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Mats Zuccarello Out “Minimum” Of Seven To Eight Weeks

September 30, 2025 at 10:37 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

While the Wild ensured one top-six winger will be staying with the club long-term earlier today, they’ve lost another in the short term. The team confirmed Mats Zuccarello will miss a “minimum” of seven to eight weeks with the lower-body injury that’s sidelined him for all of training camp so far.

There was concern Zuccarello would miss the start of the regular season back at the beginning of camp. This is a bit more significant than just the start of the season, though. A seven-to-eight-week timeline from today puts his most optimistic return date on Nov. 18, by which Minnesota will have already played a quarter of its season. In all likelihood, it could be Thanksgiving or even further down the calendar until he’s able to make his season debut.

Now 38 years old, the 5’8″ Zuccarello has kept up his reputation as a consistent top-six scorer in what should be his twilight years. The Norwegian forward ranked fourth on the team with a 19-39–54 scoring line in 69 appearances last year, his sixth in Minnesota after first signing there as a free agent in 2019. While injuries have remained a concern – he hasn’t hit the 70-game mark in the past two years – he’s clicked above expectations since signing with the Wild and has scored at a 70-point clip per 82 games during his time there.

That’s a sizable absence in the scoring department, especially considering he still averaged over 19:30 of ice time per game last year. While he’s spent a good portion of his tenure in St. Paul opposite Kirill Kaprizov on the top line, Matt Boldy ended up getting that job in the playoffs last year after Kaprizov returned from surgery. Zuccarello dropped down to a middle-six role with Marcus Johansson and Frédérick Gaudreau, the latter of whom has since been traded to the Kraken. Since he hasn’t been in camp, it’s hard to predict where the Wild planned on slotting him this season, but it likely would have been in second-line duties while keeping the top line loaded with Boldy.

Zuccarello’s top-six vacancy could mean increased opportunity for veteran Vladimir Tarasenko to start the year. The Wild picked him up from the Red Wings for future considerations over the summer after the four-time All-Star had just 11 goals and 33 points in 80 games for Detroit. The Wild are now his sixth team in the last four years, but he could get a shot at second-line duties with Joel Eriksson Ek as his centerman. There’s also a clear path for one of the Wild’s recent first-rounders, namely Liam Ohgren and Danila Yurov, to snag top-nine roles as they look to establish themselves as full-timers.

One player who won’t be getting an opportunity in the lineup is 220-game veteran Brett Leason. He was released from his PTO today, the club announced. He had a 5-12–17 scoring line in 62 games for the Ducks last year before being non-tendered.

Injury| Minnesota Wild| Newsstand| Transactions Brett Leason| Mats Zuccarello

2 comments

Hurricanes Release Oliver Kylington, Kevin Labanc

September 30, 2025 at 10:33 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

The Hurricanes released defenseman Oliver Kylington and winger Kevin Labanc from their professional tryouts, according to a team announcement. The duo is part of a good chunk of camp cuts from the Canes today, although fellow PTO invitee Givani Smith remains with the organization for now.

Kylington signed a PTO after splitting the 2024-25 season between the Avalanche and the Ducks. The left-shot rearguard missed over two months with a lower-body injury in the middle of the season, which, combined with declining play, contributed to him only making 19 appearances. He managed a 1-4–5 scoring line with a -2 rating while averaging just 12:18 per game, recording 18 blocks and three hits.

A second-round pick by the Flames back in 2015, Kylington once looked like a potential top-four piece. He broke out for 31 points and a +34 rating in 73 appearances for Calgary back in 2021-22, but he then missed over a year and a half while on mental health-related leave. His return to the game in January 2024 made him a Masterton Trophy finalist at season’s end. Unfortunately, it looks like that lost time means his days of being an everyday NHLer might be behind him. He was competing with other reclamation-type depth puck-movers like Mike Reilly for an NHL job in Carolina’s camp, but Reilly, along with preseason standout Charles-Alexis Legault, bumped him out of consideration.

Labanc, 29, was in an NHL camp on a PTO for the second straight year. Last season, he attended New Jersey’s camp on a tryout basis and landed an NHL deal with the Blue Jackets immediately after getting released. He’ll hope a similar outcome awaits him this time around.

The New York native was also limited by injuries last year, missing the last two months of the campaign due to shoulder surgery. When healthy, he got into Columbus’ lineup 34 times and scored two goals and 10 assists for 12 points.

The club has 23 skaters left in camp, leaving only two cuts still to make. The final forward spot is likely down to Smith and Juha Jaaska, while Legault is still in the mix to upset Reilly and start the year as Carolina’s seventh defenseman.

Carolina Hurricanes| Transactions Kevin Labanc| Oliver Kylington

1 comment

Wild Extend Kirill Kaprizov

September 30, 2025 at 9:06 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 45 Comments

Kirill Kaprizov is staying put and setting the market. The Wild have announced an eight-year extension for their superstar winger that will pay out a record-setting AAV of $17MM through the 2033-34 campaign. That’s a total value of $136MM. He was previously slated to hit the unrestricted free agent market following the 2025-26 season.

All but $8MM of that $136MM figure will come via signing bonuses, Michael Russo of The Athletic reports, along with an expected full no-movement clause for the duration of the deal. His base salary will only be $1MM per season. He will earn an $18.1MM bonus on July 1 from 2026-29 before that number drops to $16MM for 2030, $14.2MM for 2031, and $12.7MM for 2032 and 2033. It doesn’t change the cap picture for the Wild, but it does make the deal essentially buyout-proof, since signing bonus money is not affected by buyouts. Signing bonus money also carries more projectable tax rates since it’s taxed at the rate of a player’s primary residence, whereas base salary is taxed depending on the location of games. As PuckPedia notes, this structure could result in an increased cap hit for Kaprizov in the latter years of the deal since the league minimum salary is expected to increase beyond $1MM past 2030.

It will be the largest deal in NHL history by measure of total value as well, finally breaking the record Alex Ovechkin set with his 13-year, $124MM extension nearly two decades ago. Of course, the institution of an eight-year maximum extension length in the 2013 CBA prevented a deal from eclipsing that total value for quite some time. It’s also a drastic jump in terms of record-setting AAVs. Just over a year ago, Leon Draisaitl’s extension with the Oilers, which carries a $14MM cap hit, set the mark.  That’s a 21.4% increase in the league’s highest AAV in less than 13 months, far greater than the 8.9% increase the salary cap is projected to see next season.

It’s an important resolution after news leaked a few weeks ago that Kaprizov rejected an eight-year, $ 16MM AAV offer from Minnesota, which would have also been the largest contract in league history. While it would have been just a minor setback in talks if it had been contained, the information being made public understandably created an uncomfortable dynamic for both sides entering the season. The Wild had to lay heavy on the damage control front over the past several days as a result, rejecting speculation that they had asked for his trade list (he has an NMC as part of his expiring deal) amid concerns they might lose him for nothing next summer.

Instead, Kaprizov’s camp, led by TMI’s Paul Theofanous, gets the happy ending they hoped for – a scenario they thought out when only negotiating a five-year deal when his entry-level contract expired in 2021. Kaprizov, an age-28 season that sits right at the top of the aging curve, is never going to have a higher market value than he has today. It’s unlikely he would have been able to net much more than $17MM on the open market, either – a deal that would have netted him considerably less guaranteed cash because of the seven-year cap on UFA signings compared to extensions.

While Kaprizov is the lifeblood of Minnesota’s offense and inarguably the best talent in franchise history, it’s a tad jarring to see his name now atop the list of the league’s highest-paid players. He’s an elite scorer and the top left-winger in the game at the moment. Still, his points-per-game production over the past few seasons (1.24 since 2022-23) simply isn’t on par with names like Connor McDavid (1.71), Nathan MacKinnon (1.58), Nikita Kucherov (1.57), or even Draisaitl (1.47). Yet his deal takes up 16.35% of the salary cap at its start, higher than each of those names’ current deals did when they were signed.

It’s nonetheless a necessary price to pay for the Wild, who still have a considerable amount of financial flexibility moving forward and can ensure their top player remains with the club throughout their contention window, which is only just beginning with multiple promising under-25 talents in the organization yet to reach their stride fully. As recent first-rounders like Marco Rossi, Liam Ohgren, Danila Yurov, and Zeev Buium develop into their primes, they’ll be doing so with Kaprizov in his late 20s and early 30s, still at the top of his game.

Kaprizov did not have that same billing. He’s one of the great draft steals of the era, falling to the Wild in the fifth round of the 2015 draft. He spent the following five years developing into a star in his native Russia, earning five consecutive KHL All-Star selections during that period while twice leading the league in goals. He also clinched a gold medal for Russia at the Winter Olympics in 2018. After reaching new heights with a career-high 33 goals and 62 points in 57 games for CSKA Moscow in 2019-20, Kaprizov finally made the jump to Minnesota and kicked off his NHL career with the COVID-shortened 2021 season.

He was an immediate star, posting a 27-24–51 scoring line in 55 appearances to lead the Wild, taking home Calder Trophy honors and finishing 15th in MVP voting. That’s the only season of his five-year NHL career so far where he hasn’t managed to reach the point-per-game mark.

Last season was on pace to be a career-best. If healthy, he would have hit the 100-point mark for the first time since hitting 108 in his sophomore year. Unfortunately, a lower-body injury he sustained around Thanksgiving resulted in him being in and out of the lineup for the remainder of the campaign and eventually going under the knife. He finished with a 25-31–56 scoring line in 41 games, on pace for 50 goals and 112 points if he played a full 82. That would have placed him third in the league in scoring behind Kucherov and MacKinnon.

Playing that full 82 is something Kaprizov has never done, though, and that’s where the most significant risk lies in such a rich bet on his future. After missing only one game each in his first two seasons, Kaprizov has now missed 63 games over the past three years – over a quarter of Minnesota’s games. An upper-body injury caused him to miss seven games in 2023-24, while a leg injury took away 14 games during the 2022-23 campaign.

Even with Kaprizov taking up such a significant amount of space, the Wild still have over $23MM in projected cap space for next season with 16 roster spots already accounted for, per PuckPedia. The quickly-rising cap, plus making it through the most impactful years of the Ryan Suter and Zach Parise buyouts, has left the Wild with enviable flexibility. They have three core pieces – Kaprizov, Matt Boldy, and Brock Faber – signed through at least the end of the decade as well.

ESPN’s Kevin Weekes first broke the news that an extension was imminent. Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman added that it was an eight-year term with a cap hit north of $16MM. 

Image courtesy of Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images.

Minnesota Wild| Newsstand| Transactions Kirill Kaprizov

45 comments

Training Camp Cuts: 9/29/25

September 29, 2025 at 8:30 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 11 Comments

Eight days remain until the beginning of the regular season. After a weekend of heavy roster trimming, most clubs are down to their last few rounds of targeted cuts. We’re keeping track of today’s moves here at Pro Hockey Rumors.

Buffalo Sabres (per team announcement)

D Zachary Jones (to AHL Rochester, pending waivers)
F Jake Leschyshyn (to AHL Rochester, pending waivers)

Chicago Blackhawks (per team announcement)

G Drew Commesso (to AHL Rockford)
D Ashton Cumby (to AHL Rockford)
F Nick Lardis (to AHL Rockford)
F Samuel Savoie (to AHL Rockford)
F A.J. Spellacy (to OHL Windsor)
F Aidan Thompson (to AHL Rockford)
F Dominic Toninato (to AHL Rockford)
G Mitchell Weeks (released from PTO to AHL Rockford)

Colorado Avalanche (per team announcement)

F Taylor Makar (to AHL Colorado)
G Isak Posch (to AHL Colorado)

Edmonton Oilers (per team announcement)

G Matt Tomkins (to AHL Bakersfield, pending waivers)

Florida Panthers (per team announcement)

G Evan Cormier (released from PTO to AHL Charlotte)
G Kirill Gerasimyuk (to AHL Charlotte)
D Ludvig Jansson (to AHL Charlotte)
D Evan Nause (to AHL Charlotte)

Minnesota Wild (per team announcement)

F Nicolas Aube-Kubel (to AHL Iowa, pending waivers)
F Caedan Bankier (to AHL Iowa)
D Ben Gleason (to AHL Iowa, pending waivers)
G Samuel Hlavaj (to AHL Iowa)
F Ben Jones (to AHL Iowa, pending waivers)
D Matt Kiersted (to AHL Iowa, pending waivers)
F Rasmus Kumpulainen (to AHL Iowa)
D Carson Lambos (to AHL Iowa)
G Riley Mercer (to AHL Iowa)
D Wyatt Newpower (released from PTO to AHL Iowa)
D David Spacek (to AHL Iowa)

Nashville Predators (per team announcement)

F Daniel Carr (to AHL Milwaukee)
G Magnus Chrona (to AHL Milwaukee)
F David Edstrom (to AHL Milwaukee)
F Dylan Gambrell (to AHL Milwaukee)
D Andrew Gibson (to AHL Milwaukee)
G Ethan Haider (to AHL Milwaukee)
D Zack Hayes (to AHL Milwaukee)
F Kalan Lind (to AHL Milwaukee)
F Kyle Marino (to AHL Milwaukee)
D Jack Matier (to AHL Milwaukee)
D Chad Nychuk (to AHL Milwaukee)
F Cole O’Hara (to AHL Milwaukee)
F Isaac Ratcliffe (to AHL Milwaukee)
F Austin Roest (to AHL Milwaukee)
F Ryder Rolston (to AHL Milwaukee)
G T.J. Semptimphelter (to AHL Milwaukee)
D Ryan Ufko (to AHL Milwaukee)
F Oasiz Wiesblatt (to AHL Milwaukee)
F Joey Willis (to AHL Milwaukee)

New Jersey Devils (per team announcement)

F Tag Bertuzzi (released from PTO to AHL Utica)
G Tyler Brennan (to AHL Utica)
G Jeremy Brodeur (released from PTO to AHL Utica)
F Alexander Campbell (released from PTO to AHL Utica)
F Brian Carrabes (released from PTO to AHL Utica)
D Jimmy Dowd (released from PTO to AHL Utica)
F Josh Filmon (to AHL Utica)
D Jeremy Hanzel (to AHL Utica)
G Jakub Málek (to AHL Utica)
F Jack Malone (released from PTO to AHL Utica)
F Matyas Melovsky (to AHL Utica)
D Luke Reid (released from PTO to AHL Utica)
F Ryan Schmelzer (to AHL Utica, pending waivers)
F Cam Squires (to AHL Utica)
D Jackson van de Leest (released from PTO to AHL Utica)
F Dylan Wendt (to AHL Utica)

New York Rangers (per team announcement)

F Jaroslav Chmelar (to AHL Hartford)
D Jackson Dorrington (to AHL Hartford)
D Case McCarthy (to AHL Hartford)
D Andrej Sustr (released from PTO)
F Adam Sykora (to AHL Hartford)
F Kalle Vaisanen (to AHL Hartford)

Pittsburgh Penguins (per team announcement)

F Callahan Burke (released from PTO to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Atley Calvert (released from PTO to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
D Finn Harding (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Aaron Huglen (released from PTO to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Nolan Renwick (released from PTO to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)

San Jose Sharks (per Curtis Pashelka of Bay Area News Group)

F Filip Bystedt (to AHL San Jose)
F Igor Chernyshov (to AHL San Jose)

Toronto Maple Leafs (per team announcement)

G Kenneth Appleby (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
G Artur Akhtyamov (to AHL Toronto)
F Brandon Baddock (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Matthew Barbolini (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Travis Boyd (to AHL Toronto)
D Noah Chadwick (to AHL Toronto)
F Gunnarwolfe Fontaine (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Luke Grainger (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Benoit-Olivier Groulx (to AHL Toronto)
F Luke Haymes (to AHL Toronto)
F Reese Johnson (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Marc Johnstone (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Ben King (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Ryan Kirwan (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Braeden Kressler (to AHL Toronto)
F Vinni Lettieri (to AHL Toronto)
D Ryan McCleary (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Alexander Nylander (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Cédric Paré (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
D Rhett Parsons (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
G Vyacheslav Peksa (to AHL Toronto)
D John Prokop (to AHL Toronto)
F Jacob Quillan (to AHL Toronto)
F Nick Rhéaume (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
D Chas Sharpe (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Logan Shaw (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Marko Sikic (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Landon Sim (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
D Blake Smith (to AHL Toronto)
F Sam Stevens (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Ryan Tverberg (to AHL Toronto)
F Borya Valis (to AHL Toronto)
D Cade Webber (to AHL Toronto)

Vancouver Canucks (per team announcement)

D Parker Alcos (to WHL Edmonton)
F Vilmer Alriksson (to AHL Abbotsford)
D Joe Arntsen (released from PTO to AHL Abbotsford)
F Danila Klimovich (to AHL Abbotsford)
D Nikolai Knyzhov (released from PTO to AHL Abbotsford)
G Aku Koskenvuo (to AHL Abbotsford)
D Kirill Kudryavtsev (to AHL Abbotsford)
F Joseph LaBate (to AHL Abbotsford, pending waivers)
D Jayden Lee (released from PTO to AHL Abbotsford)
F Mackenzie MacEachern (to AHL Abbotsford, pending waivers)
F Ty Mueller (to AHL Abbotsford)
G Jiri Patera (to AHL Abbotsford, pending waivers)
F Anri Ravinskis (to AHL Abbotsford)
D Jimmy Schuldt (to AHL Abbotsford, pending waivers)
F Chase Stillman (to AHL Abbotsford)
F Chase Wouters (released from PTO to AHL Abbotsford)
G Ty Young (to AHL Abbotsford)

Winnipeg Jets (per Murat Ates of The Athletic)

F Phillip Di Giuseppe (to AHL Manitoba, pending waivers)
F Mason Shaw (to AHL Manitoba, pending waivers)
F Danny Zhilkin (to AHL Manitoba)

Buffalo Sabres| Chicago Blackhawks| Edmonton Oilers| Florida Panthers| Nashville Predators| New Jersey Devils| New York Rangers| Pittsburgh Penguins| San Jose Sharks| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions| Vancouver Canucks

11 comments

Waivers: 9/29/25

September 29, 2025 at 2:04 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 3 Comments

Teams are continuing to lean on the waiver wire as they make their final rounds of training camp cuts. All 23 players placed on waivers yesterday have cleared, but 22 more names are on the wire on Monday, captured by hockey insider Frank Seravalli.

Carolina Hurricanes

F Skyler Brind’Amour
D Ronan Seeley

Minnesota Wild

F Nicolas Aube-Kubel
D Ben Gleason
F Ben Jones
D Matt Kiersted

Nashville Predators

D Kevin Gravel
F Jake Lucchini
G Matt Murray
F Navrin Mutter
D Jordan Oesterle

New York Rangers

F Anton Blidh
F Justin Dowling
F Trey Fix-Wolansky
D Derrick Pouliot

Philadelphia Flyers

D Helge Grans

Vancouver Canucks

F Joseph Labate
F Mackenzie MacEachern
G Jiri Patera
D Jimmy Schuldt

Winnipeg Jets

F Phillip Di Giuseppe
F Mason Shaw

Transactions| Waivers

3 comments

Maple Leafs Sign Anthony Stolarz To Four-Year Extension

September 29, 2025 at 9:38 am CDT | by Ethan Hetu 14 Comments

Sep. 29: Stolarz’s contract includes a 16-team no-trade clause that applies not only to the first year of his extension in 2026-27 but will retroactively apply to the last year of his current contract, giving him new protection for the 2025-26 campaign, reports David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period. That list will downgrade to a 10-team NTC from 2027-29 and further to a five-team NTC in 2029-30. PuckPedia has the full cash breakdown of the deal:

2026-27: $850K base salary + $4.225MM signing bonus = $5.075MM total
2027-28: $900K base salary + $2.91MM signing bonus = $3.81MM total
2028-29: $1.07MM base salary + $2MM signing bonus = $3.07MM total
2029-30: $1.045MM base salary + $2MM signing bonus = $3.045MM total

Sep. 28: It was previously reported that Anthony Stolarz and the Toronto Maple Leafs were getting very close to an extension, and now ESPN’s Kevin Weekes and The Athletic’s Chris Johnston have reported that the two parties have come to an agreement on a four-year, $3.75MM AAV contract extension. According to Weekes, the contract is “largely signing bonus money” although no firm breakdown has been reported at this time. The Maple Leafs have now officially announced the contract.

Two days ago, it was reported that Stolarz and his camp, led by RSG Hockey’s Allain Roy, were eyeing recent contracts signed by Karel Vejmelka and Kevin Lankinen as potential comparables – deals that each carry a five-year term and an AAV of at least $4.5MM. The contract reported today isn’t quite as lucrative as those deals, although the fact that it is, per Weekes, heavy in signing bonuses does help bridge the gap.

The path to this contract has been an odd one for Stolarz, who appears to have emerged as a starting-caliber netminder at the age of 31. Five years ago, Stolarz was an AHL starter in the Anaheim Ducks organization, and he established himself as an NHL backup there. He signed with the Florida Panthers for 2023-24 to be Sergei Bobrovsky’s backup, and ended up putting forth a brilliant .925 save percentage and 2.03 goals-against average in 27 games.

That performance in Florida, which ended with Stolarz watching from the bench as the Panthers won their first-ever Stanley Cup championship, earned the netminder a two-year, $2.5MM AAV deal to join the Maple Leafs in a tandem with Joseph Woll. Although Woll started more games in 2024-25, Stolarz was the superior of the two netminders, playing to an excellent .926 save percentage and 21-8-3 record across 34 games.

While he hasn’t been tested in a heavy workload just yet, Stolarz has posted some of the league’s best numbers across the last two seasons. While it’s no easy task to sustain such brilliance across a heavier diet of starts, Stolarz certainly has the talent to do it. If he can end up taking a larger role in the crease in Toronto, perhaps playing something closer to a standard starting netminder’s number of games, he could easily provide an immense amount of surplus value to Toronto over the course of this contract.

The last time Stolarz played in more than 40 games was for the 2015-16 Lehigh Valley Phantoms – it’s been a while. So there is some risk to this contract, without question. But that level of risk is likely wholly acceptable to Toronto given Stolarz’s brilliance over the last two years, and the odds he provides them with surplus value appear to greatly outweigh the odds he underperforms this modest cap hit.

The key for the Maple Leafs will, unsurprisingly, be the playoffs: Stolarz led Toronto to a first-round victory over the Ottawa Senators, but an injury cost him the chance to compete in the second round. If he can find a way to be a reliable, go-to starter in playoff situations, this would be a home run of a contract for the Maple Leafs.

Photos courtesy of Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

Newsstand| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions Anthony Stolarz

14 comments

Sabres Recall Vsevolod Komarov

September 29, 2025 at 8:51 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Sabres announced Monday they’ve recalled defenseman Vsevolod Komarov from AHL Rochester. While he was a part of Buffalo’s massive round of training camp cuts over the weekend, they’re likely looking to get him into one more preseason game to allow rest for their veterans before sending him back to the minors.

Komarov, 21, was a fifth-round pick in 2022 but has outpaced his draft billing so far in his development. The 6’2″ righty had a highly successful major junior career, leading the QMJHL in scoring among defenders in 2023-24 while taking home a second league title, being named the league’s top defenseman during the regular season, and earning playoff MVP honors.

Last year’s adjustment to professional hockey was smooth. He didn’t pop in a huge way offensively, but delivered a well-rounded two-way game with the physical edge Buffalo hoped for when they drafted him. He played in all but three games for Rochester last year, logging a 2-16–18 scoring line with 85 PIMs and a +7 rating in 69 appearances. He was knocking on the door of top-pair minutes by season’s end, notes Steven Ellis of Daily Faceoff, who tabbed him as the No. 10 prospect (and No. 4 defenseman) in Buffalo’s prospect pipeline this summer.

He was never expected to compete for an opening-night job this fall. Taking a chunk out of his time with Rochester in training camp to give him another preseason look, though, could be an indicator he’s high on their list of recall options this season in case a shakeup or injury replacement is needed.

Komarov’s entry-level contract carries him through 2026-27 at a cap hit of $835K, after which he’ll be a restricted free agent. This season, he’s owed a minor-league salary of $82.5K with a $90K signing bonus and up to $35K in performance bonuses and a prorated $775K salary if he spends time in the NHL. Unless he somehow manages to play 160 NHL games in the next two years, he’ll remain waiver-exempt for the life of his ELC before requiring them beginning with the 2027-28 campaign.

Buffalo Sabres| Transactions Vsevolod Komarov

0 comments

Waivers: 9/28/25

September 28, 2025 at 1:27 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 3 Comments

With more and more cuts to training camp rosters being made, the waiver wire is becoming increasingly active. Today is another busy day on waivers as PuckPedia reports that 23 players have been waived. All of yesterday’s waived players have cleared.

Anaheim Ducks

F Jan Mysak

Buffalo Sabres

D Zac Jones
F Jake Leschyshyn

Columbus Blue Jackets

F Hudson Fasching
F Brendan Gaunce
F Mikael Pyyhtia

Chicago Blackahwks

F Dominic Toninato

Colorado Avalanche

D Ronnie Attard

Dallas Stars

D Kyle Capobianco
F Kole Lind
F Antonio Stranges

Montreal Canadiens

F Alex Belzile
D Nathan Clurman
F Lucas Condotta
D Marc Del Gaizo
F Sean Farrell

New Jersey Devils

F Ryan Schmelzer

St. Louis Blues

F Matt Luff
D Corey Schueneman

Tampa Bay Lightning

G Ryan Fanti
D Simon Lundmark
F Scott Sabourin
D Steven Santini

Today’s set of waived players is a more diverse mix, both with veteran players likely to play most of 2025-26 in the AHL and some younger players who have some NHL experience and still, theoretically, more room to grow. Jones, from Buffalo, appears to have lost a battle for an NHL job on the team’s blueline, but got into 46 NHL games for the New York Rangers last season and is still just 24 years old.

23-year-old Farrell, waived by Montreal, is a former top prospect who was, just a few years ago, ranked as the Canadiens’ second-best prospect by The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler. The former USHL and NCAA star had a strong back half of his 2024-25 AHL season and had six points in four games at the 2022 Winter Olympics, but hasn’t found a way to land an NHL role yet in his two-year pro career.

Beyond those younger names, there are also notable veterans on today’s waiver wire. Fasching, waived by Columbus, played in at least 43 NHL games in each of the last three seasons. Del Gaizo, waived by Montreal, got into 46 games with the Nashville Predators last season. And Toninato, waived by Chicago, has almost 200 NHL games to his name, although he only registered five NHL GP in 2024-25.

Transactions| Waivers

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Training Camp Cuts: 9/27/25

September 27, 2025 at 9:00 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 1 Comment

We are now 10 days away from opening night, now that training camp has reached its second Saturday. Over the next few days, teams will have some of their biggest cuts of the preseason, while also putting additional players up for claim on the waiver wire. Each team’s current roster can be found at our Training Camp Roster Tracker. Here is the list of today’s cuts:

Buffalo Sabres (per team release)

D Isaac Belliveau (to AHL Rochester)
F Matteo Costantini (released from PTO to AHL Rochester)
F Riley Fiddler-Schultz (to AHL Rockford)
D Aidan Fulp (released from PTO to AHL Rochester)
F Konsta Helenius (to AHL Rochester)
F Jagger Joshua (released from PTO to AHL Rochester)
F Tyler Kopff (to AHL Rochester)
D Vsevolod Komarov (to AHL Rochester)
F Trevor Kuntar (released from PTO to AHL Rochester)
D Noah Laaouan (released from PTO to AHL Rochester)
G Topias Leinonen (to AHL Rochester)
G Devon Levi (to AHL Rochester)
D Zach Metsa (to AHL Rochester)
F Olivier Nadeau (to AHL Rochester)
F Viktor Neuchev (to AHL Rochester)
D Nikita Novikov (to AHL Rochester)
D Jack Rathbone (to AHL Rochester, pending waiver clearance)
G Scott Ratzlaff (to AHL Rochester)
F Isak Rosen (to AHL Rochester)
F Redmond Savage (released from PTO to AHL Rochester)
F Graham Slaggert (released from PTO to AHL Rochester)
D Peter Tischke (released from PTO to AHL Rochester)
F Brendan Warren (released from PTO to AHL Rochester)
F Anton Wahlberg (to AHL Rochester)

Chicago Blackhawks (per team release)

D Cavan Fitzgerald (released from PTO to AHL Rockford)
D Taige Harding (to AHL Rockford)
D Dmitry Kuzmin (to AHL Rockford)
F Paul Ludwinski (to AHL Rockford)
D Ryan Mast (to AHL Rockford)
D Andrew Perrott (released from PTO to AHL Rockford)
F Brett Seney (released from PTO to AHL Rockford)

Colorado Avalanche (per team release)

F Alex Barre-Boulet (to AHL Colorado, pending waiver clearance)
F Tye Felhaber (to AHL Colorado, pending waiver clearance)
F Jason Polin (to AHL Colorado, pending waiver clearance)
F T.J. Tynan (to AHL Colorado, pending waiver clearance)
D Sean Behrens (to AHL Colorado)
F Ivan Ivan (to AHL Colorado)
F Jayson Megna (to AHL Colorado)
F Tristen Nielsen (to AHL Colorado)

Columbus Blue Jackets (per team release)

F Roman Ahcan (to AHL Cleveland)
F Riley Bezeau (to AHL Cleveland)
D Ole Julian Bjorgvik-Holm (to AHL Cleveland)
D Caleb MacDonald (to AHL Cleveland)
D Will MacKinnon (to AHL Cleveland)
D Dysin Mayo (to AHL Cleveland, pending waiver clearance)
F Hunter McKown (to AHL Cleveland, pending waiver clearance)
F Ryland Mosley (to AHL Cleveland)
D Guillaume Richard (to AHL Cleveland)
G Zachary Sawchenko (to AHL Cleveland, pending waiver clearance)
F Owen Sillinger (to AHL Cleveland, pending waiver clearance)

Edmonton Oilers (per team announcement)

D Josh Brown (to AHL Bakersfield, pending waiver clearance)
F Roby Jarventie (to AHL Bakersfield, pending waiver clearance)
G Samuel Jonsson (to AHL Bakersfield)
F Viljami Marjala (to AHL Bakersfield)

New York Islanders (per team announcement)

G Tristan Lennox (to AHL Bridgeport)
F Eetu Liukas (to AHL Bridgeport)
D Jesse Pulkkinen (to AHL Bridgeport)
F Gleb Veremyev (to AHL Bridgeport)
D Marshall Warren (to AHL Bridgeport)

New York Rangers (per team announcement)

F Nathan Aspinall (to OHL Flint)

Philadelphia Flyers (per team release)

D Spencer Gill (to QMJHL Blainville-Boisbriand)
F Jack Nesbitt (to OHL Windsor)

Pittsburgh Penguins (per team release)

F Raivis Ansons (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
D David Breazeale (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
D Tommy Budnick (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Kyle Criscuolo (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Brayden Edwards (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Zach Gallant (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Max Graham (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
D Brent Johnson (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Jordan Kaplan (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Gabe Klassen (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
D Daniel Laatsch (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Brett Murray (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
G Maxim Pavlenko (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
D Emil Pieniniemi (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Zach Urdahl (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)

Seattle Kraken (per team announcements)

F JR Avon (to AHL Coachella Valley)
D Lukas Dragicevic (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F Jagger Firkus (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F David Goyette (to AHL Coachella Valley)
D Kaden Hammell (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F Justin Janicke (to AHL Coachella Valley)
D Tyson Jugnauth (to AHL Coachella Valley)
G Niklas Kokko (to AHL Coachella Valley)
G Jack LaFontaine (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F Andrei Loshko (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F Ian McKinnon (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F Jacob Melanson (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F Logan Morrison (to AHL Coachella Valley)
D Ty Nelson (to AHL Coachella Valley)
D Gustav Olofsson (to AHL Coachella Valley)
G Victor Ostman (to AHL Coachella Valley)
D Caden Price (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F Carson Rehkopf (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F Lleyton Roed (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F Eduard Sale (to AHL Coachella Valley)
F Nathan Villeneuve (to OHL Sudbury)

Vegas Golden Knights (per team announcement)

F Braeden Bowman (to AHL Henderson)
F Jakub Brabenec (to AHL Henderson)
F Mathieu Cataford (to AHL Henderson)
D Artur Cholach (to AHL Henderson)
D Jeremy Davies (to AHL Henderson)
F Jakub Demek (to AHL Henderson)
F/D Joe Fleming (to AHL Henderson)
F Jackson Hallum (to AHL Henderson)
F Ben Hemmerling (to AHL Henderson)
D Brandon Hickey (to AHL Henderson)
D Lucas Johansen (to AHL Henderson)
D Viliam Kmec (to AHL Henderson)
D Samuel Mayer (to AHL Henderson)
F Riley McKay (to AHL Henderson)
F Mitch McLain (to AHL Henderson)
F Devon Paliani (to AHL Henderson)
F Matyas Sapovaliv (to AHL Henderson)
D Christoffer Sedoff (to AHL Henderson)
F Sloan Stanick (to AHL Henderson)
F Trent Swick (to AHL Henderson)
F Kai Uchacz (to AHL Henderson)
F Tuomas Uronen (to AHL Henderson)
G Jesper Vikman (to AHL Henderson)
F Kevin Wall (to AHL Henderson)
G Cameron Whitehead (to AHL Henderson)

Washington Capitals (per team announcement)

F Zac Funk (to AHL Hershey)
G Mitch Gibson (to AHL Hershey)
F Ryan Hofer (to AHL Hershey)
F Lynden Lakovic (to WHL Moose Jaw)
D Aaron Ness (to AHL Hershey)
F Ludwig Persson (to AHL Hershey)
D Calle Rosen (to AHL Hershey, pending waivers)
F Spencer Smallman (to AHL Hershey, pending waivers)
F Matt Strome (to AHL Hershey)
F Alexander Suzdalev (to AHL Hershey)

Buffalo Sabres| Chicago Blackhawks| Columbus Blue Jackets| Edmonton Oilers| New York Islanders| New York Rangers| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Seattle Kraken| Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights| Washington Capitals

1 comment

Waivers: 9/27/25

September 27, 2025 at 1:26 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

As training camp cuts continue to occur, there will be an uptick in waiver placements over the next week and a half.  Today is a particularly busy day on the wire with PuckPedia reporting that 20 players are now on waivers.  Meanwhile, all of yesterday’s players cleared, per PuckPedia.

Buffalo Sabres

D Jack Rathbone

Calgary Flames

D Jeremie Poirier

Columbus Blue Jackets

D Dysin Mayo
F Hunter McKown
G Zachary Sawchenko
F Owen Sillinger

Colorado Avalanche

F Alex Barre-Boulet
F Tye Felhaber
F Jason Polin
F T.J. Tynan

Edmonton Oilers

D Josh Brown
F James Hamblin
F Roby Jarventie

New York Islanders

F Adam Beckman

St. Louis Blues

F Nikita Alexandrov
F Hugh McGing

Toronto Maple Leafs

F Travis Boyd
F Benoit-Olivier Groulx
F Vinni Lettieri

Vegas Golden Knights

D Lukas Cormier

For the most part, this is a group of veteran players who have cleared waivers multiple times in the past and should expect to do so here as well.  That said, Lettieri has gotten into 72 NHL games over the last two seasons and could be appealing to a team looking for some extra depth down the middle.  Alexandrov didn’t see any action with St. Louis last season but averaged just over a point per game with AHL Springfield last season and has 51 career NHL appearances under his belt.  Boyd was a full-time NHL player as recently as 2022-23 and is one game shy of 300 for his career but has settled in as more of an AHL veteran since then.

At this time of year, it’s sometimes the younger players who might garner some attention and there are some on this list who could draw a look.  Cormier and Poirier are only 23 and have shown some offensive upside in the past at both the QMJHL and AHL levels.  Jarventie was once a prospect with some upside before an injury derailed his 2024-25 campaign but if there’s a team that thinks he has fully recovered, he could garner attention as well.

These players will be on waivers until 1 PM CT on Sunday.

Buffalo Sabres| Calgary Flames| Colorado Avalanche| Columbus Blue Jackets| Edmonton Oilers| New York Islanders| St. Louis Blues| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights| Waivers Adam Beckman| Alex Barre-Boulet| Benoit-Olivier Groulx| Dysin Mayo| Hugh McGing| Hunter McKown| Jack Rathbone| James Hamblin| Jason Polin| Jeremie Poirier| Josh Brown| Lukas Cormier| Nikita Alexandrov| Owen Sillinger| Roby Järventie| T.J. Tynan| Travis Boyd| Tye Felhaber| Vinni Lettieri| Zach Sawchenko

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