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Transactions

Mammoth Sign Seven Players To PTOs

September 16, 2025 at 1:11 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Mammoth will have some added depth in training camp by way of seven professional tryouts targeted toward their AHL club, the club announced today. Among the seven, only two – forward Austin Poganski and goaltender Dylan Wells – already have a contract in the organization with Tucson for 2025-26. There will be five names – Ryan McGregor, Dryden McKay, Lleyton Moore, Ty Tullio, and Samuel Walker – looking to land either a two-way deal with Utah or an AHL contract with Tucson.

The 26-year-old McGregor has spent all five of his professional seasons exclusively with Tucson. The 6’0″ forward was a sixth-round pick by the Maple Leafs in 2017 but went unsigned, instead landing an entry-level deal with the Coyotes upon turning pro in 2020. That preceded a solid run as a bottom-six piece in southern Arizona, totaling a 24-44–68 scoring line in 201 career games for the Roadrunners. He spent last year in Tucson on an AHL deal after reaching Group VI unrestricted free agency. His lengthy history with the Arizona/Utah organizations makes him a solid bet to return for another year in a minor-league support role.

McKay actually already has a landing spot for 2025-26. He signed on with the Avalanche’s ECHL affiliate, the Utah Grizzlies, back in July. He didn’t get an invite to Colorado’s NHL camp, though, so he’ll instead stay in his new team’s area and get some reps in an NHL camp with the Mammoth. He’ll serve as a camp piece for roster management purposes in the preseason before presumably getting released and returned to the Grizzlies. The 27-year-old former Hobey Baker Award winner has a career .904 SV% and 3.06 GAA in 99 ECHL games over the last three years.

Moore, 23, is a skilled but undersized (5’8″, 179-lb) rearguard still adjusting to the pro game. He has two pro seasons under his belt, both with Tucson, and will be looking to land another minor-league deal to make it three. He has 12 points in 46 career games for the Roadrunners with a +5 rating.

Poganski’s PTO is just a formality to get him into camp and add a veteran player for preseason purposes. The 29-year-old was Tucson’s captain last season and will reprise the role in 2025-26. He had 15 goals and 41 points in 71 appearances for them last year. He has 22 career NHL appearances with the Blues and Jets between 2019 and 2022, but no points.

Tullio is still looking for a contract after a tumultuous 2024-25 season. A fifth-round pick by the Oilers in 2020, he was traded to the Sabres in last summer’s Ryan McLeod deal. He only played sparingly for their AHL affiliate in Rochester, though, leading the Sabres to loan him to the Flames’ farm club to finish the season. He had eight points in 13 games down the stretch in Calgary, so there’s some promise that he could land a two-way offer from the Mammoth or at least be something of an impact contributor for Tucson.

Outside of Poganski, Walker is the only other player here with NHL experience. He has a goal and an assist to his name in 13 games with the Wild, all of which came in the 2022-23 and 2023-24 seasons. He spent all of last year in the minors and was acquired by Utah midway through the season in a minor swap. He didn’t see an NHL recall after his acquisition, which saw him score 22 points in 31 games for Tucson, and subsequently became a Group VI UFA. The 5’10” pivot will now be angling for a two-way deal or a contract with Tucson.

Wells, 27, has been an AHL backup/ECHL starter for some time now, although not routinely under an NHL contract. He’s entering his third season in Tucson and had a solid .900 SV% and 2.89 GAA in 10 games for them last year.

Transactions| Utah Mammoth Austin Poganski| Dryden McKay| Dylan Wells| Lleyton Moore| Ryan McGregor| Samuel Walker| Tyler Tullio

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Blackhawks Sign Matt Grzelcyk To PTO

September 16, 2025 at 11:16 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 9 Comments

The leading point scorer among free agent defensemen this summer will have to settle for a camp tryout. Matt Grzelcyk is heading to the Blackhawks on a PTO, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports. Chicago later confirmed the signing by listing Grzelcyk on their training camp roster.

While the market for Grzelcyk wasn’t near what he or anyone else expected, it’s still jarring to see a rearguard with the platform season he had not land a guaranteed contract heading into camp. The 31-year-old lefty was also a UFA last summer but landed a one-year, $2.75MM deal with the Penguins on the first day of free agency. That contract led to expanded ice time in Pittsburgh, where he saw some power-play usage and averaged north of 20 minutes per game for the first time in his nine-year career. He played all 82 games – the first time he’s ever done that, too – and ranked third on the team with 39 assists. Only Sidney Crosby (58) and Erik Karlsson (42) had more.

Individual defensive acumen and a lack of physicality remain the 5’10” defender’s limiting factors. Still, he was at least able to prove once again that he can be a productive puck-mover in a top-four role as he was for many years in Boston, serving as a routine Charlie McAvoy partner for a good chunk of his early career. That led AFP Analytics to project a three-year contract for Grzelcyk in the $3.75MM range annually on the open market, while we projected a slightly cheaper deal and ranked him No. 22 among all unrestricted free agents this summer.

Grzelcyk now heads to training camp in Chicago, where the Blackhawks will welcome him as insurance for the league’s most inexperienced defense group. Connor Murphy is the only defender under contract in the Windy City over the age of 25. Alex Vlasic, at 24 years of age and 179 games of NHL experience, is the club’s top lefty by a wide margin.

Most expected the Hawks to completely hand the keys over to their younger blue-liners this season. Their lack of notable moves on offense signaled they weren’t anticipating jumping back into playoff contention just yet as their rebuild enters its later stages. Even then, there simply may be too many question marks behind Vlasic on Chicago’s left side on defense to make general manager Kyle Davidson comfortable entering camp without any other options. The right side is fairly set with Murphy, 2024 No. 2 overall pick Artyom Levshunov, and 2022 first-rounder Sam Rinzel expected to anchor their own pairings. However, behind Vlasic on the left, there’s no clear No. 2 or No. 3.

That’s not to say Chicago doesn’t have options, but they do lack clarity. Wyatt Kaiser, 23, could be the frontrunner for second-pairing minutes but is still a restricted free agent. 2022 No. 7 overall pick Kevin Korchinski played just 16 NHL games last season with two assists. Defensive-minded lefties Nolan Allan and Ethan Del Mastro both held their own in NHL minutes last season but are far from finished products. Grzelcyk offers a safe plug-and-play option as their second lefty behind Vlasic, buying them time to sort out everyone else’s readiness. Leaving him on a tryout gives the Blackhawks an easy out if they do decide to let names like Allan and Korchinski run with regular minutes out of the gate.

Image courtesy of Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images.

Chicago Blackhawks| Newsstand| Transactions Matt Grzelcyk

9 comments

Transactions Notes: Poolman, Allison, Malmquist

September 14, 2025 at 11:16 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Unrestricted free agent defenseman Colton Poolman has signed with the Glasgow Clan of the United Kingdom’s Elite Ice Hockey League, the team announced.

While Poolman doesn’t have an NHL game to his name, he’s spent the last five seasons on two-way deals. The 29-year-old was initially an undrafted free agent signing by the Flames out of the University of North Dakota in 2020. He switched teams in free agency last summer, signing with the Sabres. He was then traded to the Penguins in a minor-league swap in January.

Injuries significantly limited Poolman’s playing time last season. He made just five appearances for AHL Rochester while in Buffalo’s organization before the trade to the Penguins. He got slightly more playing time with AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton after the swap, recording four points and a +12 rating in 15 appearances.

The 6’0″, 201-lb lefty has long been a stable defensive presence at the minor-league level. While not a point producer by any stretch, he does have 44 of them with a career +45 rating in 233 AHL appearances since making his professional debut five years ago.

He joins the Clan as presumptuously one of the better shutdown defenders in the EIHL, which isn’t on par with Europe’s other top-division national leagues. The team’s two career games of NHL experience come from former Avalanche depth netminder Sami Aittokallio.

More minor moves from around the sport:

  • Former Flyers winger Wade Allison has signed a one-year deal with the Straubing Tigers of Germany’s DEL, according to a team release. Allison headed overseas last summer after being a Group VI unrestricted free agent and signed with Kazakhstan’s Barys Astana in the KHL, but he only had two goals in 12 games before being released in November. He hasn’t played since and will now stage a comeback with Straubing. The 27-year-old power forward had a 13-9–22 scoring line in 75 appearances for Philadelphia from 2020 to 2023.
  • While there was some speculation that University of St. Thomas product Liam Malmquist might be in line for an NHL deal coming out of college this offseason, that won’t be the case. The 24-year-old Minnesota native has signed in the Stars organization with ECHL Idaho, the club announced. Malmquist was the Tommies’ leading scorer in his senior season with 20 goals and 45 points in 38 outings. He scored his first two professional goals with AHL Manitoba in a five-game tryout to end last season.

DEL| ECHL| EIHL| Transactions Colton Poolman| Liam Malmquist| Wade Allison

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Flyers Trade Ivan Fedotov To Blue Jackets

September 14, 2025 at 8:21 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 18 Comments

The Blue Jackets announced they’ve acquired goaltender Ivan Fedotov from the Flyers in exchange for their sixth-round pick in the 2026 draft. No salary is retained in the deal, according to The Athletic’s Kevin Kurz.

Columbus will acquire Fedotov after his first NHL season came in well below expectations. The 28-year-old had a long road to NHL minutes – including a years-long contract saga that involved mandatory military service in Russia and IIHF sanctions imposed on him over conflicting contracts with Philadelphia and CSKA Moscow – but finally arrived in North America in April 2024. He made his first three NHL appearances for the Flyers before signing a two-year extension with a $3.275MM cap hit. That theoretically locked in their goaltending tandem with Samuel Ersson also in the picture through at least this upcoming season.

Yet Fedotov, a former KHL Goalie of the Year who was viewed as potentially one of the next wave of high-end Russian netminders, barely held onto an NHL job. The military service that caused him to miss the 2022-23 season entirely was a significant statistical turning point for the 6’7″, 214-lb goalie. He made 26 relief appearances last year, logging a .880 SV% and 3.15 GAA with a 6-13-4 record. His 33.3% quality start rate was quite subpar, especially considering he posted a save percentage below .850 in 10 of his 24 starts. With an expected GAA of 2.58, Fedotov also received the most manageable defensive workload of the Flyers’ three goalies, according to MoneyPuck.

Columbus was looking for an insurance option if starter Elvis Merzlikins’ struggles continue and youngster Jet Greaves’ first chance at a full-time NHL role doesn’t pan out. Fedotov is far from a sure thing either, but they’re betting on his overseas track record as evidence of a potential bounce-back. He boasts a .921 SV% and 2.22 GAA with 10 shutouts in 133 career KHL games and had a 2021-22 season for the record books. He led CSKA to a Gagarin Cup championship with a staggering .937 SV% and 1.85 GAA in 22 postseason games. He was named the league’s best netminder and a First Team All-Star.

The Jackets, who PuckPedia projects to have over $15.5MM in cap space, will have no problem taking on Fedotov’s full salary for a year before he becomes eligible for unrestricted free agency next summer. If he doesn’t make the team over Greaves and Merzlikins, his cap hit is high enough that he should clear waivers without issue and serve as a third-string option in AHL Cleveland. It’s worth noting that Greaves is no longer waiver-exempt. It’ll be an uphill battle for Fedotov to convince the Jackets to risk losing Greaves on waivers, so if he makes the team, it’ll likely mean a three-goalie rotation in Columbus.

Meanwhile, the Flyers clear up a bit of a logjam. With Fedotov in the picture, they had four goalies in the mix for NHL minutes. Ersson and Aleksei Kolosov were still under contract, and they also inked Daniel Vladar to a two-year, $6.7MM deal in free agency to challenge Ersson for the No. 1 job. In trading Fedotov, they clear out the worst-value contract of the four and, with Kolosov remaining waiver-exempt, could now return to a traditional two-goalie setup with only Ersson and Vladar on the opening night roster.

Despite carrying a cap hit above $3MM, Fedotov will only cost the Blue Jackets $775K in actual dollars. His base salary in 2025-26 was only the league minimum. His other compensation came via a $2.5MM signing bonus, which the Flyers have already paid.

Image courtesy of Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images.

Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet was first to report that Columbus was acquiring Fedotov. The Athletic’s Kevin Kurz was first to report the return.

Columbus Blue Jackets| Newsstand| Philadelphia Flyers| Transactions Ivan Fedotov

18 comments

Blackhawks Sign Spencer Knight To Three-Year Extension

September 13, 2025 at 11:01 am CDT | by Brian La Rose 5 Comments

When the Blackhawks acquired Spencer Knight from Florida as part of the Seth Jones deal prior to the trade deadline, they picked up who they feel can be their goalie of the future in the swap.  They’ve now made sure he’ll be in the fold for a while longer as the team announced that they’ve inked the netminder to a three-year extension worth $17.5MM, or $5.833MM per season.  GM Kyle Davidson released the following statement:

After joining the team in March, Spencer quickly cemented himself as a crucial piece of our future. A talented, young goaltender, he brings athleticism, sound positioning and a calm demeanor to his game, and we’re excited to watch Spencer continue to flourish in Chicago over the next four seasons.

Knight was a first-round pick by Florida back in 2019, going 13th overall.  He quickly made the jump to the pros in 2020 and was the full-time backup for the Panthers in 2021-22.  Soon after, Florida saw fit to give him a fairly significant bridge deal for a netminder with limited experience, signing him to a three-year, $13.5MM pact, the last season of which comes in 2025-26 with the extension running through 2028-29.

Florida didn’t get a great return on that deal at the beginning.  Knight stepped away from the team in February 2023 to enter the Player Assistance Program to treat his Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.  The following year (the first of the new contract) was spent entirely at the AHL level with the Panthers prioritizing getting Knight as much playing time as possible while Sergei Bobrovsky and Anthony Stolarz comprised Florida’s tandem.  He played relatively well with AHL Charlotte, posting a 2.41 GAA along with a .905 SV% in 45 games that season.

Stolarz moved on to Toronto last season, paving the way for Knight (now waiver-eligible) to return to the Panthers.  He played in 23 games with Florida in 2024-25, putting up a 2.40 GAA and a .907 SV%, both better than the NHL average.  That was good enough to make him the centerpiece of the return for Jones and Chicago gave Knight plenty of playing time down the stretch.  The 24-year-old suited up in 15 contests for the Blackhawks following the swap where he had a 3.18 GAA and a .893 SV% on a group that was prioritizing giving some of their prospects plenty of playing time late in the year.

This deal buys Chicago only one extra year of team control as he still had two RFA-eligible years remaining after this one.  PuckPedia relays (Twitter link) that the contract is front-loaded, paying $7.25MM in 2026-27, $5.75MM in 2027-28, and $4.5MM in 2028-29; he’ll also have a 15-team no-trade clause that year.

Knight will enter the season at the head of a goaltending trio that has quietly become one of the more expensive groups in the league.  Arvid Soderblom begins the first year of his new two-year, $5.5MM pact and will likely be the backup while veteran Laurent Brossoit, who didn’t play last season due to injury, has one year left on his agreement at $3.3MM.

But while this contract cements Knight as the starter for a little while longer, it stops short of handing him the job for the long haul.  That should prove appealing for their prospects as Drew Commesso and Adam Gajan were both second-round picks that Chicago hopes can be part of the future plans as well.  Commesso had a solid year with AHL Rockford in 2024-25 while making his NHL debut while Gajan struggled in his first taste of college action and is probably a couple of years away from turning pro.  If one of them breaks through and seriously pushes for the starting job, Chicago can still pivot and go in that direction while if not, they’ll get the next few years to see if Knight is the right fit for the job for the long haul.

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman was the first to report that Chicago was signing Knight to an extension.  Bleacher Report’s Frank Seravalli was the first to report the terms.

Photo courtesy of Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images.

Chicago Blackhawks| Newsstand| Transactions Spencer Knight

5 comments

Brad Hunt Signs In Finland

September 12, 2025 at 7:00 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

Friday: Hunt has indeed signed with Vaasan Sport with the team announcing that he has signed a one-year contract.

Monday: Longtime pro defenseman Brad Hunt is expected to take his career overseas for the first time next season. He is set to sign with Vaasan Sport of Finland’s Liiga, per Tony Androckitis of Inside AHL Hockey. Hunt recently concluded his 14th season in the North American pros. His only rich experience with playing in Europe came during the spring of 2023, when he joined Team Canada for the World Championships, which were played in Latvia that year.

Hunt, 37, has already built up a career worth being proud of. He was originally overlooked in the NHL Draft – the consequence of being a 5-foot-9 defenseman – but earned a pro contract after four strong years at Bemidji State University. Hunt made his AHL debut in 2012 and quickly looked the part of a strong play-driver.

He played his way into three NHL appearances with the Edmonton Oilers in 2013-14, coupled with a breakout performance in the AHL that saw him post 50 points in 66 games. Hunt continued that pace – great AHL scoring mixed in with a handful of NHL starts – through the 2016-17 season.

Hunt seemed doomed to the role of fringe-NHL defenseman until 2017-18, when the Vegas Golden Knights operated with him on the NHL roster for the whole season. Hunt stepped into 45 games and scored 18 points that year, enough to earn him a solid NHL role for the next four seasons, even through moves to the Minnesota Wild and Vancouver Canucks.

He didn’t return to the AHL until the 2022-23 season, when he donned the captaincy for the Colorado Eagles and scored 21 points in 24 games. Hunt served an additional year as the Eagles’ captain before moving to the Hershey Bears last season. He scored just 19 points in 41 games with Hershey last year, though he managed a lofty 49 points in 70 games in the 2023-24 season.

Hunt now sits with 86 points in 288 games, and 10 seasons, in the NHL and 298 points in 422 games, and nine seasons, in the AHL. He will now take that deep resume to one of Finland’s emerging clubs. Vaasan finished last season ranked 11th out of the Liiga’s 16 teams. They struggled to consistently drive up the scoring, which is something that the puck-moving Hunt should be able to directly address.

Liiga| Transactions Brad Hunt

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Pittsburgh Penguins Sign Marc-Andre Fleury To PTO

September 12, 2025 at 10:04 am CDT | by Ethan Hetu 29 Comments

The Flower is back where it all began. The Pittsburgh Penguins have announced that the club’s legendary netminder Marc-Andre Fleury has signed a PTO with the team and will appear in parts of the team’s September 27th exhibition game against the Columbus Blue Jackets.

It is important to make clear that it does not appear that this time that Fleury is set to go back on his retirement announcement from earlier this year and attempt to play one final season in the NHL. Instead, this PTO signing, according to the Penguins, is a way for Fleury to have a “full-circle” moment and celebrate his retirement and his career with the franchise he won three Stanley Cups with. In the team’s official announcement of the signing, general manager Kyle Dubas said:

The entire Penguins organization is honored to welcome Marc-Andre Fleury back to the ice in Pittsburgh. This past year everyone witnessed how beloved and respected Marc is in the game of hockey, but the adoration goes beyond his accolades and career. Marc means so much to our team, our fans and the City of Pittsburgh because of the person he is and the example he set. The Penguins feel he and his family are most-deserving of this opportunity to celebrate this full-circle moment back where it all started in front of the black and gold faithful.

So it appears one should not expect Fleury to be competing with Tristan Jarry, Joel Blomqvist, and Arturs Silovs for a spot on the club’s season-opening roster. Penguins fans nonetheless have reason to be excited by this transaction, even if it is more ceremonial in nature. Fleury, beloved by Penguins fans and hockey fans alike, will now be able to play for the club one last time.

Fleury, who is widely expected to be elected into the Hockey Hall of Fame at some point down the line, is the Penguins’ all-time leader in wins, starts, and goals-against-average. (minimum 50 starts) He was drafted number-one overall by the club at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft, and led the team to victory in the 2009 Stanley Cup Final against the Detroit Red Wings. He split time with Matt Murray in both 2016 and 2017 when the franchise won two additional Stanley Cups, and it was Murray’s presence that led to Fleury’s exit from Pittsburgh via selection in the expansion draft by the Vegas Golden Knights.

Now, with this PTO signed, Fleury will return to Pittsburgh and, even if just for a preseason game, suit up for the Penguins one last time before hanging up his skates for good.

Newsstand| Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Marc-Andre Fleury

29 comments

Penguins Sign Brett Murray To PTO

September 12, 2025 at 9:40 am CDT | by Ethan Hetu 2 Comments

The Pittsburgh Penguins have signed their first PTO of the preseason, adding winger Brett Murray to their organization on a tryout basis, according to insider Frank Seravalli. Murray played 2024-25 on a one-year, two-way contract that was worth $775k at the NHL level and $350k at the AHL level.

Out of the four players who have signed a PTO this morning (Murray, Andrej Sustr, Daniel Walcott, and Josh Lopina) it is Murray who has most recently played in NHL games. The 27-year-old skated in three games for the Buffalo Sabres in 2024-25, and two for the club in 2023-24. Murray has been with the Sabres organization since they selected him in the fourth round, 99th overall, at the 2016 Entry Draft.

Murray took a somewhat unconventional path to professional hockey, playing parts of two college hockey seasons with Penn State before returning to his junior club, the USHL’s Youngstown Phantoms, after his sophomore campaign in State College. Murray never quite found his groove with the Nittany Lions, but he led the USHL in goals with the Phantoms, a performance that earned him a one-year AHL contract with the Rochester Americans in advance of the 2019-20 campaign.

The signing of Murray immediately paid dividends for the Americans, as he had a solid 24-point rookie campaign that year, and just one year later, registered 20 points in 27 games whilst earning his first NHL call-up. Murray developed into one of the Americans’ more reliable scorers, and most recently registered a career-best 27 goals and 49 points across 66 games in 2024-25.

Despite his quality production across more than a half-decade in Western New York, the Sabres informed Murray that they would not be offering him a contract to remain with the team for 2025-26. Murray’s 69 games played across the NHL and AHL last season put him to a career total of 351 pro games across both leagues. As a result, Murray, who began last season with 282 pro games, is now a full-status veteran player within the purview of the AHL’s development rule.

The AHL’s development rule places a strict limit on the number of players who are not considered “development players” that a team can dress for any given game. The rule has been somewhat controversial for the league’s veteran players, and has been cited by reporters covering the AHL as a reason for many quality AHL players having trouble keeping a spot in the league. Inside AHL Hockey’s Tony Androckitis quoted a veteran free agent one year ago who named the rule as a major reason as to why he could not remain with his former AHL club.

With that in mind, it is possible that Murray’s status as a “veteran” player played a role in his exit from Rochester after a strong offensive season with the club. In Pittsburgh, Murray will have an opportunity to factor into the team’s roster-building considerations.

While the Penguins appear set to focus on more homegrown youth this upcoming season, it remains possible that Murray has a strong preseason and earns a spot with the Wilkes-Barre Scranton Penguins. Murray’s 49 points last season would have tied him for second in scoring on the 2024-25 edition of the AHL Penguins, and with leading scorer Ville Koivunen a real candidate to make it to the NHL on a full-time basis, its possible the team could look to Murray to give them some more offensive firepower.

Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Brett Murray

2 comments

Rangers Sign Andrej Sustr To PTO

September 12, 2025 at 8:40 am CDT | by Ethan Hetu Leave a Comment

The New York Rangers have signed veteran defenseman Andrej Sustr to a PTO, according to insider Frank Seravalli. The 6’7 right-shot blueliner is a veteran of 361 NHL games, although he has not dressed for a game in the world’s top league since the 2021-22 campaign.

Sustr, now 34 years old, has spent the last two seasons of his career playing overseas, splitting time across three teams and three different leagues. He began 2024-25 with HC Dynamo Pardubice in his native Czechia, but transferred to Liiga’s Tappara Tampere in advance of their first-round Champions Hockey League matchup against Färjestad BK. With Tappara, Sustr registered 12 points in 38 games and averaged a shade over 16 minutes of ice time per game, usage that was good for a number-six role on the team.

In 2023-24, his first season back in the European pro circuit, Sustr played for Cologne in the German DEL, scoring 20 points in 44 games while playing in a top-pairing role. Sustr most recently played in North America in 2022-23, as a member of both the Minnesota Wild and Anaheim Ducks organizations. Sustr skated in 51 games and scored 14 points.

The most prominent NHL stretch of Sustr’s career came between 2013-14 and 2017-18, when he was a regular defenseman for the Tampa Bay Lightning. In Tampa, Sustr played a steady role, holding onto an NHL job for four consecutive full seasons without playing in an AHL game. The highlight of Sustr’s career came during that stretch – when he played in all 26 of the Lightning’s playoff games on their run to the 2015 Stanley Cup Final.

Now back in North America, this PTO gives Sustr a chance to enter the competition for a roster spot in New York. Although Sustr’s imposing size and playoff experience (albeit decade-old playoff experience at this point) allow him to offer something different to Rangers management compared to other defensemen on the roster bubble, such as young puck mover Scott Morrow. But with that said, it’s difficult to imagine Sustr grabbing a hold of a spot at this time. The right side of the Rangers’ defense is well-stocked with quality players, and one of William Borgen or Braden Schneider (who make $4.1MM and $2.2MM AAV, respectively) will be overwhelmingly likely to occupy the third-pairing right-side lineup slot.

The competition for the Rangers’ seventh-defenseman role looks a bit more wide-open, but Sustr will nonetheless have to contend with players Rangers executives (if not the Rangers coaching staff, which was overhauled this summer) are more familiar with. Veterans Casey Fitzgerald and Connor Mackey, and youngsters Matthew Robertson and Morrow appear to be the primary competition for that spot. Fitzgerald, Mackey, and Robertson (but not Morrow) are all subject to waivers should the team seek to assign them to its AHL affiliate, the Hartford Wolf Pack.

While it is somewhat difficult to imagine Sustr turning this PTO into an NHL role with the Rangers, the signing is not without its uses. His NHL experience allows him to qualify as a veteran player for the purposes of preseason exhibition games, meaning the Rangers will have additional flexibility to rest other veterans with Sustr occupying a lineup spot. And regardless of his ultimate chances of making the team, Sustr provides valuable veteran competition for the club’s young defensemen as they seek to earn an opening-night roster spot.

New York Rangers| Transactions Andrej Sustr

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Buffalo Sabres Sign Alexandar Georgiev

September 11, 2025 at 6:05 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 18 Comments

The Buffalo Sabres have added a new goalie to their roster. The club announced tonight that they have signed netminder Alexandar Georgiev to a one-year, one-way $825k contract.

Georgiev, who is repped by Dan Milstein of Gold Star Hockey, had lingered on the free agent market after a sub-par 2024-25 season. It was just a few years ago that Georgiev was considered one of the NHL’s more promising young goalies. In 2022-23, his first season as the number-one for the Colorado Avalanche, Georgiev went 40-16-6 with a .919 save percentage, landing a seventh-place finish in Vezina Trophy voting. The next season, Georgiev started 62 games for the Avalanche and represented the team at the 2024 NHL All-Star Game. But despite that honor, some cracks were beginning to show in Georgiev’s performance, as his save percentage declined to .898.

Georgiev struggled mightily to begin 2024-25, and through 18 games, he had a .874 save percentage. The Avalanche decided to move on from Georgiev in December of last year, dealing him to the San Jose Sharks as part of a larger trade that put Mackenzie Blackwood in position to take up a role as the new number-one goalie in Colorado.

In San Jose, Georgiev failed to find his form. He played in 31 games for the Sharks and went 7-19-4, posting an .875 save percentage while playing behind an admittedly poor defensive group. After the season, the Sharks informed Georgiev that he was not in their plans moving forward. After the Sharks’ final game of 2024-25, the netminder told the media, including Sharks Hockey Digest’s Max Miller, that he would not be offered an extension to remain with the club.

By signing with the Sabres, Georgiev has given himself a fresh opportunity to re-establish himself as an NHL goalie. The Sabres are not the most obvious fit for Georgiev – they already have Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen entrenched as a starter, and two other netminders with NHL experience set to compete for the role behind him. Top prospect Devon Levi appeared set to battle with Alex Lyon for the right to be Luukkonen’s backup, and now it appears a third name, Georgiev, has entered the mix for that role.

The Sabres signed Lyon to a two-year, $1.5MM AAV contract this summer, and the cap hit of that deal indicates that he enters training camp as the favorite for the spot behind Luukkonen. But this addition of Georgiev adds a new, qualified veteran for the Sabres to consider. With Georgiev playing to re-establish his place as an NHL netminder, Levi fighting to retain his status as one of the game’s top goalie prospects, and Lyon looking to play a third consecutive season entirely in the NHL, the battle for the number-two goalie spot in Buffalo looks set to be one of the more intriguing roster situations to watch in this upcoming preseason.

Buffalo Sabres| Transactions Alexandar Georgiev

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