Bruins overpay for Tanner Jeannot on Day 1 of NHL free agency

Bruins overpay for Tanner Jeannot on Day 1 of NHL free agency originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Bruins have not fared very well in NHL free agency during Don Sweeney’s decade-long tenure as general manager, and his latest contract is a head-scratcher.

The B’s and left wing Tanner Jeannot have agreed to a five-year, $17 million contract, per Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman. The deal carries a $3.4 million cap hit.

Jeannot is a physical player (sixth-most hits in the league over the last four years) who can sometimes add a scoring punch, but he has not been a productive offensive player for a while.

Jeannot scored 24 goals with the Predators during the 2021-22 season, but he has scored only 20 goals over the last three years combined. The 28-year-old left wing tallied 13 points (seven goals, six assists) in 67 games for the Kings last season.

A $3.4 million cap hit is a steep price for a player with one 10-goal season in his career and who will probably fill a bottom-six role for the Bruins. He also isn’t likely to be much of a factor on the power play or penalty kill.

Sure, the salary cap is expected to go up significantly in the coming years, but every dollar counts. And unless Jeannot rediscovers his goal-scoring form from the 2021-22 campaign, this contract will not age well.

The Bruins were one of the league’s worst offensive teams last season. They cannot afford to use up valuable cap space on players of Jeannot’s caliber.

Giving him a five-year deal was an odd move as well. A two- or three-year contract would have made more sense.

The Bruins now have around $5.3 million in cap space after signing Jeannot and trading for Edmonton Oilers left wing Viktor Arvidsson earlier on Tuesday.

Confirmed: Golden Knights Complete Sign-and-Trade For Mitch Marner

Toronto Maple Leafs forward Mitch Marner (16) displays a Hockey Hall of Fame induction patch on his shoulder as he skates against the Detroit Red Wings during the third period at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

After a long saga with several curveballs and rumors, the Vegas Golden Knights have finally got their man, completing a sign-and-trade with the Toronto Maple Leafs, which will see Mitch Marner sign with the Golden Knights on an eight-year, $12-million AAV deal, and Nicolas Roy join the Maple Leafs. 

Over the last couple of days, the Golden Knights and the Maple Leafs have been working hard to complete the sign-and-trade, which has opened up cap space for the Golden Knights, allowing them to sign Marner. The 28-year-old will play his first NHL games outside of Toronto after scoring 221 goals and 741 points in 657 career games.

His time with the Maple Leafs ends on a sour note, but the former fourth overall pick in the 2015 NHL Draft was once hailed as the next homegrown talent who could help lead the Maple Leafs to win a Stanley Cup alongside Auston Matthews and William Nylander. With several playoff failures and fans growing frustrated with playoff shortcomings from Marner, he's decided to venture out of his comfort zone. 

Marner is one of the best pure playmakers in the NHL and will likely spend the next eight years next to Jack Eichel, who is now eligible for a contract extension. Eichel and Marner have career highs in goals of 36 and 35, both of which will likely increase once the pair benefits from each other's stellar playmaking. 

Heading the other way in the deal is Roy, a versatile 28-year-old forward who has been everything the Golden Knights have needed in their bottom-six. Prior to joining the Golden Knights, Roy had played just seven NHL games, but he leaves the franchise with 362 games of experience. With the Golden Knights, the 6-foot-4 center scored 68 goals and 166 assists.

With the Maple Leafs, Roy will be the third-line center they have been missing. Although he's a career 47.7-percent faceoff winner, the Maple Leafs have lacked a right-handed center, and he will fill that void nicely.

With two seasons left on a $3-million cap hit, Roy will provide the Maple Leafs with immense value and will be dearly missed in Vegas. 

In all, the Golden Knights and general manager Kelly McCrimmon have once again been the most aggressive team in chasing the top fish to improve their team. 

Stay updated with the most interesting Golden Knights stories, analysis, breaking news and more! Tap the star to add us to your favourites on Google News to never miss a story.

Report: Golden Knights Acquire Mitch Marner From Maple Leafs In Eight-Year DealReport: Golden Knights Acquire Mitch Marner From Maple Leafs In Eight-Year DealAfter nine years with the Maple Leafs, Marner is officially headed to Vegas.

Former Maple Leafs Star Mitch Marner To Wear No. 93 With Golden Knights

The Toronto Maple Leafs made their trade of Mitch Marner official on Tuesday morning.

After more than a year of speculation about the star player's future, the player signed a seven-year extension worth $12 million per season with the Vegas team. The team announced that the player will wear his favorite No. 93, in their official announcement of the deal.

Marner wore No. 93 during his time in Junior with the London Knights and the number is still associated with his social media handles despite the fact that he wore No. 16 with the Maple Leafs. The number was a dual tribute. The first being for his favorite player growing up, former Maple Leafs captain Doug Gilmour, and it was also the birth year for his older brother.

The No. 93 in Toronto is currently retired in Gilmour's honor. 

Report: Maple Leafs Trade Mitch Marner To Vegas Golden Knights, Agrees To Eight-Year Deal Worth $12 Million AAVReport: Maple Leafs Trade Mitch Marner To Vegas Golden Knights, Agrees To Eight-Year Deal Worth $12 Million AAVMitch Marner is on his way to Las Vegas.

Marner leaves Toronto as the club's fifth-leading point-getter of all time with 221 goals and 520 assists in 657 games. Had he stayed in Toronto, there was a good chance that his No. 16 could be retired someday. Now, his exit is being compared similar to that of Vince Carter with the Toronto Raptors when he requested to be moved.

In the end, time healed all wounds and Carter's number was eventually retired. Perhaps after some time, the same will happen for No. 16.  But we'll see. Marner's first game back in Toronto next season will certainly be a must-see for a lot of reasons.

(Photo credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images)

'I Would Love To Play My Whole Career Here': Inside Steven Lorentz's Three-Year Extension With The Maple Leafs'I Would Love To Play My Whole Career Here': Inside Steven Lorentz's Three-Year Extension With The Maple LeafsToronto Maple Leafs forward Steven Lorentz is staying at home. Report: Maple Leafs Lose Out On Brad Marchand Who Signing Six-Year Extension With PanthersReport: Maple Leafs Lose Out On Brad Marchand Who Signing Six-Year Extension With PanthersBrad Marchand reportedly won't be hitting NHL free agency after all. Maple Leafs Trade for Matias Maccelli: Why Toronto Acquired Winger From Utah MammothMaple Leafs Trade for Matias Maccelli: Why Toronto Acquired Winger From Utah MammothThe Toronto Maple Leafs have acquired Matias Maccelli from the Utah Mammoth in exchange for a conditional third-round draft pick in 2027, which will convert to a second-round draft pick in 2029 if Maccelli record at least 51 points in the 2025-26 NHL season.

Utah Prospect, Ex-Sen Egor Sokolov Signs In KHL

Russian winger Egor Sokolov, 25, has signed a one-year contract with CSKA Moscow, the KHL club announced on Tuesday. According to the announcement, CSKA had earlier worked out an agreement with Avtomobilist Yetaterinberg, who had previously held Sokolov’s KHL rights.

Originally from Yekaterinburg, a city in the foothills of the Ural Mountains on the Asian side, Sokolov went overseas at age 17 to play junior hockey for the Cape Breton Screaming Eagles of the QMJHL.

Sokolov was taken by the Ottawa Senators in the second round, 61st overall in the 2020 NHL Entry Draft. He then spent the next four seasons in the Ottawa organization, playing 13 NHL games for the Sens in which he recorded one goal, one assist and four penalty minutes.

Sokolov was traded last summer to Utah HC, now the Utah Mammoth, for Czech winger Jan Jeník. He spent the entire 2024-25 season in the AHL with the Tucson Roadrunners, where he recorded 44 points in 75 regular-season and playoff games.

CSKA, colloquially known in North America as the Red Army team, is a perennial powerhouse in Russia. In addition to Sokolov, it has under contract for 2025-26 ex-NHLers Denis Guryanov, Nikita Nesterov, Nikita Okhotyuk and Vladislav Kamenev.

Photo © Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images.

Former Stars, Sens D-Man Signs In GermanyFormer Stars, Sens D-Man Signs In GermanyCanadian defenseman Dillon Heatherington, 30, has signed a one-year contract with Red Bull Munich, the DEL team announced on Monday. This is the first contract to play in Europe for the 6-foot-4, 216-pound rearguard.

Flyers Can Find the Perfect Ryan Poehling Replacement in Joe Veleno

Joe Veleno is the perfect buy-low candidate for the Flyers this offseason. (Photo: David Banks, Imagn Images)

After losing Ryan Poehling in the Trevor Zegras trade, the Philadelphia Flyers need another reliable two-way center.

While Zegras may very well end up converting back to center full-time, he's not the guy the Flyers want playing high-pressure defensive minutes, and especially not on the penalty kill.

There are a quite a few interesting veteran options for that archetype of player on the NHL free agent market this year, but the Flyers, just like at the goalie position, will face hot competition from Stanley Cup contenders.

Names like Radek Faksa, Nick Bjugstad, and Nico Sturm would be fantastic stopgap options, but with a little extra searching, the Flyers can find themselves a more permanent replacement in Joe Veleno.

Veleno, 25, is a former first-round pick who is set to be bought out by the Seattle Kraken after being traded by the Chicago Blackhawks for Andre Burakovsky last week.

Veleno was, of course, already traded once this season, with the Detroit Red Wings bringing in Petr Mrazek and Craig Smith and sending Veleno to Chicago.

All in all, the 2024-25 season was a tougher go for the former 30th overall pick, although Veleno's five points in 16 games with Chicago was markedly better than the 10 points he had in 56 games with the Red Wings.

Coming into the year, Veleno was fresh off a career-high 28 points with the Red Wings, emerging as a strong penalty killer and a physical presence.

Veleno was emerging as a strong two-way bottom-six forward before putting together a so-so 2024-25 season playing on two bad teams. (Evolving-Hockey)

Veleno's GAR card above is similar to Poehling's before he joined the Flyers; Veleno's is more well-rounded, while Poehling was in the 80th percentile of defense due to some elite penalty kill play.

If the Flyers are in on Veleno, they'll get some intel from defenseman Jamie Drysdale, who won the 2019-20 IIHF U20 Men's World Championships with Veleno and Canada a few years back.

Going back another year, Veleno played with Flyers forward Owen Tippett and former Flyers center Morgan Frost on the 2018-19 U20 Canada team.

The 25-year-old is having a two-year, $4.55 million contract cut short with the buyout, so it's unlikely Veleno will cost the Flyers much more than something in the range of $1 million. 

The 6-foot-1, 200-pound forward has thrown over 100 hits in each full season of his NHL career and is a respectable 46.6% for his career in the faceoff dot.

The combination of size, potential, physicality, and versatility should be attractive to a smaller Flyers team, and Veleno is much more seasoned than Rodrigo Abols, for example.

He should be one of their top targets heading into the start of NHL free agency Tuesday.

Flyers, in need of goalie help, agree to terms with Vladar on 2-year deal

Flyers, in need of goalie help, agree to terms with Vladar on 2-year deal originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Flyers had to address the goaltending position this offseason.

They did that Tuesday in the form of Dan Vladar. The club and the 27-year-old agreed to terms on a two-year, $6.7 million contract. The deal has an average annual value of $3.35 million.

Vladar is expected to form a tandem with Samuel Ersson, who has one more year left on his contract. Ivan Fedotov and Aleksei Kolosov also have one more year to go on their respective deals and will compete for playing time.

At 6-foot-5, 209 pounds, Vladar comes to the Flyers after spending the last four seasons with the Flames. He’s coming off a career-high 30 appearances (29 starts) in which he went 12-11-6 with a 2.80 goals-against average and an .898 save percentage.

His best season came in 2021-22, when he went 13-6-2 with a 2.75 goals-against average, .906 save percentage and two shutouts. Time will tell if Vladar is the short-term answer to helping the Flyers stabilize in net.

Last season, the Flyers had an .872 save percentage, the worst in the NHL. The season before that, they were tied with the Senators for the league’s worst mark at .884. It has arguably been the Flyers’ most costly flaw since Carter Hart left the team in January 2024 because of the Hockey Canada sexual assault case.

On Day 1 of NHL free agency, the Flyers also added center Christian Dvorak and defensemen Noah Juulsen and Dennis Gilbert.

Flyers add another center in offseason by agreeing to terms with Dvorak

Flyers add another center in offseason by agreeing to terms with Dvorak originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Flyers opened Day 1 of NHL free agency Tuesday by agreeing to terms with Christian Dvorak on a one-year, $5.4 million contract.

The 29-year-old center is coming off a season in which he played all 82 games for the Canadiens, putting up 12 goals and 21 assists.

A little over a week ago, the Flyers started their addition down the middle by trading for 24-year-old Trevor Zegras.

Center has been a position of need for the Flyers. Dvorak gives the Flyers a solid bottom-six boost after they lost Ryan Poehling in the Zegras trade.

Dvorak, a 6-foot-1, 190-pounder, won 55.2 percent of his faceoffs over four seasons with Montreal. Last season, he started in the defensive zone a career-high 69 percent of the time, so he’s a center who can be trusted in tough spots.

In 2019-20, playing under Rick Tocchet with the Coyotes, Dvorak put up career highs in goals (18) and points (38). In the playoffs last season with the Canadiens, he had a pair of goals over five games.

The Flyers have to like the one-year commitment to Dvorak. It doesn’t block anyone and it gives the Flyers a good look at if Dvorak will be a fit.

Right now, the Flyers’ competition at center includes Dvorak, Zegras, Sean Couturier, Noah Cates, Jett Luchanko, Rodrigo Abols and Karsen Dorwart.

With the trade of Joel Farabee and Morgan Frost, Tony DeAngelo, Andrei Kuzmenko, Cal Petersen and Jakob Pelletier coming off the books and the NHL salary cap rising, the Flyers had some room to spend this offseason.

They opened free agency with $15.14 million in cap space, according to PuckPedia.com. They ended up adding Dvorak, goaltender Dan Vladar and defensemen Noah Juulsen and Dennis Gilbert. They still need to re-sign restricted free agent defenseman Cam York.

“There’s a little bit of a window to add from the outside,” general manager Danny Briere said about free agency in April. “We’re not going to be able to fix every problem, but it would be nice to be able to, if the situation is right, add a player or two to come in and help on that front. That also should help taking a step forward.”

The Flyers have not changed their rebuilding plans, but they do need and want to get better this season. They hit “rock bottom” last season and the 2025-26 campaign will be Year 3 under Briere and president of hockey operations Keith Jones.

The club also added a depth center Tuesday by agreeing to terms with Lane Pederson on a one-year, two-way, $775,00 contract. The 27-year-old is projected to open this season with AHL affiliate Lehigh Valley.

NHL Rumor Roundup: The Latest On Free Agency's Notable UFAs

The NHL's annual free-agent market opens at noon ET on July 1. 

Many of the notable names, including Mitch Marner, Brad Marchand, and Aaron Ekblad, have already come off the market. Nevertheless, several notable players remain eligible for UFA status.

Brock Boeser: David Staples of the Edmonton Journalcited several NHL insiders linking Boeser to the Edmonton Oilers. However, they're still trying to free up salary-cap space by shopping Viktor Arvidsson. TSN's Chris Johnston believes the 28-year-old right winger will be “Plan A” for the Winnipeg Jets.

Nikolaj Ehlers: Jets GM Kevin Cheveldayoff said last week he intended to continue contract talks with the 29-year-old right winger until the last minute. Meanwhile, ESPN's Emily Kaplan considers the Carolina Hurricanes to be the front-runners for Ehlers. Nick Goss of NBC Sports Boston believes the Bruins should pursue the long-time Jet.

Brock Boeser (Bob Frid-Imagn Images)

Vladislav Gavrikov: The Los Angeles Kings want to re-sign Gavrikov, but the 29-year-old left-shot defenseman could be eyeing the free-agent market. TSN's Pierre LeBrun reported Monday that the Kings were waiting for a response to their final offer. If Gavrikov goes to market, Mollie Walker of the New York Postbelieves the New York Rangers intend to pursue him.

Mikael Granlund: The limited number of quality centers in this summer's UFA market should make the 33-year-old Granlund a much-sought-after commodity. Cam Robinson of Elite Prospects claimed the St. Louis Blues, San Jose Sharks and Hurricanes could be among his suitors.

Jake Allen: This summer's free-agent market is thin on goaltenders, which could work to Jake Allen's advantage. The 34-year-old put up solid numbers last season as the New Jersey Devils backup. Anthony Di Marco of Daily Faceoff reported last week that he was in talks with the Devils, seeking a two-year deal worth around $5 million. If he doesn't stay in New Jersey, he could draw interest from the Oilers or Philadelphia Flyers

NHL Free Agency Frenzy 2025: Live Tracker And AnalysisNHL Free Agency Frenzy 2025: Live Tracker And AnalysisWelcome to the NHL Free Agency Frenzy of 2025.

Corey Perry: The 40-year-old right winger was still hopeful about returning with the Edmonton Oilers. However, their recent re-signings of Evan Bouchard and Trent Frederic likely mean the well-travelled Perry will be moving on to another contender in search of another Stanley Cup run. 

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NHL Free Agency: Five Intriguing Players Who Didn't Receive Qualifying Offers

NHL clubs decided whether to present qualifying offers to their pending RFAs or not. 

Players who didn’t receive qualifying offers by the 5 p.m. ET deadline on Monday become UFAs on Tuesday’s NHL free agency opener.

There are some talented and solid players who were let go by their teams and will hit the open market. Here are some of the top players becoming UFAs.

Philipp Kurashev, C

The Chicago Blackhawks let go of Philipp Kurashev after he had a down year. The 25-year-old scored seven goals and 14 points in 51 games last season. The team had four pending RFAs, and Kurashev was the only player who didn’t receive a qualifying offer.

It may come as a shock to some because in 2023-24, Kurashev recorded 18 goals and 36 assists for 54 points. The Swiss center had the second-most points on the team that season behind Connor Bedard’s 64.

Jordan Harris, D

In a world where right-handed defensemen are in high demand, Jordan Harris became available in free agency. The 24-year-old joined the Columbus Blue Jackets as part of the trade that sent right winger Patrik Laine to the Montreal Canadiens.

It didn’t seem to work out in Columbus, as Harris’ average ice time went down by six minutes from this past season compared to 2023-24. The D-man finished this past campaign with a goal and five points in 33 appearances with the Jackets.

Nikolai Kovalenko, RW

Nikolai Kovalenko could fly under many teams’ radars this off-season. The Russian right winger is coming off his first NHL season, playing for the Colorado Avalanche and San Jose Sharks.

In 57 games, the 25-year-old scored seven goals and 20 points while averaging 12:20 of ice time. Before entering the NHL, he was a respectable scorer in the KHL with Nizhny Novgorod. Kovalenko scored 11 goals and 35 points in 42 games in his final season overseas.

Philip Tomasino (David Gonzales-Imagn Images)

Philip Tomasino, C

Philip Tomasino is the youngest player among all the RFAs who didn’t receive qualifying offers. On top of that, the 23-year-old had the most points last season among those unqualified RFAs.

Tomasino scored 11 goals and 24 points in 61 contests with the Pittsburgh Penguins and Nashville Predators last season. He played up and down Pittsburgh’s lineup, ending the season averaging 13:27 of ice time.

NHL Free Agency Frenzy 2025: Live Tracker And AnalysisNHL Free Agency Frenzy 2025: Live Tracker And AnalysisWelcome to the NHL Free Agency Frenzy of 2025.

Pontus Holmberg, RW

The Toronto Maple Leafs let go of Pontus Holmberg. The 26-year-old Swede is coming off a career-high season, scoring seven goals and 19 points.

The Maple Leafs leaned on Holmberg several times this past season during tough stretches of injuries. Holmberg played the second-most games of the unqualified RFAs, sitting only behind Anaheim Ducks center Isac Lundestrom, who played 79 games.

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Bruins acquire Viktor Arvidsson from Oilers in pre-free agency trade

Bruins acquire Viktor Arvidsson from Oilers in pre-free agency trade originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Bruins made a trade with the Edmonton Oilers shortly before the NHL free agent market opened Tuesday.

The Oilers are sending forward Viktor Arvidsson to the Bruins in exchange for a 2027 fifth-round draft pick, the teams announced. Arvidsson waived his no-trade clause to allow the deal to go through, per TSN’s Pierre LeBrun.

Arvidsson is entering the final season of a two-year, $8 million contract ($4 million salary cap hit). The Bruins will have about $8.7 million in cap space after this trade.

The 32-year-old left wing provides some much-needed scoring depth to Boston’s lineup.

He had a bit of a down 2024-25 season with the Oilers, scoring 15 goals with 12 assists in 67 games. He scored 26 goals for the Los Angeles Kings during the 2022-23 campaign. He has scored 20-plus goals five times in his career.

Arviddson can be a dangerous player off the rush and isn’t afraid to fire pucks on net — two attributes the Bruins need to add.

There were 380 forwards last season who logged at least 500 even-strength minutes, per Natual Stat Trick, and Arvidsson ranked 19th with 9.56 shots per 60 minutes.

Arvidsson isn’t going to be a huge difference-maker for the Bruins, but he’s a solid buy-low addition.

New Bruins head coach Marco Sturm was an assistant during Arvidsson’s first season with the Kings in 2021-22, so he already has some familiarity with the Swedish forward.

NHL Free Agency Frenzy 2025: Live Tracker And Analysis

Image

Welcome to the NHL Free Agency Frenzy of 2025.

Catch up on the latest NHL free agency coverage and follow along as we track all the big deals from the beginning of the signing season.

Stay tuned to The Hockey News as free agency opens at 12 p.m. ET. We're tracking the big signings and trades while featuring our free agency coverage, including lists, rumor roundups, analysis, news and more.

Also tune into The Hockey News' Free Agency Frenzy Live, going live at noon ET on YouTube, X, Facebook and more.

Signings Tracker

Catch up on some of the notable re-signings in the week leading up to July 1.

Detroit Red Wings: Patrick Kane (UFA), 1 year, $3 million cap hit (up to $4 million in performance bonuses). Read more

Columbus Blue Jackets: Ivan Provorov (UFA), 7 years, $8.5 million AAV. Read more

Los Angeles Kings: Andrei Kuzmenko (UFA), 1 year, $4.3 million AAV.

Florida Panthers: Brad Marchand (UFA), 6 years, $5.25 million AAV, per reports. Read more

Vegas Golden Knights (in a sign-and-trade from Toronto): Mitch Marner, 8 years, $12 million AAV, per reports. Read more

Edmonton Oilers: Evan Bouchard (RFA), 4 years, $10.5 million AAV. Read more

Florida Panthers: Aaron Ekblad (UFA), 8 years, $6.1 million AAV. Read more

New York Islanders: Alexander Romanov (RFA), 8 years, $6.25 million AAV. Read more

Nashville Predators (after trade from Vegas): Nicolas Hague, 4 years, $5.5 million AAV. Read more

Boston Bruins: Morgan Geekie (RFA), 6 years, $5.5 million AAV. Read more

Toronto Maple Leafs: Matthew Knies (RFA), 6 years, $7.75 million AAV. Read more

Ottawa Senators: Claude Giroux (UFA), 1 year, $2 million cap hit (up to $2.75 million in performance bonuses). Read more

Columbus Blue Jackets: Dante Fabbro (UFA), 4 years, $4.125 million AAV. Read more

St. Louis Blues: Joel Hofer (RFA), 2 years, $3.4 million AAV. Read more

Calgary Flames: Kevin Bahl (RFA), 6 years, $5.35 million AAV. Read more

Florida Panthers: Sam Bennett (UFA), 8 years, $8 million AAV. Read more

Buffalo Sabres: Jack Quinn (RFA), 2 years, $3.375 million AAV. Read more

Montreal Canadiens (in a sign-and-trade from NY Islanders): Noah Dobson (RFA), 8 years, $9.5 million AAV. Read more

Toronto Maple Leafs: John Tavares (UFA), 4 years, $4.38 million AAV. Read more

Edmonton Oilers: Trent Frederic (UFA), 8 years, $3.85 million AAV. Read more

Dallas Stars: Jamie Benn (UFA), 1 year, $1 million cap hit (up to $3 million in performance bonuses). Read more

Utah Mammoth (after trade from Buffalo): JJ Peterka (RFA), $7.7 million AAV. Read more

Boston Bruins: Mason Lohrei (RFA), 2 years, $3.2 million AAV. Read more

Trade Tracker

Check back here for some of the notable recent trades during the off-season.

To Toronto: Matias Maccelli
To Utah: Conditional 2027 third-round pick (becomes 2029 second-rounder if Leafs make playoffs and Maccelli records at least 51 points in 2025-26)

To Minnesota: Vladimir Tarasenko
To Detroit: Future considerations

To Nashville: Nicolas Hague, conditional 2027 third-round pick
To Vegas: Colton Sissons, Jeremy Lauzon, 2027 third-round pick

To Detroit: John Gibson
To Anaheim: Petr Mrazek, 2026 fourth-round pick, 2027 second-rounder

To Ottawa: Jordan Spence
To Los Angeles: 2025 third-round pick, 2026 fourth-rounder

To Montreal: Noah Dobson
To NY Islanders: Two 2025 first-round picks, Emil Heineman

To Columbus: Charlie Coyle, Miles Wood
To Colorado: Gavin Brindley, 2025 third-round pick, conditional 2027 second-rounder

To Utah: JJ Peterka
To Buffalo: Michael Kesselring, Josh Doan

To Vancouver: Evander Kane
To Edmonton: 2025 fourth-round pick

To Philadelphia: Trevor Zegras
To Anaheim: Ryan Poehling, 2025 second-round pick, 2026 fourth-rounder

Top UFAs

Check out each UFA, their age and previous cap hit.

Centers

Mikael Granlund, 33, $5 million

Pius Suter, 29, $1.6 million

Jack Roslovic, 28, $2.8 million

Lars Eller, 36, $2.45 million

Adam Gaudette, 28, $775,000

Anthony Beauvillier, 28, $1.25 million

Pontus Holmberg, 26, $800,000

Nick Bjugstad, 32, $2.1 million

Luke Kunin, 27, $2.75 million

Mason Appleton, 29, $2,166,667

Wingers

Brock Boeser, 28, $6.65 million

Nikolaj Ehlers, 29, $6 million

Jonathan Drouin, 30, $2.5 million

Andrew Mangiapane, 29, $5.8 million

Gustav Nyquist, 35, $3.185 million

Victor Olofsson, 29, $1.075 million

Evgenii Dadonov, 36, $2.25 million

Connor Brown, 31, $1 million

Corey Perry, 40, $1.15 million

Jeff Skinner, 33, $3 million

Christian Dvorak, 29, $4.45 million

Philipp Kurashev, 25, $2.25 million

Max Pacioretty, 36, $873,770

James van Riemsdyk, 36, $900,000

Justin Brazeau, 27, $775,000

Defensemen

Vladislav Gavrikov, 29, $5.87 million

Brent Burns, 40, $8 million

Dmitry Orlov, 33, $7.75 million

Matt Grzelcyk, 31, $2.75 million

Ryan Lindgren, 27, $4.5 million

Brian Dumoulin, 33, $3.15 million

Cody Ceci, 31, $3.25 million

Tony DeAngelo, 29, $775,000

Nate Schmidt, 33, $800,000

Ryan Suter, 40, $775,000

Goaltenders

Jake Allen, 34, $3.85 million

Ilya Samsonov, 28, $1.8 million

Alex Lyon, 32, $900,000

Dan Vladar, 27, $2.2 million

Vitek Vanecek, 29, $3.4 million

David Rittich, 32, $1 million

Anton Forsberg, 32, $2.75 million

James Reimer, 37, $1 million

Alexandar Georgiev, 29, $3.4 million

Georgi Romanov, 25, $910,000

NHL Free Agency Coverage

Mitch Marner Leaves The Toronto Maple Leafs For Vegas, Per Report. How Did Nine Years Lead To This?Mitch Marner Leaves The Toronto Maple Leafs For Vegas, Per Report. How Did Nine Years Lead To This?In what has felt like an inevitability since the NHL’s 2024-25 Stanley Cup playoffs ended, star right winger Mitch Marner is leaving the Toronto Maple Leafs for the Vegas Golden Knights via a sign-and-trade deal. 

Golden Knights Release Update On Defenseman Alex Pietrangelo

10 Enticing Depth Forward Options

The Art Of Keeping Quinn: Nearing Demko Extension, Latest Move To Keep D-Man Hughes In Vancouver

Double Play: Tavares, Knies Extensions Give Maple Leafs Financial Clarity

With Gibson Off The Board, Oilers’ Goalie Hunt Gets Harder

Patience Over Paydays: Why Waiting Until 2026 Free Agency May Be The Best Move For Some NHL GMs

Four Tiers Of Players Who Can Sign Extensions On July 1

Why A Bowen Byram Trade To The Canucks Could Save A Rebuild

Jonathan Toews Agrees To Sign With His Hometown Winnipeg Jets In NHL Return

Leafs' Mitch Marner Could Be The NHL's Biggest Free-Agent Signing Of The Past Decade

The NHL's No-Tax Team Advantage Is Not A 'Ridiculous Issue,' But Bettman Has Won The Argument

Vancouver Canucks' Conor Garland Is 'Really Excited' About New Coach Adam Foote

With Cap Room To Burn, Hurricanes Could Aim To Fix Familiar Playoff Failures This Off-Season

Marchand And Perry Could Shift UFA Market Amidst Strong NHL Playoff Runs

NHL Rumor Roundups

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NHL Free Agency: Flyers Best Goalie Options Include an Old Friend

Former Flyers goalie Alex Lyon is one of the best free agent goalies this offseason. (Photo: Eric Hartline, Imagn Images)

The Philadelphia Flyers picked a bad time to need a goalie from the NHL free agent market.

Of the 12 unrestricted free agent goalies, two had a save percentage of .900 or higher, and none of the 12 recorded more than 16 wins this season.

The top option in free agency, Jake Allen, is still playing at a high level and will draw attention from Stanley Cup contenders, including his own team, the New Jersey Devils. The former Stanley Cup champion will receive offers more suitable from elsewhere around the NHL.

So what does that leave the Flyers with? An old friend and a bunch of redemption stories.

Leading the pack, and perhaps the most likely of the bunch if for no reason other than a feel-good story to carry us through what could very well be another long year, is Alex Lyon, who spent five years with the Flyers organization after going undrafted out of the USHL.

Lyon, 32, fell apart after a strong start to his pro career, but re-emerged with the Florida Panthers two seasons ago.

The former Flyers goalie has spent the last two seasons - his first and only two as a full-time NHLer - with the Detroit Red Wings, going 35-27-6 in 74 games to the tune of a 2.96 GAA, a .901 save percentage, and three shutouts.

Spectacular numbers? Certainly not, but the Flyers can do (and have done) worse at the position. Lyon is a veteran and has been through the grind of the AHL, which should help set a positive example for the younger goalies in the organization, like Aleksei Kolosov and Carson Bjarnason.

Among 45 goalies who played 30 or more games this season, Lyon's 2.4 goals saved above expected ranked 26th in the NHL, per MoneyPuck.

Flyers starter Sam Ersson ranked 45th out of 45 with -19.9.

Another name to watch - and there aren't many - is Ottawa Senators netminder Anton Forsberg.

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The 32-year-old Swede has been with Ottawa since 2020-21 and has generally never played for great teams at the NHL level, aside from a three-game stint with Carolina in 2019-20.

Despite that, Forsberg owns a respectable .904 career save percentage. In Ottawa, Forsberg was 62-56-10 in 142 games, posting a 2.99 GAA, a .905 save percentage, and eight shutouts.

Again, like Lyon, not spectacular, but achieves the goal the Flyers are setting out for this summer.

It should be noted that Forsberg is coming off a three-year contract worth $2.75 million a year and could easily bargain for the same on this market.

That could prove to be a little rich for the Flyers' tastes, especially knowing that Lyon was pulling in a more modest $900k for his services.

In terms of goals saved above expected this season, Forsberg finished right behind Lyon, placing 27th with 2.2 goals saved above expected.

One last free agent goalie the Flyers should be considering is none other than former Toronto Maple Leafs goalie Ilya Samsonov, who has seen his fair share of ups and downs after once being considered one of the most exciting goalie prospects in the world.

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The 28-year-old has posted .890 and .891 save percentages in consecutive seasons, but also has two seasons under his belt with save percentages of .913 or higher.

If and when he leaves the Vegas Golden Knights, Samsonov will be on his third team in three years, so a one-year prove-it deal is in the cards if the Flyers make an offer.

By most metrics recorded by MoneyPuck, Samsonov performed about how he was expected to this season, even despite his underwhelming raw stats.

For instance, MoneyPuck has him at 0.6 goals saved above expected for the year, a save percentage 0.0004% above expected, and a GAA 0.02 above expected.

Basically, Samsonov was not actively crushing his team's chances of winning games, but also not providing any surplus value beyond that.

Interestingly, Samsonov's 0.825 high-danger save percentage was 0.135 above expected, which is considerable.

The talent has always been there for the Russian, but consistency has not. If the Flyers feel they can get any value out of a short-term stay, Samsonov is worth a dart throw in free agency this year.

Canadiens Did Not Submit A Qualifying Offer To A Few RFAs

On the eve of free agency, it was the deadline for teams to submit qualifying offers to their pending RFAs. For the Montreal Canadiens, that meant goaltenders Jakub Dobes and Cayden Primeau, forwards Rafael Harvey-Pinard, Sean Farrell, Xavier Simoneau, and defensemen Jayden Struble, William Trudeau, Gustav Lindstrom, and Noel Hoefenmayer.

In Lindstrom’s case, it matters very little since the right-shot 26-year-old blueliner has already signed a five-year deal with Djurgårdens in the SHL. Considering his age and the length of the agreement, it would be surprising to see him return this side of the pond.

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As for Rafael Harvey-Pinard, who had made the most of his opportunity when the Injury Ninja hit the Canadiens hard during the 2022-23 season when he recorded 20 points in 34 games with the Habs and turned that into a 2-year deal with a $1.1 M AAV, he did not receive a qualifying offer. That doesn’t necessarily mean he’s done in Montreal; they could still sign him as a free agent, but it does mean the Canadiens weren’t ready to offer him $1,000,000, which was his qualifying offer.

Simoneau and Hoefenmayer didn’t receive an offer either. Simoneau is a 5-foot-7, 24-year-old left-shot center who had a rough season with the Laval Rocket this year. In 58 games, he could only muster 21 points, down from 38 in 2022-23 and 37 in 2023-24. He was a sixth-round pick by Montreal at the 2021 draft, and in nine playoff games this postseason, he notched three points.  

As for Hoefenmayer, he was obtained in a trade with the Oilers in December in which the Canadiens sent Jacob Perreault their way. The 26-year-old left-shot defenseman was a fourth-round pick by the Arizona Coyotes at the 2017 draft. In 32 games with the Rocket this season, he recorded 14 points in 32 games but was only dressed in six of the Laval outfit’s playoff games.

Photo credit: Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images


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'I Would Love To Play My Whole Career Here': Inside Steven Lorentz's Three-Year Extension With The Maple Leafs

Toronto Maple Leafs forward Steven Lorentz is staying at home.

The 29-year-old forward was trekking the back nine of a golf course on Monday afternoon when he agreed to a three-year, $4.05 million contract with an annual average value of $1.35 million. Lorentz was creeping towards the open market, with less than 24 hours until free agency, though he knew he'd always remain in Toronto.

"There was no doubt in my mind that I'd be back in Toronto again. It definitely has been a process, and maybe it went a little bit longer than I'd hoped, but that's part of being unrestricted," Lorentz said Monday evening.

"In my heart, I knew I wanted to come back. I knew that I wanted to stay, I didn't want to go anywhere else, and I'm just so proud and happy to be able to get it done, and I'm already looking forward to next year."

Lorentz's story isn't different from many who grew up as Maple Leafs fans in the Greater Toronto Area, except for one aspect: he now plays for them. As a child, Lorentz watched Toronto push toward a Stanley Cup, hoping that they'd get across the finish line every year.

They won two rounds, in 1999 and 2002, but that's the closest they ever got.

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After basking in being a Maple Leaf this past season, Lorentz will now have three more years to go into battle with Toronto in hopes of bringing the historic trophy back home.

"Honestly, that's what I wanted more than anything, was just the longevity. I would love to play my whole career here in Toronto. Last year was even better; it exceeded expectations," he said.

"Just being able to wear the Leaf with pride and being able to play at home, with friends and family, and trying to bring a cup to a city that's been longing for it for so long, and it deserves it...

"We still have that goal that we want to be the hardest-working team. We want to be the best team. We want to be the team that comes out on top in June. It was kind of a no-brainer, working out the contract details and stuff like that."

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Bursting onto the scene with his puppy-like personality at training camp last September, Lorentz and the Maple Leafs agreed on a one-year, $775,000 contract after the preseason. He had just won a Stanley Cup a couple of months earlier with the Florida Panthers and wanted to return home so that he could do the same here.

"I've tried (to imagine winning the Stanley Cup in Toronto)," Lorentz said with a grin last September. "This is such a hockey city, and it's no secret it would just be mayhem if the Leafs were ever to do it."

Ultimately, after a 19-point season, which tied a career high, plus two assists in the playoffs, Toronto was ousted in the second round by the very same team that he won with the year prior. The year didn't finish how he and many others would've liked it to, but what it means to be a Maple Leaf isn't lost on Lorentz.

"I don't think I'll ever forget skating out for Game 1 of playoffs," he grinned.

"I remember looking at [Scott Laughton] on the bench, just a couple of local boys, and we're like, holy you know what, this is sick. I still remember the first 10 minutes and we came out flying. That's something I don't think I'll ever forget, so that's one that sticks out, but there was so many (memories).

"Little things on the ice, off the ice, in the community, at practice, it was a blur, but I don't think there was a bad day, minus the day we lost out. It was just so disappointing, but it was such a fun year, and like I said, it's such a great group there, and I wouldn't really want to go to war with anybody else."

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Lorentz is already feet-first into his offseason work, skating with several players from the Kitchener-Waterloo area. There's one thing, though, left to tick off his summer bucket list: getting married to his fiancée, Erin. 

And after that, it's back to Maple Leafs land—with a three-year extension in his hands—to begin the quest of bringing hockey's ultimate prize back to Toronto for the first time since 1967.

"My head's kind of still buzzing right now," he smiled.

"It's been a crazy couple of weeks in just trying to get this thing done, but more than anything, I'm just excited, and like I said, it's such a great group that, it didn't take a lot of decision-making. I knew my heart was here."

(Top photo of Lorentz: Nick Turchiaro / Imagn Images)

Blackhawks Extend Qualifying Offers To Key Players, Let Philipp Kurashev Walk

The Chicago Blackhawks have officially reached July. The draft is in the rear-view mirror, and NHL teams only have free agency and trades left to improve their franchises. 

On Monday, the last day of June, Ben Pope of the Chicago Sun-Times reported the news that the Blackhawks have extended qualifying offers to Wyatt Kaiser, Louis Crevier, and Arvid Soderblom. All of them remain restricted free agents.

Philipp Kurashev did not receive one and will become an unrestricted free agent. This will likely end his five-year tenure in Chicago, the team that drafted him. 

Ben Pope (@BenPopeCST) on XBen Pope (@BenPopeCST) on XBlackhawks have given qualifying offers to Wyatt Kaiser, Louis Crevier and Arvid Soderblom, per source. They all remain RFAs. Crevier and Soderblom have arbitration rights. Kaiser does not. Philipp Kurashev was not qualified and becomes a UFA.

Kaiser and Crevier are defensemen who will likely rotate in and out of Chicago’s lineup during the 2025-26 season. They are both solid and deserve playing time. Each of them may even get some games in the AHL to stay fresh. Chicago has a lot of serviceable defenders, which is a good problem to have. 

As for Soderblom, unless the Blackhawks make a move on an established veteran goalie, an extension would likely mean an opportunity to be Spencer Knight’s backup in 2025-26. 

Soderblom had an outstanding year in different roles for Chicago. Whether he was the number one, the backup, or splitting time at any point in the year, the Hawks knew that they had a reliable player between the pipes. 

As for Kurashev, he fell out of favor with the current folks in charge. After a strong 2023-24 season that saw him have 18 goals and 36 assists for 54 points in 75 games, he took a major step back with just 7 goals and 7 assists for 14 points in 51 games in 2024-25. He was mostly a healthy scratch down the stretch. 

Kurashev will find work elsewhere. Another team will give him a chance based on his good moments in the past. Kyle Davidson and his staff are much more focused on players that they brought into the organization. 

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