Rookie Camp Game Day: Nashville Predators vs Tampa Bay Lightning

Apr 14, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Utah Hockey Club goaltender Matt Villalta (31) blocks a shot by Nashville Predators right wing Matthew Wood (52) during the third period at Bridgestone Arena. Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

It may not count in the standings, but there's a hockey game Friday afternoon.

Following a practice on Thursday, rookies from the Nashville Predators traveled to Tampa Bay and will face the Lightning in the first game of the NHL Prospect Tournament Friday afternoon at AdventHealth Center Ice.

There's no such thing as getting your feet wet for the 24 Predators prospects who reported to rookie camp Wednesday. After today's game, they will face the Florida Panthers and Carolina Hurricanes over the next four days.

As in previous years, the coaching staff of the Predators' AHL affiliate, the Milwaukee Admirals, will lead the prospect camp. Ads head coach Karl Taylor heads the group, along with assistants Greg Rallo and Matt Donovan. Predators general manager Barry Trotz will be on hand to observe.

While winning may not be the ultimate objective in these games, it's certainly a part of the competitive nature of these young players as they hope to turn heads and make a good impression on the Predators' brass.

"The first 10 minutes are probably going to be a gongshow out there,but you never want to lose," defenseman Andrew Gibson told reporters following Thursday's practice. "I've been competitive my whole life, no matter what it is. I always want to win. So, it's going to be a big factor going into this weekend, and hopefully, we win all three."

Two of Nashville's three first-round picks in this year's NHL Draft are competing in the tournament: fifth overall pick Brady Martin and defenseman Cameron Reid (21st overall). Ryker Lee, Jacob Rombach and Jack Ivankovic, who were also selected in the 2025 Draft, committed to play in the NCAA this season and are not in attendance.

Forwards Matthew Wood and Joakim Kemell, along with defenseman Ryan Ufko, made their NHL debuts in 2024-25 and are competing in the tournament. Each is hoping to grab a roster spot in 2025-26.

"I know there's a lot of guys going down to Tampa that really want to make the team, and I’m definitely one of them," Wood, who skated in six games for the Predators last season, said Thursday. "It's going to be a lot of fun.”

Teams will dress a total of 20 players during the tournament, including 18 skaters and two goaltenders. Each game will feature three 20-minute periods, with a five-minute, 3-on-3 overtime if the score is tied. A shootout consisting of five playrs will conclude each contest regardless of the final score.

This is the 10th time in the last 11 years that a team of rookies is taking part in a tournament. In 2024, the Predators hosted the tournament at Ford Ice Center Bellevue. It marked the third time Nashville hosted the showcase after doing so in 2017 and 2019 at Ford Ice Center Antioch.

Puck drop for Friday's game against the Lightning is set for 4 Pm CT, and the game will be streamed on NashvillePredators.com.

Former Blackhawks Goalie Marc-Andre Fleury Will Return To Penguins For Preseason Game

Due to the state of the franchise during his tenure with the team, Marc-Andre Fleury didn't do much winning with the Chicago Blackhawks. 

Fleury played with Chicago for just a tick over half a season. He played 45 games in 2021-22 before being traded to the Minnesota Wild at the deadline. During those games, he went 19-21-5 with a .908 save percentage and 2.95 goals against average. Had they not had Fleury that year, their place in the standings might have been even lower. 

The Blackhawks and Wild, along with the Vegas Golden Knights, are the three teams to have Fleury since his departure from the Pittsburgh Penguins, where he became a legendary goalie. 

While with Pittsburgh, Fleury was a part of three Stanley Cup championships, and formed an all-time great core with Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang, and Chris Kunitz. To be a good team-guy, Fleury waived his no-move clause so the Vegas Golden Knights could select him in the 2017 Expansion Draft. 

Since Fleury retired at the end of last season, he hasn't had the chance to have a proper send-off from the Pittsburgh Penguins. On Friday, however, the Penguins announced how they plan to rectify that. 

Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) on XPittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) on XWelcome home, Flower. The black and gold missed you 🖤💛 Read more: https://t.co/oZr416yko9

Fleury has signed a PTO with the Penguins, and he will play in one pre-season game for them. That will take place in Pittsburgh on September 27th, when they take on the Columbus Blue Jackets. It is sure to be a special night for the franchise that selected Fleury first overall in the 2003 NHL Draft. 

The Chicago Blackhawks were a very small part of Fleury's journey in the NHL, but everyone in the organization who had a chance to know him and learn from him is better for it. Now, all hockey fans will get to witness a very special moment later this month.

You don't see an honoring like this very often, where they get to actually suit up, which adds to the intrigue. Fleury deserves all of his "flowers". 

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Penguins Sign Marc-Andre Fleury To Professional Tryout Contract

Pittsburgh Penguins fans are getting their wish to see Marc-Andre Fleury one more time in Pittsburgh.

The Penguins signed Fleury to a professional tryout on Friday, allowing him to retire as a Penguin. He will come into town at the end of the month and practice with the team on September 26 before playing in part of the Penguins' preseason game against the Columbus Blue Jackets on September 27. 

“The entire Penguins organization is honored to welcome Marc-Andre Fleury back to the ice in Pittsburgh," Penguins general manager and president Kyle Dubas said in a statement. "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."

This news comes on the heels of the Penguins putting out a cryptic tweet on Thursday, showcasing some "Fleury Flakes" cereal. 

Fleury spent the first 13 seasons of his career with the Penguins and helped them win three Stanley Cups before he spent time with the Vegas Golden Knights, Chicago Blackhawks, and Minnesota Wild.

He's one of the best goaltenders in NHL history and will get to have one final moment with Penguins fans before riding off into the sunset. 


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Easton Cowan Adds Size, Reveals What It Will Take To Make Maple Leafs Roster Out Of Training Camp

All eyes are on Easton Cowan as he heads to the Toronto Maple Leafs’ rookie tournament in Montreal this weekend. The prospect will play professional hockey for the first time this season. His performance this weekend and at the Leafs’ upcoming training camp will determine if he plays in the NHL with the Leafs or in the AHL with the Toronto Marlies.

If Cowan doesn’t make the Leafs roster, however, it won’t be because of his size. Toronto’s first-round pick (28th overall) in the 2023 NHL Draft has brought his weight up to 190 pounds and stands at almost six feet tall.

Cowan spent his summer working out in London and recently joined the Leafs at their practice facility over the last three weeks, and his teammates have noticed.

Easton Cowan Headlines Maple Leafs Roster For Prospects Showdown in Montreal, Schedule Of GamesEaston Cowan Headlines Maple Leafs Roster For Prospects Showdown in Montreal, Schedule Of GamesThe Toronto Maple Leafs rookie roster is set to take on the rookies of the Montreal Canadiens and Ottawa Senators at the 2025 Prospect Showdown this weekend at the Bell Centre in Montreal.

“He’s maybe not the tallest guy but I feel like he’s a pit bull,” Maple Leafs prospect Ben Danford said. “When he has the puck he’s low on the ice and hard to knock off”.

Cowan is coming off yet another successful season with the London Knights, helping the team win the 2025 Memorial Cup, where he was named tournament MVP.

Toronto Marlies head coach John Gruden, who is leading the prospects to Montreal for rookie games against the Montreal Canadiens and Ottawa Senators, is impressed with how Cowan has found time to add strength after a long junior season including the 2025 World Juniors.

“You gotta understand like he was with Team Canada, their development camp all those times playing at the Memorial Cup two years in a row, winning it. It's a lot on a young man,” Gruden said.

The path for Cowan to the NHL will be tough, and he will need to show he can keep up with the defensive demands of hockey’s highest level.

“I just gotta be a worker, gotta be a hound, get pucks in, get pucks out, play simple because me and the Leafs organization know that if I do that my offense will take over. So just focus on defense first and the offense will come,” Cowan said.

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Magnus Hellberg Aiming for a Fresh Start as He Returns to Sweden and Djurgården

There’s been lots of attention on Nicklas Bäckström’s SHL comeback this upcoming season. Behind him, Magnus Hellberg is looming as one of the biggest signings ahead of the season.

Hellberg returns to Sweden and Djurgården after thirteen years abroad. During that time, he played 7 games in the NHL and 259 games in the AHL. He also spent several seasons in the Russian KHL, where he made 169 appearances over the years.

Djurgården’s sporting director Niklas Wikegård is pleased to bring in such an experienced goaltender. In an interview with the club’s own media channels, he shared his thoughts on Hellberg and what he believes he can add to the team this coming season.

“We’re bringing in one of the most experienced goaltenders in the country, with many years of playing abroad at a very high level. Magnus has represented some of the top clubs in the KHL and been close to the top clubs in the NHL, and on top of that he has produced strong results in the AHL in recent years,” said Niklas Wikegård.

In addition to Hellberg, Djurgården has the talented Hugo Hävelid in goal. Hävelid is undrafted but has represented Sweden at the junior international level. Here’s what sporting director Wikegård said about Hellberg as a complement to Hävelid.

“Magnus will be an extremely important piece for us to bring home. He is a goaltender we feel secure with and who upgrades us, together with the defensive line we are putting together. We are also creating a very exciting goalie duo with 21-year-old Hugo, who can get fantastic training from Magnus over the coming years,” says Wikegård.

Hellberg followed Djurgården from a distance last season and, like so many others, was impressed by the club’s fan support. Djurgården won the second-tier HockeyAllsvenskan last season and earned promotion to the SHL.

“I followed the team very closely last season and am very impressed by the journey, with the fans’ support and help. A full Hovet or Avicii Arena with all the awesome tifos and atmosphere and the pressure that comes with it is something I look forward to sharing with you. I’m super excited to come home, help Djurgården win hockey games and create great memories together with all of you,” says Magnus Hellberg.

In addition to Hellberg, Djurgården has several other players with NHL experience. Most notably, they have Marcus Krüger, who won two Stanley Cups with Chicago during their dynasty years. They also have Jacob Josefsson, formerly with the New Jersey Devils, who has made a comeback and adds further experience to the team.

When it comes to young players, Djurgården also has a strong group. Among them are two 17-year-old prospects, Marcus Nordmark and Viggo Björck. The team also features 2025 NHL Draft first-round picks Victor Eklund and Anton Frondell.

Marc-Andre Fleury To Return To The Pittsburgh Penguins For One Last Game

Marc-Andre Fleury is playing one last game with the Pittsburgh Penguins this pre-season.

Fleury, who announced last season would be his final in the NHL, signed a professional tryout with the Penguins, GM Kyle Dubas announced Friday.

The 40-year-old will practise with the Penguins on Friday, Sept. 26, before playing in parts of Pittsburgh's exhibition game against the Columbus Blue Jackets on Saturday, Sept. 27, in front of the home fans at PPG Paints Arena.

The Penguins drafted Fleury first overall in 2003, and together, they won three Stanley Cup championships. He last played for them in 2017 before getting claimed in the Vegas Golden Knights' expansion draft, then later playing for the Chicago Blackhawks and Minnesota Wild.

After finishing his NHL season with the Wild, he reunited with Penguins captain Sidney Crosby on Team Canada at the World Championship.

Marc-Andre Fleury (Aaron Doster-Imagn Images)

"The entire Penguins organization is honored to welcome Marc-Andre Fleury back to the ice in Pittsburgh," Dubas said in a news release. "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."

Fleury spent 13 of his 21 NHL seasons with the Penguins and set franchise records along the way.

He leads all Penguins netminders, past and present, with 691 games played, 375 wins and 44 shutouts. As for goalies with at least 100 games played on the team, Fleury's 2.58 goals-against average ranks first, and his .912 save percentage is tied for second behind Matt Murray (.914).

As for playoff numbers, Fleury's 115 games played, 62 wins and 10 shutouts also rank first in Penguins history.

Fleury also won the Vezina Trophy and William M. Jennings Trophy, but it came in 2020-21 with the Golden Knights, four seasons after he last played for the Penguins.

That said, Fleury's more than a goalie.

"It was so apparent in October when Minny came to Pittsburgh (for Fleury's final game against Pittsburgh), just what he means to people," Dubas told The Athletic in May. "Not just the staff or the players. I’m talking more about the fans, the reaction they had to him. It was incredible."

Known for his many high-effort pranks and funny personality, Fleury's also known for his charitable efforts. With the Penguins, he received two Edward J. Debartolo Community Service Awards.

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Do The Bruins Really Have Everything They Need To Be A Playoff Team?

The Boston Bruins head into the 2025-26 season unburdened by the expectations that have always been on them in the NHL’s salary cap era.

Many pundits (this one included) don’t see the Bruins as being a Stanley Cup playoff team this season, but veteran Boston defenseman Charlie McAvoy believes his team can stop its playoff drought at just one season.

“We got everything to prove,” McAvoy told Sportsnet this week. “This the first time in my career that we’re going into this year probably not being a playoff team by a lot of people's metrics. We're a playoff team every day of the week, in my mind… We have everything we need. We have more than enough on this roster to be (a playoff team).”

It’s undeniable the Bruins have some key components – McAvoy and star right winger David Pastrnak, in particular – but the drop-off in skill from the top of Boston’s roster to its bottom is pretty steep.

Besides Pastrnak, who had an impressive 106 points last year, Boston's next-leading scorer is Morgan Geekie, who had just 57 points. Elias Lindholm and Pavel Zacha had 47 points. These are not playoff-quality numbers up top, and depth forwards Casey Mittelstadt, Tanner Jeannot, Viktor Arvidsson haven't been producing like they used to.

On defense, McAvoy and Hampus Lindholm make a strong first pairing, and it was a huge struggle for Boston to adapt when they were injured last year. Having them healthy will help a lot. Mason Lohrei shows promise, while Nikita Zadorov is a notable defensive defenseman. But Andrew Peeke doesn't provide as much two-way play as Zadorov does, and Henri Jokiharju had 10 points in 60 games last season.

Charlie McAvoy (Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images)

Let’s give McAvoy the benefit of the doubt – we’ll slot in the Bruins for a wild-card berth, but which team do you take out of the playoff equation to open that slot for Boston? The Ottawa Senators? Nope, their team is clearly deeper than the Bruins, with better special teams and more effective goaltending last season. The Montreal Canadiens? They're probably closer to Boston in overall talent, but still, we’d say Montreal is a better team than Boston. 

The Detroit Red Wings may be another story, and same with the Buffalo Sabres. Eighth place in the Atlantic Division isn’t a sure thing for Boston. That said, BetMGM's odds of the Bruins making the playoffs are at 4.75 (+375). The Sabres are at 3.75 (+275), and the Red Wings are at 3.30 (+230), according to BetMGM.

Predicting The NHL's Atlantic Division Rankings In 2025-26Predicting The NHL's Atlantic Division Rankings In 2025-26The NHL’s Atlantic Division might well be the league’s most competitive division. And in this short THN.com series, we’re predicting how it will look at the end of the 2025-26 regular season.

You can't feel good about taking a hunch on this Bruins team, which appears destined for tougher conversations about its direction next summer. But for now, we don't agree with McAvoy that Boston has all the tools. Some tools? Sure. All of them? No.

The changes Boston did make this summer certainly don’t make them significantly more skilled. Instead, they focused on grittier veterans to make the team a tougher team to play against, but not necessarily an offensive threat when Pastrnak's not on the ice. This is why few people are picking the Bruins for a big turnaround.

So much has to go right, including good health, a quick adjust to the systems of new coach Marco Sturm and bounce-back years from veterans, such as Elias Lindholm and goaltender Jeremy Swayman. 

If they don’t get all those things, it could prove to be a long season. Even if Boston veterans are setting a higher bar than that.

“(O)ur standards don't deviate, regardless of what people think we may or may not be.” McAvoy said. “We went out and got (newcomers including Arvidsson, Jeannot and Sean Kuraly) that are going to make us a tough team to play against. So, I think we're going to buy into that as best we can, and we’re going to be a tough out.”

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REPORT: Panthers Continue To Hand Out PTOs; Josh Lopina, Daniel Walcott To Join Camp

Josh Lopina (Stan Szeto-Imagn Images)

The Florida Panthers are leading the way with camp invitations, signing center Josh Lopina and winger Daniel Walcott to professional try-outs.

The Panthers have now invited wingers Noah Gregor and Tyler Motte, as well as defenseman Ben Harpur, bringing their number of PTOs up to five.

Lopina, 24, was a fourth-round pick of the Anaheim Ducks in 2021 who has spent the last three seasons in the AHL with the San Diego Gulls. Lopina has scored 20 goals and 44 points in 203 games, including a career high of 14 goals and 23 points in the 2023-24 season. 

Standing 6-foot-2, 208 pounds, Lopina won a National Championship with UMass in 2021. 

Daniel Walcott (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Walcott, 31, is a long-time veteran in the AHL, playing in 495 games. The former 2014 fifth-round pick of the New York Rangers has scored 56 goals and 147 points with the Syracuse Crunch, the Tampa Bay Lightning's AHL affiliate. Walcott has skated in one NHL game in his career, which was against the Panthers during the 2020-21 season, where he recorded a fight against defenseman Kevin Connauton.

Lopina and Walcott would be long shots to make the Panthers roster, but could be signed to AHL or two-way contracts to increase the depth within their farm team, the Charlotte Checkers. After three long seasons, the Panthers would like to dress their veterans for as few games as possible in pre-season. Signing players to PTO's will allow them to dress different lineups and keep them fresh.

From The Archive: Rare Rookie

Welcome to this edition of "From The Archive". In this recurring series, we open The Hockey News' vault and display some of the top Vancouver Canucks related articles from the past. Today's article comes from Volume 72, Issue 9, where Ken Campbell wrote about Canucks rookie Elias Pettersson. 

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Rare Rookie, Volume 72, Issue 9, January 29, 2019

When Guy Lafleur was five years old, his father built a small rink in the backyard of their home in Thurso, Quebec. After school and on weekends, the rink was crowded with Lafleur and his friends, but on weekdays, rushing through lunch before returning to school, it was his alone for half an hour or more. A few years later, anxious for more ice time, on Saturday and Sunday mornings he would sneak in the back door of the local arena, finding his way unseen through the engine room, under the seats, and onto the ice. There, from 7:30 a.m. until just before the manager awakened about 11 a.m., he played alone; then quickly left. Though he was soon discovered, as the manager was also coach of his team, Lafleur was allowed to continue, by himself, and then a few years later with some of his friends.

– Ken Dryden in his best-selling book, The Game, talking about the childhood of Montreal Canadiens teammate and fellow Hall of Famer Guy Lafleur

YOU’D BE EXCUSED FOR thinking that the days of the Guy Lafleurs freelancing their way to hockey glory are over. NHL careers are stage managed now more than ever, meticulously planned from childhood, complete with full family moves to play in superior big-city hockey associations, an obsession with playing up an age group and families with seemingly unlimited resources and a willingness to pour them into on- and off-ice instruction from scores of people who make their living off the dreams of others.

And it might make you a little depressed. If that’s the case, you should really know about Vancouver Canucks rookie Elias Pettersson. He never had a skills coach growing up, and he still doesn’t. Like Lafleur, Pettersson grew up in a tiny place. Ange is geographically in the center of Sweden, and in 2010 its population was 2,872. Apparently nobody has bothered to update it since then. Before Pettersson, the most famous person from Ange was Sami Pahlsson, who played 11 seasons in the NHL and won a Stanley Cup with the Anaheim Ducks. It’s a place that has produced no fewer than six heavy-metal bands, including Corroded, which recorded a song called Age of Rage for the play-for-free version of the video game Battlefield 4, so it sounds like they’re doing all right. The lead singer Jens Westin is friends with Pettersson’s parents and was his older brother’s music teacher in middle school.

And like Lafleur, Pettersson developed his eye-popping array of skills essentially on his own. His father sometimes watched him do drills and helped him, “but he only played hockey from 10 to 12 years old.”

Ange has one arena, the Kastbergshallen. It’s right there off National Road 83, just past the ICA Supermarket. Get onto Bagskyttevagen (Archery Road) and bear right once you get to the skeet-shooting range and you’re there. Pettersson’s father, Torbjorn, who owns and maintains several apartment buildings in town, was also the manager of Ange IK, which meant he also occasionally drove the Zamboni, which also meant he had keys to the rink. Elias and his older brother, Emil, a 24-year-old prospect for the Nashville Predators who plays for AHL Milwaukee, would take the keys and head down to the rink anytime they wanted. And there, without a badgering wannabe Scotty Bowman teaching systems or doing cycle drills, they worked on their skills. “Just a couple of boys having fun with the puck,” said Tommy Ostrom, who, along with Johan Altberg, recruited both brothers as an agent in Sweden.

Prior to his record-breaking season in the Swedish League last year, Pettersson wasn’t happy with his shot. So he broke it down into 12 different motor movements and worked tirelessly on each one until it got better. By himself. “I wanted to (improve) at one-timers and get a quicker release,” he said. “Every day after practice I would stay for 15 minutes extra and work on one-timers. One day I’d just work on my balance, another day I’d get my stick in a certain position, another day I’d shift my weight, each one one day apart.”

The way Emil recalls, Elias was good at every sport he tried, but he combined that with an unwavering passion and stubborn streak. When he and Elias were growing up, their father’s old unicycle was sitting in the basement. “I tried to learn (how to ride it) for about 10 or 15 minutes, and I got so angry I just threw it away,” Emil said. “(Elias) tried it about a year after, and he just kept trying until he got it.”

And the results of that determination are on full display. Unless an opponent takes him out for the season, which isn’t out of the realm of possibility given how much he has been targeted in Year 1, Pettersson will make a mockery of the Calder Trophy race. Last season, Mathew Barzal was named rookie of the year by scoring 85 points, which was the highest total by a rookie since Evgeni Malkin, who had the same number in 2006-07. Pettersson, who had missed seven of the Canucks’ first 45 games, was scoring at a pace that would see him record 91 points in a full 82-game schedule. Over the past 25 years, only Alex Ovechkin and Sidney Crosby have scored more points as a first-year player. Of course, Pettersson is no stranger to putting up mind-boggling numbers. Last season, his 24 goals and 56 points with the Vaxjo Lakers were the most ever recorded by a junior player in the SHL, breaking a mark set more than 40 years ago by Kent Nilsson. Along the way, he also won the league scoring title, was MVP of both the regular season and the playoffs, rookie of the year and a champion in both the SHL and the World Championship for Sweden.

I CALL HIM ‘THE MINI PAVEL DATSYUK.’ YOU SEE HIM SHIMMY - SHAKE GUYS– Vancouver Canucks teammate Brock Boeser

His play earned him a nickname. Teammates in Vaxjo called him ‘The Alien’ because of his otherworldly talents. “It’s pretty funny, but I don’t know if I like it too much,” Pettersson said. “That puts a lot of pressure on me.”

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Now that he’s in the NHL, he’s earning a few other monikers. “I call him ‘The Mini Pavel Datsyuk,’” said teammate Brock Boeser, who knows a little bit about impressing as a rookie in the NHL. “You see him shimmy-shake guys, it’s pretty impressive. He’s always thinking one step ahead of the play.”

Among his bag of tricks this season was a penalty shot he took on Pekka Rinne in early December. Pettersson slowed up in front of the net, then prompted Rinne to bite on a fake backhand before going forehand with lightning speed and tucking the puck under the Nashville Predators goalie. That move didn’t surprise Boeser. He first saw it in a shootout during the Canucks’ rookie development camp in 2017. “I thought, ‘This guy is legit,’” Boeser said.

It’s actually a little surprising that Pettersson is accomplishing so much at such a young age. Because until now, he’s always been a little behind his peers, largely because he was so much smaller than them. Consider this: the Swedish Ice Hockey Federation has been holding its TV-Pucken tournament since the 1950s, which brings together 24 teams from different regions in a tournament for the best under-16 players in Sweden. Of the 561 of them who played in the 2013-14 tournament, only two of them were lighter than Pettersson (one of them was a goalie) and only 37 were shorter. Pettersson was 5-foot-6 and 103 pounds at the time, and in the intervening years has grown eight inches and added 73 pounds. “He’s freakishly strong, and he catches guys by surprise,” said teammate Bo Horvat. “At the same time, being that skinny, he weasels his way through everybody.”

He’s still slight by NHL standards, but in today’s game if you have superior brains, legs and hands, it mitigates a lack of size more than ever. “Being smaller has been good for my game,” Pettersson said, “because of that I can take a hit and still have good speed. If I were a bigger guy and stronger than everybody else, maybe I never learn to take a hit.”

Minnesota Wild defenseman Ryan Suter raises another valid point: “It’s a little easier to come into the game now. You don’t have to worry about getting your head taken off.” Added Suter’s teammate Zach Parise: “The confidence with the puck, it’s crazy. He’s a rookie, and he’s cutting to the middle of the ice, buying time, holding onto the puck. It’s awesome, it’s great to see.”

That’s exactly what Canucks coach Travis Green was thinking before Pettersson arrived at training camp this season. Green saw no point in putting a player as lightly built as Pettersson on the wing in his first season and expect him to dig pucks out of the corner, reasoning that he would get the puck a lot more down the middle of the smaller rink. The Canucks had drafted him as a center, but he broke all the Swedish scoring records as a winger, so there was going to be a period of adjustment. That lasted throughout the Canucks’ rookie tournament, where Pettersson was decidedly ordinary. But with every passing day, he got better and more comfortable, and now the Canucks don’t even make any attempt to hide the fact they know he’s their best player.

SPECIAL TALENTS PLAY THE WAY YOU DID WHEN YOU WERE A KID PLAYING ROAD HOCKEY– Canucks coach Travis Green

With players such as Pettersson, those with elite hockey minds, it’s almost as though the game they are seeing and playing is different than the one the other nine skaters on the ice are experiencing. For those players, everything moves more slowly, which gives them the ability to think two or three plays ahead. “I remember when I played,” Green said, “when you played with special talents, it was almost like they played the game the way you did when you were a kid and you were playing road hockey. I remember when I was playing road hockey I felt like I could do anything I wanted with the (ball), and that’s a nice feeling, but there’s only a few guys in the world who get that feeling on the ice.”

In his four seasons with the Toronto Maple Leafs in the mid-1970s, Inge Hammarstrom scored 20 goals three times. As one of the first players in NHL history to come over from a European league, he acquitted himself well. That didn’t prevent Leafs owner Harold Ballard, however, from opining that Hammarstrom could “skate into the corner with a half-dozen eggs in his pocket and not break any of them.” It was a xenophobic remark that helped set an inaccurate and unfair tone that European players carried with them for years. A couple decades later, someone might have said Hammarstrom could walk into an arena in Europe and come out with superstar players. It was Hammarstrom who convinced the Canucks to take the skinny kid from the Allsvenskan, Sweden’s second-tier professional league, with the fifth overall pick in the 2017 draft.

With Hammarstrom’s track record for identifying talent, the Canucks were willing to listen. As a scout with the Philadelphia Flyers in 1991, he had to talk his bosses into taking a chance on another skinny Swede, Peter Forsberg, at No. 6. “The year before that I was pushing for Jaromir Jagr (at fourth overall), but we took another really good player, Mike Ricci,” Hammarstrom said. “We also got Mikael Renberg from Sweden, and Chris Simon. It was a pretty good draft year.”

A half-season into his NHL career, it’s difficult to fathom that Pettersson fell that far in the first round, though Nico Hischier, Nolan Patrick, Miro Heiskanen and Cale Makar are all fine players in their own right. One executive whose team didn’t have a shot at Pettersson said his European scouts were adamant that he was the superior talent in the draft, despite not doing much to impress their North American counterparts in tournaments in Europe or the World Junior Championship. And nobody, but nobody, could project that Pettersson would improve so much in such little time. The exec marvelled at how much Pettersson’s shot has improved since then. “He was absolutely not shooting the puck like that in his draft year,” he said.

As is the case with rare finds, there was some luck involved. Pettersson left home when he was 16 to play in Timra, about 70 miles east of his hometown. Hammarstrom lives in Timra and is a regular at the rink. He would often attend Timra’s practices and stay and chat with Pettersson on the bench, as well as teammate Jonathan Dahlen, who is former NHLer Ulf Dahlen’s son, who just happens to be good friends with Hammarstrom. (It should come as no surprise that Dahlen was the return for the Canucks when they dealt Alexandre Burrows to the Ottawa Senators two years ago.)

During those chats, Hammarstrom got to know Pettersson as a person, and the two became close friends. Hammarstrom saw a young man who was a little difficult to get to know at first, but one who became an open book once he was comfortable. He also saw a young man who was stubborn, in a good way, one whose passion for the game drove him to continue to practice something until he perfected it. “I knew he was an exceptional person with a very strong character who knows what it takes,” Hammarstrom said. “When you talk to him, you immediately know he understands all it takes. For me, it was Elias all the way from the beginning of his draft year. Every meeting it was Elias. I liked some other guys, too, but for me his hockey sense, smarts and hand speed, that kind of control and moves are exceptional.”

From there it was matter of convincing Judd Brackett, the Canucks’ director of amateur scouting, and the rest of the staff, that Pettersson was worth a few trips to Europe for extended viewings. In the end, it was an easy sell, and the Canucks went into the 2017 draft unanimous that Pettersson would be their choice, provided he was still there at No. 5. At the time, Pettersson was listed generously at 161 pounds. He was rated No. 9 in THN’s Draft Preview, where one scout opined that he tended to stay away from high-traffic areas on the ice. “So you have to ask yourself whether it’s smart to not put yourself in those situations, or is it because he’s scared?” the scout asked. “Only one person can answer that. You have to determine whether it’s intelligent self-preservation or a lack of accountability.” Fifteen pounds and a year-and-a-half later, we all know the answer to that question.

I KNEW HE WAS AN EXCEPTIONAL PERSON WITH A VERY STRONG CHARACTER WHO KNOWS WHAT IT TAKES– Scout Inge Hammarstrom

The Canucks were blessed by the fact that at least the four teams choosing ahead of them were thinking the same thing. “He didn’t get much exposure (in his draft year) because he was very skinny and he looked very weak,” Hammarstrom said. “But what I noticed right away on the ice was his quickness. His mind was so quick that he solved problems on the ice that I haven’t seen a young player do in a long time. He was like Peter Forsberg, you know? Someone special. I remember playing against Wayne Gretzky, and you can see when they’re special.”

Speaking of solving problems, Pettersson is going a long way toward solving many of them in Vancouver. Prior to the season, the Canucks were far more likely to be in a position to unite the Hughes brothers – the Canucks’ 2018 seventh overall pick, Quinn, and his younger brother, Jack, the overwhelming favorite to go first overall in 2019 – than they were to be in contention for a playoff spot. But there they were in January, hanging in and competing for a post-season berth. They likely won’t make it, but more importantly, led by some promising young talent in Pettersson, Boeser and Horvat and with more on the way in the form of Hughes and goalie Thatcher Demko, the Canadian west coast is not a barren wasteland. The Canucks, at the very least, have been fun to watch this season, and there is real, tangible hope they can elevate themselves, led by the best player they’ve had since Pavel Bure.

Pettersson is scoring at crucial times, too. Seventeen of his first 42 points came on goals that put the Canucks ahead in a game, and nine times he scored goals that lifted his team into a tie, which was tied with the Boston Bruins’ David Pastrnak for the league lead in that category.

In the Canucks’ first game of 2019, Pettersson scored a hat trick against Ottawa, including the overtime-winner on his second breakaway of the 3-on-3 competition that was the talk of the NHL. He also hit two performance bonuses, on the same day, that bumped his rookie salary from $925,000 to $3.8 million, by scoring his 20th goal of the season and being named to the NHL All-Star Game. (In the next game, Pettersson sustained a mild MCL sprain in his right knee as the result of being pulled down by Montreal Canadiens rookie Jesperi Kotkaniemi in an exchange that had nothing to do with being a hockey play.)

Is his coach surprised at the dominance Pettersson has displayed in his rookie season? “Yeah, I am,” Green said. “I really am. We didn’t know exactly what we were getting. We think we have a special player, and I think we’re just starting to see what he can do.”

The Hockey News, Volume 72, Issue 9 (Photo Credit: The Hockey News Archive)

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News

The Hockey News

One Question Facing Each Former Anaheim Ducks Player Ahead of the 2025-26 Season

The 2025-26 season is now just around the corner after a long, busy offseason for general manager Pat Verbeek and the Anaheim Ducks. There’s still one large order of business remaining on the table: the Mason McTavish contract extension.

From a (mostly) new coaching staff to four key additions, the Ducks organization received a significant facelift this summer as they attempt to take another step and put an end to their elongated rebuild.

The team's complexion is vastly different than the one that started last year’s training camp. Four pieces once considered part of the team’s future core at one point or another now call a different organization home, as does a player who was in Anaheim for just a short time but made a meaningful impression.

I had fun asking one question about each Ducks roster player ahead of the upcoming season, so I decided to do the same for those former key pieces who once called Anaheim home.

Questions Facing Each Anaheim Ducks Defenseman, Goalie Heading into the 2025-26 Season

Questions Facing Each Anaheim Ducks Forward Heading into the 2025-26 Season

Brian Dumoulin: Can he help Los Angeles topple Edmonton at long last?

Dumoulin only played 61 games in a Ducks sweater, but he had an immediate positive impact on the young dynamic defensemen on the Ducks' blueline, emphasizing good habits and communication skills. He signed a three-year contract with the Los Angeles Kings this summer to add veteran experience and added Stanley Cup pedigree to a team that’s lost in the first round to the Edmonton Oilers in each of the last four seasons. Whether he’s slated to play a bottom-pair role next to a fellow veteran like Cody Ceci or aid in the development of a talented offensive talent like Brandt Clarke, Dumoulin will have the opportunity to solidify the middle or bottom of the Kings' depth chart on the blueline.

Cam Fowler: Can he set a new career high in points?

Fowler was the first of this group to depart the Ducks, ending a 14-plus-year career with the organization in which he played just shy of 1000 games (991), when he was traded to the St. Louis Blues in Dec. 2024. He made an immediate impact and found instant chemistry with the Blues, notably alongside Colton Parayko, where the two now comprise the projected top pair in St. Louis. After the trade, Fowler scored 36 points (9-27=36) in 51 games for the Blues, the highest scoring rate (.71 points per game) in his career. He’ll have to fight for top power play time with Justin Faulk, but if Fowler gets the nod (and stays healthy), he has the chance to set a new career high for himself, which now stands at 48 points, set in the 2022-23 season.

John Gibson: Can he lead Detroit into he playoffs?

On day two of the 2025 NHL Draft, Gibson was traded from the team with the third-longest playoff drought (Anaheim, seven years) to the team with the second (Detroit, nine years). Gibson’s numbers bounced back in a big way in 2024-25, after a half-decade of mediocrity. Talent remains, but health is the question. It’s a gamble the Red Wings are willing to take, as they’ve been knocking on the door of the playoffs in the last two seasons. Cam Talbot, with whom Gibson will likely form a tandem, played well last season, but the goaltending position has been volatile for the Red Wings for the duration of their rebuild. Gibson and Talbot can hopefully raise the team’s floor and give the players in front of them needed security as they look to finally break through and play spring hockey.

Isac Lundestrom: How long can he stick in the NHL?

Lundestrom was given a relatively long leash in Anaheim, where he played 337 games over seven seasons, but never found a way to meaningfully impact games on the offensive side of the puck. This summer, he signed a two-year contract with the Columbus Blue Jackets. His skating, defensive prowess, and work ethic will always endear him to coaches, but his NHL role seems destined to that of a fourth-line center, a position in which he’ll have to fend off hungry, young players for the remainder of his career. He’ll also need to improve on his 45.9% clip in the faceoff circle, so coaches can trust him with defensive zone starts if he’s to be relied on as a matchup option in any way.

Trevor Zegras: Who is the real Trevor Zegras?

Zegras burst onto the scene in 2021-22, dazzling on a nightly basis, was the 2022 Calder Trophy runner-up, and notched back-to-back 60-plus point seasons. A lengthy contract negotiation amid a coaching change and a mandate to work on his 200-foot game led to a muted impact followed by significant injuries over the following two seasons. Verbeek and the Ducks made the decision to go in a different direction, sending him to the Philadelphia Flyers this summer. Whether he ultimately ends up on the wing or sticks at the center position, as is the initial intention of the Flyers, he’s a player who will hopefully be afforded the freedom to explore the reaches of his vast creativity, increasing the odds of returning to that scintillating talent we saw early in his career.

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Chris Kreider, Jacob Trouba Highlight Angels' Ducks Night

Canadiens: Demidov Impresses Media and Teammates Alike

After just one training session on the ice at the Montreal Canadiens’ rookie camp, it’s safe to say that one player is head and shoulders above the other. As the hopefuls were put through their paces on Thursday at the CN Sports Complex, media and fans alike were keeping a keen eye on Ivan Demidov.

It might only have been drills, but the Russian was giving it his whole and using those magical hands of his whenever necessary. His skills didn’t go unnoticed by his fellow rookies and Florian Xhekaj, who often skated alongside him on the day, told the media that he “tried to give him the puck and create space out there”. It’s not because Xhekaj can’t score, he’s done it 24 times last season with the Laval Rocket, but Demidov’s presence and skills are just that impressive.

Canadiens: What The Rookies Had To Say On Day One
Canadiens: Rookies Put Through Challenging First Practice
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So impressive in fact that defenseman Adam Engstrom couldn’t help but say that he’s just so much fun to watch out there, just doing such great stuff with the puck all the time.

As for goaltender Jacob Fowler, he described the 19-year-old phenom as “a special player who’s an even better person off the ice” before adding “his talent is some of the highest I’ve ever seen but it’s also the way he works with it”. No one will argue with the netminder when he says he’s only going to get better. He already has, since coming over from Russia, his skating as improved and he doesn’t have the same stance anymore; moving on the ice looks much more effortless nowadays than it did when he first joined the Canadiens last April.

While the main camp hasn’t even started, it’s hard to imagine how Martin St-Louis could deprive his first power play unit of such skill and creativity. Whatever happens, though, the Canadiens’ power play will be much better this season than it was last year. The arrivals of Demidov, Noah Dobson, and Zachary Bolduc will bring a significant influx of talent and provide the coach with so many more weapons to work with. While the offseason hasn't been kind to the Canadiens' penalty kill, it sure has been to its man-advantage. 


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31 Days Until Opening Night At NWA: The History Of Jersey #31

The Columbus Blue Jackets have 31 days until opening night at Nationwide Arena. Today, we look at the history of jersey #31. 

Let's take a look at today's edition, which is all about goalies. 

Ron Tugnutt - 2001-2002 - Drafted by Quebec in the 1986 NHL Draft. 

Tugnutt for President!! He played in 53 games for the Jackets in the first year of the franchise and went 22-25-5 with a .917 save %.

After two years with Columbus, he went on to play the final two years of his long career with the Dallas Stars and Utah Grizzlies of the AHL. 

He played 16 years and won 186 games in the NHL. After retiring, he went into coaching, where he would coach at various levels and leagues as a goaltending coach. 

Pascal Leclaire - 2004-2009 - Leclaire was drafted #8 overall in 2001 by Columbus.

He compiled a career record of 45-55-12 with Columbus and had a save % of .907%. The Jackets traded him to Ottawa on March 4, 2009, with he and a 2009 second-round pick went to Ottawa in exchange for Antoine Vermette. The pick the CBJ sent to Ottawa would wind up being Robin Lehner. Leclaire would retire on November 12, 2012. Leclaire was also in net for Columbus and gave up the first career goal to future Hall-of-Fame and all-time leading goal scorer Alex Ovechkin. 

David LeNeveu - 2011 - Drafted by Phoenix in the 2002 NHL Draft. 

LeNeveu played in one game for Columbus during the 2010-11 season. He played one period and gave up 2 goals on 12 shots. He never played another NHL game after his time in Columbus and finished his career in the KHL in 2014-15. 

He bounced around different leagues before retiring, playing in Russia, Poland, and Slovakia. He was also the goaltending coach, President, Part-Owner, and Governor of the Nanaimo Clippers of the BCHL from 2014 to 2017. 

Shawn Hunwick - 2012 - Undrafted out of Sterling Heights, Michigan. 

Hunwick famously made one appearance for Columbus, playing 3 minutes on April 7, 2012. He relieved Steve Mason in a 7-3 Jackets win. He never played another NHL game and finished his career in Germany in 2013 after just one year of professional hockey. Hunwick announced his retirement from professional hockey on August 26, 2013.

Curtis McElhinney - 2014 - Drafted by Calgary in 2002. 

McElhinney could have been listed as the player who wore #31 the best. He started 66 games for the Jackets and came in to relieve the starters another 19 times. His career record with Columbus was 26-33-8. He went on to win a pair of Stanley Cups for the Tampa Bay Lightning, backing up starter Andrei Vasilevskiy. He retired on September 25, 2021.

He was the Toronto Maple Leafs Dir. of Goaltending from 2023 to 2025. 

Anton Forsberg - 2015-2017 - Drafted by Columbus in 2011. 

He played for the Columbus organization for three seasons but would only get 9 starts. In those 9 starts from 2014 to 2017, his record was 1-8. Where he really showed his worth was during the 2015-16 season while he was playing for the Cleveland Monsters. He had a record of 23-10-6 and also went 9-0 in the Calder Cup Playoffs. He and former CBJ goalie Joonas Korpisalo guided the team to a Calder Cup Championship.

On 23 June 2017, he and Brandon Saad were a part of a package to the Chicago Blackhawks that brought Artemi Panarin to Columbus. After five years in Ottawa, he signed a free agent deal with the LA Kings for two years.  

Michael Hutchinson - 2023 - Drafted by the Boston Bruins in the 2008 NHL Draft. 

Hutchinson started 10 games for Columbus after coming over from the Vegas Golden Knights in exchange for Blue Jackets legend Jonathan Quick in March of 2023. He went 2-6-3 and made 6 relief appearances as well. 

He left to play in Finland for the 24-25 season but hasn't been signed anywhere for 25-26. 

With 31 days until opening night at Nationwide Arena, the anticipation for the season is in full swing. Take a look at the schedule of events below.

Blue Jackets Participate in 2025 Prospects Challenge in Buffalo

The Blue Jackets will take part in the Prospects Challenge in Buffalo from Thursday, Sept. 11, to Sunday, Sept. 14. They’ll play three games and have one day off.

The schedule looks like this:

Thursday, Sept. 11 - 7 p.m. vs. New Jersey Devils

Friday, Sept. 12 - No Game Scheduled

Saturday, Sept. 13 - 7 p.m. at Buffalo Sabres

Sunday, Sept. 14 - 3:30 p.m. at Pittsburgh Penguins

This will be the second year Columbus has participated in the Prospects Challenge. Before that, they played in the NHL Prospect Tournament in Traverse City. As for the roster, it won’t be released until closer to the tournament.

Let us know what you think below.

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Islanders Prospect Calum Ritchie Bulked Up, Ready To Fill Brock Nelson's Role

EAST MEADOW, NY -- New York Islanders prospect Calum Ritchie knows how big the loss of Brock Nelson was for the club. Being the big return piece in the Nelson deal with the Colorado Avalanche isn't something the 20-year-old takes lightly. 

“Brock’s a legend here,” Ritchie said on the first day of Islanders rookie camp on Thursday. “To be traded for him, it’s obviously big shoes to fill. I’m going to work my hardest every day to try to fill that.”

Now, the Islanders aren't looking at Ritchie as a Nelson comparable, nor should he have the pressure ahead of his first season on Long Island that he has to be a guy that comes close to 30 goals to make the trade seem worthwhile. 

The two players share some commonalities, particularly in their transition abilities through the neutral zone and over the blue line, but Ritchie is more of a playmaker.

He recorded 55 assists with 15 goals for 70 points in 47 OHL regular-season games before 16 assists with nine goals for 25 points in 21 OHL playoff games. 

“My two-way game, my passing improved last season,” Ritchie said. “I think I’ve always been considered a playmaker. I felt like I was moving the puck really well last season, thinking the game smarter. I’m really confident in my abilities right now, and my defensive game has improved a lot, too. So I’m happy with where I am.”

Ritchie, who seemed like the most NHL-ready player at development camp in terms of his physical makeup, has bulked up quite a bit since last year's training camp with Colorado. 

He entered camp in the Mile High City weighing 185 pounds. He enters Islanders camp at 200. 

“My goal is obviously to play in the NHL,” Ritchie said. “So I’m going to work my hardest and try to achieve that.”

He'll be working hard alongside an abundance of Islanders prospects. As one of the many new guys at development camp following the 2025 NHL Draft, Ritchie said that he was able to stay in touch with a lot of those guys.

"I've gotten close with Schaefer, Aitchison, Romano, Maggio, George -- all those guys," Ritchie said. "So, it's been really good. Everyone is a great guy here. It's actually an unreal group, a great time, and I'm just looking forward to the rest of camp."

Outside of Isaiah George -- can't forget about Tristan Lennox's one period --  Ritchie is the only other prospect at rookie camp who has played in an NHL game before.

Ritchie did make the Avalanche out of training camp last season, playing in seven games before being loaned back to juniors after recording a goal, which just so happened to come against the Islanders. 

"Having that experience last year was really good for me, and I thought I learned a lot," Ritchie said. "I'm a lot better of a player now than I was then. So, yeah, and I think it helps me a lot to have that experience."

While Ritchie may be able to fill Nelson's role as the No. 2 center, the Islanders' decision to move Mathew Barzal from Bo Horvat's wing to center will likely clog the center ice for the young centerman. 

Ritchie is open to playing the wing, and general manager Mathieu Darche said that if he plays well enough, he'll make a spot for him. 

Could we see Ritchie actually win the No. 2 spot, moving Barzal back to Horvat's wing, where he's shown an ability to perform at a high level?

What about on Jean-Gabriel Pageau's wing?```

The options are there. Now it's about Ritchie to prove that he doesn't need any AHL seasoning and that he's ready to produce, long term, at the NHL level. 

Flyers Brass Not Giving Up On Aleksei Kolosov

(Photo: Robert Edwards, Imagn Images)

The Philadelphia Flyers may appear set at the goalie position at the NHL level this year, but anything can happen, and the book isn't closed on prospect Aleksei Kolosov yet.

Lamentable performances in net over the last few seasons, including from Kolosov himself, have largely doomed the Flyers to their lack of success.

An offseason addition of Dan Vladar is expected to help stabilize incumbent starter Sam Ersson and give the Flyers a reliable duo, but Ersson, too, is guilty of struggling. He's also been bedeviled by injuries, which can anecdotally be attributed to his increased workload.

Knowing that, Flyers GM Danny Briere already warned that he expects Kolosov and Russian counterpart Ivan Fedotov to be ready when called upon.

In a press conference Wednesday, Flyers president Keith Jones echoed that sentiment, advising that the book is not closed on either Fedotov or the enigmatic Kolosov.

"We had hoped their ability to adjust would occur quicker than it did. I wouldn't write off either guy, Fedotov or Kolosov," Jones said. "Kolosov is obviously younger and is an extremely athletic goaltender. And, if he can put all the pieces together in the future, he could turn into a very good goaltender."

The question, for some Flyers fans, will be about Kolosov's commitment to patience and playing his role.

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The 23-year-old Belarusian ultimately arrived, albeit late, to training camp last year, and made his NHL debut as early as Oct. 27.

Despite that, though, Kolosov's hot start flamed out, and he was sent to the AHL Lehigh Valley Phantoms.

There were many occasions last season where the Flyers' former third-round pick sat in the press box as the third goalie in the NHL, which did his development no favors.

"He'll be here, and we're excited about that, too. He has an opportunity, just like everybody else, to come in and show what he has," Jones added. "Developmentally, we would prefer that last year he spent a little more time in the American Hockey League. It just was not in the cards. I wouldn't do it differently, but I'm excited about the depth that we have."

Jones was also sure to note that the Flyers are "happy" to have Vladar, and that Kolosov and Fedotov will have to prove they have the chops to cut it at the NHL level. For real this time.

Flyers: Where Is Egor Zavragin?Flyers: Where Is Egor Zavragin?Top Philadelphia Flyers goalie prospect Egor Zavragin has yet to play for his KHL club, SKA St. Petersburg, in the early goings of the 2025-26 season.

Fortunately for both, and especially the youngster Kolosov, the Flyers seem intent on giving their homegrown guys one last opportunity to carve out an NHL path.

Panthers prospects gather in Fort Lauderdale ahead of 2025 Prospect Showcase outside Tampa

The Florida Panthers were back on the ice in Fort Lauderdale this week.

A group of the team’s best and brightest prospects gathered in South Florida ahead of the 2025 Prospect Showcase taking place in Wesley Chapel, just outside of Tampa.

It runs from Friday to Monday, with the Panthers facing prospects from the Tampa Bay Lightning, Nashville Predators and Carolina Hurricanes in a round-robin.

Florida’s roster consists of 25 players, broken down to 15 forwards, seven defensemen and three goaltenders.

Coaching the Panthers prospects once again this year is Florida’s AHL head coach, Geordie Kinnear.

“The Rookie Tournament is a great opportunity for these guys to keep getting evaluated, but also an opportunity to get better, to get a little taste of playing competitive hockey against your peers,” Kinnear said.

On Thursday, the Panthers’ prospects gathered at the Baptist Health IcePlex in Fort Lauderdale for some practice and meetings before heading north to the Tampa area.

You can check out footage from Thursday’s practice in the video below:

Forward Gracyn Sawchyn, who Florida selected in the second round of the 2023 NHL Entry Draft, is gearing up for his first professional season after signing his entry level contract earlier this year.

“I’m a lot closer to the guys now, so it’s good to be around everybody again,” said Sawchyn.

He’s playing in his third, and ultimately last, prospect tournament.

“Every year has been a little bit different,” he said. “I think the biggest thing for me is just trying to play a mature game. Do that this weekend, and hopefully carry that on to training camp with the big guys.”

Florida’s three-game schedule kicks off on Friday afternoon against the prospects from Carolina.

Here is the Panthers schedule:

Friday, Sept. 12 at 2:00 p.m. vs. Carolina

Saturday, Sept. 13 at 5:00 p.m. vs. Tampa Bay

Monday, Sept. 15 at 12:00 p.m. vs. Nashville

All games are open to the public and free to attend, and the Panthers previously said all games would be streamed online as well.

Florida’s full 25-man roster can be seen below:

Image

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