Panthers Activate Brad Marchand Off IR

What started as a day-to-day injury turned into a considerably longer absence for Panthers winger Brad Marchand.  However, it appears the counter will stop at two-and-a-half weeks as the team has activated him off injured reserve, according to the NHL’s Media Site.

The 37-year-old suffered an undisclosed injury early this month against Toronto.  Initially deemed to be held out for precautionary reasons, Marchand wound up missing seven games due to the injury, taking one of Florida’s top offensive performers out of the lineup.  Head coach Paul Maurice had phrased the injury as something that Marchand had been dealing with for a while and the hope was that some time off would stop it from becoming worse.

After playing a bit more of a limited role following his acquisition from Boston last season, injuries put Marchand into a top-line spot this year.  He certainly has made the most of it, picking up 23 goals and 23 assists in just 41 games; he’s only one point behind Sam Reinhart for the team lead despite playing in eight fewer contests.

With his return and the recent return by winger Matthew Tkachuk, Florida’s offense is about the healthiest it has been all season long.  They’re still without Aleksander Barkov and depth players Tomas Nosek and Jonah Gadjovich but they now have all of their available top-six pieces healthy.  They’ll need them if they want to make up the five points needed to get themselves into at least a Wild Card position to try to defend their back-to-back Stanley Cup titles.

The Panthers opened up a roster spot earlier this week when they sent center Jack Studnicka down after clearing waivers.  With no recalls since then, they still had the open slot to activate Marchand without any other moves being needed.

Canucks Recall Nikita Tolopilo, Assign Jiri Patera To AHL

In Thatcher Demko’s absence, the Canucks appear intent on not having just one player serving as Kevin Lankinen’s backup.  Instead, their goalie swapping continues as the team announced (Twitter link) that Nikita Tolopilo has been recalled from AHL Abbotsford while Jiri Patera has been sent back to Abbotsford.

Tolopilo struggled mightily during his latest recall earlier this month as he allowed six goals to both Montreal and Edmonton.  That brought his NHL totals this season to a 3.98 GAA and a .881 SV% in six outings.  He fared a little better in the minors after being sent down last weekend, allowing five goals on 54 shots in two starts since last weekend’s demotion.  Over the year with them, Tolopilo has a 2.94 GAA and a .901 SV% in 13 games.

As for Patera, he didn’t see any NHL action over the past week while up with Vancouver and he has made just one appearance with them this season, allowing seven goals in a loss to Florida.  The 26-year-old has been Abbotsford’s top performer in goal, posting a 2.49 GAA with a .915 SV% in 16 outings with them and will now get some game action in after last playing on January 16th.

With no proven player capable of stepping into that interim number two role, it wouldn’t be overly surprising if these two netminders get flipped once again before the Olympic break next month.

Sabres Acquire Gavin Bayreuther From Hurricanes

The Sabres and Hurricanes have made a small swap of AHL depth.  Buffalo announced that it has acquired defenseman Gavin Bayreuther from Carolina in exchange for winger Viktor Neuchev.  Bayreuther has subsequently been assigned to AHL Rochester while Neuchev will be sent to AHL Chicago.

Bayreuther returned to North America this season after playing for Lausanne in Switzerland in 2024-25.  The 31-year-old inked a one-year, two-way deal with the Hurricanes that carried a guaranteed salary of $150K.  He received a pair of recalls to Carolina, one in November and one in December, but hasn’t seen any NHL playing time this season.  Instead, he has suited up in 33 games with the Wolves, notching four goals and nine assists.

Bayreuther does have a reasonable amount of NHL experience in his career, however.  He has suited up in 122 games at the top level over parts of four seasons with the bulk of that playing time coming over three years with Columbus.  In those appearances, Bayreuther has five goals and 23 assists along with 139 blocked shots while averaging a little more than 15 minutes per game of playing time.  He’ll serve as some veteran recallable depth with both Conor Timmins and Jacob Bryson dealing with injuries.  He will be eligible for unrestricted free agency once again this summer.

As for Neuchev, the 22-year-old was a third-round pick by Buffalo back in 2022, going 74th overall, following a strong offensive showing in the MHL where he finished eighth in league scoring with Avto Yekaterinburg, tallying 67 points in 61 games.  He was promoted to Yekaterinburg’s KHL squad the following season and while he only collected a dozen points in 57 outings, it was still enough for Buffalo to sign him to an entry-level deal, one that he is in the final season of.

In 57 games in 2023-24 (his first season in North America), Neuchev had 11 goals and 17 assists.  Injuries limited him to just 39 games last season although he was reasonably productive with seven goals and 15 helpers in those outings.  This season, his output is down a bit as he has six goals and ten assists through 34 contests and will now look to make an impression in Carolina’s prospect pool.  He will be a restricted free agent this summer with the Hurricanes needing to issue a two-way qualifying offer to retain his rights.

Avalanche Recall Isak Posch, Move Scott Wedgewood To Non-Roster Status

The Avalanche have made a pair of roster moves as they get set to embark on a road trip beginning Sunday in Toronto.  The team announced (Twitter link) that they’ve recalled goaltender Isak Posch from AHL Colorado.  To make room on the roster, netminder Scott Wedgewood has been designated to non-roster status.

Posch is in his first full professional season after signing an entry-level deal with the Avs last March following two seasons at St. Cloud State University.  His first taste of the pros has been successful as the 23-year-old has a 2.45 GAA along with a .902 SV% in 20 games with the Eagles and he’ll now be rewarded with a few days of NHL pay for his efforts.  He’ll serve as Mackenzie Blackwood’s backup until Wedgewood is able to return.

As for Wedgewood, this is expected to be a short-term absence.  His wife just gave birth and the team is granting him a bit of extra time with his family.  He’s expected to rejoin the Avalanche on their road trip.  It has been a breakout year for the 33-year-old who has a 2.14 GAA with a .918 SV% in 30 starts this season, earning himself a two-year, $5MM extension for his efforts.

Lightning Recall Jakob Pelletier

One of the AHL’s top scorers is getting another NHL opportunity.  The Lightning announced that they’ve recalled winger Jakob Pelletier from AHL Syracuse.

The 24-year-old signed a three-year contract with Tampa Bay last summer worth the league minimum in each season.  The hope was that he could battle for a full-time spot at the bottom of their lineup after putting up 19 points in just 49 games last season between Calgary and Philadelphia.  However, that didn’t happen and he instead cleared waivers and was sent to the Crunch.

Aside from a one-game stint back in mid-November where he played just over six minutes, Pelletier has played exclusively with Syracuse this season.  Given a chance to play in a top-line role, he has certainly made the most of it, posting 19 goals and 22 assists in 35 games.  His 41 points put him third in league scoring although he likely won’t have anywhere near the same role with the Lightning if he gets into the lineup.

Tampa Bay had one open roster spot following the recent return of goaltender Brandon Halverson to the minors so no corresponding move needed to be made to recall Pelletier to the active roster.

Capitals Sign Bogdan Trineyev To Two-Year Extension

Earlier this season, Capitals winger Bogdan Trineyev made his NHL debut.  Between that and a solid showing in the minors, he has shown enough to earn a longer look from the team.  The Caps announced that they’ve inked the winger to a two-year, $1.8MM contract extension.  The deal will be a two-way deal in 2026-27, paying $850K in the NHL and $225K in the minors before converting to a one-way salary of $950K for the 2027-28 campaign.

The 23-year-old was a fourth-round pick by Washington back in 2020, going 117th overall.  It took until the 2022-23 campaign for him to become a full-time player in the KHL when he was in the first season of his entry-level deal.  Trineyev managed just two goals and 11 assists in 39 games with Dynamo Moskva but he has been a bit more productive offensively since making the jump to North America full-time for the 2023-24 campaign.

That year with AHL Hershey, Trineyev had 16 points in 63 contests before upping his output to 22 points in 62 games last season before adding seven more in eight playoff outings.  That was enough to earn him a one-year, two-way deal for this season and he has made the most of it.  Trineyev has played in 30 games so far for the Bears in 2025-26, picking up nine goals and 11 assists while already setting a new personal best in the latter category.  That earned him a two-game stint with Washington last month although he’s still looking for his first NHL point.

Assuming that Trineyev gets into 78 more NHL games between now and the end of the 2027-28 season, he will remain eligible for restricted free agency with salary arbitration rights.  If he doesn’t get into that many outings at the top level, he will instead become eligible for Group Six unrestricted free agency at that time.

Islanders Recall Isaiah George, Assign Cole McWard To AHL

Saturday: The Islanders announced that they have indeed recalled George from Bridgeport.  To make room on the roster, McWard has been sent down.


Friday: The New York Islanders are expected to turn towards a top prospect to help them with injuries. Defenseman Isaiah George appears to have been recalled to the NHL just before the AHL’s Bridgeport Islanders’ Friday night game per Stefen Rosner of The Hockey News.

This would be George’s first call-up of the 2025-26 season. He has spent the first half of the year in a focused role with Bridgeport, that he’s rewarded with 10 points, 10 penalty minutes, and a plus-five in 24 games. That performance is a hardy step up from the 14 points and minus-16 that George recorded in 33 AHL games last season. He also played the first 33 games of his NHL career last year, netting five points and a minus-three. Through a struggled stat line, George showed flashes of two-way upside at the NHL and AHL level last season. He has looked well improved in the minor-leagues this season. With better footing, George could be set to make a stronger push for an NHL role.

He could see ice time right out of the gates as New York looks to address a day-to-day injury to top-four defenseman Ryan Pulock. Extra defenseman Cole McWard would be the de facto replacement if Pulock couldn’t play. McWard has scored 16 points in 29 AHL games and no points in three NHL games this season. He is also a right-handed shot, which wouldn’t pair as nicely with righty Adam Boqvist as the left-handed George. That could be enough to earn George a shot at his first NHL game of the season, should Pulock need to miss time.

Lightning Activate, Reassign Scott Sabourin

The Lightning announced Friday that they activated winger Scott Sabourin from injured reserve and subsequently assigned him to AHL Syracuse.

Sabourin, 33, has been more of a factor for Tampa Bay this season than anyone anticipated. The enforcer was assessed a preseason suspension and was brought up multiple times from Syracuse after the campaign started to finish serving it, making him eligible to suit up for the Bolts rather early in the schedule.

He was called into action more consistently in November and December, marking his first big league action since last January. All told, he played nine games before sustaining an undisclosed injury against the Canadiens on Dec. 28 that’s kept him out for nearly a month. That’s the second-most NHL action he’s ever seen in a single season, trailing only the 35 appearances he made as a 27-year-old rookie for the Senators in 2019-20.

Sabourin scored a goal and two assists – his first tally since that rookie year – and averaged 8:12 of ice time per game with a whopping 63 penalty minutes. No one even comes close to Sabourin’s 12.19 penalties taken per 60 minutes this season. Ottawa’s Kurtis MacDermid is a distant second at 8.40.

The 6’4″, 207-lb winger has always displayed enough of a scoring touch to challenge for top-nine deployment in the minors and is thus a fine enough fourth-line spark plug at the NHL level in short-term regular-season deployment. We likely haven’t seen the last of him in Tampa this season as a result. For now, though, he returns to Syracuse, where he’s notched six goals and two assists in 20 games this year.

Sabres Place Jacob Bryson On IR, Recall Zachary Jones

The Sabres placed defenseman Jacob Bryson on injured reserve Friday and recalled Zachary Jones from AHL Rochester to replace him on the active roster, according to Rachel Lenzi of The Buffalo News.

Bryson, 28, is now ineligible to play in the Sabres’ next two contests in what is a light week for them. He suited up in Thursday’s 4-2 win over the Canadiens but left the team’s road trip today and returned to Buffalo to be evaluated for an upper-body injury, head coach Lindy Ruff told Lenzi.

Playing time has been difficult to come by for Bryson as of late. While he’s suited up in 10 of Buffalo’s last 11 games, his bottom-pairing ice time has been incredibly restricted, averaging just 9:19 of ice time per game since the calendar turned to 2026.

The 5’9″ Bryson is in his sixth NHL season, all with Buffalo. He’s been a clear-cut bottom-pairing/press box option since debuting in 2021, four years after the Sabres made him a fourth-round pick out of Providence College, and has 48 points and a -38 rating in 287 career appearances.

Five of those points have come in 33 outings this year. The Sabres have rarely had all their defensemen healthy, contributing to him playing in two-thirds of their games. Michael Kesselring has missed much of the year with lower-body issues and is still being load-managed as he steps back into the lineup, while Conor Timmins has been out with a broken leg since before Christmas.

Now, they’re short another depth option, meaning Kesselring’s in-and-then-out-again routine may be ending. It’s hard to find a more direct replacement for Bryson than Jones, a similarly undersized lefty who’s produced at essentially the same exact pace throughout his career.

Buffalo has recalled Jones multiple times to serve as short-term roster depth since plucking him from the Rangers in free agency last summer, but he hasn’t yet made his Sabres debut. That hasn’t stopped him from playing the most dynamic offensive hockey of his life in Rochester, where he leads the team in scoring with 37 points (six goals, 31 assists) in 32 games.

It’s concerns over Jones’ defensive game that have kept him from locking down an everyday NHL role. With a -1 rating in Rochester despite that elite scoring line, those concerns haven’t dissipated. And with Buffalo’s defense group already being lefty-heavy, it stands to reason that right-shot depth option Zach Metsa has a clearer path to minutes in Bryson’s absence than Jones does.

Maple Leafs Activate Anthony Stolarz

4:23 p.m.: Stolarz has officially been activated from IR with Hildeby headed down, the team announced.


11:54 a.m.: The Maple Leafs will activate goaltender Anthony Stolarz from long-term injured reserve before tonight’s tilt against the Golden Knights, head coach Craig Berube confirmed to reporters (including Mark Masters of TSN). It will be his first start in over two months. The team sent Dennis Hildeby to AHL Toronto to open up a spot, per PuckPedia, but they’re still one over the roster limit as they’ve yet to make a corresponding move for Henry Thrun‘s recall this morning.

The last 32 games of the season provide Stolarz a chance to erase what was a disastrous early going. Entering training camp as the clear-cut No. 1 option for the first time, he landed a four-year, $15MM extension during training camp as a result. It was well-deserved – he backstopped the Leafs to a rare playoff series win last year and finished fifth in Vezina Trophy voting while leading the league with a .926 SV% in 33 starts.

Injuries have consistently been an issue for the skilled 32-year-old, who averaged just 23 starts per season over the last four years. Tandem partner Joseph Woll started the year on personal leave, meaning Stolarz had a much higher-than-normal workload out of the gate. He immediately faltered, posting his worst stretch of hockey as an NHLer with a .884 SV% and 3.51 GAA in 13 starts. High-end goal support from the Leafs meant he still ended up with a 6-5-1 record, but his -8.3 goals saved above expected in such limited action were a noticeable stain on the track record of one of the league’s most consistently analytically sound netminders.

He’s spent the last few days with AHL Toronto on a conditioning assignment as he works his way back from his upper-body issue. He didn’t get into any game action with the Marlies, though.

Now, with Woll healthy, he and Stolarz can return to a more familiar split. Woll has had a fine year in his own right – his .911 SV% and two shutouts in 21 games certainly read as impressive, but he’s only accounted for 0.6 GSAx, according to MoneyPuck, suggesting there still might be some room for growth.

Unfortunately, Toronto’s roster crunch and Hildeby’s waiver-exempt status meant a three-goalie rotation would be unfeasible when Stolarz returned. With no roster limit, the Leafs likely would have opted to experiment with one. Hildeby, 24, has been one of the best stories of the season in Toronto. The 2022 fourth-round pick has spent virtually the entire season on the roster with Woll’s and Stolarz’s long-term absences.

He’s not just been an above-average third-string option; he’s arguably been the Leafs’ best netminder. His raw numbers are slightly under Woll’s, but he carries a wide advantage when accounting for team defense with 8.9 GSAx. Even his .910 SV% and 2.90 GAA in 19 appearances are strong stats for a largely unheralded rookie.

Nonetheless, he may need to wait until the roster limit disappears at the trade deadline to get his next NHL chance if Stolarz and Woll manage to stay healthy until then. Despite just signing a multi-year extension, Stolarz’s race to the finish could impact whether Toronto aims to shop him over the summer in order to open up a spot for the younger, cheaper Hildeby next season.

Image courtesy of Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images.

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