BYU has signed men's basketball coach Kevin Young to a long-term contract extension following the program's first run to the NCAA Tournament's Sweet 16 in 14 years. Terms of the deal announced Thursday were not released, with the school saying only that the contract would keep Young in Provo for the “foreseeable future.” “My family and I have loved our first year at BYU, being surrounded by great people, at a great university with shared values,” Young said in a statement.
The Pittsburgh Penguins' New Coach Has A Tall Task With This Mushy-Middle Club
New Pittsburgh Penguins coach Dan Muse has a mountainous task ahead of him.
Muse, who was most recently an assistant with the New York Rangers, has to balance the needs of the here and now with the long-term needs of the Penguins. We’re not sure that a veteran coach, let alone a first-timer like Muse, will be up to that challenge.
“From his success in developing college and junior players, to his impactful work with veteran players during his time in the NHL, Dan has shown a proven ability to connect with players at all stages of their careers and help them to reach their potential,” Penguins GM Kyle Dubas said in the announcement.
There’s no question Muse has a well-balanced resume. The 42-year-old was an assistant for the 2013 NCAA-champion Yale Bulldogs, and he led Chicago of the USHL to the Clark Cup in 2017 before becoming an NHL assistant, first with the Nashville Predators from 2017 to 2020, then with the Rangers. So he’s acutely aware of the needs of veteran NHL teams, and he’s also cognizant of turning young players into pros.
The problem with the Penguins is they’re buried in the mushy middle of the NHL, not good enough to be a playoff team and not bad enough to land elite players through the draft.
They’ve got an aged core that includes stars Sidney Crosby, Kris Letang, Evgeni Malkin and Erik Karlsson, and they’ve got young players on the way who are intent on cracking the NHL lineup next fall, such as Rutger McGroarty. To say they’re selling a mixed message to their fan base is a serious understatement.
The Penguins could use more change this off-season, with goaltending being arguably a priority.
Another question mark is the status of Karlsson, who hasn’t worked out to expectations since he arrived in Pittsburgh in 2023. Karlsson has a full no-movement clause in the remaining two years of his expensive contract, but at 35 years old, he came to the Pens intent on competing for a Stanley Cup, and barring some miraculous turnabout, that isn’t going to happen. So if Dubas can find a home for Karlsson somewhere else, he’d be a fool not to move him.
That brings the conversation back to Muse. By the time the 2025-26 season arrives, the Penguins’ lineup could look different than it looks right now. But Crosby, Malkin and Letang – all of who have their own no-movement clauses – are still likely to be with the Pens next fall.
So what is Muse being asked to do here – win for the stars who only have a couple of seasons left in their careers, or take his lumps in the standings and try to build a new culture of winning for a new generation of players?
To be sure, there’s no uniform philosophy for the lineup, and that could prove to be a significant problem. It doesn’t matter who is behind Pittsburgh’s bench – the Pens are going to have a very tough go of it.
The Penguins are strung between two competitive poles, and Muse has to find a balance between competing right away and being a consistent winner in the long haul. His job could shepherd the Pens into a new golden generation – or it could result in more of the same disappointment.
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3 Blackhawks Who Will Thrive Under Jeff Blashill
The Chicago Blackhawks hired Jeff Blashill with the hope that his experience at different levels will allow him to get them going in the right direction. His time spent with great veterans and young players alike is seemingly perfect for this organization.
A lot of the players already on the team need some help around them to take their game to another level. When that happens, winning will follow them on a more consistent basis.
Three players, in particular, will take big steps under Blashill as he will set the tone for the new era.
Connor Bedard, F
The Chicago Blackhawks have their entire future being built around Connor Bedard. The first overall pick in the 2023 NHL Draft has been great as a teenager in the NHL, but now he will be expected to take a big step as a point-producing forward.
Under Jeff Blashill, Bedard will be the focal point of the team’s offense. He has worked with superstar forwards like Henrik Zetterberg, Pavel Datsyuk, Dylan Larkin, Steven Stamkos, Nikita Kucherov, and Brayden Point in the past. That knowledge may help him get Bedard to another tier.
Part of Blashill’s plan has to be figuring out what position Bedard will stick at in the long term. Is he a center or a winger? Once that is squared away, Bedard should be able to focus his game differently. Either way, expect him to become even more of an impact player under his new coach’s watch.
“Connor’s gonna get to another level,” Blashill said when he was first asked about Bedard. Another level means turning into one of the great offensive players in the NHL right now. "Like other superstars in this league, he has the drive, the want, to be the very, very best he can be."
Blashill already has a connection starting with Connor Bedard, which is important. He didn't take long to learn as much as he could about his young star. As Blashill is around Bedard's game more going forward, these mindsets will lead to success.
Alex Vlasic, D
Alex Vlasic had moments in 2024-25 where he was the best defenseman on the team. As Seth Jones was sent away and more young players started to come along, the pressure wasn’t as heavy on Vlasic. This was not Vlasic’s rookie year, but it was his big breakout that allowed him to stay in the NHL for the entire season.
Vlasic won a Gold Medal with Team USA this spring at the World Championships. In the role of a defensive defenseman there, his confidence in his own end has to be as high as it ever has.
A coach like Blashill will help young Vlasic go from being a solid player to a borderline star. In his new coach’s system and with some power play time, Vlasic may get himself into consideration for the Olympics in Milan 2026.
Expect Blashill to help him reach that potential by having him push the puck up the ice to an improved group of forwards while staying committed to his skills in his end.
“The scouts here have done an excellent job," Blashill said of the organization's recent success in acquiring talent. "We have a number of great young players. We have an opportunity to have depth at every position and potential superstars at every position, and that’s very unique in this league."
Vlasic is one of the young players who create the depth on defense that Blashill is referring to. With other new players ready to patrol the blue line for this team, like Sam Rinzel and Artyom Levshunov, Vlasic will be one of the guys relied on to lead that depth.
Frank Nazar, F
The Chicago Blackhawks called Frank Nazar up from the AHL's Rockford IceHogs in the middle of the 2024-25 season, and he never went back down. The offense he created, his ability on the penalty kill, and the mature game he brought to the team allowed him to stick around.
Nazar’s offense started to show towards the end of the NHL regular season. He kept it going in the IIHF World Championships with Team USA. He co-led this Gold Medal-winning team in scoring.
Like Vlasic, Nazar will benefit from this experience with Jeff Blashill leading the way. The new head coach will give young Nazar a lot of ice time in a top-six role, as long as he continues to produce and play well in all three zones.
In this new Blackhawks era led by Blashill, who will surely cater to the young guys, Nazar will thrive with the expectations placed on him. Alongside some of the other young talent on the team, great development is coming up.
"We want to score a lot and give up a little," was a half-joking answer given by Blashill when asked about his philosophy. As a head coach, he's the kind of guy who wants his most talented offensive players to be creative while respecting the defensive side of the puck. These three guys will be pillars in that quest.
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Nate Schmidt collecting points in bunches has been recurring theme during Stanley Cup Playoffs
The Florida Panthers have been receiving steady contributions from their blueline during the playoffs.
Florida’s defensemen have accounted for 15 goals and 41 points through 18 postseason games.
Now it’s not terribly surprising to see players like Aaron Ekblad to have 11 points or Seth Jones to have three goals, but the resurgence of defenseman Nate Schmidt has been a pleasant surprise.
In Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final against the Edmonton Oilers on Wednesday night, Schmidt had a gorgeous assist on a first period power play goal by Brad Marchand.
It was Schmidt’s first point in seven games for Florida.
He wasn’t done there, picking up another primary assist on Sam Bennett’s second goal of the game early in the second period.
Schmidt is now up to three goals and nine points during the postseason, but we have to wonder if his Game 1 helpers will spark some additional offensive production.
The veteran blueliner has seen his points come in bunches during the playoffs.
He scored three goals in a two-game span against the Tampa Bay Lightning in the first round, then he logged four assists in five games during round two against the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Those were all his postseason points prior to his two-assist outing in Edmonton, which was also Schmidt’s third multi-point game of the playoffs.
Will this be the start of another bust of offense from Schmidt?
The timing would be great for Florida, who find themselves down 0-1 in the series after dropping Game 1 in overtime.
Game 2 is set for Friday night at Rogers Place.
Considering the way his postseason has gone, placing a couple bucks on a Schmidt anytime point may be worth contemplating.
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Photo caption: Apr 22, 2025; Tampa, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers defenseman Nate Schmidt (88) is congratulated after he scored a goal against the Tampa Bay Lightning during the third period in game one of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Amalie Arena. (Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images)
Pope Leo XIV receives Villanova hat during meeting, reps alma mater at Vatican
Flyers, Rangers Can Resolve Big Contract Issues with K'Andre Miller Trade
The Philadelphia Flyers and New York Rangers are currently dealing with the same problem, and a K'Andre Miller trade might be the easiest way to resolve the issue.
Miller, 25, is a pending restricted free agent whose name has been dangled in trade rumors for a long time now, dating back as far as last season.
According to Cam Robinson of EliteProspects, the Rangers are letting other NHL teams know that Miller is available via trade at this week's scouting combine ahead of the 2025 NHL Draft.
As a restricted free agent, of course, the Flyers and other teams can simply bypass a Miller trade altogether and instead opt to sign the former first-round pick to an offer sheet when free agency opens on July 1.
At the same time, if the Flyers wanted to guarantee Miller's signature, they can beat other teams to the punch with a trade. In that case, they would have to weigh their trade offer against the compensation they would pay the Rangers from an offer sheet, which depends on Miller's salary from the offer sheet.
The Flyers have a similar situation growing in their hands, as an RFA defenseman of their own, Cam York, is in need of a new contract.
The issue is that, according to Anthony Di Marco of Daily Faceoff, York's camp and the Flyers have yet to make meaningful progress on a contract extension.
One thing the Flyers and Rangers can offer each other that few other teams can is a direct swap of their two disgruntled defenders, who come with different sizes and skillsets.
York, 24, was drafted 14th overall by the Flyers in the 2019 NHL Draft with the intention of developing him into a premier two-way defenseman with high-end offensive chops. To this point, though, York's best season has seen him produce 10 goals and 30 points while operating primarily as a safety valve for the buccaneering Travis Sanheim, who's scored 18 goals and 74 points over the last two seasons.
Miller, on the other hand, already has a 40-point season under his belt, scoring nine goals and 43 points in the 2022-23 season. At 6-foot-5, Miller is much larger than York and would be a much better alternative to a bottom-pairing player with little scoring upside like Nicolas Hague.
The former 22nd overall pick has played his best hockey alongside Adam Fox, a heady, highly intelligent puck-mover with an elite offensive skillset.
So, while the Flyers don't have an Adam Fox on their team, it's possible Miller could unlock a player like Jamie Drysdale.
Among all defense pairings that played 300 minutes together, Miller and Fox led the NHL with an expected goals percentage of 66.7%. In terms of generating offense, the duo led the league with 4.11 expected goals for per 60 minutes, per MoneyPuck.
If you're the Flyers, and you consider how average the team has been in the scoring department, trading Miller has to be intriguing, to say the least.
Another thing to consider: in 2024-25, the Flyers were 30th in the league in scoring from defensemen with just 132 points coming from the blueline. Only San Jose and Boston were worse. Just 25.1% of the Flyers' assists came from defensemen this season, which was 31st in the NHL ahead of only Dallas.
With John Tortorella and Brad Shaw out of town, and with Rick Tocchet building an entirely new coaching staff, there are no guarantees York will continue to insulate Sanheim on a regular basis.
That change alone could further drive Sanheim's scoring down and force the Flyers to deploy a more traditional partnership between left- and right-shot defenders. And Miller's size and skill are things the Flyers don't have on their defense aside from Sanheim.
If management insists on having a hulking cast of rearguards for future playoff runs, Miller is a great place to start if changes are made.
A trade between division rivals is hard to come by these days, but perhaps the Flyers and Rangers could find some motivation to find an agreement ahead of the 2025 NHL Draft later this month.
It's worth noting, too, that Miller and Flyers trade target Marco Rossi share an agent in Ian Pulver. It would be worth Philadelphia's while to consider killing two birds with one stone and address two big roster holes before free agency even opens.
Does Ducks Young Star Forward Make Sense As A Trade Target For Sabres?
As one of the most disappointing teams in the NHL for many seasons now, the Buffalo Sabres need to make extensive roster changes this summer. And an intriguing target for the Sabres could be an Anaheim Ducks youngster in need of a change of employer -- left winger Trevor Zegras.
The 24-year Zegras has stuggled to live up to expectations in Anaheim since signing a three-year contract extension in 2023 that pays him an average annual value of $5.75-million. Zegras posted two consecutive seasons of 23 goals and at least 61 points from 2021-23, but injuries limited him to only 31 games in 2023-24 (when he posted only six goals and 15 points), and last season, he generated only 12 goals and 31 points in 54 games.
But now that he's entering a contract year, Zegras will have all the motivation in the world to rebound and prove himself at least worthy of the same salary moving forward. And that's where the Sabres should be looking to pounce. Buffalo can offer Zegras a golden opportunity to rebound, and given that Zegras doesn't have any no-move or no-trade protection in his current deal, he wouldn't have any say in where the Ducks deal him.
Zegras hasn't become an ineffective NHLer because his skills have suddenly left him. But like more than a few young players, a change of teams could be just the thing he needs to revitalize his career. And while the Sabres wouldn't get Zegras on the cheap in any trade, the risk-reward involved in acquiring him would work in Buffalo's favor. And the Sabres have long been rumored to be interested in landing Zegras.
Indeed, if Buffalo trades for Zegras and he doesn't pan out, they're under no contractual obligation to him beyond the coming season. He's going to be an RFA at the end of next year, so he's still under team control for some time to come. And if things go really bad for him, the Sabres could look to deal him at next year's trade deadline.
Zegras wouldn't be the first youngster to bounce around early in his playing days, but we're getting too far ahead of ourselves. The main reason Buffalo needs to explore acquiring him in a trade is because there's still plenty of time for him to salvage a reputation as someone who can be a key long-term component on a team with legitimate playoff aspirations.
We can debate who the Sabres would have to trade to land Zegras in a deal, but some combination of young player and draft pick would probably accomplish the goal of satisfying Ducks Gm Pat Verbeek's asking price. And really, the goal for Verbeek should be to get out from under the final year of Zegras' contract. They can't expect Buffalo to trade them an elite player, because they're not necessarily getting one back in Zegras.
In any case, Sabres GM Kevyn Adams needs to be a busy guy on the trade and free-agent front this summer, and pinpointing players who are achievable targets should put Zegras on their radar. He may no longer be the surefire difference-maker many believed he'd be when he had his breakout seasons, but Zegras still has enough upside to merit the investment Buffalo would have to make to make him a Sabre.
It's a matter of making a deal that limits the risk for Buffalo and maximizes the opportunity for a player who has already had a decent deal of success. If Adams can do that and Zegras becomes a player the Sabres can build with, the price Buffalo pays to acquire him will be well worth it.
EA SPORTS NHL 25 Predicts Edmonton Oilers To Win In Stanley Cup Final Simulation
The Edmonton Oilers defeated the Florida Panthers in seven games in EA SPORTS NHL's simulation of the Stanley Cup Finals in NHL 25.
The Oilers fell down 3-1 in the series after dropping games one, three and four before roaring back to win games five, six and seven by one goal, including a game five overtime win.
Leon Draisaitl took home the Conn Smythe Trophy in the simulation.
The #NHL25 simulation predicts Oilers in 7 — now it's time to finish the job and:
— EA SPORTS NHL (@EASPORTSNHL) June 5, 2025
"DIG IN!!!!!!!!!!" 🗣️🏆🇨🇦 pic.twitter.com/qxrP3xBq28
Prior to round one EA SPORTS NHL's simulation predicted the Toronto Maple Leafs to win the Stanley Cup.
We will see which simulation is more accurate in a few weeks.
For more NHL 25 news make sure you bookmark The Hockey News Gaming Site or follow our Google News Feed.
Photo Credit: EA SPORTS NHL
Knicks made offer for Suns star Kevin Durant at last season's NBA trade deadline: report
The Knicks' 2024-25 season ultimately ended in disappointment, with a six-game series loss to the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference Finals, but the team also won 51 games and proved to be a legit championship contender.
And it sounds like they nearly added another superstar in the process.
According to ESPN's Shams Charania, the Knicks made an offer to the Phoenix Suns to try to acquireKevin Durantat the trade deadline.
"On Kevin Durant, I will say this: There was some mutual interest between Kevin Durant and the Knicks at the trade deadline. The Knicks made an offer for Kevin Durant at the NBA trade deadline," Charania said on Thursday.
SNY NBA Insider Ian Begley recently noted that he believes it’s unlikely that the Knicks would ultimately pull the trigger on a trade for Durant this offseason.
Durant, a 15-time All-Star, averaged 26.6 points, 6.0 rebounds, and 4.2 assists with the Suns in 62 games last season, before an ankle injury ended his season.
In 17 career seasons, Durant has averaged 27.2 points, 7.0 rebounds, and 4.4 assists while shooting 39.0 percent from three-point range. A four-time scoring champion, Durant is eighth on the all-time scoring list with 30,571 career points.
Panthers rally around Tomas Nosek after overtime penalty led to Game 1 loss
It was a rough ending to Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final for the Florida Panthers.
As the first overtime session was winding down, Panthers forward Tomas Nosek was called for delay of game after shooting the puck over the glass from inside Florida’s defensive zone.
Now, there may have been contact with the stick of Oilers forward Vasily Podkolzin, who was trying to deflect the puck as Nosek shot it, but nevertheless, the penalty was called and Nosek was sent off.
A few moments later, Edmonton’s Leon Draisaitl sent the Oilers faithful into a frenzy when he scored the game-winning overtime goal.
The situation is about as rough as you can get for an athlete, and nobody in the building probably felt worse than Nosek.
That’s where his teammates come into play.
Florida is known throughout the league as having one of the best, tightknit locker rooms, full of genuinely good men with exceptional work ethics.
“That stuff happens in the game of hockey, it’s a bad break,” said Panthers forward Brad Marchand. “He’s been a great player for us all year, all playoffs, so we have his back with that one.”
While the penalty proved to be costly for Florida, they full expect the Stanley Cup Final to be a long series.
As such, there will likely be situations where Nosek will have to show up and provide the kind of steady, reliable play that he’s been bringing all season.
After Game 1, Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice explained that at times like this, you don’t let your player wallow in sorrow or self-pity. You surround them with love and find ways to lift them up.
“You just remind him after the game of being down 0-2 to Toronto and that line came in and changed everything for us, and how we're not here without Thomas Nosek,” Maurice said. “It’s a tough break, so we just make sure he doesn't get eat alone tonight. He's got lots of people sitting at his table and reminding him how good he's been to us.”
Indeed, Nosek played in 59 regular season games for Florida, and in addition to adding nine points and a plus-four rating while primarily centering the fourth line and playing regular minutes on the penalty kill, he was also one of the best even strength defenders on the team.
That has remained true during the playoffs, where he’s added three assists and a plus-five rating in 11 postseason games so far.
Wednesday night was likely not the best for Nosek, but he’ll get plenty of positivity and reminders of all he’s done well for the team in the time they’re together before Game 2 arrives.
“It's going to be a tough one,” Maurice said. “He's going to eat that one for a day, but, from his penalty kill to, again, that line really changed the flow of that Toronto series, (so we’ll) just remind him about that a whole bunch of times before the puck drops.”
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Photo caption: Feb 25, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Florida Panthers left wing Tomas Nosek (92) awaits the face-off against the Nashville Predators during the second period at Bridgestone Arena. (Steve Roberts-Imagn Images)
Vancouver Canucks' Conor Garland Is 'Really Excited' About New Coach Adam Foote
It’s no secret that the Vancouver Canucks’ 2024-25 season was tumultuous and disappointing. Entering a new chapter after Rick Tocchet’s departure, stability and calm should be the team’s watchwords.
To that end, the Canucks elected to promote assistant coach Adam Foote to take Tocchet’s place. That sits well with right winger Conor Garland.
“I’m really excited about it,” Garland said last week, shortly after earning gold with Team USA at the 2025 World Championship. “I loved having him as an assistant. It's obviously going to be a little different now. I’m assuming as the head, we won’t be able to talk and hang out as much at the rink. But he was a lot of fun, and he's a very smart guy.”
When former Canucks bench boss Bruce Boudreau guested on The Hockey News’ Big Show earlier this week, he warned that the transition from fun-loving assistant to hard-nosed head man can be tough.
“The head coach is like the father, the disciplinarian,” Boudreau said. “The assistant coach is the guy that the players all come to and ask questions… Now, all of a sudden, you change the role. You’ve got to be the a------, and you’ve got to be the guy that comes down with the hammer.”
Boudreau was a head man for almost his entire coaching career, which spans more than three decades. While it’s not especially common to see assistants step into head jobs on the same NHL team, Foote is following three others who have recently made the same jump in the Pacific Division: Ryan Huska in Calgary, Jim Hiller in Los Angeles and Ryan Warsofsky in San Jose.
While Garland is disappointed that Foote’s new position will cut into their 1-on-1 time, he is confident in his new coach’s abilities.
“When I get older, I’d love to coach,” Garland said. “A lot of the stuff he’d say, I’d make mental notes of – the techniques he talks about and how to win a playoff series, and what plays are important. I think he is one of the smarter guys when it comes to defensive hockey and winning games.”
The stats seem to bear that out.
During Boudreau’s 103 games in Vancouver, the Canucks logged an expected goals share of 47.83 percent at 5-on-5, according to naturalstattrick.com. In 200 games under Tocchet and Foote, they improved to 50.58 percent.
Over the same time frames, Boudreau’s penalty kill ranked 31st with a success rate of 73.7 percent. Under Tocchet and Foote, the Canucks improved to 80.3 percent over the full 200 games and 82.6 percent in 2024-25 – third-best in the NHL.
One of the key cogs in that penalty-killing machine was veteran defenseman Derek Forbort. A new arrival last season on a one-year deal at a $1.5-million cap hit, the 33-year-old elected to bypass free agency and return to Vancouver. On Tuesday, he signed a new one-year contract worth $2 million.
As someone who has only known the Canucks through their challenging ’24-25 season, Forbort’s decision to return can be seen as a vote of confidence for Foote, who he worked with closely as part of the blueline.
It’s also one UFA back in the fold in Vancouver. It’s unclear whether forwards Pius Suter or Brock Boeser will follow suit or if they’ll test the open market on July 1.
Of course, Canucks GM Patrik Allvin and hockey ops president Jim Rutherford must scrutinize each one of their roster decisions in terms of how it will impact Quinn Hughes’ desire to stay with the Canucks beyond the two-year term remaining on his contract.
“If you’re going to trade Quinn Hughes, you’d better get a whole team back,” Boudreau said. “He’s that good.”
Meanwhile, Foote filled out his coaching staff.
He replaced himself as Vancouver’s defensive assistant with Kevin Dean – another bruising defenseman in his playing days, who is of similar vintage.
As a player, Dean won the Stanley Cup as a rookie with the New Jersey Devils in 1995. Recently an assistant with the Boston Bruins and Chicago Blackhawks, he coached Forbort in Boston and just worked with Garland as part of Warsofsky’s U.S. staff at worlds.
Brett McLean and Scott Young also became assistant coaches.
McLean coached AHL’s Iowa Wild for the past two seasons and was an assistant coach on Minnesota before that. He played 385 career NHL games and recorded 162 points.
Young was the Canucks’ director of player personnel for the past three seasons and was the Pittsburgh Penguins’ director of player development for five years beforehand. He won the Stanley Cup with the Penguins in 1991 and the Colorado Avalanche in 1996 during his 1,181-game career.
Canucks assistant Yogi Svejkovsky, who handled the special teams duties in Vancouver last season, joined Tocchet in Philadelphia. Defensive development coach Sergei Gonchar and video coach Dylan Crawford also won’t return to the Canucks next season, but Henrik and Daniel Sedin will remain player development coaches, with Marko Torenius keeping the goalie coach role.
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Swedish D-Man Returns Home On Long-Term Contract
Swedish defenseman Gustav Lindström, 26, has signed a five-year contract with Djurgården, the Stockholm-based SHL club announced on Thursday.
“I’m so incredibly happy and proud to have signed for Djurgården,” said Lindström. “I remember when I was younger and watched hockey at Hovet (Djurgården’s home rink) with my friends. Every now and then, we would just look at each other and say, ‘Imagine playing here one day.’ Now that day is here.”
“Gustav is a very exciting player who has experience from international hockey at all levels,” said club sports director Niklas Wikegård. “At the same time, he’s still at an age where we feel that with him, we will have something to build around over time. We are very happy that Gustav has finally found his home in his beloved Djurgården.”
Lindström was picked in the second round, 38th overall, by the Detroit Red Wings in the 2017 NHL Entry Draft. He played the 2018-19 season in the SHL for Frölunda and then went overseas.
Between 2019 and 2024, Lindström played 174 NHL games for the Red Wings, Montreal Canadiens and Anaheim Ducks, recording 35 points and 80 penalty minutes. He returned to the Montreal organization in 2024-25 but spent the entire season in the AHL with the Laval Rocket.
Lindström joins a Djurgården team that just earned a promotion from the HockeyAllsvenskan and is in the process of building a competitive SHL roster. The team will have the consensus top-two ranked European draft prospects in 18-year-olds Anton Frondell and Victor Eklund, as well as veteran center Marcus Krüger, who was a two-time Stanley Cup champion with the Chicago Blackhawks, and Finnish right winger Jesse Ylönen, who like Lindström, is also returning from North America.
Photo © Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images
MLB reinstates 4 players after yearlong bans for betting on baseball
Major League Baseball’s one-year suspensions for betting on the sport ended for four players Thursday — San Diego starter Jay Groome, Athletics relief pitcher Michael Kelly, Philadelphia infielder José Rodríguez and Arizona reliever Andrew Saalfrank.
The A’s announced they reinstated Kelly along with left-hander T.J. McFarland, who was on the injured list. They optioned right-handers Elvis Alvarado and Justin Sterner to Triple-A Las Vegas to make room on their big league roster.
Saalfrank was optioned to the Diamondbacks’ rookie-level Arizona Complex League.
The Padres have not announced their plans for Groome, but the Athletic reported he was not offered a contract, making him a free agent.
The Phillies have not announced their intentions regarding Rodríguez.
Kelly was suspended for betting on baseball while in the minor leagues, and the other three minor leaguers were penalized for betting on big league games. Each player wagered less than $1,000. Saalfrank and Rodríguez played previously in the majors.
The players violated Major League Rule 21, which is posted in every clubhouse. They were handed mandatory one-year suspensions for betting on games in which they did not participate. If they had bet on any games they attended in person — even if they didn’t play — they would have been banned for life.
Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice Leaves Heartfelt Message for Jets Fans
Prior to the start of the Stanley Cup Final, longtime Winnipeg Jets head coach and current bench boss of the Florida Panthers, Paul Maurice opened up on his thoughts for his former club.
After making the bold statement to which he indicated his hopes that the Jets would win the 2025 Stanley Cup, Maurice doubled down on his claim, suggesting that the team is close to the top.
"Yeah, getting rid of your last coach was the right thing to do, won the Presidents' Trophy,” Maurice laughed when asked what he thought Winnipeg needed to do to get to the Stanley Cup.
“I cheer for three teams, basically,” he added. “I cheer for the Vancouver Canucks because of Jim Rutherford. I cheer for the Winnipeg Jets, because, well, because of Winnipeg. And I was cheering for the Dallas Stars for Pete DeBoer.”
Earlier, the NHL released footage from an interview between lifelong friends Maurice and DeBoer in advance of the third round, to which the video indicated their love for one another.
But Maurice also continued in his answer to the question about the Jets, indicating his deeper connection to the people and the city of Winnipeg.
“If you’re good at it, you put everything into this and you’re not cheering for the other team, you’re cheering for your own team. But if you’re going to lose, I’d want to lose to one of those three groups. That’s kind of the idea. Now, my cheering for the team hasn’t really done them much good, it seems. But they’re just the right story in Winnipeg for the National Hockey League and what’s right about the game.
"We saw it in the connection with what Mark Scheifele did to play in that game, the connection to his brothers, but that's not just a one-off, that starts at the top of that organization. And it fits very well with the fanbase there. They won the presidents’ trophy. I think the Florida Panthers did that a couple years before they got to the Final, so I think they’re right there.”
Maurice's Panthers trail the Edmonton Oilers 1-0 in the best-of-seven Stanley Cup Final. Game 2 is set to be played on Friday.
Flyers Officially Hire Red Wings Coach, NHL Veteran as Assistant Coaches
The Philadelphia Flyers have officially announced the additions of two new assistant coaches as Rick Tocchet's first iteration of his Orange and Black coaching staff takes shape.
On Thursday, the Flyers officially announced the hiring of former Vancouver Canucks assistant coach and skills coach Yogi Svejkovsky, a former teammate of Tocchet's who once played for former Flyers interim head coach Brad Shaw.
During his playing days, Svejkovsky, 46, was teammates with Tocchet, former Flyers head coach Craig Berube, Flyers president Keith Jones, Nashville head coach Andrew Brunette, and New Jersey head coach Sheldon Keefe.
Svejkovsky, a former first-round pick of Washington in 1996, is expected to work with Tocchet in coaching the Flyers' power play, among other responsibilities.
Joining Tocchet and Svejkovsky in Philadelphia is former Detroit Red Wings assistant coach Jay Varady, who was one of Tocchet's assistant coaches in Arizona in the 2020-21 season.
Prior to that, Varady, 47, was the head coach of the AHL Tucson Roadrunners, overseeing the development of players like Adin Hill, Calvin Pickard, Michael Bunting, Christian Dvorak, Ilya Lyubushkin, Barrett Hayton, Ivan Prosvetov, and Conor Garland.
According to Bill Meltzer of the Flyers' official website, the Flyers would like to make one more coaching hire this offseason. The exact roles for Svejkovsky and Varady have not been officially assigned by Tocchet at this time.