Transaction Notes: Benson, Smith, Commesso
The Buffalo Sabres will have to wait a little longer for the return of their top prospects. As expected, Paul Hamilton of WGR Sports Radio reported earlier that the organization placed forward Zach Benson on injured reserve to make room for Nicolas Aube-Kubel tonight.
Buffalo has been fairly vague regarding Benson’s timeline, but he has sat out the last two games and the team’s most recent practice with a lower-body injury. There is some indication the injury has plagued Benson for much of the regular season with the youngster going scoreless in six games to start the year.
Line rushes from yesterday morning indicated that Aube-Kubel will assume the left-wing role on the team’s second line where Benson should end up upon his return. The organization will likely make the IR placement retroactive to Benson’s last game on October 19th meaning he’s already eligible to be activated once fully healthy.
Other transactions:
- With their road trip ending tonight, it was inevitable that the Carolina Hurricanes would shorten their roster. The team has done just that announcing they reassigned defenseman Ty Smith to their AHL affiliate, the Chicago Wolves. Smith has been with the team as a seventh defenseman for much of the road trip with his original recall coming on October 18th. Unfortunately for Smith, the team’s blue line was fully healthy during the road trip eliminating any chance for him to enter the lineup.
- Chicago Blackhawks netminder Arvid Soderblom has fully recovered from his illness meaning the team no longer requires goaltender Drew Commesso on the NHL roster. Ben Pope of the Chicago Sun-Times reports the team has reassigned Commesso to their AHL affiliate, the Rockford IceHogs. It marked Commesso’s first call-up with the Blackhawks this season although he has yet to make his NHL debut. He’ll return to an IceHogs roster where he’s already played two games this season with a .854 save percentage.
Penguins Notes: Rust, Bunting, Nieto
The Penguins were without winger Bryan Rust at practice today, per Josh Getzoff of SportsNet Pittsburgh. Head coach Mike Sullivan confirmed that Rust is being evaluated for a lower-body injury he sustained against the Canucks on Saturday, and there’s no timeline for his return to the ice yet (via Michelle Crechiolo of Pens Inside Scoop).
Rust, 32, left the weekend loss to Vancouver after getting his right leg tangled up awkwardly with Canucks winger Nils Höglander. It’s been a mediocre start to the campaign for the five-time 20-goal scorer, who’s been limited to three goals and an assist in eight games with a -7 rating. But he’s still averaging 19:20 per game – that’s second-most among Pittsburgh forwards and, correspondingly, a large hole to fill for a team short on forward depth if he misses any extended time.
Almost no Penguin has started the season as they’d like to, aside from a handful of exceptions – namely Evgeni Malkin, who’s turned back the clock with 14 points in 10 games. But it’s been especially difficult for Rust, who also missed the season’s first two games with a separate lower-body injury. If he can’t play tomorrow against the Wild, Cody Glass is the extra forward on hand and will return to the lineup after missing the Canucks game with an illness.
Other items of note out of Pittsburgh:
- One of this season’s biggest disappointments so far has been winger Michael Bunting. Acquired from the Hurricanes near the tail end of last year as arguably the highest-value part of the return for Jake Guentzel, he’s fallen completely flat with just one assist in nine games. He’s already been a healthy scratch once in 2024-25, and Josh Yohe of The Athletic reports the Penguins organization as a whole is “very unhappy” with his performance. It’s a completely unforeseen drop-off after he ended last season with 19 points in 21 games for the Pens, mainly playing alongside the red-hot Malkin.
- Winger Matthew Nieto returned to practice today for the first time since sustaining a knee injury that ended his 2023-24 season all the way back in November, relays Seth Rorabaugh of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Nieto, 32 next week, underwent laparoscopic surgery on his left knee shortly after the New Year but suffered a setback that required him to undergo a reconstructive MCL procedure in May. After inking a two-year, $1.8MM deal in free agency in 2023, Nieto had a goal and three assists in 22 appearances for Pittsburgh before the season-ending injury.
Kraken Recall John Hayden, Cale Fleury
The Kraken announced today that they’ve summoned defenseman Cale Fleury and forward John Hayden from AHL Coachella Valley. With three open roster spots and ample cap space due to Vince Dunn‘s long-term injured reserve placement, no corresponding transactions are necessary.
It’s no surprise to see Fleury’s name here. The 25-year-old has been recalled and reassigned twice in the last week as Seattle looks to keep him on the roster for game days as injury insurance while delaying the expiry of his temporary waiver exemption. However, it is Hayden’s first recall of the season after he cleared waivers near the end of training camp. The 29-year-old veteran of 249 NHL games is off to a good start for Coachella Valley, with three assists in his first four games of the campaign. Now in his third season with the Kraken organization, Hayden has spent most of his time under contract with Seattle in the minors. However, he has made nine combined appearances over the prior two years, scoring twice while averaging just 7:39 per game in a Kraken sweater.
The 6’3″, 223-lb agitator can play both center and right wing. The Kraken don’t have any apparent injury issues up front ahead of tomorrow’s game against the Canadiens, but due to cap constraints, they weren’t carrying any extra forwards on the active roster. With Dunn now sitting on LTIR, there’s some flexibility for them to have a 13th forward in case of game-day injuries or if head coach Dan Bylsma wants to make a lineup change.
The same goes for Fleury, who hasn’t played an NHL game yet this season despite his multiple recalls and Dunn’s injuries. Seattle was carrying Josh Mahura as an extra defender to begin the year, so he’s been getting third-pairing reps alongside William Borgen. At the same time, sophomore Ryker Evans has slid up to top-pairing duties on the left alongside Adam Larsson in Dunn’s absence. Even with the roster shuffling, Fleury has managed four appearances for Coachella Valley, tying for the team lead in scoring with four points (3 G, 1 A). He can still be on Seattle’s roster for a cumulative total of 27 days before he needs waivers again to head back to the AHL.
Lightning Reassign Gabriel Fortier
Oct. 28: Fortier cleared waivers and will head to Syracuse, per PuckPedia.
Oct. 27: The Tampa Bay Lightning have placed forward Gabriel Fortier on waivers per Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman. Fortier started the year on the non-rostered injury list after surgery to address an unspecified injury this off-season. His mention on the transaction log indicates a return could be imminent.
It’d be a surprise to see Fortier head anywhere other than the AHL’s Syracuse Crunch, where he’s spent the bulk of the last four seasons. He recorded 26 points, split evenly, in Syracuse’s middle-six last season – continuing a trend of decreasing scoring since a career-high 35 points in 2021-22. He’s proven a stout minor-league forward over the years but hasn’t yet translated to the top flight, with just one goal in 11 career NHL games.
Fortier was far more productive across six total seasons in the QMJHL. He found his scoring touch quick – with 11 goals and 17 points in 25 games at age 17 and 26 goals and 59 points in 66 games at 18. The bulk of that scoring was earned by smart positioning and strong shooting. Tampa Bay bought those traits with the 59th overall pick in the 2018 NHL Draft, though Fortier would stick around the QMJHL through the next three seasons. He totaled 236 games and 230 points in the league and served one-year stints as captain for both Baie-Comeau and Moncton. Fortier will continue his search for similar stability at the pro level once he clears waivers and, likely, heads back to the minor leagues.
Senators Notes: Gaudette, Reinhardt, Subban
The Senators assigned forwards Adam Gaudette and Cole Reinhardt to AHL Belleville today, per a team announcement. It’s just a short-term move to accrue cap space and delay both players’ temporary waiver exemption, relays Bruce Garrioch of Postmedia. They should be back on the active roster before tomorrow’s game against the Blues.
It’s the second time Gaudette’s been involved in such a transaction this year. He was placed on waivers the day before opening night rosters were due but was never sent to the minors, sticking around to begin the season. He was assigned to Belleville on Oct. 15 before being recalled the following day without reporting to the minor-league club. The 28-year-old has appeared in seven of Ottawa’s eight contests this season, scoring twice and adding an assist with a +1 rating. He can play in three more games or remain on the active roster for nine more days before he needs waivers again to head to the minors, so his temporary waiver exemption will likely expire by mid-November.
Reinhardt, 24, has suited up in the Sens’ last two games with Shane Pinto now out week-to-week with an undisclosed injury. The 2020 sixth-round pick recorded an assist in his season debut against the Golden Knights on Friday and is averaging just 7:03 across his pair of showings, adding two blocks and five hits. The left winger also has five points in three games with the B-Sens this year. Like Gaudette, he cleared waivers during the preseason. He was added to the NHL roster for a pair of days earlier this month for injury insurance, so combining that with this most recent recall, he’s been on the NHL roster for five days. That gives him 25 days on the active roster or eight NHL appearances before he needs waivers again to head back to Belleville.
Neither Pinto nor David Perron, who’s out on personal leave, have been placed on injured reserve or non-roster. That leaves them with only 12 healthy forwards with no flexibility when Gaudette and Reinhardt come back up. Perron and Pinto aren’t expected back by tomorrow’s game, so Gaudette and Reinhardt should once again play fourth-line roles against the Blues.
Additionally, the Sens added some goaltending depth with Belleville signing goaltender Malcolm Subban to an AHL contract. The 30-year-old had previously been on a professional tryout with the Grand Rapids Griffins, the Red Wings’ AHL affiliate, but didn’t get into a game and was released over the weekend. The 2012 first-round pick last played in the NHL with the Blue Jackets last season, stopping 32 of 35 shots in a loss to the Hurricanes on April 7.
Subban is essentially now the No. 5 option on Ottawa’s goalie depth chart. He’ll split the Belleville crease with Leevi Merilainen while Mads Søgaard, the Sens’ third-stringer, is out with an injury.
Aleksander Barkov To Return For Panthers
The Panthers will have captain Aleksander Barkov back in the lineup tonight against the Sabres, head coach Paul Maurice told reporters in Buffalo (including Bill Hoppe of the Olean Times Herald).
The team has danced around confirming his return for days now. Barkov has missed the last eight games with a lower-body injury, believed to be a high ankle sprain that he sustained in the closing seconds of Florida’s second game of the season against the Senators back on Oct. 10. The 29-year-old was a full participant in practice over the weekend, signaling that he’d likely be ready to play tonight.
Despite the absence of their No. 1 center for 80% of their schedule, the defending Stanley Cup champions have managed to stay ahead of the pack. They rank first in a mediocre Atlantic Division to start the season, leading the way with a 6-3-1 record. Remarkably, six of the division’s eight teams have a .500 record – the Panthers and the Lightning (5-3-0) are the only exceptions.
The team’s Jameson Olive relays Barkov will return with Sam Reinhart and Evan Rodrigues as his wingers. Reinhart has shown no signs of slowing down from last season’s breakout campaign, but Barkov’s return could help jumpstart Rodrigues, who’s stumbled out of the gate with just three points and a -10 rating in 10 contests.
Barkov is coming off his second Selke Trophy-winning regular season. The 2013 second-overall pick led Panthers forwards last season with a +33 rating and 61 takeaways and controlled 58.4% of shot attempts and 58.2% of expected goals while on the ice at even strength. He proceeded to add 22 points (8 G, 14 A) in 24 playoff games, averaging over 21 minutes per night, as the Panthers lifted the first Stanley Cup in franchise history.
Florida never needed to move Barkov to IR despite the extended absence. They still have an open roster spot, even with him on the active roster.
Canucks Recall Erik Brännström, Arshdeep Bains
Oct. 28: As expected, yesterday’s transactions were a paper move. Both Bains and Brännström are back up today, the team announced.
Oct. 27: The Vancouver Canucks have assigned forward Arshdeep Bains and defenseman Erik Brannstrom to the AHL’s Abbotsford Canucks. Bains recorded the first goal and point of his NHL career in Saturday night’s win over Pittsburgh. Both players have recorded one point through four games with Vancouver this season.
Bains made the Canucks roster out of training camp, surviving through the final roster cuts to vindicate a strong AHL season last year. He scored 16 goals and 55 points in 59 games, working his way up the Abbotsford lineup and even earning eight NHL games – though he didn’t record any scoring. It was Bains’ second year of pro hockey, scoring 38 points in 66 AHL games as a rookie. He’s Vancouver born-and-raised, playing locally until he moved to the Red Deer Rebels at the age of 17. It took a lowly 18 points in 63 games as a WHL rookie to help Bains find his footing, but he’d ultimately record 209 points across 257 games and five games in juniors. That includes a 112-point season to cap off his time in Red Deer – enough to convince Vancouver to sign him as an undrafted free agent in 2022. He’ll return to a familiar role in Abbotsford, though his brief stint at the top flight could suggest more to come.
Brannstrom started the year in the minors – a surprising move after he followed a summer signing in Colorado by being traded to Vancouver. He earned a recall after two games and three assists with Abbotsford, though he hasn’t held onto his spark with Vancouver. Brannstrom will be under the microscope this season, finally moving away from a six-year stint with the Ottawa Senators that didn’t yield much. He managed 69 points across 266 games with Ottawa, and never managed to maintain a top-four role. That includes a career-high 20 points last season. But despite that jump to modest production, Brannstrom will still need to prove his worth to the Canucks before he nets an everyday role.
Capitals Recall Michael Sgarbossa, Place Matt Roy On IR
The Capitals have recalled veteran center Michael Sgarbossa from AHL Hershey, per general manager Chris Patrick. Defenseman Matt Roy, absent since the season opener after sustaining a lower-body injury, was placed on injured reserve to open up a spot for Sgarbossa on the active roster.
The news doesn’t delay Roy’s return to the lineup – he’s been out for more than seven days so that he can come off IR at any time. In fact, the 29-year-old made a big step in his recovery today, as Bailey Johnson of The Washington Post relays he participated in practice wearing a non-contact jersey for the first time since exiting the lineup.
Signed to a six-year, $34.5MM deal in free agency, Roy logged a -2 rating and two shots on goal in 8:39 of ice time against the Devils back on Oct. 12. The Detroit native averaged 20:54 per game for the Kings last season, recording a career-high 20 assists with a +21 rating and 42 PIMs in 81 games. Washington brought in the 6’1″, 205-lb defender to serve as their No. 2 right-shot option behind John Carlson, replacing Nick Jensen, who the Caps traded to the Senators for Jakob Chychrun as part of a significant offseason remodel of their defense corps.
Meanwhile, Sgarbossa will likely draw in for Hendrix Lapierre, who has no points and a -5 rating in seven games this season, tomorrow against the Rangers, per Sammi Silber of The Hockey News. Sgarbossa, 32, has been with the Caps since the 2018-19 season, usually serving as a top-six fixture in the minors for AHL Hershey. He’s been a productive regular-season player, posting 249 points in 269 games since arriving there six years ago. However, he has barely played in postseason action the past few years as Hershey has marched to back-to-back Calder Cup championships.
After not seeing NHL ice in 2022-23, Sgarbossa played 25 games for the Capitals last season, his most since splitting the 2016-17 season between the Ducks and Panthers. He scored four goals and added three assists for seven points, averaging 10:58 per game and winning 46% of his draws. He’s appeared in 42 NHL contests for Washington over the past six years and 90 NHL games in total, making his big-league debut with the Avalanche back in 2012-13. He’s also spent time under contract with the Jets and Sharks but never got into an NHL game for either club.
Sgarobssa is off to a hot start for Hershey this season, posting a goal and eight assists in his first seven games. He had seven goals and 43 points in 44 games for the AHL club last season. He’s in the back half of a two-year, two-way deal that pays him a hefty $525K minor-league salary and is ticketed for unrestricted free agency next summer.
Maple Leafs Sign Jake McCabe To Five-Year Extension
9:52 a.m.: The first-year salary of McCabe’s extension will be paid out mostly via signing bonus, reports David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period. The second, third and fourth years of the deal also include some signing bonus money, while the fifth and final season is paid entirely via base salary. McCabe’s total compensation each year breaks down as follows:
2025-26: $6MM
2026-27: $5.5MM (including deferred money)
2027-28: $5.5MM (including deferred money)
2028-29: $3.6MM
2029-30: $3.6MM
9:02 a.m.: The Maple Leafs have signed defenseman Jake McCabe to a five-year extension, the team announced today. It keeps the blue liner off next summer’s UFA market and makes him cost $4.51MM against the salary cap through the 2029-30 campaign. Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports the total value of the deal is higher than the cap hit indicates due to deferred money in the 2026-27 and 2027-28 campaigns. McCabe’s agency, Bartlett Hockey, confirms the total value of the contract is $23.5MM, equating to an AAV of $4.7MM.
It’s hardly unexpected news. Friedman reported at the beginning of September that McCabe and the Leafs had begun extension talks, which McCabe confirmed at the beginning of training camp. Sportsnet’s Nick Kypreos added shortly before the regular season started that the two sides were close to a deal, although the final contract is shorter than the six-year, $30MM pact he predicted.
For the past couple of years, Toronto has benefitted from McCabe’s services at a bargain-bin price. He signed a four-year, $16MM contract ($4MM AAV) with the Blackhawks in free agency in 2021, but with the team squarely in a rebuild, they traded him and depth forward Sam Lafferty to the Leafs before the 2023 trade deadline. Chicago retained half of McCabe’s salary in the deal, meaning he’s cost only $2MM against Toronto’s cap.
Even his full $4MM cap hit would have likely been below market value for McCabe, who’s averaged north of 20 minutes per game in a Maple Leafs sweater. Last season was the 31-year-old’s best, as he posted a career-high 28 points (8 G, 20 A) in 73 games and a +20 rating.
His possession metrics back up those numbers, painting the picture of an extremely valuable two-way, top-four defender. McCabe’s usage trended toward the defensive zone at even strength, but even still, the Leafs controlled 50.6% of shot attempts with him on the ice last season and 51.6% of expected goals. He was also one of their most physically involved players, finishing third on the team in blocks (129) and second in hits (219).
McCabe is off to a similar start this season. He’s averaging 21:09 per game, which is on pace for a career-high while adding three assists and a +6 rating in nine appearances. He has 17 blocks and 19 hits, ranking second on the team in each category, and the Leafs are controlling 55.4% of shot attempts and 54.7% of expected goals at even strength with him on the ice.
He’ll never be a significant factor on the scoresheet, but he’s not an offensive liability. He can be deployed in power-play situations if necessary and is good in transition. Having him under contract through his age-36 season could be dicey, but for now, just north of $4.5MM is an extremely affordable cap hit for what his all-around game provides.
The Maple Leafs now have $66.23MM in cap space tied up in 15 players for next season. Assuming a projected cap increase to $92.5MM, that gives them roughly $26.27MM in space to fill eight roster spots, including new deals for UFA forwards Mitch Marner and John Tavares and RFA Matthew Knies.
Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.
Hurricanes Recall Spencer Martin
Hurricanes general manager Eric Tulsky announced today in a team release that the team has recalled goaltender Spencer Martin from AHL Chicago. Carolina has two open roster spots, so no corresponding transaction is necessary.
The recall could indicate that either Frederik Andersen or Pyotr Kochetkov is unavailable for tonight’s game against the Canucks. It’s unclear why, however. Neither sustained an apparent injury in their most recent appearances last week.
That means Martin may have the opportunity to at least dress against his former team. The 29-year-old journeyman got his first actual NHL look in Vancouver, making a career-high 29 appearances for them in the 2022-23 campaign. That workload was out of necessity, not performance, however. The 2013 third-round pick of the Avalanche struggled to the tune of a .871 SV%, 3.99 GAA, and an eye-popping -27.5 GSAA, still managing an 11-15-1 record that’s far better than his play warranted.
While that experiment clearly showed Martin isn’t a legitimate full-time NHL option, he’s still an above-average No. 3 netminder. Martin was claimed off waivers twice last season – first by the Blue Jackets from the Canucks during the preseason and again by the Hurricanes from Columbus after the Jackets no longer had a need for him on the roster in January. Martin was a slight improvement over struggling veteran Antti Raanta in limited action for Carolina last season as a backup option for Kochetkov while Andersen missed most of the season with a blood clotting issue, recording a .896 SV%, 2.63 GAA, and 4-1-1 record in six starts.
That was evidently enough for the Hurricanes to decide to keep him around, signing him to a one-year, one-way extension worth the league minimum $775K in March. With Andersen and Kochetkov healthy, he unsurprisingly landed on waivers during preseason. Unlike last season, he managed to clear, and was subsequently assigned to the minors. He’s off to a strong start with Chicago, posting a 2.32 GAA, .920 SV%, and a 1-1-1 record in three appearances.
Martin can remain on the NHL roster for up to 30 days until he needs waivers again to return to the AHL. He has a 21-26-7 record, a 3.52 GAA, and an .887 SV% in 52 career NHL starts and five relief appearances.
