The Chicago Blackhawks make it multiple Coles as they have signed Ian Cole to a one-year deal. This will come with a one-time cap hit of $4 million. He can earn up to $4.74 million with performance bonuses.
Cole is a defensive defenseman who will bring a veteran presence to a young group that ended last season with one of the youngest defenses in the history of the NHL. Multiple Frozen Four college teams had older defenses by average age.
Ian Cole is 36 years old, and he will turn 37 in February. He has had quite the NHL career, including two Stanley Cups during his time with the Pittsburgh Penguins.
The Blackhawks will be his 10th NHL team, as he has hopped around a lot since leaving the St. Louis Blues in 2014-15. Along the way, he has played with some of the game's best, including Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Nathan MacKinnon, and Nikita Kucherov, amongst others.
That type of experience will help the young Blackhawks, who are looking to improve in the standings during the 2026-27 season.
In Ian Cole, you're going to get a solid defensive player who can make a good pass and chip in 3-5 goals a season. He played in all 82 games for the Utah Mammoth in 2025-26, and he had 3 goals and 20 assists for 23 goals on a good playoff-bound team.
Ian Cole, signed 1x$4.8M by CHI, is a physical veteran defenceman who continues to put up solid results in a third pair role (although he takes too many penalties). pic.twitter.com/DW0TXmTC14
Cole will play in his 1000th NHL game early with the Blackhawks, as he has 990 career games played. In those games, he has 38 goals and 195 assists for 233 points. For being a defensive defenseman, it's not horrible offensive production.
If the Blackhawks are well out of it by the trade deadline, you may see them flip Cole for assets that will help them in the draft. If not, he'd be a great veteran to have in the locker room during meaningful games down the stretch.
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Last season with the Philadelphia Flyers, he finished with one goal and nine assists for 10 points. The 6-foot-2, 201-pound right-handed defenseman is most likely going to be the Avalanche's seventh defenseman this upcoming season.
Drafted 26th overall in the first round of the 2015 NHL Draft, Juulsen is a defenseman that you can really like in this position for the Avalanche, where on nights he can fill in 14-15 minutes a game and be reliable in the defensive zone.
With this move, the Avalanche now have just over $1 million in cap space, so it will be interesting whether these are all the moves they intend to make, or if another move will be made to create cap space and involve another signing.
Immediately after the clock turned to 12:00 p.m. ET on Jul. 1, Kyle Dubas and the Pittsburgh Penguins immediately got to work.
Per NHL Insider Chris Johnston, the Penguins are set to sign former Washington Capitals' defenseman Trevor van Riemsdyk. The terms on the deal are unclear, as the deal has yet to be announced, but the 34-year-old right-shot blueliner registered three goals and 14 points to go along with a plus-6 in 68 games last season. Undrafted, he has spent the last six seasons in Washington.
Standing at 6-foot-3, 210 pounds, van Riemsdyk is a solid bottom-pair defense-first defenseman who can help bring stability to either side, as he is capable of manning both sides. After the Penguins traded Parker Wotherspoon to the Vegas Golden Knights, it left their left-side wide-open, and van Riemsdyk figures to fill in where needed.
As NHL free agency officially opens, defenseman Trevor van Riemsdyk is heading to the Pittsburgh Penguins.
The signing of van Riemsdyk further begs the question of how the Penguins plan to build out their blue line this season. Dubas mentioned during his season-ending press conference that they need to be better defensively - and van Riemsdyk should help in that department - but the right-shot pool is crowded with Erik Karlsson, Kris Letang, Kaeden Korczak, van Riemsdyk, and Harrison Brunicke.
ST. LOUIS -- The St. Louis Blues made their first official unrestricted free agency signing (outside of their own players) when they signed forward Ross Johnston to a three-year, $6 million contract ($2 million average annual value).
The 32-year-old spent the past three seasons with the Anaheim Ducks; last season, he had 14 points (three goals, 11 assists) in 62 regular-season games. Johnston also appeared in five postseason games for Anaheim.
At 6-foot-5, 232-pounds, Johnston provides grit and toughness to the fourth line, someone who is a worthy and willing player to drop the gloves, a needed element to this lineup.
Johnston has played in 307 regular-season NHL games, including stints with the New York Islanders and the Ducks and has 46 points (14 goals, 32 assists) and 579 penalty minutes.
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The San Jose Sharks have reportedly signed forward Mason Marchment, the son of former Sharks player and long-time scout Bryan Marchment, to a five-year contract with an average annual value of roughly $7 million.
Insider Elliotte Friedman was the first to break the news of the signing early on Wednesday morning.
Mason Marchment sounds like he's headed to San Jose...long-time home of father Bryan in both an on- and off-ice role
Last summer, the Dallas Stars traded Marchment to the Seattle Kraken, where he played just 29 games before being traded to the Columbus Blue Jackets. With Columbus, Marchment found his form once again, as he scored 15 goals and 32 points in 39 games.
Throughout his career, Marchment, 31, has also played with the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Florida Panthers.
Adding another top-nine forward does add some questions for the Sharks, as it's expected that recent second overall pick Ivar Stenberg is ready to step directly into the NHL. As a result, it'll be interesting to see how Sharks General Manager Mike Grier handles the growing forward logjam in San Jose.
The Chicago Blackhawks continue to add depth to their roster with their latest free-agent signing, Cole Smith. Smith is getting a three-year deal with a $3 million cap hit.
Smith is 30 years old, and he spent the first 6 years of his NHL career with the Nashville Predators before being traded to the Vegas Golden Knights during the 2025-26 season.
Of course, the Golden Knights went all the way to the Stanley Cup Final in the spring, and Smith was a part of it as a member of their 4th line. In 22 playoff games, he had 3 goals and 3 assists for 6 points.
During the regular season, Smith had 8 goals and 4 assists for 12 points in 63 games played. There isn't much offense there, but it is his physical presence and defensive play that will make the Blackhawks a bit harder to play against.
Cole Smith, signed 3x$3M by CHI, is a physical fourth line winger who brings defensive value. pic.twitter.com/WdNZ1XaGBz
On the penalty kill, Smith will be one of the forwards who replace Ilya Mikheyev. At even strength, he won't produce nearly as much offense; the Hawks will have to find that elsewhere.
With Jordan Greenway also coming in via the Bowen Byram trade, the Hawks have a couple of guys who bring a different style of game to their bottom six than their opponents have had to deal with in recent years.
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The St. Louis Blues winger re-signed with the club on Wednesday, getting a one-year contract for $2 million after the team and player did not come to terms in time to receive a qualifying offer on Monday at 4 p.m. (CT).
Blues general manager Alexander Steen sounded line someone who was confident that the forward, despite getting unrestricted free agency status as of Wednesday despite missing the QO deadline, would be retained.
The Blues came through with the forward, who was claimed off waivers from the Detroit Red Wings on December 16, 2025.
The 25-year-old played in 36 games for the Blues last season and had 16 points (six goals, 10 assists). He also played in 15 games for the Red Wings and posted six points (two goals, four assists).
"Berggren was more about the deadline," Steen said Tuesday. "We didn’t feel like we were going to get it done before then, but we’ve been in communication with both him and his agent. We’re hopeful that we can get something done and he can continue to grow as a player with the Bluenote on.
"He’s got high offensive vision. I enjoy watching him play. He has a unique ability. You can almost see when he sees the pass when it’s about to open up and then he presents it at the right time with the right weight with minimum amount of complication to it. And it goes fast. He picks it up fast. If he finds the offensive play to be a little bit on the risky side, he knows the time to score and he’ll revert to something else. He’s not a big risk guy, but he does have that offensive creativity. I think towards the end of the season last season it wasn’t easy because of the amount of bodies we had and what we were looking to accomplish with the last part of the season, but I thought that he really stepped up his all-around game. Defensively, he was very sound. We like him as a player. I know Monty and his coaching staff like him as a player."
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A week ago Friday, in the lead-up to the NHL Draft, the Senators acquired goalie Samuel Ersson from the Toronto Maple Leafs for a fifth-round selection in next year's NHL Draft. Five days later, after not being qualified by the Senators, Ersson was allowed to walk into free agency as a UFA.
But it wasn't a very long walk.
Minutes after free agency opened on Wednesday, first reported by Elliotte Friedman, Ersson reportedly signed a two-year deal with the Sens worth $2.2 million a season.
Steve Staios spoke last week about why his goalie gurus were big on Samuel Ersson.
The 26-year-old is coming off a two-year deal with he Philadelphia Flyers at $1.45 million a year
Ersson spent each of the past four seasons with the Flyers and played a career-high 51 games in 2023-24. In 2025-26, he appeared in 33 games for the Flyers, posting a 14-11-5 record with a 3.12 GAA.
The 6-foot-3 is regarded as one of Sweden's finest goaltenders, just like the man he'll be backing up. With Wednesday's $2.2 million investment, there's no doubt that he is officially Ottawa's number two. Given Linus Ullmark's history of never playing more than 50 games, Ersson will carry a heavy load in 2026-27.
“Samuel is a goaltender we identified as a good fit with our system,” Staios said Wednesday in a club statement. “He has a combination of NHL and international experience and has an upside that our staff is excited to work with.”
Ersson represented his country at the 4 Nations Face-Off in a third-place finish. He also represented Sweden twice at the World Hockey Championship, winning bronze in 2024 and 2025. He played for Sweden at last year's worlds, even though Linus Ullmark expressed a desire to play at season's end.
The Sens goaltending was all-Swedish two seasons ago when Ullmark was backed up by Anton Forsberg, who has since moved on to Los Angeles in free agency. Last year, the backup duties were split between Leevi Merilainen and James Reimer.
The Ersson acquisition speaks volumes about how mightily Merilainen's stock has fallen. He was anointed as the undisputed backup last season, and the Sens clearly aren't ready yet to give him that opportunity again.
On Wednesday, the St. Louis Blues reportedly agreed to a one-year, $2 million contract extension with forward Jonatan Berggren, bringing back the Swedish forward who rediscovered his game after being claimed off waivers from the Detroit Red Wings midway through the season.
The signing closes what has been a pivotal chapter in Berggren's career, one that began with the promise of a high-end prospect and nearly faded before St. Louis stepped in and gave him the opportunity Detroit never quite extended.
The Red Wings selected Berggren 33rd overall in the 2018 NHL Draft, a pick that carried genuine expectations. The Uppsala, Sweden native arrived in North America with the pedigree of a player who could contribute offensively at the NHL level, and he flashed that potential during a promising debut season in 2022-23 that saw him put up nearly 30 points and turn heads as a legitimate top-six option in the making. That momentum, however, never fully carried forward in Detroit.
Berggren spent the bulk of his Red Wings tenure operating in a limited role, averaging somewhere between ten and thirteen minutes of ice time per game, a number that made it difficult for any offensive player to find consistent rhythm and production.
By mid-December, the writing was on the wall as Detroit placed Berggren on waivers, and the Blues immediately jumped at the chance to claim him, recognizing what the organization believed was a player whose situation rather than his talent had been the limiting factor.
The results in St. Louis backed that theory up in a hurry. Given an average of 14:35 of ice time per night, roughly two full minutes more than he had typically seen in Detroit, Berggren responded with 16 points in 36 games with his new club, a pace that would have translated to nearly 37 points over a full 82-game season.
At 25 years old, Berggren is at precisely the age where most skilled European forwards hit their developmental stride, and St. Louis is betting that the second half of this past season was a preview rather than a peak.
The one-year, $2 million deal keeps him affordable while giving him a full training camp, a full season of meaningful minutes and a genuine chance to prove that his time with the Red Wings was a story of circumstance rather than ceiling.
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It's Jun. 30, and that means NHL free agency is just one day away.
In years past, there was much more fanfare surrounding Jul. 1, especially since there was talent to be had in unrestricted free agency. That's not to say there isn't any talent this season, but there certainly isn't nearly as much intrigue surrounding the free agent class this season as opposed to years past.
Just take it from Pittsburgh Penguins' president of hockey operations and general manager Kyle Dubas, who actually laughed when asked about whether or not the Penguins will turn to free agency to fill talent holes.
"We can be as aggressive as we want on Jul. 1, but if you look at what's available, it could be an expensive mistake," Dubas said. "And I try to learn from the past. We'll try to steer clear of that."
Even if Pittsburgh could risk making some "expensive mistakes," however, that doesn't mean they won't be active on Jul. 1 - they just aren't likely to overpay.
So, what should Penguins' fans expect when free agency begins at noon ET? Here are three storylines to watch.
As of now, they have Karlsson, Korczak, van Riemsdyk, Kris Letang, and Harrison Brunicke on the right side - in addition to Finn Harding and Chase Pietila right behind them as far as depth in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) - so it is becoming a crowded place. In contrast, the Penguins now have just Sam Girard, Ryan Graves, Caleb Jones, and Ilya Solovyov left over from last year's NHL roster on the left side, and Owen Pickering, Jake Livanavage, and Maleek McGowan will be pushing for a roster spot from WBS. The only surefire NHL-caliber player there - right now - is Girard.
In free agency, options are limited. 27-year-old San Jose Sharks UFA Mario Ferraro is, potentially, a name to keep an eye on, as he recorded seven goals and 23 points last season and is a perfectly solid bottom-pair guy who can be had for relatively cheap. Same goes for Calgary Flames 28-year-old UFA Jake Bean, who played just 16 games with Calgary last season because of a season-ending injury sustained in December.
And, of course, there's still a few big names to watch on the trade market if the Penguins want to shoot higher. Zach Werenski and Thomas Harley are hot names, as is Alexander Nikishin, as the Carolina Hurricanes are exploring his market.
This is definitely a situation to keep an eye on Jul. 1 and into the rest of the summer.
To be upfront about this, I believe this is unlikely.
Dubas said last summer that he believed offer sheets aren't particularly viable in the rising cap environment: Teams not only have more cap space to match offers, but the pick compensation is also going to make things more complicated, as it will be a bit hard to predict how that ratio is going to work relative to the cap.
Perhaps blueliners Braden Schneider and Arber Xhekaj made some degree of sense, but only for a reasonable cap hit - and I doubt Dubas would surrender first-rounders for either, meaning he can't go above $4.68 million. RFAs like Nikishin will cost too much on an offer sheet.
Again, I doubt this is the route they'll take. But never say never.
Following Dubas's body of work, it's clear that he likes to make trades after Jul. 1 - particularly in the month of August. The Karlsson deal happened in August of 2023. The Rutger McGroarty deal in August of 2024.
But, given the trade market landscape right now, it's hard to imagine, if the Penguins are indeed shooting big in the trade market, that they will be able to wait that long to get something done.
Rumors have been swirling about superstar winger Jason Robertson, and Pittsburgh is in the thick of it. For three of the other teams that were revealed to have checked in on Robertson - the Seattle Kraken, St. Louis Blues, and Ottawa Senators - it was almost immediately shot down that Robertson would sign long-term with those teams.
So far, that hasn't been the case for Pittsburgh, and it's reasonable to think it would have been shot down by now if there was no interest, on his part, in coming to Pittsburgh.
As mentioned before, the Penguins are loaded up on the right side. A guy like Karlsson immediately makes a win-now team better. A guy like Brunicke gives a playoff-hopeful team something to look forward to. If the player is right, both of these guys are probably going to be in play, and Dallas needs right-side defensemen.
The chances of the Penguins pulling something as massive as Robertson off are slim, especially given their asset pool. But that doesn't mean it can't get done. And that doesn't mean they still won't be in the mix for a guy like Nikishin, or even a guy like Anaheim Ducks defenseman Pavel Mintyukov.
So, stay tuned. Things could get pretty interesting in the coming days.
The Senators made it official on Wednesday morning. They've signed forward Nick Cousins to a two-year contract extension. The deal kicks in this fall and is worth an oddly specific total of $1.5875 million per season.
It's a decent raise for Cousins, who's 33 next month, and has obviously proven his worth to Sens management in his effective bottom six role. He's coming off back-to-back one-year deals with the club and has spoken openly about his desire to stay, ideally with some term.
Cousins didn't miss a game this season, putting up nine goals, 23 points and a career-high 92 penalty minutes. With Brady Tkachuk now gone, the Sens could ill afford to lose any more edge up front, and Cousins has never been an easy man to play against. In fact, he was voted as having the NHL's most punchable face for two years running.
“Nick has proven his value to our hockey club over the past two seasons," GM Steve Staios said in a prepared club statement. "He brings Stanley Cup-winning experience and is an important player inside our dressing room."
In parts of 12 NHL seasons, Cousins has collected 86 goals and 218 points with seven different clubs. He's also played for the Florida Panthers, Arizona Coyotes, Montreal Canadiens, Vegas Golden Knights, and Nashville Predators.
A member of the Panthers, Cousins won a Stanley Cup ring in 2024.
By Steve Warne The Hockey News
This article was first published on The Hockey News Ottawa Senators site. For full coverage of the Senators check out one of the latest headlines below:
As the free agency window opened on Wednesday, the Detroit Red Wings announced they have re-signed forward Carter Mazur to a two-year contract with a $875,000 cap hit.
The deal brings back the 24-year-old Jackson, Michigan native on a team-friendly pact as he looks to finally establish himself with the franchise he grew up watching and dreaming of playing for.
Mazur is a Michigan kid through and through, and the Red Wings represent far more than just an employer. After the organization elected not to extend him a qualifying offer, the decision to circle back and bring him back on a new deal speaks to the belief Detroit still holds in what Mazur can be when healthy, and perhaps to the belief that his passion for this particular organization is worth betting on.
When Mazur has been on the ice and at full strength, he has looked every bit the part of a legitimate NHL contributor. Over 16 games, the former third-round pick in the 2021 NHL Draft posted 11 goals and five assists for a point-per-game pace that would rank among the more productive stretches by any Red Wings forward this past season. He added six points in eight playoff games, further reinforcing that his game translates when the stakes are highest.
His game is built on grit, physicality and a competitive edge that resonates in the modern NHL, where teams increasingly value forwards who can contribute offensively while also bringing a nasty, hard-to-play-against element every shift.
Mazur suffered an injury during his debut with the Red Wings in the 2024-25 season and was unable to return, a cruel interruption to what had been a promising introduction at the NHL level. The health question mark remains the central uncertainty surrounding his game, but the underlying talent and compete level have never been in serious doubt.
At $875,000 per season, Detroit is taking on minimal financial risk while keeping a player whose combination of skill, physicality and hometown motivation makes him a compelling possibility for the bottom six.
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WASHINGTON, D.C. - APRIL 12: Trevor Van Riemsdyk #57 of the Washington Capitals controls the puck in the second period against the Pittsburgh Penguins on April 12, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Jamie Sabau/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Penguins have reportedly made a signing just as the 12 noon window of free agency opens. Veteran defenseman Trevor van Riemsdyk, formerly of Washington, is said to be signing with the Pens.
As NHL free agency officially opens, defenseman Trevor van Riemsdyk is heading to the Pittsburgh Penguins.
TvR was featured on Pensburgh just yesterday as a free agent name to watch:
Trevor van Riemsdyk
AFP Projection: $2.36 million AAV for two years
van Riemsdyk turns 35 next month, not sure how much appetite the Penguins would have with a two-year contract for him but he’s got some size (6’3”, 210 pounds) and 751 games of experience that would add some depth to shore up the right side of their defense with skating ability and a history of strong defensive impacts. The Penguins don’t currently have that many defenseman in a ‘5/6’ type of role that could shade more into being used as a ‘5’, van Riemsdyk could be a nice short-term patch and insurance if 20-year old Harrison Brunicke needs more AHL developmental time.
van Riemsdyk is the second right handed defenseman to join the team in as many days after the acquisition of Kaeden Korczak via a trade from Vegas.
Trevor van Riemsdyk, signed 2x$4M by PIT, is a veteran defence-first right defenceman who kills penalties and, year after year for over a decade, puts up excellent underlying numbers in a third-pairing role. pic.twitter.com/oWXYB1osv7
This first move is sure to not be the last of the offseason, or possibly day for Pittsburgh. Kyle Dubas and the team stated a goal to add more depth to the blueline in hopes to improve their goals and chances against, it looks like that overhaul is well under way.
Update: looks like a two-year deal for $4.0 million AAV.
The #LetsGoPens signed 34 y/o D Trevor van Riemsdyk to a 2 year $4M cap hit contract
Officially, the Philadelphia Flyers have locked down Dan Vladar as their starting goalie for the next five years.
On Wednesday, Vladar, 28, officially signed his five-year extension worth a total of $27.5 million ($5.5 million cap hit), after much anticipation locally and around the NHL.
Vladar signed with the Flyers on July 1, 2025 after four years with the Calgary Flames and one with the Boston Bruins, quickly emerging as their starter after displacing Sam Ersson.
In 52 games, and 51 starts, with the Flyers, Vladar went 29-14-7 with a 2.42 GAA and .906 save percentage, establishing new career-highs across the board while playing north of 30 games for the first time in his NHL career.
Vladar was even more effective in the Stanley Cup playoffs, backstopping the Flyers to a 4-6-0 record and defeating the Pittsburgh Penguins in six games in Round 1 to the tune of a 2.18 GAA, .922 save percentage, and two shutouts.
Earlier this offseason, the Flyers traded for Joseph Woll to serve as Vladar's backup, with prospects Carson Bjarnason, Egor Zavragin, Aleksei Kolosov, Martin Psohlavec, and Marek Sklenicka developing behind them.
According to PuckPedia, Vladar will have a full no-move clause in the first two years, a 15-team no-trade list in Year 3, a 10-team no-trade list in Year 4, and a five-team no-trade list in Year 5, giving the Flyers trade flexibility as he ages.
Vladar will be an unrestricted free agent in 2032 at the age of 34.
As the Edmonton Oilers get set for free agency, let's take a look at everything I'm hearing as the team has several irons in the fire, but it could be a relatively slow day.
Darnell Nurse
Bob Stauffer of Oilers Now reports, "Given the uncertainty of the Darnell Nurse situation it is quite possible that today may be a very quiet day for the Edmonton Oilers on the Free Agent front.
EDM will need another goalie…at some point, still need to sign RFA’s C. Dach/S. Stastney and have limited cap space."
Several Western teams, including San Jose, have explored trading for him, but he prefers an Eastern destination. Pittsburgh attempted to involve Edmonton in a contract swap that was declined. Philadelphia may need to move a player like Rasmus Ristolainen first, Boston has shown interest, and Nurse has yet to expand his trade list.
Connor Ingram
According Mark Spector: "With the goaltending moves made in Florida, Daniil Tarasov heads to market. A few teams interested, Edmonton among them. Connor Ingram not out of the Oilers picture yet, however."
In respect to Tarasov, Spector adds, "Tarasov played 2/3rds of his career in Columbus, not a good team. The final 1/3rd was spent in Florida last season - when they weren't a very good team (25th in NHL)."
He has an .897 career saves %, he's 6-5, he's 27 years old.
Kasperi Kapanen
There is still talk about Kasperi Kapanen coming back to the Oilers. Spector writes, "Don’t rule out Kasperi Kapanen and the Oilers quite yet. Still ongoing conversations between the two sides."
Jack Roslovic and Adam Henrique Going to Market
The ship has sailed in Edmonton on both Jack Roslovic and Adam Henrique. Each will test the market and see if another team is open to signing either.
** Update: Roslovic signed a two-year deal with the Toronto Maple Leafs
Gene Principe said he reached out to Corey Perry, who is also a free agent. There was a public push of support to bring him back. He said he's waiting things out, but it appears he's going back to the Los Angeles Kings.
Ilya Mikheyev
One player currently being linked to the Edmonton Oilers is Blackhawks forward Ilya Mikheyev, who previously played under head coach Mike Babcock during their time in Toronto.
The Oilers might not do much in free agency, but he's a player they like for his depth scoring, speed and abilty to kill penalties.
* Update: Mikheyev signed a four-year deal with the Tampa Bay Lightning.
The Edmonton Oilers have traded for goaltender Devon Levi. There was talk earlier this week that Edmonton had kicked tires on the netminder. The Sabres are getting Edmonton's third-round pick in 2028.
Mark Spector of Sportsnet writes, "This would be a precursor to another move. Had better be." Bob Stauffer adds, "Could see the Edmonton Oilers add another goalie on top of Levi. "