long-term, and the aging Hedman and Ryan McDonagh needing to start to wind down their minutes on the left side, the need for another high-powered righty to take the Bolts through the end of the decade is apparent. On the left side, they have at least one succession policy in J.J. Moser, who’s already arrived as a top-pairing capable piece. Until they have some degree of certainty surrounding Raddysh’s future, though, long-term right-shot depth remains an active weakness.
If the Bolts aren’t in the rental market, their options become more limited. Teams are never exactly chomping at the bit to part ways with a cost-controlled, or even rights-controlled, right-shot blue liner with top-four deployability. The most talked-about names on the market, veterans Dougie Hamilton and Justin Faulk, are both rather high-cost, on the wrong side of 30, and are only signed for two seasons (Hamilton) or one season (Faulk) past this one.
A younger name who could be a fit, especially short-term as a more natural third-pairing upgrade, is the Rangers’ Braden Schneider. The 24-year-old is a pending restricted free agent, so while he’s not cost-controlled, he at least has two years of team control left for the Bolts to sign him to a long-term deal. He’s averaging a career-high 20:19 per game for the Blueshirts this season with two goals, 11 points, and a -15 rating in 57 games. New York has relied on him heavily in shutdown situations over the past few seasons, and his possession numbers consistently come out above water compared to his offensive zone start percentage. With Černák taking the brunt of shutdown minutes in Tampa, there may be room for Schneider to chip in more offensively in easier minutes.
Sidney Crosby Ruled Out Of Semifinals, Possible For Medal Game
Feb. 20: Crosby will not play in today’s semifinal matchup against Finland, Hockey Canada announced. As IIHF rules stipulate a captain must be named for each game, Connor McDavid will wear the ‘C’ in his absence. Crosby, who by all accounts avoided a worst-case injury, is still questionable for either the bronze or gold medal game pending today’s result.
Feb. 18: During Canada’s dramatic overtime victory over Czechia in the quarterfinals of the ongoing Winter Olympics men’s hockey tournament, Pittsburgh Penguins forward Sidney Crosby was forced out of the game with an injury.
ESPN’s Emily Kaplan relayed word from Canadian head coach Jon Cooper post-game, who said that he didn’t know the extent of Crosby’s injury. According to Kaplan, Crosby will undergo medical imaging to determine the extent of the lower-body injury he suffered. The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun reported that Hockey Canada is expected to issue an update on Crosby’s status on Thursday.
As one of the most iconic players in the history of Canadian international hockey competition, Crosby’s status is one of the key storylines to watch as the tournament progresses into the semifinal stage. At this point in time, one can only speculate on whether Crosby will be available for the rest of the tournament.
If Crosby is unavailable, it goes without saying that would be a massive loss for Canada. Crosby has six points in the tournament and his line with Mitch Marner and Mark Stone has been one of Canada’s best.
Any extended absence would also impact the Penguins. Pittsburgh is in the thick of the Eastern Conference playoff race, in large part powered by Crosby’s 59 points in 56 games. Losing Crosby, even for a brief period of time, would make winning on a nightly basis far more challenging for the Penguins.
As of right now, all Canada and Penguins fans can do is wait for Hockey Canada to issue an update regarding Crosby and hope it’s positive.
