Headlines

  • 2025 NHL Training Camp Rosters
  • Blackhawks Sign Matt Grzelcyk To PTO
  • Rangers Name J.T. Miller Captain
  • Canadiens Discussing Extension For Kent Hughes, Jeff Gorton
  • Mathew Barzal Ready For Islanders Training Camp
  • Flyers Trade Ivan Fedotov To Blue Jackets
  • Previous
  • Next
Register
Login
  • MLB Trade Rumors
  • Hoops Rumors
  • Pro Football Rumors

Pro Hockey Rumors

  • Home
  • Teams
    • Atlantic
      • Boston Bruins
      • Buffalo Sabres
      • Detroit Red Wings
      • Florida Panthers
      • Montreal Canadiens
      • Ottawa Senators
      • Tampa Bay Lightning
      • Toronto Maple Leafs
    • Central
      • Chicago Blackhawks
      • Colorado Avalanche
      • Dallas Stars
      • Minnesota Wild
      • Nashville Predators
      • St. Louis Blues
      • Utah Mammoth
      • Winnipeg Jets
    • Metropolitan
      • Carolina Hurricanes
      • Columbus Blue Jackets
      • New Jersey Devils
      • New York Islanders
      • New York Rangers
      • Philadelphia Flyers
      • Pittsburgh Penguins
      • Washington Capitals
    • Pacific
      • Anaheim Ducks
      • Calgary Flames
      • Edmonton Oilers
      • Los Angeles Kings
      • San Jose Sharks
      • Seattle Kraken
      • Vancouver Canucks
      • Vegas Golden Knights
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • MLB/NBA/NFL
    • MLB Trade Rumors
    • Hoops Rumors
    • Pro Football Rumors
Go To MLB Trade Rumors
Go To Hoops Rumors

Brad Hunt Receiving SHL Interest

August 22, 2025 at 7:59 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

For close to 15 years, veteran defenseman Brad Hunt has provided an offensive boost wherever he has played.  At times, he has been a high-producing offensive blueliner in the minors while at other times, he was a power play specialist (or even briefly a winger) in the NHL.  But it appears that he might be heading for a change of scenery as Mattias Persson of Sweden’s HockeyNews reports (subscription link) that Hunt is receiving interest from some SHL teams this summer.

The timing is a little curious given that a lot of teams in Sweden have already filled their import quotas but some are still trying to round out their roster with the season getting started in mid-September.

Hunt spent last season with AHL Hershey where he was limited to just 41 games where he had 19 points.  In 2023-24, the 36-year-old was one of the top-scoring blueliners in that league, tallying 16 goals and 33 assists in 70 games with Colorado.  He can certainly still be a productive player in the minors but as a veteran player and a limit on roster spots for veterans in the AHL, that likely isn’t helping his cause in a search for a contract in North America.

Hunt has played in 288 career NHL games over parts of ten seasons, tallying 26 goals and 60 assists along the way.  His last taste of action at the top level came back in 2022-23 with the Avalanche when he got into 47 games with them.  But in the minors, Hunt has been a key scoring threat, notching 84 goals and 214 assists in 422 contests spanning nine seasons.

While it’s possible that Hunt could try to catch on via a PTO deal for training camp and then try to land a full contract from there, it appears that he has at least one other viable option on the table with some interest in Sweden.  With their season fast approaching, he’ll need to decide if that’s the route he wants to take sooner than later.

SHL Brad Hunt

0 comments

Salary Cap Deep Dive: Chicago Blackhawks

August 22, 2025 at 6:58 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Navigating the salary cap is one of the most important tasks for a front office.  Teams that can avoid total cap chaos by walking the tightrope of inking players to deals that match their value (or compensate for future value without breaking the bank) remain successful.  Those who don’t often see struggles and front office changes.

PHR will look at every NHL team and give a thorough look at their cap situation for the 2025-26 season.  This will focus more on players who are regulars on the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL.  All cap figures are courtesy of PuckPedia.  We’re currently covering the Central Division, first up are the Blackhawks.

Chicago Blackhawks

Current Cap Hit: $76,837,976 (below the $95.5MM Upper Limit)

Entry-Level Contracts

D Nolan Allan (one year, $825K)
F Connor Bedard (one year, $950K)
D Kevin Korchinski (one year, $918.3K)
D Artyom Levshunov (two years, $975K)
F Frank Nazar (one year, $950K)
D Sam Rinzel (two years, $941.7K)

Potential Bonuses
Bedard: $3.5MM
Korchinski: $1MM
Levshunov: $3.25MM
Nazar: $900K
Rinzel: $500K
Total: $9.15MM

Bedard’s second contract has long been a discussion point.  Frankly, it was already being speculated about before he even signed his first deal.  But while he has led Chicago in scoring in each of his first two NHL seasons, he hasn’t been as dominant as some thought he might be.  Still, he’s tracking to be worth $10MM or more on a long-term deal, an amount that could go up if he gets closer to the point-per-game mark this season.  However, knowing there are big jumps coming to the cap for at least the next two years, this might be a case where a bridge deal makes sense, setting him up to cash in a couple of years from now when he’s ideally more established as an elite player.  A bridge agreement would still likely run past the $7MM mark.  He should hit his $1MM in ‘A’ bonuses while the ‘B’ ones are unlikely.

Nazar earned himself a quick recall and never looked back as he got better as the second half of the season went on.  He just signed a new deal which we’ll get to later on but for here, some of his four ‘A’ bonuses should be achievable.

Levshunov played enough to officially burn the first year of his deal but not accrue a season toward UFA eligibility, meaning the Blackhawks still have seven seasons of club control.  Assuming they push him to play the full NHL season this time around, he should have a chance at a couple of his ‘A’ bonuses and could have him in a position to bypass a bridge deal and sign a long-term contract.  It’s a bit early to predict that one but we’ve seen post-ELC contracts for key blueliners push past $8MM in recent years.  Rinzel got his feet wet at the NHL level late last season and was quite impressive, putting him in line to have a full-time spot barring a rough training camp.  Like Levshunov, it’s too early to predict a deal (he’s only nine games into his pro career) but if he progresses as expected, his second contract could be pricey while his ‘A’ bonuses will be reachable.

Korchinski was a regular with Chicago in his first professional season but spent the bulk of last season with AHL Rockford.  He could go back to the IceHogs but if he stays with the Blackhawks, it’s likely to be in a third-pairing role.  If that happens, a short-term second contract would make sense for both sides, one that should check in below $2MM.  He has four A’ bonuses in his deal but it seems unlikely he’ll reach any unless he plays a bigger role than expected and is quite productive.  Allan split time between the NHL and AHL last season as well although he played twice as many NHL games as AHL ones.  He had limited minutes when he was in the lineup and projects to have a similar role this season.  That has him in line for a bridge contract in the $1.5MM range.

Signed Through 2025-26, Non-Entry-Level

G Laurent Brossoit ($3.3MM, UFA)
F Jason Dickinson ($4.25MM, UFA)
F Nick Foligno ($4.5MM, UFA)
G Spencer Knight ($4.5MM, RFA)
F Sam Lafferty ($2MM, UFA)
F Ilya Mikheyev ($4.038MM, UFA)*
D Connor Murphy ($4.4MM, UFA)
F Lukas Reichel ($1.2MM, RFA)
D Shea Weber ($7.857MM, UFA)

*-Vancouver is retaining an additional $712.5K on Mikheyev’s deal.

When Chicago re-signed Foligno to a short-term contract, they knew they were likely to be paying a bit of a premium for him.  But he wound up playing a fair-sized role while being reasonably productive.  He seems like a candidate to be moved by the trade deadline and if he wants to take one last chance at a Stanley Cup when he’s nearing the age of 39, it will need to be a much cheaper deal although some of that can be recovered with some reasonably achievable bonuses.  Dickinson was kept at a similar premium and after a couple of decent seasons, last year was a step in the wrong direction as he dealt with injuries while his output was closer to the other years in his career.  If he remains that type of player next season, his next deal might be closer to half of this amount.

It wasn’t always pretty for Mikheyev last season but he did put up a 20-goal performance and took a regular turn on the penalty kill, a reasonable showing for someone acquired as a cap dump.  It would be surprising to see him beat his current price tag next year but a multi-year agreement in the $3.5MM range wouldn’t be shocking.  Lafferty had a particularly rough season with Buffalo last year and a repeat of that performance could have him in PTO territory next summer.  Assuming he goes back to the level of previous seasons, a small dip in pay would be more realistic.  Reichel seems to be tracking in the wrong direction as his ice time dropped to under 12 minutes a night last season with middling offensive numbers.  With him not being UFA-eligible until 2029, another two-year bridge deal might be coming his way, one that would likely check in below $2MM per season if this season is similar to last.

Weber is with his fourth different organization since it was determined that his playing days were over back in 2021.  He’s LTIR-eligible but with how far Chicago is below the cap, they shouldn’t need to put him on there.  He’ll quietly come off the books next year and that will be that.

Knight was the centerpiece of the Seth Jones trade back around the trade deadline.  For a player who was touted as a future starter at the time he was drafted, he has less than 100 NHL appearances over parts of six seasons.  Still, he showed last season that he could still be on that trajectory.  He isn’t UFA-eligible until 2028 so another short-term deal is possible, one that should check in a little above his current price tag.  Meanwhile, a long-term agreement likely pushes past $6MM per season.  Brossoit didn’t play at all last season due to a knee injury.  Assuming he’s cleared for this year, he might have to start in the minors which wouldn’t bode well for his future earnings.  But if he’s able to stay healthy in the minors, he could still surpass the $1MM mark on a one-year deal next summer.  If he’s up in the NHL and fares well, something a little less than this might be doable.

Signed Through 2026-27

F Andre Burakovsky ($5.5MM, UFA)
D Louis Crevier ($900K, RFA)
F Landon Slaggert ($900K, RFA)
G Arvid Soderblom ($2.75MM, UFA)
F Teuvo Teravainen ($5.4MM, UFA)

Burakovsky was acquired from Seattle in a cap-clearing move this summer.  He isn’t the 61-point forward he was a few years ago with Colorado but they’ll be counting on him to be a floor-raiser in the middle six.  That’s a fair bit of money for someone in that role but they’re clearly comfortable paying it.  Teravainen was brought in to be a floor-raiser himself last summer and was one of the team’s top point-getters.  They have to be pleased with how the first year went and if Teravainen can stay around the same point total, he could probably land another three-year pact in this price range.  Slaggert has been up and down since turning pro but the one-way nature suggests he might be eyed as a regular in Chicago this season, albeit in a limited role.  If he can stick as even a fourth liner, arbitration eligibility could give him a shot at doubling this in 2027.

Crevier has shown some promise in his limited time on the third pairing over the past two seasons and his size (six-foot-eight) is something that few blueliners possess.  He may ultimately be someone with limited overall upside but if he can carve out a niche as a physical penalty killer and hold his own on the third pairing, he can carve out a reasonable career for himself.  If he does that over the next couple of years, he could land closer to the $2.5MM mark.

Soderblom bounced back relatively well last season after a 2023-24 campaign that was nothing short of a disaster.  Even though the overall numbers weren’t great (he didn’t have the greatest of teams in front of him, after all), Chicago saw fit to give him a longer look.  He should have the inside track on the backup spot over Brossoit and will need to take another step forward if he wants a shot at beating this contract two years from now.

Read more

Signed Through 2027-28

F Tyler Bertuzzi ($5.5MM, UFA)

In 2023, Bertuzzi hit the open market in search of a long-term, big-money deal and had to pivot quickly on the second day of free agency when he signed a one-year deal in Toronto.  Last summer, he got at least the term he was looking for while matching the salary from his time with the Maple Leafs.  Like Teravainen and now Burakovsky, Bertuzzi is another bridge veteran who got perhaps a bit more than his market value to sign with Chicago.  But after putting up his fifth 20-goal season in the last seven years (the other saw him deal with injury issues), the contract actually held up relatively well.  As long as he stays in this range of production (around 45 points), they should get some value from this contract.

Signed Through 2028-29

F Ryan Donato ($4MM, UFA)

Donato’s case was an interesting one to follow last season.  He had a breakout year, doubling his previous career high in points from 31 to 62.  That’s called a great platform season.  But with his track record being that of a depth forward, this contract reflects some shared risk.  If Donato can maintain this production, it’ll be quite the team-friendly deal while if he reverts back to his normal form, it will be an above-market pact fairly quickly.

Signed Through 2029-30 Or Longer

F Frank Nazar ($6.6MM from 2025-26 through 2032-33)
D Alex Vlasic ($4.6MM through 2029-30)

Nazar impressed after being recalled in mid-December, playing his way into bigger minutes down the stretch and earning this extension, a notable one for someone with just 56 NHL games under his belt.  If he becomes a full-time top-six forward and pushes near the 60-point mark each season, they’ll do okay with this contract.  Clearly, they’re banking on him getting past that threshold before long and making it a team-friendly pact.

Vlasic isn’t going to be a big point-getter but he was basically their number one blueliner for big chunks of last season, especially after the Jones trade.  To have someone in that role at that price tag is a boon for the Blackhawks even if it’s not really the role that Vlasic is best suited for.

Still To Sign

D Wyatt Kaiser

One of the few remaining RFAs league-wide, Kaiser spent most of last season in Chicago, often as the fourth or fifth blueliner on the depth chart.  We’ve seen the market for these types of players sit around $1.5MM on the low end of a two-year bridge while a three-year pact could run them closer to $2.5MM.

Buyouts

D T.J. Brodie ($3.233MM in 2025-26, $258.3K in 2026-27)

Retained Salary Transactions

D Seth Jones ($2.5MM through 2029-30)

Carryover Bonus Overage Penalty

None

Best Value: (non-entry-level) Vlasic
Worst Value: Dickinson

Looking Ahead

As a result of Chicago being in a full-scale rebuild, cap space isn’t an issue for them.  They have ample room to absorb any of the bonuses that were reached and still act as a third-party facilitator as they did last season in trades; this is the last year they can do so.

If things go as planned in terms of development, GM Kyle Davidson will get some richer contracts on the books but even with those, the short-term nature of the contracts for their bridge veterans will largely offset those.  It’s not unexpected given their situation but the Upper Limit of the salary cap shouldn’t be an issue anytime soon.

Photos courtesy of Charles LeClaire and Brad Penner-Imagn Images.

Chicago Blackhawks| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals| Salary Cap Deep Dive 2025

0 comments

NHL To Organize 2028 World Cup Without IIHF Involvement

August 22, 2025 at 5:15 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 13 Comments

The NHL appears set to move forward with their plan on organizing a World Cup of Hockey. They’re ready to reach out to international clubs directly, rather than work with the IIHF, per TSN’s Darren Dreger. This news doubles down comments that NHL commissioner Gary Bettman made in February.

The tournament will be an eight-country event and take place during the 2027-28 season – the year of the next summer Olympics – shares David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period. Pagnotta adds that preliminary matches will be split between one North American, and one European, city – while semi-final and final rounds will be hosted in North America.

This news answers the question of what the NHL will do in the Olympics’ off-years. The World Cup will feature a wider cast than the 4-Nations Face-Off that took place this February, though the exact list of countries isn’t quite clear. In addition to the four countries that suited up this winter, both Czechia and Slovakia seem like locked-in options. The NHL could also bring in any one of Germany, Switzlerand, Austria, and Latvia – who have each reached varying levels of international success over the last few years.

But Russia will stand as the big uncertainty. Both Russia and Belarus have been barred from participation in IIHF events since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. The IIHF upheld that decision for the 2025-26 season and 2026 Winter Olympics. The NHL deciding to go around IIHF involvement does open the door to Russia – one of the world’s top hockey countries – getting back into the swing of best-on-best competition. That would likely give aging stars like Andrei Vasilevskiy, Igor Shesterkin, Nikita Kucherov, and Artemi Panarin a chance to show their might in their prime years. Commissioner Gary Bettman declined comment when asked, back in March, about if the NHL would entertain playing against Russia in the near future.

The World Cup tournament itself will serve as an exciting shove into the future for the world’s top hockey talents. High-potential young players like Connor Bedard, Macklin Celebrini, Lane Hutson, and Juraj Slafkovsky will be just entering their prime years in 2028, and certainly looking for a chance to prove their country’s might at the top stage. The event will be a great run-up to the 2032 Winter Olympics, where all four players seem ready to play big roles.

The NHL will intercut the World Cup with All-Star games. Bettman has shared that he knows the All-Star matchup will need to live up to high expectations, after the popularity garnered by the 4-Nations Face-Off earlier this year. In an interview with NHL.com’s Dan Rosen, Bettman said that everything will be on the table for the next All-Star event. That will set a high bar for the mid-season breaks next season, though many fans will be looking ahead to an even bigger best-on-best tournament only three seasons away.

IIHF| NHL| Players World Cup

13 comments

Mitch Marner Didn’t Think Of Leaving Maple Leafs Until Summer

August 22, 2025 at 3:59 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 11 Comments

Winger Mitch Marner was wrapped up in drama and rumors for the bulk of his final years with the Toronto Maple Leafs. A move at the end of the controversial six-year, $65.41MM contract he signed in 2019 seemed all but certain as the summer approached – but despite that, teammate William Nylander emphasized that Marner was focused on the Leafs until the very end. Nylander told NHL.com’s Mike Zeisberger:

I actually asked him during the season and he said he was concentrating on Toronto. I didn’t want to press him on that and let him be because it was obviously on his mind, but his play was focused on helping us. Then I asked him after the season and he wasn’t sure.

Aside from wanting to avoid thinking of looming contract negotiations, it’s no surprise to hear Marner remained invested in Toronto. He was born in Markham and grew up playing for the Vaughan Kings and Don Mills Flyers AAA organizations. Marner moved right down the road for juniors hockey, joining the OHL’s London Knights for two superstar seasons, before being drafted by his hometown club with the fourth-overall pick in 2015. He stayed in London for one additional season, before diving into a career that would lead him through 657 games and 741 points in a Maple Leafs jersey.

Despite the fairytale matchup, Marner’s years in Toronto seemed to be clouded by stress. He was ridiculed for a lack of effort, poor results or attitude, and clashes with coaches or teammates. That includes one incident from the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs, when Marner and Nylander exchanged heated words on the bench. Fans analyzed the event as signs of mounting tensions, but Nylander told Zeisberger that it was nothing to read into. He said that things happen in the heat of big games, and that it’s still tough to see Marner leave the club after nine years.

Nylander emphasized that Toronto will miss Marner both on and off of the ice. He leaves a monumental hole on the top line, after scoring a career-high 102 points in 81 games last season. That peak came after Marner rivaled the century mark for three straight seasons, even coming as close as 99 points in 80 games of the 2022-23 season. His breakthrough should provide the perfect ramp to another dazzling season among the Vegas Golden Knights’ star-studded lineup. After years of playing alongside Auston Matthews, Marner will now suit up next to Jack Eichel and Mark Stone, and should almost certainly provide the boost to help the former reach the 100-point mark as well.

Meanwhile, Nylander didn’t commit to filling Marner’s role on the top line next season. He said that he’ll be open to playing all throughout the lineup, and is only focused on dominating next season. Nylander also posted a career year last season, reaching a career-high 45 goals to round out 84 points, after he posted 40 goals and 98 points in 2023-24. It was Nylander’s third-straight year of playing in all 82 games. He’ll undeniably be the top bet to fill Marner’s impact, though Toronto may need to dig deep to fill the spot Nylander will vacate to step up in the lineup.

Toronto Maple Leafs| Vegas Golden Knights Mitch Marner| William Nylander

11 comments

Matthew Tkachuk Underwent Surgery, Aiming For January Return

August 22, 2025 at 2:18 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 7 Comments

Panthers star Matthew Tkachuk’s health entering the season has been a topic of conversation after he returned early from an adductor injury sustained at the 4 Nations Face-Off to suit up in Florida’s run to a second straight Stanley Cup. David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period now relays that Tkachuk indeed opted for surgery to repair it, undergoing the procedure “a few weeks ago,” and could miss as much as the first four months of the campaign.

It’s still not clear what caused the right-winger’s injury during the 4 Nations tournament, but he missed the balance of the regular season and wasn’t cleared to return until Game 2 of the Cats’ first-round win over the Lightning. Opting for non-surgical rehab initially to accelerate his return timeline, he still managed to rattle off a point per game as he marched to his third straight Stanley Cup Final and second straight win, although his 17:24 average time on ice was a noticeable drop from his previous usage.

His projected return timeline makes him LTIR-eligible and offers the Panthers a pathway to cap compliance to begin the season, but it’s not that simple. They’re now $4.5MM over the cap and, on top of shuffling their roster to optimize his LTIR relief, they have to figure out a way to reinstate him on the active roster when he’s ready to return while staying below the $95.5MM upper limit. They likely won’t concern themselves with the first bit too much, as he’s not a season-long absence and their roster is full, but their roadmap to a compliant roster and a healthy Tkachuk is still murky.

Tkachuk, 27, has averaged 99 points per 82 games since arriving in Florida in 2022 via the blockbuster trade with the Flames that sent Jonathan Huberdeau and MacKenzie Weegar the other way. He also has 25 goals and 69 points in 67 playoff games for the Panthers over the last three years, ranking fourth and third in franchise history, respectively.

In the interim, the Panthers can expect 2021 first-rounder Mackie Samoskevich to play a pivotal role in their early-season success. The 22-year-old winger filled in for Tkachuk down the stretch last year and finished his rookie campaign with a 15-16–31 scoring line in 72 games. He’ll now get more opportunity out of the gate after essentially being forced to sign a league-minimum contract this summer thanks to Florida’s cap crunch and his 10.2(c) status prohibiting him from signing an offer sheet.

Florida Panthers| Injury| Newsstand Matthew Tkachuk

7 comments

Wild Sign Marco Rossi To Three-Year Deal

August 22, 2025 at 1:36 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 11 Comments

1:36 p.m.: The Wild have made Rossi’s new deal official in a team release.

10:36 a.m.: After months of trade speculation, restricted free agent center Marco Rossi is signing a new deal in the State of Hockey. PuckPedia reports the forward will sign a three-year deal with the Wild worth around $15MM in total, working out to a cap hit around $5MM. The backloaded deal will pay Rossi $4MM in 2025-26 and increase by $1MM increments each season, giving him a $6MM qualifying offer when he can become an RFA again upon expiry in 2028, reports Michael Russo of The Athletic.

It’s a welcome increase for Rossi as he comes off his entry-level contract, but it’s still significantly less than he was hoping for. The 2020 ninth overall pick took major strides in his development last season, posting a career-high 24 goals and 60 points for Minnesota in first-line deployment despite missing star wingman Kirill Kaprizov for more than half the season. As a result, he entered talks this summer looking for a long-term deal in the $7MM range annually.

It was how Rossi ended the season that set the stage for a rather sour offseason. After cooling off down the stretch, posting nine points and a -11 rating in 20 games after the trade deadline, he was demoted to fourth-line deployment in their first-round loss to the Golden Knights. He still managed two goals and 11 shot attempts in the six-game battle, but averaged only 11:08 of ice time per game.

In most cases, that would be seen as only a minor roadblock for a high-potential pick. But Rossi, who was Bill Guerin’s first draft pick as the Wild’s general manager, had been the subject of trade speculation for some time – to the point where Guerin said outright last December that he was highly impressed with Rossi’s forward progress and wasn’t looking to move him. The Wild’s hesitancy to offer a long-term deal remained, though, leaving the two sides at an impasse for most of the offseason and forcing Guerin to explore trade packages, none of which were appealing enough to get a deal done despite wide-ranging interest.

The contract itself is likely bang-on for his market value. AFP Analytics projected a long-term pact for Rossi to come in at seven years at $7.4MM per season and a short-term one to be two years at $4.5MM annually. With an extra year thrown in on top of that shorter projection, it makes sense that the AAV comes up a notch as well.

After trade interest quieted in July, the Canucks and Kraken had reportedly resurfaced in talks in recent days, with Rossi’s contract situation still unresolved. Whether that was a significant impetus for Rossi’s camp to agree to a bridge remains to be seen – either to solidify his future in Minnesota or to make himself a more palatable trade asset with cost certainty.

Rossi’s long-term projection as a legitimate top-six center remains optimistic. After losing a good chunk of his development due to a serious bout with COVID, he’s steadily upped his offensive production each year since turning pro. He’s improved on draws as well, going from a 44.7% win rate in his rookie season to 46.8% last year. He was significantly more involved in the forecheck in 2024-25 compared to 2023-24, nearly doubling the amount of hits he laid, and he has had strong relative possession impacts in each of his two full NHL seasons.

The Wild now end up with a full roster and north of $4.4MM in cap space to open the season, per PuckPedia. The club projects to have much more financial flexibility to make in-season adds than they have in the last couple of years as a result. He’ll enter camp as the odds-on favorite to start next season alongside Kaprizov again despite how his minutes were cut in last year’s playoffs, firming up a familiar center corps of himself, Joel Eriksson Ek, Ryan Hartman, and Nico Sturm.

Image courtesy of Nick Wosika-Imagn Images.

Minnesota Wild| Newsstand Marco Rossi

11 comments

Panthers Sign Luke Kunin

August 22, 2025 at 1:04 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 11 Comments

The Panthers have signed versatile forward Luke Kunin to a one-year deal, the team announced. It’s a one-way, league minimum contract, according to PuckPedia.

This will be the fifth NHL stop for Kunin, who began his career as the 15th overall pick in the 2016 draft by the Wild. He turned pro the next year after two collegiate seasons at Wisconsin and got his first taste of NHL action after making Minnesota’s opening night roster in 2017-18. Over his first three years in the NHL with the Wild, he developed rather quickly and recorded a 23-29–52 scoring line in 131 games – including an optimistic 31-point showing in 63 games in 2019-20.

Minnesota traded Kunin to Nashville in the 2020 offseason in exchange for Nick Bonino. The move brought both an ice time reduction and injury troubles. He recorded a career-high 0.50 points per game in his first year with the Preds, scoring 10 goals and 19 points in the COVID-shortened 2021 season, but was limited to 38 games with a lower-body injury. His production pace dropped to 22 points over a full 82-game schedule the following year before he was traded during the offseason again, this time to San Jose for John Leonard.

Kunin returned to a regular top-nine role with increased penalty-killing responsibility for the rebuilding Sharks, but ACL surgery ended his first season in the Bay Area after recording 13 points in 31 games.

Since returning for 2023-24, Kunin has taken on more of a pure checking role with significantly decreased offensive success. He posted identical 11-7–18 scoring lines in each of the last two seasons, along with an eye-popping cumulative -58 rating, although playing mostly on the league’s worst team during that time will obviously exaggerate poor defensive impacts. San Jose understandably wasn’t keen on re-signing him this summer and instead flipped him to the Blue Jackets at the trade deadline for a fourth-round pick. He went pointless with a -5 rating in 12 games for Columbus before reaching the open market for the first time this year.

As such, a spot in Florida’s opening night lineup is far from guaranteed. He was receiving NHL interest, but he enters the Panthers organization after a tough stretch and now must compete with names like Jonah Gadjovich, A.J. Greer, and Tomas Nosek – each of whom has proven effective fourth-line pieces on a Stanley Cup champion – for ice time.

The Panthers already have a projected cap exceedance of $3.725MM, but with star winger Matthew Tkachuk likely headed for adductor surgery soon, he’ll be LTIR-eligible and allow the Cats to be compliant to begin the season.

Florida Panthers| Newsstand| Transactions Luke Kunin

11 comments

Projecting Evgeni Malkin’s Future

August 22, 2025 at 11:59 am CDT | by Josh Cybulski 7 Comments

Penguins legend Evgeni Malkin is entering the final season of a four-year contract, and it could be his final season as a Penguin. Not only that, the 38-year-old could be closing in on the end of his NHL career, which will no doubt see him enter the Hockey Hall of Fame in due time.

Malkin is no longer the superstar center he once was and has seen his game decline since inking his extension in the summer of 2022. That being said, he is still a capable top-six contributor for the time being and produced 50 points in 68 games last season (16 goals and 34 assists).

Malkin’s underlying numbers have also dipped in recent seasons, but he is still a positive contributor on the possession front with a 50.1 CF%. If Malkin can produce results that are similar to the last couple of seasons, he could still be an NHLer beyond this season, but it might not be with the Penguins.

Malkin has previously stated that he only wants to play for the Penguins (as per Josh Yohe of The Athletic), and if that remains true, Pittsburgh would likely need to offer him an extension to keep him in the NHL. Recent reports suggest that the Penguins don’t plan to provide Malkin an extension beyond this year.

While that seems possible if Malkin’s performance continues to decline, it might not be the case if he has a strong offensive season. Josh Yohe has mentioned multiple times that he sees the summer of 2026 as the period when Penguins general manager Kyle Dubas will become more proactive in rebuilding the team, and securing a top-six forward at a reasonable cost would be a significant step toward those efforts – if Malkin is still a top-six forward at that time.

Malkin could opt to go year to year and will likely need to consider his age, but if he’s still around, he would make an excellent mentor for some of the Penguins’ prospects expected to make the jump to the NHL in the coming seasons.

Malkin’s body might struggle with the demands of an 82-game season, but if the Penguins acquire more depth through trades and free agency, they could better protect Geno and improve his chances to produce with less physical stress. Malkin could move to the wing, as he did last season, playing alongside Sidney Crosby.

He might also drop lower in the lineup, potentially taking on a third-line centre role or playing on the wing of the third line with Thomas Novak. There would be plenty of options available, but they depend on Malkin’s ability to keep producing; otherwise, it would just be a nostalgia trip, and that’s something Dubas and Penguins management want to avoid.

The flip side of that coin is that Malkin is struggling, and his play continues to decline. He has never been the most responsible defensively, and his play away from the puck leaves much to be desired.

Malkin also has a history of taking less-than-ideal penalties, which would all become glaring issues if he doesn’t offset those shortcomings with strong point production. If that happens, it’s hard to see them extending Malkin.

Dubas has made it clear he wants the team to get younger, and holding onto a 40-year-old in decline would go against everything he has been working towards. Sure, veterans are necessary to guide rebuilds and retools, but they need to be productive as well; if not, they just take up space and block a more promising option.

If the Penguins chose not to extend Malkin, he would have options. There would probably be a team willing to take a chance on him, even if his performance were declining.

It would most likely be on a one-year deal for league minimum plus bonuses, but that would give him the chance to stay in the NHL. The more likely option for Malkin would be to retire and go back to Russia for a final farewell game in the KHL. Many Russian players have jumped over to the KHL to finish out their careers, but Malkin has previously stated that he wants to wrap up his playing days in Pittsburgh and maybe play a single game in his hometown in Russia.

No matter where Malkin goes or how the rest of his time in the NHL unfolds, he will be cherished in Pittsburgh for winning three Stanley Cups and giving Penguins fans countless highlights and memorable moments. There was a time when he was the best player in the world, and although that was a brief window, Malkin stayed among the league’s top players for more than a decade.

This upcoming season in Pittsburgh might be tough for Malkin and his teammates. Still, if the Penguins don’t trade Bryan Rust, Rickard Rakell, and Erik Karlsson, they might surprise some people by getting a meaningful boost from younger players for the first time since early 2016.

Back then, the Penguins had an 18-month run that rivals some of the greatest ever, but with an aging core, that won’t happen again this time. Still, it could be exciting if Malkin can dial it back and produce a few more memorable moments before riding off into the sunset.

Photo by Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Pittsburgh Penguins| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

7 comments

Emil Bemstrom Signs In Swiss National League

August 22, 2025 at 11:55 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

Aug. 22: Bemstrom has officially made the jump to Bern, confirming a one-year deal today.

Aug. 12: Pittsburgh Penguins unrestricted free agent Emil Bemstrom will continue his career overseas. He has signed with SC Bern of Switzerland’s National League, per Henrik Sjöberg of Switzerland’s HockeyNews and Tony Androckitis of Inside AHL Hockey. This will mark a return to Europe for Bemstrom, who grew up through the Swedish junior hockey pipeline and has experience in Sweden’s SHL and Finland’s Liiga.

Bemstrom played through his first full season in the minor leagues last season, to great effect. He cemented a spot on the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins’ top line, and worked his way to 23 goals and 48 points across 48 games. Despite that, he was only able to manage one assist in 14 games with the Pittsburgh Penguins. The performance continued a wave of star scoring in the AHL, followed by underwhelming play in the NHL, which Bemstrom has been riding for much of the last four seasons.

The nifty forward made his NHL debut with the Columbus Blue Jackets in the 2019-20 season, after posting 35 points in 47 SHL games in the 2018-19 campaign. His career started off great, with 20 points, split evenly, in his first 56 NHL games. But Bemstrom opted to move to the Liiga for the first half of the shortened 2020-21 season, and while he scored 17 points in 16 games, his NHL scoring fell to a measly five points in 20 games following a return to Columbus. He’d continue on in a depth role for the Blue Jackets through the next two seasons – and even one-upped his rookie performance with 22 points in 55 games of the 2022-23 season. His NHL performances were coupled with tremendous efforts in the AHL, marked by 47 points in just 33 games between 2021 and 2024.

Hot scoring in the minor leagues and a clear ability to outplay his opponents continued to earn Bemstrom routine NHL minutes through the 2023-24 season. But he was never able to find a true groove and found himself relegated to the minor leagues for the majority of last season. He’ll now search for a bigger opportunity on the other side of the world. He brings a resume featuring 75 points in 242 NHL games, and 95 points in 81 AHL games, with him to Switzerland.

Bemstrom will join multiple NHL features on SC Bern’s lineup, including Swedish compatriots Hardy Häman Aktell and Anton Lindholm. Bern has lost in the quarterfinals of the NL’s postseason in each of their last four playoff appearances. They’ll hope the addition of a high-scoring veteran of North American pros will be enough to boost them over tough competition, like the ZSC Lions and HC Lausanne.

AHL| NHL| NLA| Pittsburgh Penguins Emil Bemstrom

0 comments

Morning Notes: Ekblad, Verhoeff, Wood

August 22, 2025 at 9:21 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

Panthers defenseman Aaron Ekblad wasn’t particularly personally involved in the last-minute contract talks that led to him signing an eight-year, $48.8MM contract extension instead of testing free agency this summer, he told RG’s DJ Siddiqi.

Ekblad spoke on how his situation intertwined with other potential Florida UFAs, Sam Bennett and Brad Marchand, both of whom also signed long-term deals to stay with the back-to-back champions. “Obviously we had conversations about what could or may happen, but at the end of the day, I think a lot of us just left it up to our agents to figure it out. We give them instructions, and they kind of handle the gist of it at least. That’s how I felt, personally. I didn’t want to get too involved with the negotiation.”

That’s a formula that’s worked well for the Panthers in the last two seasons, only jotting down defensemen Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Brandon Montour as their only notable free agent departures in 2024. Along with being able to keep Sam Reinhart and Carter Verhaeghe off the open market in that time, general manager Bill Zito may be in for some short-term pain in terms of cap management, but has certainly sold his group on long-term stability.

When Bennett, Ekblad, and Marchand signed their deals, they gave Florida 10 players locked in through the remainder of the decade. That number is proportional to their talent, including their top seven forwards and top three defensemen. That’s some invaluable cost certainty that, despite being rather limited in external additions this offseason, will open up more space for the Cats to be aggressive over the summer as soon as next year.

Here’s more from around the league:

  • While he still enters the season as the consensus No. 2 option in the 2026 draft class, defenseman Keaton Verhoeff still has some work to do to maintain that title, Scott Wheeler of The Athletic opines. “I did want to see Keaton Verhoeff dominate more than he did,” Wheeler wrote, referencing this month’s Hlinka Gretzky tournament for the under-18 age group. “At the present moment, I don’t view Verhoeff as a [Matthew Schaefer]-level D prospect. Now, it’s early, and if Verhoeff has a huge year playing big minutes at North Dakota and takes some steps in his development as a 6-foot-4 summer birthday, maybe that changes… I’ve also felt, dating back to U17s last fall, that Verhoeff’s feet are just average whereas Schaefer’s are world class. Verhoeff is bigger and shoots it harder, but that skating gap is pronounced and gives Schaefer the higher ceiling.“
  • Veteran defenseman Kyle Wood is on his way to Germany on a one-year deal with the DEL’s Iserlohn Roosters, the team announced. The 6’7″ righty was a third-round pick by the Avalanche back in 2014 but was sent to the Coyotes as part of a package for winger Mikkel Bødker at the 2016 trade deadline. He was an AHL All-Rookie Team member with Arizona’s affiliate in Tucson, recording 43 points in 68 games in his first professional season, but never sniffed that level of offensive production again and never reached the NHL. He’s been overseas since 2020, spending the last three years with Kunlun Red Star (now the Shanghai Dragons) in the KHL. He previously had 21 points in 32 DEL2 games for Löwen Frankfurt in the 2020-21 season, so this isn’t his first rodeo in German hockey.

2026 NHL Draft| DEL| Florida Panthers Aaron Ekblad| Keaton Verhoeff| Kyle Wood

2 comments
« Previous Page
Load More Posts
    Top Stories

    2025 NHL Training Camp Rosters

    Blackhawks Sign Matt Grzelcyk To PTO

    Rangers Name J.T. Miller Captain

    Canadiens Discussing Extension For Kent Hughes, Jeff Gorton

    Mathew Barzal Ready For Islanders Training Camp

    Flyers Trade Ivan Fedotov To Blue Jackets

    Blackhawks Sign Spencer Knight To Three-Year Extension

    Kings’ Corey Perry Undergoes Knee Surgery

    Pittsburgh Penguins Sign Marc-Andre Fleury To PTO

    Carter Hart, Others Found Not Guilty In Hockey Canada Sexual Assault Trial

    Recent

    Snapshots: Ristolainen, McDavid, Malhotra, Sabres

    Wild Not Entertaining Trade Offers For Kirill Kaprizov

    Submit Your Questions For The #PHRMailbag

    2025 NHL Training Camp Rosters

    Sharks Sign Oliver Wahlstrom To PTO, AHL Deal

    What The Senators Can Learn From Past Champions’ Development Model

    Mammoth Sign Seven Players To PTOs

    Bruins Promote Adam McQuaid, Hire Ben Smith

    Blackhawks’ Laurent Brossoit Still Injured Heading Into Camp

    Blackhawks Sign Matt Grzelcyk To PTO

    Rumors By Team

    Rumors By Team

    • Avalanche Rumors
    • Blackhawks Rumors
    • Blue Jackets Rumors
    • Blues Rumors
    • Bruins Rumors
    • Canadiens Rumors
    • Canucks Rumors
    • Capitals Rumors
    • Devils Rumors
    • Ducks Rumors
    • Flames Rumors
    • Flyers Rumors
    • Golden Knights Rumors
    • Hurricanes Rumors
    • Islanders Rumors
    • Jets Rumors
    • Kings Rumors
    • Kraken Rumors
    • Lightning Rumors
    • Mammoth Rumors
    • Maple Leafs Rumors
    • Oilers Rumors
    • Panthers Rumors
    • Penguins Rumors
    • Predators Rumors
    • Rangers Rumors
    • Red Wings Rumors
    • Sabres Rumors
    • Senators Rumors
    • Sharks Rumors
    • Stars Rumors
    • Wild Rumors

    Latest Rumors & News

    Latest Rumors & News

    • 2025’s Top 50 Unrestricted Free Agents
    • Rasmus Andersson Rumors
    • Erik Karlsson Rumors
    • Rickard Rakell Rumors
    • Bryan Rust Rumors

    Pro Hockey Rumors Features

    Pro Hockey Rumors Features

    • Support Pro Hockey Rumors And Go Ad-Free
    • 2025 NHL Free Agent List
    • 2026 NHL Free Agent List
    • Offseason Trade Tracker
    • PTO Tracker 2025
    • Summer Synopsis Series 2025
    • Training Camp Rosters 2025
    • Pro Hockey Rumors On X
    • Pro Hockey Rumors Polls

     

     

     

     

    Navigation

    • Sitemap
    • Archives

    PHR Info

    • About
    • Privacy Policy
    • Commenting Policy

    Connect

    • Contact Us
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • RSS Feed

    Pro Hockey Rumors is not affiliated with National Hockey League, NHL or NHL.com

    Do not Sell or Share My Personal Information

    scroll to top

    Register

    Desktop Version | Switch To Mobile Version