Devils Reassign Dennis Cholowski

Feb. 24: Not surprisingly, New Jersey shared today that Cholowski has been re-assigned to AHL Utica. The former first round defenseman was able to practice with the team during the break, but will not add to his 15 game season total with New Jersey at this time. The Devils host Buffalo tomorrow in their first game post-Olympics.


Feb. 18: The Devils made Hameenaho’s and White’s recalls official today. They also summoned defenseman Dennis Cholowski and goaltender Jakub Malek from AHL Utica to serve as extra practice players while they await the return of their Olympians.


Feb. 13: The Devils will recall forward Lenni Hameenaho and defenseman Colton White back to the NHL roster after the Olympic break, per James Nichols of New Jersey Hockey Now. As things stand, they won’t need to make any corresponding moves.

Hameenaho, 21, appeared in the first nine games of his NHL career in the weeks leading up to the break. The early returns were strong for the 2023 second-round pick. He notched two goals and four points with a +1 rating. The right-winger played his natural position, usually on a line with Arseny Gritsyuk and Cody Glass. That trio controlled a dominant 75% of expected goals at 5-on-5, per MoneyPuck. It’s easy to see why New Jersey wants to squeeze as much momentum as they can out of that group when league play reconvenes later this month.

Hameenaho’s adjustment to the NHL game is a great sign that a rough campaign for the club’s AHL affiliate in Utica hasn’t steered him too far off his development path. The 6’1″ Finn has a 9-13–22 scoring line and a -13 rating through 34 minor-league games, a figure that improbably leads the team in scoring.

He made his offensive ceiling evident with a pair of spectacular post-draft campaigns in his home country for Ässät. In 2024-25, he erupted for 20 goals and 51 points in 58 Liiga games to lead under-20 players in scoring.

Now, as one of New Jersey’s brightest prospects, he appears set to finish out the season in a top-nine role. While playoffs are essentially out of the question, a strong finish should position him well to crack the opening night roster next fall.

White, 28, has spent most of his pro career in the minors but has been a pleasant surprise as a call-up option when needed this season. Injuries have forced the lefty in 23 appearances, in which he’s recorded four assists and a +2 rating. They’re his first games at the top level since suiting up a career-high 46 times for the Ducks in 2022-23.

A stay-at-home specialist, White is averaging just 12:15 of ice time per game but has been a no-fuss option in bottom-pairing minutes. He’s controlled 47.7% of shot attempts and 53.9% of expected goals at even strength, so he’s done a good job of helping the Devils control quality scoring chances against lesser competition.

Central Notes: Toews, Jets Injuries, Predators

Winnipeg Jets center Jonathan Toews can be marked off any trade deadline wish lists, as the future Hall of Famer says he will invoke his no movement clause if approached, as explained in a piece by Murat Ates of The Athletic

The reigning Presidents’ Trophy winners welcomed Toews back into the NHL after a two-year hiatus. Joining his hometown club, there were slight hopes the 37-year-old could be a viable second line center, but even if not, he’d be a key presence in a smaller role. Unfortunately things have not gone to plan for Winnipeg, as injuries and a brutal 11-game winless streak at the New Year have sunk the team’s playoff hopes. 

Toews’ 19 points in 56 games indicate decline, but he still shows a respectable 48.5% corsi for at even strength, an improvement from his final days as a Blackhawk in 2022-23. As a three-time Stanley Cup winner, practically any contender would welcome Toews with open arms, but the 37-year-old is perfectly content with his childhood favorite team, where he’ll focus on finishing the campaign strong. 

Elsewhere across the division:

  • Also in Winnipeg, Head Coach Scott Arniel told reporters, including Mitchell Clinton, team Color Analyst, that Neal Pionk is week-to-week with what’s called a “new” injury. The defenseman was nearing a return from a lower-body ailment which sidelined him since January 13, but is now dealing with another issue. With just eight points in 40 games, it figures that Pionk has not been up to full speed all season. Nino Niederreiter is also week-to-week, injured while playing for Switzerland in the Olympics. At 33, the usually dependable scorer has taken a step back with just eight tallies on the year. Finally, Josh Morrissey will miss the team’s road trip, but should return afterward, as soon as March 3 against Chicago. The top defender was injured against Czechia in the Olympics and will have to miss his first game of the campaign as a result. 
  • Trade discussions on Nashville Predators forwards Jonathan Marchessault and Erik Haula are expected to ramp up until the March 6 trade deadline, as reported in an article from The Fourth Period. Insider David Pagnotta mentioned that the Predators were working on deals which had to wait due to the Olympic trade freeze, although it’s unclear exactly which players were in discussion. While Steven Stamkos has come to life of late, Marchessault, 35, has been unable to find his footing as a Predator, with just 17 points on the season. Still signed through 2028-29 at $5.5MM and with a full no movement clause, Nashville would likely take back an unfavorable contract and a limited return if they could avoid retention. Meanwhile, Haula was picked up to be a stop gap center in his second stint as a Predator. A pending unrestricted free agent, he can veto trades to six teams, but would surely welcome a move to a contender, and will have interest in such a weak center market. 

Stars Place Radek Faksa On Injured Reserve

Dallas Stars forward Radek Faksa was placed on injured reserve, as noted by Robert Tiffin of StarsThoughts.com. Representing Team Czechia at the Olympics, Faksa suffered an upper body injury which cut his time short.

The team has annouced the retroactive date as February 17, when the veteran was injured in Milan, meaning he could be activated as soon as Saturday. If such could be the case, he’d only miss one game, tomorrow against Seattle.

The ailment does not appear to be serious, but it’s another tough blow considering that top scorer Mikko Rantanen landed on the shelf from his own injury during the Olympic Games, and top center Roope Hintz is unlikely to play tomorrow as he is ill.

Chosen by the Stars back in 2012, Faksa returned to his long-term organization after a one year stint with St. Louis in 2024-25 to serve as a bottom six center. The 32-year-old has missed just one game, recording 17 points, already surpassing his output in the unusual Blues uniform last year. Faksa’s 43.3% corsi for in at five-on-five is a career worst, however he has started 72% of his shifts in the defensive zone, thanks to his trustworthy 56% face-off win rate. The fifth-ranked Stars hardly need offense from Faksa at this point in his career, as opposed to his usual shutdown play and penalty killing.

Dallas’ forward depth will be tested over the next few days as they return from the Olympic break, but in all likelihood, Faksa will return by next week in time for the team’s two-game Western Canada road trip which starts Monday in Vancouver.

Kraken Sign Ryan Winterton To Two-Year Extension

It has been an eventful evening for the Seattle Kraken, announcing that Ryan Winterton has been signed to a two-year contract extension worth $1.125MM per season. The forward would have become a restricted free agent after the season, now with a nice increase from his current $828k entry level deal. Winterton’s contract news came out tonight along with teammate Ben Meyersextension.

A third round selection of Seattle in their inaugural 2021 draft class, Winterton has emerged as a nice find with a strong bottom six potential. Standing at 6’2″, the 22-year-old recorded at least 35 points in each of his two AHL seasons, now breaking through as a regular in the lineup. Across 54 games so far, the Ontario native has 15 points, missing just two contests to this point.

Back in August, Winterton was listed as the Kraken’s ninth-best prospect by Steven Ellis of The Fourth Period. A franchise whose efforts to build a contender immediately proved ineffective, with shuffling behind the bench, Seattle has finally started to assemble a formidable next wave of young players; Winterton helping round out the group with a high floor outlook.

Winterton’s development is still a work in progress, as his possession metrics at even strength remain below average, but he’s shown real improvement from last season’s -11 in just 12 games, now into the positives across his 54 games. Serving as a penalty killer in the team’s bottom six, he offers enough speed and puck skills to carve out a role under Head Coach Lane Lambert.

Now locked up until after the 2027-28 season, where he’ll still remain under team control, Winterton is expected to grow further over the next two seasons on his way to becoming a fixture of Seattle’s lineup.

Kraken Sign Ben Meyers To Two-Year Extension

The Seattle Kraken shared that Ben Meyers has been signed to a two-year extension worth $1MM per season. The forward’s one year deal worth $775k was set to expire this summer, where he would have become an unrestricted free agent.

Undrafted, the 27-year-old represented his home state as a Minnesota Golden Gopher from 2019-22, working his way up to becoming team captain and a Hobey Baker Award finalist. Notable considering recent events, Meyers was a proud member of Team USA at the 2022 Olympic Games in Beijing. As NHL players were not allowed to participate, he landed into the global stage out of college, posting four points in as many games.

Upon the conclusion of his impressive collegiate career, Meyers caught the attention of Colorado, who signed him to a two-year contract, subsequently jumping right into the show and scoring in his NHL debut. Things came a bit harder for the forward after the blur of his first professional action, as in 2022-23 he scored four goals with no assists in 39 games with the Avs, leading to a split across the campaign with time in the AHL.

Meyers remained productive with the Colorado Eagles, posting 49 points in 62 contests across 2022-24, but opportunities proved limited with the elite Avalanche. In March of 2024, he was dealt to the Ducks for a 2024 fifth round draft selection. The trade gave him an opportunity to return to an NHL lineup, where Meyers played out his contract but after just two assists in 14 games, Anaheim chose not to keep him.

Undeterred, Meyers then signed a one-year deal with Seattle worth $755k for 2024-25, where he ended up spending the year with the team’s AHL affiliate, the Coachella Valley Firebirds. Meyers lit it up with 51 points in 57 games, leading the team and earning another extension for this year with a shot to stay at the NHL level.

His patience has paid off, as Meyers is now a key depth player for the Kraken. Across 32 contests so far in 2025-26, he has recorded 11 points, a nice increase after just seven in his first 75 at the highest level. Important for any fourth line penalty killer, Meyers has spent just four minutes in the box all year. His 53.4% face-off win percentage is a career best.

Having addressed their depth forwards, GM Jason Botterill can turn his attention to key veterans such as Jaden Schwartz, Jordan Eberle, Eeli Tolvanen who all expire after the season. Meyers’ Kraken are back in action tomorrow in Dallas, but as he’s currently on IR with a lower-body injury, it will be without the newly signed man, pending further announcement.

Image Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Lightning’s Victor Hedman, Brayden Point, Two Others Set To Return

Tampa Bay assistant coach Rob Zettler told reporters, including Benjamin Pierce, Beat Writer for the team, that Victor Hedman, Brayden Point, Charle-Edouard D’Astous, and Emil Martinsen Lilleberg are all expected to return tomorrow against Toronto. 

Hedman, who already dealt with a nearly two-month long IR stint after elbow surgery, returned for the Bolts’ epic Stadium Series win over Boston on February 1, the first of his three games before the Olympic Break. 

The Tampa captain then went off to Milan as a pillar of Team Sweden, where he sustained an apparent lower-body injury in warmups prior to last Wednesday’s game against the United States, ending his Olympic action. The 35-year-old won’t miss any more time, as he’ll look to settle in after just 21 games on the campaign so far, where he’s recorded 13 points (all assists) on 20:15 a night. 

Also with ties to the Olympics, Point suffered a knee injury on January 12 that had fans fearing for the worst. Thankfully avoiding a long term recovery, Tampa’s top center attempted to get back in time for Milan and Team Canada, however, on February 5 the 29-year-old made the commendable decision to pass his spot, which was taken by Seth Jarvis

Able to utilize the break to return to form, Point will give another boost to Tampa Bay, who maintained their elite play even without him. After a slower start to the year relative to his standards, with injuries a factor, Point was on a heater prior to his injury with 19 points in 16 games. All told, he has 30 in 37 on the season, good for sixth on the club despite missing considerable time. 

Meanwhile, Lilleberg and D’Astous, both young defenseman who round out Tampa’s blueline, have been on injured reserve and are expected to be activated for tomorrow. 

Lilleberg hasn’t played since mid-December, dealing with an undisclosed lingering injury. The 25-year-old had six points in 32 games before going down, averaging a career high 17:21 after emerging as a regular in the lineup in 2024-25. 

D’Astous was placed on IR in late January, after a collision against Columbus on the 24th left him with a lower-body injury. The undrafted 27-year-old latched on with Tampa after three seasons in Sweden, and he looks to be the next under-the-radar contributor in the blue and white. The 6’2” lefty has 17 points in 43 games, playing over 19 minutes a night with a strong 53.4% corsi for at even strength. 

The Lightning host the Maple Leafs tomorrow, and having won five in a row going into the break, it’s hard to imagine they’ll stop anytime soon, with several players back into the fold. Tampa is five points behind Colorado for first in the league.

Sharks Reassign Nick Leddy, Filip Bystedt

2/24: Like Bystedt last Sunday, San Jose reassigned Leddy to the AHL today. The veteran was able to skate with the team over the last few days but now is headed back down, with the big club back in action Thursday against Calgary.

A Stanley Cup champion and member of the 1,000 game club, Leddy’s Shark tenure hasn’t gone to plan as he plays out the final year of his deal worth $4MM. The 34-year-old hasn’t debuted with the Barracuda yet, but if he does at some point, it would be his first AHL action since 2012-13 with the Rockford IceHogs.


2/22: As expected, the Sharks have returned Bystedt to the minors ahead of their return to game action. He will continue to heal up from an upper-body injury as the AHL’s San Jose Barracuda approach two games next weekend.


2/18: The San Jose Sharks announced that they’ve recalled forward Filip Bystedt and defenseman Nick Leddy from the AHL’s San Jose Barracuda. Still, there’s no indication that either player will play for the Sharks next week.

Following the announcement, Sheng Peng from San Jose Hockey Now reported that Bystedt will not be playing for the Sharks next week; he has been recalled solely to serve as an additional participant in practice. Additionally, because Bystedt is nursing an upper-body injury, he wasn’t expected to play for the Barracuda either. There is no word on how long Leddy’s promotion will be.

Still, Bystedt likely isn’t far off from becoming a full-time player for the Sharks. He’s in his third season playing professionally in North America after being selected with the 27th overall pick of the 2022 NHL Draft by the Sharks. He’s continued to get better every season.

He got off to a hot start, scoring four goals and seven points in eight games for the Barracuda in 2023-24, and followed that up with a 12-goal, 31-point performance in 50 games last season. This year, he’s leading the team in scoring, registering 13 goals and 36 points in 40 games.

Meanwhile, Leddy has yet to play for AHL San Jose after clearing waivers and being reassigned in mid-January. The 34-year-old veteran has struggled this season, registering four assists in 19 games, averaging 17:30 of ice time per game. In the last year of a four-year, $16MM contract signed with the St. Louis Blues, there’s a strong indication that this will be Leddy’s last season in the NHL.

Pro Hockey Rumors’ Bradley Keith also contributed to this article. 

Kings Recall Kirill Kirsanov, Erik Portillo

Feb. 24: Kirsanov and Portillo were quietly returned to Ontario back on Friday, but the team announced they’ve been recalled again today. With Doughty and Kuemper taking home silver medals, they might be getting tomorrow off against the Golden Knights before returning to the lineup. As such, Kirsanov and Portillo would be needed as a healthy extra and a backup goalie, respectively.


Feb. 19: The Kings announced they’ve recalled defenseman Kirill Kirsanov and goaltender Erik Portillo from AHL Ontario. Netminder Pheonix Copley was returned to Ontario after being recalled yesterday in the corresponding move.

Kirsanov gets a look in an NHL practice today while Drew Doughty is still in Italy representing Team Canada at the Olympics. The 23-year-old is in the first season of his entry-level contract, waiting four years after L.A. drafted him in the third round in 2021 to come over from his native Russia. While the 6’2″ lefty struggled to hold down a regular role in the KHL, he’s looked the part so far in Ontario. A stable two-way presence, he’s put up four goals and 11 points with a +8 rating in 47 games.

Portillo, who’s essentially usurped Copley as the No. 3 goalie on the Kings’ depth chart, will get his turn in practice today with Darcy Kuemper absent. After a tough showing last year, the 25-year-old has squarely outperformed Copley in the minors this season and has a .905 SV% and 2.45 GAA in 19 games. That’s been good for a 13-3-1 record and one shutout behind one of the AHL’s best offensive clubs.

Ducks Recall Ian Moore, Tim Washe

Feb. 24: As expected, the Ducks announced today that Moore is back on the roster ahead of tomorrow’s game against the Oilers. He was recalled alongside forward Tim Washe, who was on the NHL roster prior to the break but was sent down to San Diego earlier than Moore. His return indicates the Ducks aren’t expecting either Leo Carlsson or Frank Vatrano to be able to come off injured reserve yet.


Feb. 18: According to a team announcement, the Anaheim Ducks have reassigned defenseman Ian Moore to the AHL’s San Diego Gulls. It’ll be Moore’s first stint in the AHL since the beginning of the season.

It’s not expected to be a long-term demotion for Moore. Simply put, the move to AHL San Diego will allow the 24-year-old defenseman to play in as many as three games before the Ducks return to action against the Edmonton Oilers next Wednesday.

Regardless, it won’t be an unfamiliar environment for Moore. The former captain of Harvard University played nine games for the Gulls last year to close out the regular season, scoring one goal and five points. He has only registered one AHL contest this season.

Although he didn’t crack Anaheim’s roster out of training camp, he’s been with the Ducks for much of the 2025-26 campaign. He’s scored two goals and nine points in 41 games, averaging 14:10 of ice time per night. He’s shown quality possession metrics for a rookie, managing a 53.5% CorsiFor% at even strength.

Moore’s rise as a capable NHL defenseman has sparked mixed feelings in Orange County. His play at the beginning of the year led to a loss of ice time for defenseman Pavel Mintyukov, who even considered requesting a trade in late November.

Wild Recall Ben Jones, Matt Kiersted

The Wild announced today that they’ve recalled forward Ben Jones and defenseman Matt Kiersted from AHL Iowa. They have two open roster spots and thus don’t need to make any corresponding moves.

Minnesota is expecting Matt Boldy to return to the team from his gold medal win with Team USA in time for tomorrow’s game against the Predators, per Michael Russo of The Athletic. However, they didn’t have an extra forward rostered in case he isn’t able to go. Jones, who’s already suited up 26 times for Minnesota this season, will do the honors.

With the Wild having a back-to-back road trip to kick off their post-break schedule, there’s a decent chance they’ll need him for at least one of the contests. He last appeared for the Wild on Jan. 20 before being reassigned to Iowa a few days later. Jones, who turns 27 on Thursday, was a high-scoring piece in juniors but hasn’t found much of any offense at the NHL level. He has a goal and an assist this season, the only two points of his career in 54 total games. He’s only averaged 8:36 per game of ice time but has been valuable as a depth faceoff-taker, winning 53.5% of his draws.

Outside of that, Jones’ game is uninspiring. His -10 rating is ahead of only Marcus Foligno‘s -11. He averages under a shot on goal per game. His 2.04 hits per game rank fourth on the team, but that’s more a measure of how little Minnesota has the puck when he’s on the ice. His 39.2 CF% at even strength is the lowest among active Wild forwards.

As for Kiersted, he gives the Wild two extra defenders – also in case fellow Olympians Brock Faber and Quinn Hughes aren’t available. He joins David Spacek, who was recalled from Iowa on Saturday. The 27-year-old was already jockeyed between the NHL and AHL over the break to give the Wild some extra practice players. The lefty has just seven points in 33 AHL games this season with a -5 rating, adding an assist and a -1 mark in four NHL contests in December and January.