Morning Notes: Vladar, Garland, Klapka
While they have not been able to hold down a playoff spot, the Philadelphia Flyers have been a largely competitive team this season, and a significant reason for that has been the excellent play provided by netminder Daniel Vladar. The team signed Vladar, a longtime backup, this summer to compete with Samuel Ersson for the No. 1 role on the team, and he’s run away with it. In 35 games, Vladar has a .907 save percentage and 2.42 goals-against-average. Vladar has one more year remaining on his deal at a $3.35MM cap hit, and The Athletic’s Kevin Kurz asked Vladar about the prospect of signing an early extension with the team. Vladar made it clear that it was too early for those questions, saying “It’s too far ahead. I’m living my life day by day, week by week.”
Given Vladar’s success this season, it’s likely the Flyers have interest in locking him into an extension before his current deal expires. He won’t turn 29 until August, meaning he isn’t just a short-term stopgap option for Philadelphia. The team has some talented goalie prospects in its system, such as Carson Bjarnason, Yegor Zavragin, and Aleksei Kolosov, but keeping Vladar is the kind of move that can help the development of those players, rather than hinder it, because of how his presence helps keep those young goalies from playing too much, too early in their NHL career. The key factor related to Vladar’s situation is likely to be cost. Kurz pointed to the recent extension signed by Minnesota Wild starter Filip Gustavsson as a comparable deal (five years, $6.8MM AAV), but it should be noted that Gustavsson had more extensive experience as a No. 1 goalie when he signed that deal.
Other notes from around the NHL:
- As the Vancouver Canucks chart their course through an uncertain competitive future, one veteran name drawing interest ahead of the trade deadline is that of winger Conor Garland. According to Bruce Garrioch of the Ottawa Citizen, Senators head coach Travis Green is a “huge backer” of Garland, dating back to his own days as head coach of the Canucks, and as a result “it would be no surprise if the Senators checked in on” Garland. The 29-year-old has seven goals and 26 points in 49 games this season, and would instantly plug in somewhere in Ottawa’s top-nine. The main area of contention regarding a Garland trade is likely to be his contract, as his six-year, $6MM AAV contract kicks in next year. That contract has a full no-move clause attached.
- With the Calgary Flames sitting near the bottom of league standings, the focus for the rest of the season is undoubtedly on maximizing the growth and development of the team’s younger players, something that will be especially true after the trade deadline. One player poised to get an increased opportunity on the ice is 25-year-old winger Adam Klapka, according to Sportsnet’s Eric Francis. Klapka is already a success story for the Flames’ player development team, as the massive 6’8″ has blossomed into an NHLer since signing as an undrafted player out of the Czech Extraliga. But the Flames, including head coach Ryan Huska, appear to believe there is room for Klapka to provide even more value on the ice. Under contract for an additional season at a $1.25MM cap hit, Klapka will be one of the players to watch in Calgary moving forward, as he’s poised to gain a greater role once the Flames make their trade deadline moves. Through 57 games this season, he has notched five goals, 12 points, and 215 hits.
Mammoth Have Shown Interest In Robert Thomas
The Mammoth are among the teams that have shown interest in Robert Thomas, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman said on the network’s “Saturday Headlines” segment. No matter what they put forth, they’d remain one of the longer shots to land the two-time 80-point scorer if he’s moved at all. Intra-division trades involving players of his caliber are exceedingly rare.
Utah is looking into long-term moves, not the rental market, in order to help secure the franchise’s first trip to the postseason since being born from the ashes of the Coyotes, general manager Bill Armstrong told NHL.com’s Mike Zeisberger this week. Thomas would be among the most impactful moves they can make. They’ve already been linked to puck-moving rearguard Dougie Hamilton in their pursuit of added offense, but adding a player of Thomas’ age and cost control is a much higher-caliber addition.
Thomas has 11 goals and 33 points in 42 games this season for St. Louis. The 26-year-old’s underlying offensive numbers have tanked, averaging 1.43 shots on goal and 2.88 shot attempts per game compared to 2.07 and 4.40 last season, respectively. That should be easily attributable to Thomas fighting through a number of injuries this season while being symptomatic of a larger offensive regression in St. Louis, where the Blues are near the bottom of the league in virtually every category.
The fact stands that over the past five years, Thomas has established himself as one of the league’s top playmaking centers. He’s averaged 60 assists and 83 points per 82 games over that span, with his 1.01 points per game ranking 23rd in the league since 2021-22 (min. 300 games played). Among players on the Mammoth’s roster, only Clayton Keller stands above him, and only narrowly.
Thomas also has five years left on his contract at a stomachable $8.125MM cap hit. He has a full no-trade clause and controls his destiny. The Blues have made it clear they’re not overly willing to dump him as part of their retooling, but will listen to offers. They’re reportedly looking for a template similar to what the Canucks acquired for franchise defender Quinn Hughes earlier this season – a package roughly equivalent to four first-round picks.
While the Blues surely won’t be excited about the prospect of moving Thomas in the division, few teams are as well-equipped to put forth a compelling offer as the Mammoth. They still have all of their firsts in the next few drafts and have a rich staple of first-round drafted prospects over the past few years to part with. 2023 selections Danil But and Dmitriy Simashev have made their debuts this season, while they’d have to consider making 2024 #6 pick Tij Iginla and 2025 #4 pick Caleb Desnoyers available as well.
Trade Deadline Primer: New York Islanders
With the Olympic break over, the trade deadline is under a week away. Where does each team stand, and what moves should they be looking to make? Next up is the Islanders.
The Islanders made some big moves last summer, sending defenseman Noah Dobson to the Montreal Canadiens and drafting Matthew Schaefer with the first overall pick. Many pundits weren’t sure what the Islanders would be this season, but they have surprised some folks by becoming a playoff contender with a roster that doesn’t have much flash but is solid enough to compete in the Eastern Conference. The Islanders have won on the back of strong team defense and goaltending this season, and despite the lack of skill in their lineup, they’ve managed to score enough to win games.
Record
33-21-5, 3rd in the Metropolitan
Deadline Status
Buyer
Deadline Cap Space
$6.02MM on deadline day, 0/3 retention slots used, 49/50 contracts used, per PuckPedia.
Upcoming Draft Picks
2026: NYI 1st, COL 1st, NJD 3rd, NYI 4th, NYI 5th, NYI 6th, NYI 7th
2027: NYI 1st, NYI 2nd, NYI 3rd, NYI 4th, NYI 5th, NYI 6th, NJD 6th, NYI 7th
Trade Chips
The Islanders have built up their prospect pool in recent seasons thanks to several successful first-round picks. The team likely has a top ten pipeline and the assets to be aggressive on the trade front if the money works. That ranking doesn’t include defenseman Schaefer, who went straight to the NHL, but there is no chance New York moves him anytime soon.
Setting aside the Islanders’ lottery win, they have done some good business in the trade market, moving on from Dobson and Brock Nelson for very strong returns. From these two trades, the team ended up with Victor Eklund, Kashawn Aitcheson and Calum Ritchie. Those three are all arguably among the top 100 NHL prospects at the moment and are a big reason the Islanders now have one of the best prospect systems in the NHL.
If the Islanders moved any of those three players, they would have one of the better trade chips available in terms of future value. Eklund’s skill is among his strongest assets, along with his top-notch skating. Those traits would make him appealing to every team in the league, but his ability to battle could be the best feature of his game. Eklund battles from whistle to whistle and isn’t afraid to play with reckless abandon.
Aitcheson is a physical defender who plays an old-school game that should resonate with the Long Island crowd. Aitcheson could one day be a top-pairing, bruising defenseman who plays a stay-at-home game alongside a more offensively minded partner. Aitcheson’s game isn’t flashy, but he is safe and responsible in his own end, bringing an intensity to the ice that few could match. His ability to give the opponent absolutely nothing to work with could eventually earn him a reputation as the NHL’s ultimate shutdown man, provided he improves his average skating and harnesses his intimidating presence.
Ritchie saw his draft stock slide a few years ago as he focused more on becoming a 200-foot player rather than simply being a point producer. It paid off in terms of his overall game, but he did slide in the NHL draft rankings before being scooped up by the Avalanche late in the first round (27th overall) of the 2023 draft. Ritchie possesses a mean shot that should translate well to the NHL, particularly on the power play. He also has elite hockey sense, anticipating plays before they happen and hunting down soft areas of the ice to get himself open or in the right spot at the right time.
Finally, we come to another first-round pick, forward Cole Eiserman. The 20-year-old isn’t an imposing presence, but he loves to throw his body around and doesn’t mind taking a hit to make a play. Eiserman will cruise to the front of the net in the offensive zone to stir up some disruption, but he does most of his scoring from a distance with his shot, which was considered one of the best during his draft eligibility.
Team Needs
A Top Six Forward: The Islanders gambled this summer when they signed forward Jonathan Drouin to a two-year deal, hoping he could fill an offensive role in the top six. While he hasn’t produced what GM Mathieu Darche hoped, he has chipped in with some offense and remains a good gamble. That being said, New York needs more from its top two lines, and bringing in a Jordan Kyrou-type from St. Louis would go a long way toward adding to an offense that is currently 22nd in the league. The Islanders could also look at Kyrou’s teammate, Robert Thomas, if the Blues were open to it, or take a long look at some of the forwards the Vancouver Canucks have made available, such as Elias Pettersson.
Depth Scoring: The Islanders need more offense from the bottom of their lineup and could look at a player like Michael Bunting of Nashville, who has a long history of providing depth offense on good hockey teams. Bunting is a UFA at the end of the season and has been effective as a depth scorer in Toronto, Pittsburgh and Nashville. If Bunting isn’t an option and the Islanders want to look at a pure shooter, Patrik Laine of the Montreal Canadiens would be a player who could fit simply as a triggerman. Laine doesn’t play much of a two-way game, but on a team like the Islanders, where he would be defensively insulated, it might be a great fit for a once-great goalscorer who has fallen on hard times in Montreal. Laine isn’t a prototypical depth player, but at this point, there isn’t much to his game away from the puck, and with all of his injury concerns, he could likely be acquired for very little.
Islanders Shopping Anthony Duclair
The Islanders have deemed themselves at least soft buyers heading into the deadline after their pickups of Carson Soucy and Ondřej Palát before the Olympic break. One thing they don’t have a bevy of is cap space. Their roughly $6MM is enough to wheel and deal on deadline day, but that’s with the club using a good deal of long-term injured reserve placements.
One option the club has pursued this season to continue shuffling the deck is moving on from the remainder of Anthony Duclair‘s contract, according to David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period. Pagnotta writes that dealing Duclair is something they’ve been open to all season, but with the winger holding a full no-trade clause, their options will be limited if they have any at all.
It’s not hard to see why the Islanders would be willing to part ways with Duclair. He’s rebounded somewhat with a 12-14–26 scoring line in 54 games this year, but he’s still performing below his career average and is coming off a disastrous first year on Long Island last season, derailed by an early-season leg injury.
With Duclair churning out at least capable third-line scoring numbers this season, though, his $3.5MM cap hit through 2027-28 suddenly becomes more palatable to potential suitors. The 6’0″ lefty has been prone to some wild year-to-year swings in his career, but is still a 20-goal, 42-point man on average per 82 games.
For a team that just added Palát through next season and is looking to get young center Calum Ritchie more ice time moving forward, the Isles could stand to drop a forward with term. They don’t have many pending UFAs up front, and the ones they do, Anders Lee and Jean-Gabriel Pageau, are well-respected veterans they likely have at least some interest in retaining – especially Lee, their captain who’s spent all 14 of his NHL seasons with the club.
Of course, it all depends on Duclair being amenable to a specific change of scenery. If not, they’ll have to wait until the summer when his NTC downgrades to a 16-team no-trade list on July 1 to open up more options.
That may be the better move anyway. The Isles have a 66.3% shot at ending up in the playoff picture (per MoneyPuck), but won’t get there because of an excess of scoring. Duclair’s 12 goals are tied for seventh on the team, and his 26 points are sixth. That’s valuable production for a team scoring 2.86 goals per game, 22nd in the league.
Capitals Looking To Move Trevor Van Riemsdyk
The Capitals are set to move on from pending unrestricted free agent defenseman Trevor van Riemsdyk one way or another, Frank Seravalli of Victory+ writes. With Washington unlikely to pursue an extension with him, they’re willing to move him before the deadline to get a return for him while freeing up a roster spot.
That roster spot is crucial as the Caps look to welcome top D prospect Cole Hutson to the NHL – potentially within the next two weeks. An underwhelming season for Hutson’s Boston University means they’re all but ruled out of qualifying for the national tournament. Their final regular-season game is against UMass-Lowell on March 7. They’ll have at least one conference playoff game, but if they drop an opening round matchup on March 11, Hutson could be signed and on Washington’s roster for the stretch run and playoffs two weekends from now.
The Caps have already rostered eight defensemen virtually all season long, so they’d need to move one out, either via trade or waivers, to work him in. While they likely wouldn’t love to lose out on a serviceable piece of right-shot depth like van Riemsdyk in a best-case scenario – Hutson is a lefty – he’s averaging just 15:32 per game for Washington this year and has been in and out of the lineup.
The 34-year-old van Riemsdyk has been a stellar bottom-pairing option for Washington for the last several seasons but hasn’t been terribly effective this year. While a defense-first rearguard, his eight points in 47 games are still his worst offensive output since his first season in D.C. back in 2020-21. His possession impacts have cratered, too, controlling 48.3% of shot attempts at 5-on-5 with a career-worst -3.6% relative Corsi For share.
If not used in a deal for a forward and is instead moved separately as a more traditional rental, there will be plenty of contenders looking to shore up their right-shot depth. The Lightning have been looking for help there but reportedly prefer a long-term option. If they can’t strike a deal there, though, a cheap rental option with a good bit of playoff experience, as van Riemsdyk has, would suffice. The Stars, Oilers, and Sabres are other clubs in playoff position with a documented need and desire for immediate right-side help.
Bruins Interested In Owen Tippett
The Bruins have interest in Flyers winger Owen Tippett, according to a report from Anthony Di Marco of The Fourth Period. Di Marco also reports that the Flyers have identified Boston center prospects Matthew Poitras and Dean Letourneau as desirable pieces in a return, as well as defenseman Mason Lohrei. It’s unknown how close a deal has gotten or what the exact framework of talks has been, but Boston has checked in on Tippett’s availability “several times this season,” Di Marco writes.
Tippett, 27, was a first-round pick by the Panthers in 2017 and, after finding his way to Philly in the 2022 Claude Giroux deal, broke out as a consistent second-line scoring piece immediately upon his arrival. He’s never had a big breakthrough by any means but has been remarkably consistent over the past four years.
His points per game rates have fallen in a narrow window between 0.56 and 0.68 since 2022-23, with his goal-scoring rates per game even more precise between 0.26 and 0.36. He averages 16 to 17 minutes per game and has held consistently strong possession impacts, peaking with a relative Corsi For share of 2.3% at 5-on-5 this season.
Not only would Tippett be an immediate plug-and-play 25-goal scorer for a Bruins team with a top-heavy offense, but he’d come with a good deal of control. Tippett is less than two years removed from signing an eight-year, $49.6MM extension with the Flyers, which carries a $6.2MM cap hit.
He’s got six years left on that deal but has a modified no-trade clause kicking in on July 1 this year, affording him a 10-team no-trade list through the end of the 2029-30 season. Whether that would impede any future deal to the B’s remains to be seen, but it’s a factor to keep in mind if Boston identifies him as a must-have target.
The prospects Di Marco reports the Flyers have been eyeing are on opposite trajectories. After impressing out of camp in his age-19 season, Poitras – who the B’s are reportedly dangling in other talks – has yet to settle back into a full-time NHL role.
He dropped out of Boston’s top-five prospects before the season, according to NHL.com. The 2022 second-rounder is days away from his 22nd birthday and does have a 7-20–27 scoring line in 69 career NHL games, but the 6’0″ playmaker’s AHL production has regressed to 30 points and a -5 rating in 47 games this season after notching over a point per game in 2024-25.
Letourneau, however, has seen his stock take a meteoric rise this year. He was also left off NHL.com’s top five list and was ranked right at #5 by Daily Faceoff’s Steven Ellis last offseason. The gargantuan 6’7″ pivot was a controversial selection late in the first round of the 2024 draft right out of the Canadian high school system, and the criticism of the pick was only backed up by Letourneau managing just three assists in 36 games as a freshman for Boston College last year.
A night-and-day sophomore season now sees Letourneau producing over a point per game, ranking second on B.C. in scoring behind fellow B’s center prospect James Hagens with a 19-15–34 line in 31 games. That breakout, combined with that elusive size and skill combination, could very well make Letourneau check in as Boston’s #2 prospect behind Hagens at this point.
With his emergence in mind, that pair of prospects would be a substantial return for Tippett on their own – not to mention a defensively flawed but high-skill piece on the back end in Lohrei. Promising young centers will be the most valuable piece of most any trade, but especially to the Flyers, who have two top-nine pivots on the wrong side of 30 and their current fourth-line pivot, Carl Grundström, is a natural winger.
They do have some names in the system, like 2025 first-rounder Jack Nesbitt, but he’s having an offensively conservative post-draft season and was tabbed by most as a high-end third-line piece in the NHL anyway. That makes the prospect of adding a name with top-six ceiling like Letourneau especially appealing.
Sabres Activate Zach Benson, Assign Anton Wahlberg To AHL
The Sabres will welcome back a key winger to their lineup tonight against Tampa Bay. NHL.com’s Heather Engel relays (Twitter link) that Zach Benson has been activated off injured reserve. To make room on the roster, forward Anton Wahlberg has been sent down to AHL Rochester.
Benson has missed the last four weeks with an upper-body injury although he only ultimately missed four games. But between a facial injury and a lower-body issue earlier in the season, the 20-year-old has been limited to just 42 games so far. He has fared well in those outings, picking up seven goals and 19 assists, putting him on pace to pass his career high in points despite all the missed action. Head coach Lindy Ruff has rewarded the extra production with more ice time as Benson is logging 16:30 per game, a personal best.
This is a big season for Benson as he’s in the final year of his entry-level contract, making him a restricted free agent this summer. At this point, given the long-term deal given to Josh Doan and their desire to re-sign Alex Tuch to a long-term pact, Benson’s next contract seems likely to be a bridge agreement although a strong performance down the stretch could boost his chances of forcing Buffalo’s hand into giving him a long-term deal.
As for Wahlberg, he received his first NHL recall earlier this week but ultimately didn’t see any game action. The 20-year-old is in the first year of his entry-level deal and has six goals and 19 assists in 47 games for the Americans this season.
Central Notes: Mikheyev, Namestnikov, Stars, Parayko
The Blackhawks showed some interest in signing pending UFA winger Ilya Mikheyev to a contract extension but now, they’ve put his name out there in trade talks, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports in the latest 32 Thoughts podcast (audio link). The 31-year-old has 11 goals and 12 assists in 53 games this season while averaging a career-high 17:17 per night of playing time. Mikheyev has a $4.0375MM cap charge with Chicago (Vancouver is covering the rest of his $4.75MM AAV) and the Blackhawks will need to further pay that down to maximize their return. Ben Pope of the Chicago Sun-Times suggests that the team might only be willing to go as high as two years on an extension offer for Mikheyev, albeit likely at an above-market rate. While that would allow him to potentially maximize his earnings and would keep in line with similar deals GM Kyle Davidson has done, this might be his last shot at a long-term contract. The stability of that might outweigh the value of getting top dollar.
More from the Central:
- Jets forward Vladislav Namestnikov left last night’s game with a lower-body injury, relays Ken Wiebe of the Winnipeg Free Press. The injury, which appeared to be a leg issue, happened early in the second period when he got tangled up with teammate Adam Lowry in the neutral zone. Head coach Scott Arniel told reporters including Wiebe (Twitter link) that the veteran is listed as out week-to-week. Namestnikov, who has been one of Winnipeg’s more versatile players this season, has seven goals and six assists through 57 outings.
- While he won’t be in the lineup tonight against Nashville, Stars center Roope Hintz is expected to skate tomorrow and travel with the team for their upcoming road trip, notes Lia Assimakopoulos of the Dallas Morning News (Twitter link). He has been dealing with an illness since returning from the Olympics but it appears he’s at least nearing a return. Radek Faksa’s situation is a little more uncertain as Assimakopoulos adds that it’s unclear if he will accompany the team on the trip. The center suffered a lower-body injury at the Olympics and is currently on injured reserve although he is eligible to be activated at any time.
- Blues defenseman Colton Parayko will be scratched from today’s game against New Jersey due to back spasms, according to Matthew DeFranks of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Twitter link). Parayko was a regular for Canada at the Olympics and was a full participant on Thursday, logging over 21 minutes. Through 58 games this season, the 32-year-old has a goal and 13 assists along with 141 blocked shots.
Andrei Kuzmenko Undergoes Meniscus Surgery
Already down a key offensive winger in Kevin Fiala who is out for the season, the Kings are now going to be without another offensive winger for at least a little while. The team announced that Andrei Kuzmenko has undergone successful surgery to repair a torn meniscus and is listed as out week-to-week; he has also been placed on injured reserve. Taking his spot on the active roster is defenseman Angus Booth, who has been recalled from AHL Ontario.
Kuzmenko is in his first full season with Los Angeles after being acquired at the trade deadline last season. A strong finish saw him put up five goals and 12 assists in just 22 games down the stretch before putting up six points in six games in the playoffs. That performance helped keep him around as Los Angeles signed Kuzmenko to a one-year, $4.3MM contract to keep him from testing unrestricted free agency.
Things haven’t gone quite as well for the 30-year-old this season, however. Kuzmenko has been limited to 13 goals and 12 assists through 52 appearances although he still ranks seventh on the team in points with Los Angeles being one of the lowest-scoring teams in the NHL. Now, with him and Fiala out of the lineup, there will be even more pressure on Artemi Panarin in the short term to pick up the slack while GM Ken Holland might be more motivated to try to seek out some scoring help over the coming days as well. Projected to have more than $15MM in cap room on deadline day, per PuckPedia, Los Angeles has plenty of room to add to its roster.
As for Booth, this is his first career NHL recall. The 21-year-old was a fourth-round pick by the Kings in 2022, going 116th overall out of the QMJHL. In his second professional season, Booth has played exclusively with the Reign and has a goal and nine assists in 42 games. With Drew Doughty exiting Thursday’s game with a lower-body injury, it appears that Booth will serve as the seventh defender until the veteran is able to return.
Devils Activate Luke Hughes, Assign Colton White To AHL
The Devils will welcome back a key part of their back end today against St. Louis. The team announced (Twitter link) that they have activated defenseman Luke Hughes off injured reserve. To make room on the roster, blueliner Colton White has been sent back to AHL Utica.
After two very promising seasons to start his career, 2025-26 hasn’t gone quite as well for Hughes this season. The 22-year-old had a long contract standoff, resulting in a deal only getting done a few days before the start of the season, resulting in him missing the majority of training camp.
Meanwhile, his production hasn’t taken a meaningful step forward despite a jump in ice time to more than 23 minutes per game. Hughes had 47 points in 82 games in his rookie season and 44 in 71 outings in 2024-25 but has been limited to five goals and 21 assists so far this season in 49 appearances. He missed nearly six weeks with a shoulder injury but only wound up missing 10 games overall thanks to the Olympic break.
Notably, when New Jersey had a fully healthy back end earlier this season, trade speculation around Dougie Hamilton picked up. Those talks faded when Hughes went down but once again, the Devils now have their top seven blueliners healthy and available which could ultimately kickstart those trade talks before Friday’s deadline. For now, it’s unclear who will be the scratch as team reporter Amanda Stein relays (Twitter link) there are players dealing with an illness and a decision on who’s out will be made closer to warmups.
As for White, he was recalled when practices resumed during the Olympic break but had served as a healthy scratch since then, keeping his games played total with the Devils this season at 23, where he has four assists in a little over 12 minutes per night of ice time. The 28-year-old has also suited up 10 times with Utica and is still looking for his first AHL point of the season.
