'It's Great That The Game Doesn't Count, Let's Put It That Way': Nikolaj Ehlers, Sebastian Aho, Rod Brind'Amour On Preseason Loss

The Carolina Hurricanes suffered a third-period collapse Wednesday night at Lenovo Center, losing 4-2 to the Florida Panthers in their second preseason contest despite outshooting them 49-16.

It was clear that the Hurricanes outclassed the Panthers' NHL regular-less roster through 40 minutes, but the Canes decided to start packing it in early after going up 2-0 and you can't really do that.

After the game, Hurricanes coach Rod Brind'Amour along with Nikolaj Ehlers and Sebastian Aho spoke with the media. Here's what they had to say:


Rod Brind'Amour

On his first impressions of Nikolaj Ehlers in game action and on the top line: I thought they were good early. Had some buzz and then as the game went on, it kind of wasn't great. But I think it's tough to play in these games, I get it. But you can see that they generated a bunch early. Hopefully that will continue.

On Bradly Nadeau: He had some chances, one near the end Svech set him up. Again, he's a young kid still trying to figure it out. We'll keep giving him opportunity. 

On it being a community game: I think it's very important. The fanbase and the Hurricanes, we have a good relationship and I think anything we can do to show our appreciation is special, so I'm glad that we do it.

On Givani Smith: There's not much not to like about the way he's played. You always want to know when you ask about a player, 'What does he do and what can he provide?' and it's pretty obvious if you watch.

On seeing Dominik Badinka and Ivan Ryabkin in game action for the first time: They did fine. For a young kid, it wasn't NHL players they played against, but it's still men and I thought [Ryabkin] did well and Badinka isn't much older. He's a young guy too. The key is to not look out of place, right? If you can fit in and then all of a sudden, they did. They looked right at home there. So I think that's real positive.

On if he considered giving Frederik Andersen the full 60 minutes: Nah. Really, I think originally we were thinking maybe just go half, but it didn't feel like he even had to make a save. But it's not really about that either. It's more like, 'Okay, we got through it without any incidents, let's get him out of there.' That's kind of what the decision was.

On Mike Reilly: I thought he was good tonight. Again, those are guys that could be really, really important at some point or maybe even right away. You don't know how it's going to shake out. Those guys that are new like that, I think it's important for them to get acclimated to what we're doing. Now we have clips and things we can teach off of to get everybody up to speed even more so.

On having a learning moment from how the game ended: It sucks to play a game like that and then lose, but there's a reason we lost too. We could have walked out of that game 5-2 and still didn't have a very good segment in there, but now it's obvious. So we can hammer home the point a little more. It's great that the game doesn't count, let's put it that way.


Nikolaj Ehlers

On his impressions from his first game as a Hurricane: I like the way we played in the first two periods. We put a lot of pressure on them, gave them nothing. I've played against this team enough to know that that's the identity of this team and we did that for 40 minutes. 

On the impact of game action over practice: You want to lay a foundation in practice, but ultimately, it's the games that you find that chemistry in and where you learn how to play with each other. I think we did a lot of good things today, but there were also a lot of shifts where there was really nothing happening at all, but that's a part of playing in the NHL. We got some work to do.

On putting on the jersey for the first time and playing in front of the Lenovo Center crowd: It was really cool. The jerseys were looking pretty nice. Lots of fans out there, which is always nice. You want to play in front of a lot of fans. Felt good. Obviously it sucks to lose, always does, but it was a good first game. Got some game legs in you, but there's a lot better in this room. 


Sebastian Aho

On the team's performance: Obviously a brutal third period, but at least we got a lesson on how not to play hockey. Obviously this time of year doesn't really matter, but I guess the good thing is we can get some clips and talking points out of the third period, but obviously we had plenty of chances to put the game away, but obviously that last... You play a real game, you do whatever you can, the last little step to put the puck in. But I guess it was a good day to miss all those and save them for the regular season and the real games.

On building chemistry with Nikolaj Ehlers: I think that's the good part about the preseason. You bring a new guy in and there's probably a thousand little details that you have to soak in all at once and then when you play a game, you really see and feel how each situation goes. I know already that we're going to build a lot better chemistry just buying in and doing the little details the right way. Every team has different tendencies and like I said, that's why the preseason is good when you're trying to learn a new system and new guys and all that.

On getting reps with the full PP1 unit: Obviously when we start in a couple of weeks, that's a big part of hockey right now. Special teams, a lot of times, dictate how the games go and obviously we did some good things and had some good looks. We'll build here in the preseason so we can be as sharp as possible when we start.


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As He Battles For Roster Spot, David Edstrom Continues To Adjust To North American Hockey

Jun 28, 2023; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Vegas Golden Knights draft pick David Edstrom stands with Knights staff after being selected with the thirty second pick in round one of the 2023 NHL Draft at Bridgestone Arena. Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

When David Edstrom’s name was called in the first round of the 2023 NHL Draft, he just so happened to be in Nashville.

The draft was held in Bridgestone Arena that year, but Edstrom wasn’t selected by the Predators. He was picked 32nd overall by the Vegas Golden Knights.

Fast forward to just over two years later. The 20-year-old Swedish center found himself in Bridgestone Arena again, this time in a Predators uniform. He scored the final goal of the Preds’ 5-0 victory against the Florida Panthers in the pre-season opener last Sunday.

Funny how things come full circle. After being selected by Vegas, Edstrom spent the next season playing for the Swedish World Junior Team, recording three assists during the tournament before appearing in 44 games with Frolunda HC (SHL).

When the Golden Knights traded for San Jose Sharks forward Tomas Hertl in March 2024, Edstrom was part of the deal that also included a first-rounder in the 2025 NHL Draft.

After he informed the Sharks of his intention to play in Sweden, Edstrom was shipped to the Predators five months later. Nashville sent goalie Yaroslav Askarov, forward Nolan Burke and Colorado’s third-round pick in the 2025 NHL Draft.

Along with Edstrom came goalie Magnus Chrona and the Golden Knights’ conditional first-round pick in this year’s draft to Nashville.

Now, Edstrom is in Predators’ training camp fighting for a roster spot. It’s been quite a journey for the 6-foot-3, 190-pound native of Goteborg, Sweden, but he’s just happy to be in this position, for however long that may be.

“I’m just trying to learn new stuff each day, trying to get better,” Edstrom said during media availability Wednesday. “There’s a bunch of good guys here, so I’m just soaking it in every day, just trying to get better.”

Proving His Worth

Edstrom has shown some flashes of his talent during the first week of camp and in pre-season play. With the Predators leading Florida 4-0 late in Game 1 of their split-squad doubleheader, Edstrom took a feed from Brady Skjei after the puck ricocheted off a Panther defender. Edstrom then fired a wrist shot that went behind Florida netminder Brandon Bussi for the Preds’ final goal of the night.

“I thought he had a heck of a game against Florida,” Preds head coach Andrew Brunette said of Edstrom on Wednesday. “He seems to be getting better every time I see him.”

Last season, Edstrom collected 19 points (7-12-19) in 39 games with Frolunda HC and had a brief stint with Milwaukee in the AHL. He appeared in four post-season games for the Admirals but did not collect a point.

As eager as he is to get to the NHL, Edstrom knows he still has some things to learn.

“I think it’s been really good for me to get back to Milwaukee last season to end the year there, to meet all the coaching staff and players, to get a bit more of American hockey,” Edstrom said. “That’s something I’m trying to soak in during the summer and been working on a lot.”

Finding A Mentor

Apr 14, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Nashville Predators center Ryan O'Reilly (90) celebrates his goal with his teammates against the Utah Hockey Club during the first period at Bridgestone Arena. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

One of those “good guys” Edstrom mentioned earlier is Ryan O’Reilly, the Predators’ top-line center. Edstrom credits the 34-year-old veteran for helping him adjust.

“He’s a really good role model for me, his game, every detail,” Edstrom said of O’Reilly. “He’s a good guy to look up to.”

Edstrom is a long shot to make the final roster out of training camp. The Hockey News ranks him as the Preds’ No. 3 prospect and projects his NHL arrival in 2026-27.

Along with O’Reilly, Edstrom is competing with the likes of Steven Stamkos, Fedor Svechkov and Michael McCarron. The exceptional play of Brady Martin and Matthew Wood make the battle for forward spots even more intriguing, especially with Luke Evangelista not in camp as he attempts to negotiate a new contract.

Edstrom will most likely start the season with Milwaukee once again. In the meantime, he’s keeping his head down and working on his game.

“I’ve been working a lot on explosiveness this summer,” Edstrom said. “That is something I need to keep working on. Be more explosive in the gym, and it will translate into my game. Also faceoffs, be more explosive, skating and the skill stuff.”

Young Panthers earn shocking comeback victory over veteran-filled Hurricanes squad in Raleigh

The Florida Panthers played their third preseason game of the week on Wednesday night in North Carolina.

Florida faced the Carolina Hurricanes, who they’ve defeated in two of the past three the Eastern Conference Finals.

Much like their previous trip to Nashville on Sunday, the Panthers did not bring any expected NHL regulars on the trip – other than expected backup goalie Daniil Tarasov – instead allowing their younger prospects and players fighting for roster spots to have another opportunity to show what they could do.

Carolina, meanwhile, dressed plenty of their NHL guys, including Sebastian Aho, Andrei Svechnikov, Nikolaj Ehlers, Seth Jarvis, Frederik Andersen and Shayne Gostisbehere.

Tarasov looked good in his first appearance in a Panthers sweater, playing the entire 60 minutes and stopping an eye-popping 47 shots, backstopping Florida to a stunning 4-2 win.

The only goals to get by him were on a great deflection by Carolina’ Ryan Suzuki and off a quick turnover that led to a slot one-timer off the stick of Jesperi Kotkaniemi, both coming during the opening frame.

Considering the Panthers were outshot 19-2 during the first period, a 2-0 deficit didn’t seem that terrible.

Things didn’t get much better in terms of shot volume during the second period, but Tarasov stopped all 16 shots sent his way to keep Florida down by only two heading into the third.

Defenseman Ben Harpur, who got into a fight earlier in the game, got the Panthers on the board with a sneaky wrist shot from the right-side boards that got past the blocker of Amir Miftakhov just under four minutes into the final frame.

It wasn’t until late in the third when the preseason version of the Comeback Cats roared to life.

First it was Gregor scoring a gift of a goal after Miftakhov gave the puck away behind the net to Gracyn Sawchyn, who quickly fed Gregor in front of a wide-open net.

Just 1:16 later, Mike Benning fired a shot that went off the stick of Miftakhov, rolled up his arm and went just over the goal line to five the Panthers a stunning 3-2 lead.

Jack Studnicka added an empty-net goal to seal the victory for Florida.

Carolina outshot the Cats 49-16 in the game, but Florida played an excellent third period to shock the Hurricanes and head back home with a win.

The Panthers ended up going 4-for-4 on the penalty kill, including a lengthy 5-on-3 during the first period. Tarasov stopped all eight of the power play shots sent his way by Carolina.

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Photo caption: Sep 24, 2025; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Hurricanes left wing Eric Robinson (50) tries to get to the puck against Florida Panthers defenseman Mike Benning (20) and defenseman Tobias Bjornfot (22) during the first period at Lenovo Center. (James Guillory-Imagn Images)

Colby Barlow Impresses in Jets Preseason Loss Against Oilers

Jets former first round pick puts on impressive performance in preseason loss to the Oilers Tuesday

It might be safe to say that Colby Barlow is ready to make the jump to pro hockey. 

While the Winnipeg Jets were downed for their second straight preseason loss Tuesday after falling 3-2 to the Edmonton Oilers. The team's 2023 first round pick had a standout performance with a goal, a +2 rating and five shots on net. Barlow was noticeable all over the ice as he made more than a handful impact plays. 

His line with high-end prospects Parker Ford and Brad Lambert made their presence felt as they were involved on the Jets first goal of the game. Barlow jumped up in the play after anticipating that Lambert would be able to free the puck off the boards from a Oilers defender. He speeds up to scoop the puck and dishes the puck to Ford who tries to work it back but the pass is knocked away. 

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The quick thinking by Barlow led to a lengthy possession in the Oilers end that was capped off by a Colin Miller goal from the point. Before the shot was fired, Barlow quickly moved to the front of the net as the puck was working its way to the point. He got in position for a screen or for an opportunity to tip the puck in and the play resulted in a goal. 

Winnipeg Jets (@NHLJets) on XWinnipeg Jets (@NHLJets) on XFirst (preseason) game ✅ First (preseason) goal 🚨

Barlow showcased his hockey IQ throughout the game like when intercepting a centering pass in the Oilers end and creating a high-danger chance but was turned away by Calvin Pickard in net.

He also showcased his talents on both ends of the ice as during a backcheck into the Jets end, Barlow caught up to a pinching Oilers defender coming into the zone looking to get a shot off in the high zone. He stick-checked the defender and quickly turned away the scoring chance before chipping the puck out to Lambert and creating a fast break the opposite way. 

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Barlow's best play of the night was late in the third period, when the Jets found themselves down 3-1 after giving up a power play goal followed by a defensive collapse leading to the Oilers third goal. Barlow was out in the final minutes and made another solid play.

He again saw the puck working its way back to the point and made sure he secured a prominent position in the netfront. Barlow was able to screen the goalie and even get a stick on a point shot from Ville Heinola for a re-direction that got past backup goaltender Matt Tomkins to cut the Oilers lead to one. 

TSN (@TSN_Sports) on XTSN (@TSN_Sports) on XColby Barlow gets his goal off the deflection after his first was given to Miller! 😅

Although they lost the game, it was a very positive showing from Barlow as he said post-game that his changes to his body were noticeable as he was able to get in the play easier and felt faster. 

"I think it's just moving my feet, getting in on the forecheck, backchecking, I think that gets you into the game pretty quick and, gets you involved all over the ice," Barlow explained "Definitely felt faster out there, light on my feet, more agile, was able to carry the puck, back check, get into place. So I think that's a big thing for me that helped me." 

Barlow is expected to not make the Jets main roster and will be optioned to the Manitoba Moose for the upcoming season. In his first three AHL games last season, he averaged a point-per-game with a goal and two assists.

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The Evolution Of Dominance - Apr. 1 2019 - Vol. 72 Issue 13 - Matt Larkin

REMINISCING ABOUT DARRYL SUTTER’S Los Angeles Kings feels like admiring primitive cave drawings these days. They won Stanley Cups as recently as 2012 and 2014, but hockey has changed so much that those teams look like Dead Puck Era throwbacks.

Sutter’s Kings were dominant possession teams, outstanding defensively and, most memorably, they were huge. The average NHLer in 2011-12 was 6-foot-1 and 204 pounds. The Cup-winning Kings: 6-foot-2 and 210 pounds. The average NHLer in 2013-14 was 6-foot-1 and 202 pounds. The Cup-winning Kings: 6-foot-2 and 211 pounds. They outweighed their typical opponent by an average of nine pounds per guy in 2014. They wore the competition down with a heavy game.

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We know what happened next, of course. The 2015 Chicago Blackhawks won with one of the smallest teams in the league, and coach Mike Sullivan’s need-for-speed Pittsburgh Penguins captured consecutive Cups in 2016 and 2017 with a workmanlike defense corps that fired stretch passes to a brigade of fleet-footed, undersized forwards. The 2015 Hawks and 2016 Penguins were about six-foot on average with a mean weight below 200 pounds. Both teams were shorter and lighter than the league average. Being a copycat league, the NHL thus ushered in an era of rewarding speed and skill. The Kings’ style suddenly became fossilized. They missed the playoffs this spring for the third time in the past five years.

So would the NHL belong to the Little Guy for years to come, then? Hold on. To assume things would stay exactly the same would mean forgetting how Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection works. A quick refresher: organisms pass on traits to their offspring, certain traits suit them better for survival, and individuals whose traits suit them well to survival will pass on the most offspring to the next generation.

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Giraffes are tall because the generations of shorter giraffes died out from failure to reach food in high places. For a while, big hockey teams bred other big hockey teams because the game was tailored to reward a heavy style. The Kings’ approach has died out because the game rewards speed and skill more than ever. Starting in 2017-18, stricter enforcement of slashing rules really opened up space for smaller, faster players. The likes of Johnny Gaudreau, Mitch Marner, Brayden Point and Alex DeBrincat could fill the net like they never could’ve even five years ago. They were naturally selected to thrive in the new NHL ecosystem.

Eventually, however, a generational mutation would come along favoring a new set of traits built to thrive. That brings us to the 2018 Stanley Cup-winning Washington Capitals. They oozed skill and speed, no doubt. Evgeny Kuznetsov, Nicklas Backstrom, Alex Ovechkin, John Carlson and T.J. Oshie were high-talent, high-motor offensive weapons, all first-round picks. The Caps had the razzle-dazzle to compete with, and defeat, the skill-oriented Penguins and Tampa Bay Lightning plus a Vegas Golden Knights team that prioritized a rapid, hornet’s-nest approach to forechecking and back pressure.

The Caps, though, also had Tom Wilson. And Lars Eller. And Devante Smith-Pelly. And Brooks Orpik. And Jay Beagle. In an NHL growing noticeably smaller and lighter, this Capitals team averaged 6-foot-1 and 203 pounds, making it the biggest championship squad since the 2014 Kings. The Caps had the size to play a Sutter-like bruising style when necessary and the skill to run and gun. Wilson epitomizes Washington’s dual-threat identity. He’s a 6-foot-4, 220-pound monster who bludgeons opponents with his hits and fists yet also keeps up with Ovechkin and Kuznetsov in a first-line role, stride for stride.

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Behold, the next phase of hockey’s evolution. It’s established that small and fast beats big and slow in today’s NHL. But it stands to reason a biological mutation to big and fast beats small and fast. The laws of natural selection suggest any team that manages to blend both traits should win the fight to survive.

The Tampa Bay Lightning have been hockey’s most dominant, talented club this season. They also entered 2018-19 as the NHL’s 28th-heaviest and 23rd-tallest team. Our Stanley Cup pick, the Winnipeg Jets, entered the season as the league’s tallest and seventh-heaviest squad – while still boasting almost as many elite-skill players as the Lightning. Washington’s evolutionary traits made it a champion last year – and could birth a new Cup-winning offspring in Winnipeg this June.

Ex-Devils Goalie Could Miss Start Of Season

Mackenzie Blackwood (© Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images)

While speaking to reporters, including the Denver Gazette's Evan Rawal, Colorado Avalanche head coach Jared Bednar shared that former New Jersey Devils goaltender Mackenzie Blackwood is making progress with injury recovery but might not be ready for the start of the 2025-26 season. 

If Blackwood ends up not being good to go at the start of the campaign, it would be tough news for the Avalanche. This is because Blackwood is their clear starting goalie and a big part of their roster because of it. 

After being acquired by the Avalanche from the San Jose Sharks, Blackwood immediately made a big impact. In 37 games with the Avalanche following the move, the former Devil posted a 22-12-3 record, a 2.33 goals-against average, and a .913 save percentage. Due to his strong play, Blackwood also earned a five-year, $26.25 million contract extension with the Avalanche. 

Blackwood was selected by the Devils with the 42nd overall pick of the 2015 NHL Entry Draft. In 152 games over five seasons with the Metropolitan Division club, he recorded a 65-57-18 record, a .906 save percentage, a 2.97 goals-against average, and eight shutouts. 

Blackwood's time with the Devils ended when he was traded to the Sharks during the 2023 NHL off-season in exchange for a 2023 sixth-round pick. 

Red Wings Prospect Signs Four-Year Deal To Stay With Russian Club

Red Wings recent 5th round pick Nikita Tyurin signs four-year extension with Russian club

Detroit Red Wings 2025 fifth-round pick Nikita Tyurin has committed to staying in Russia for the foreseeable future, signing a new four-year contract with his MHL club, HC Spartak Moscow.

The deal, announced on Wednesday by the team, runs through the end of the 2028–29 season and marks a significant step in the young defenseman's development path. 

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Tyurin, 18, had a breakout debut in Russia’s Junior Hockey League (MHL), playing a key role in JHC Spartak Moscow’s run to the Kharlamov Cup championship. Standing 6 feet tall and weighing 187 pounds, the Moscow native reportedly totaled 30 points (6 goals, 24 assists) over 75 games across all competitions, establishing himself as one of Spartak’s most promising young defensemen.

Red Wings Prospects (@LGRWProspects) on XRed Wings Prospects (@LGRWProspects) on XNikita Tyurin(5th round’25) GOAL🚨 he starts the play and finishes it. #LGRW

In 50 regular-season MHL games, Tyurin recorded 20 points (4 goals, 16 assists), finishing as Spartak’s second-highest scoring defenseman while averaging 18 minutes of ice time per game. His mature, poised play earned him a spot in the MHL All-Star Game, a gold medal at the Challenge Cup, and a call-up to the KHL, where he made his debut with Spartak’s senior team.

We recently highlighted some of his early success this season and broke down a recent interview Tyurin had done with the JHL website, where he mentioned he needs to continue to add muscle and weight as he felt undersized going into puck battles. He added that he added 13 pounds in the off-season after weighing in at 174 pounds last season. 

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While the new deal means Tyurin is likely to remain in Russia for at least the next few seasons, it could benefit both player and NHL team alike. He would turn 22 years old at the end of his deal and could present the option to follow up his development in the Spartak system with a stint in North America with the Grand Rapids Griffins. 

For now, Tyurin should receive opportunities in both the MHL and KHL with valuable ice time and experience before making the leap to pro hockey. With a new contract in place and a championship already under his belt, Tyurin now turns his focus to further cementing his place as one of Russia’s top young defensive talents.

Red Wings Prospects (@LGRWProspects) on XRed Wings Prospects (@LGRWProspects) on XYesterday Nikita Tyurin(5th round’25): 2 Assists +4 4PIM 2/5 SOG 1 shot block 22:40 TOI in a 7-1 win. #LGRW

Also signing a four-year extension with Spartak is fellow young blueliner Vsevolod Matveev (17), who played in 47 MHL games last season and has already appeared in four KHL contests this year.

Sabres Set To Play One Of Most Pressure-Packed Seasons In Team History — Can They Finally End Playoff Drought?

Tage Thompspon (Timothy T. Ludwig, USA TODAY Images)

The NHL’s 2025-26 season is nearly here, and the Buffalo Sabres are being cautiously optimistic about their chances of ending a 14-year Stanley Cup playoff drought. You don’t see Sabres GM Kevyn Adams, coach Lindy Ruff or Buffalo’s players making grand pronouncements guaranteeing the Sabres will make the playoffs. Nobody under the Sabres’ umbrella will be handing out dressing room white-board material to their opponents in the highly-competitive Atlantic Division.

However, make no mistake – this is shaping up to be one of the most pressure-packed seasons in Sabres history. From Game 1 of the year through to the point Buffalo either qualifies for or are eliminated from the playoffs, the Sabres’ every move will be under the microscope. Any one particular loss could wind up being the difference between Buffalo making or missing the playoffs. 

There’s virtually no room for error with this Sabres group. They have to be consistently competitive, and while we know Buffalo isn’t going 82-0-0 in the standings, the Sabres need to eke out standings points wherever they can. You never know – a playoff spot could come down to one standings point. 

This is why Buffalo’s day-in, day-out results will be so fascinating this year in particular. Sabres fans are beyond exhausted cheering on a team that has been almost comically inept in the past decade-and-a-half. They need to see progress out of the gate, or cynical fans will pop up right away decrying the state of this organization.

Lots of teams need a good start right from the first game of the season. The Detroit Red Wings are one of those teams. For different reasons, the New York Rangers are another one of those teams. And for different reasons, the Vancouver Canucks are another one of those teams. 

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But there are degrees of desperation going on in hockey’s top league, and no team has a deeper degree of desperation than the Sabres. Buffalo can’t afford another year of dismay, and the Sabres are going to need every bit of puck luck and grace from the hockey gods if they’re going to avoid being the punchline for jokes for a 15th-consecutive season.

The Sabres can't avoid it -- the pressure is going to be there, day-in and day-out, no matter what goes on. If they do come out strongly, the pressure will be on them to stay consistent in that regard. And of course, if they come out poorly, the vultures will quickly emerge to pick their bones clean.

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Thus, Buffalo has to tackle the pressure in a heads-on manner. Their leadership will be tested, as will their depth. And the Sabres' response to the particular type of pressure they create for themselves will dictate what their legacy is going to look like.

"It's Time": Dylan Larkin Lays Out Clear Goal For Red Wings

The city of Detroit hasn't hosted a Stanley Cup Playoff game since April 2016 against the Tampa Bay Lightning at Joe Louis Arena, who at that time were overseen by general manager Steve Yzerman.

It was a quick five-game series and to date remains the most recent occasion that the Detroit Red Wings have played beyond the 82nd game of the regular season. 

That Red Wings team featured a young, Michigan-born rookie named Dylan Larkin who has since become the 37th team captain in franchise history and has been the one to face the media and answer difficult questions during several lean seasons since then. 

Larkin is preparing for his 11th season since breaking into the NHL, and there is no player on the Red Wings roster who more badly wants a return to postseason play. 

His teammate Andrew Copp flatly stated following practice on Tuesday that Detroit must secure themselves a postseason berth this season. While Larkin stated that all 32 NHL clubs have certain expectations of themselves, it's the time for the Red Wings to not only make the playoffs but to do some damage. 

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"I would think all 32 teams in training camp right now have that mentality. If you don't, there's an issue," Larkin said following Wednesday's practice. "I think coming into the state of where we are as a team - like, Lucas Raymond, Mo Seider haven't made the playoffs in their careers and they're way too good of players for that." 

"It's time to put ourselves in a position that we've been putting ourselves in the last few years and to just stick and just not be satisfied with that," he said. "We've got to make it and start to make noise in the playoffs." 

"We Have To Make The Playoffs": Andrew Copp Has Blunt Expectation For Red Wings in 2025-26 The Detroit Red Wings enjoyed one of the longest postseason streaks in professional sports, qualifying for the Stanley Cup Playoffs every season from 1991 through 2016.

Larkin's wish for playoff hockey is the fervent desire of Red Wings fans near and far, especially his caveat of being able to "make noise". 

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Blackhawks Young Defender Scores Nice Goal

Wyatt Kaiser (

© Matt Marton-Imagn Images)

After a long summer of contract negotiations, the Chicago Blackhawks re-signed defenseman Wyatt Kaiser to a two-year, $3.4 million contract last week. This was a very important move for the Blackhawks to make, as Kaiser is one of the team's brightest young defensemen. 

Kaiser took a nice step in the right direction this past season with the Blackhawks, recording four goals, eight points, 54 hits, 93 blocks, and an even plus/minus rating in 57 games. Now, he will be looking to hit another new level for the Blackhawks this upcoming season.

Kaiser certainly started off his preseason on the right foot, as the 23-year-old defenseman scored a nice goal in the Blackhawks' preseason contest against the Detroit Red Wings on Sep. 23.

After receiving a perfect feed in the offensive zone from Aidan Thompson, Kaiser showed patience with the puck before firing a fantastic wrist shot past Red Wings goalie Sebastian Cossa in the third period.

This is exactly the kind of stuff that the Blackhawks will be hoping to see from Kaiser this campaign. If he takes a step forward with his offense this season and continues to improve defensively, he could become a big part of Chicago's blueline moving forward. 

Kris Letang’s Hat Trick Highlights Penguins’ First Training Camp Scrimmage

The Pittsburgh Penguins held their first scrimmage of training camp on Wednesday. 

The scrimmage lasted approximately an hour, with one 25-minute period held at the Covestro Rink and the other at the FedEx Rink. Sidney Crosby, Bryan Rust, and Avery Hayes were on the top line for Team Black, while Evgeni Malkin, Anthony Mantha, and Danton Heinen were on the top line for Team White. 

Team White won the scrimmage by two, 5-3, thanks to a hat trick from Kris Letang. He was everywhere on the ice, skating methodically and showcasing his shot throughout. After Sam Poulin opened the scoring for Team Black, Letang scored the next two goals to give Team White a 2-1 lead.

Letang's second goal was especially impressive, beating Jarry with a one-timer that went in and out of the net in what felt like a millisecond. He later got a hat trick on a penalty shot after getting tripped near the boards. Letang was paired with Ryan Graves for most of the scrimmage and skated fluidly throughout. 

Outside of Letang, let's look at a few other players who stood out during the scrimmage. 

The entire Heinen-Malkin-Mantha line

Evgeni Malkin was on the top line for Team White and his line was living in the offensive zone during the scrimmage. He set up Danton Heinen with a sick behind-the-back pass near the boards for a mini breakaway and Heinen buried the puck to give his team a 3-2 lead. 

Letang would later get the eventual game-winning goal, but Anthony Mantha would put the exclamation point on the game at the end of the second period with a snipe past Maxim Pavlenko to make it 5-3. Pavlenko played the entire secon period after Tristan Jarry played the first. 

Training camp has only been going for a week, but due to the chemistry that Malkin and Mantha already have, it would be a surprise if they didn't start the season together on the second line. 

Sam Poulin

Poulin opened the scoring for Team with a nice shot that beat Sergei Murashov five-hole in the opening period. Outside of that, he played a methodical game and was on a line with Gabe Klassen and Boko Imama. 

Even though it was only a scrimmage, Poulin needed a performance like this since he looked rough during Monday's preseason game against the Canadiens. He now needs it to translate to other preseason games since he's still likely on the outside looking in for a full-time roster spot. 

Sergei Murashov

After he was arguably the Penguins' best player during Monday's preseason game, Murashov carried that momentum into Wednesday's scrimmage.

He played the entire scrimmage since Joel Blomqvist is day-to-day with a lower-body injury and made a tremendous save on Crosby when it looked like he had a sure goal from about 10-15 feet out. Murashov flashed the glove on Crosby, which drew some nice cheers from the crowd that was on hand to watch the scrimmage. His positioning was also rock-solid during both periods. 

Murashov continues to be the best goaltender at training camp, but it remains to be seen if he crack the opening night roster. This isn't a prospect that the Penguins want to rush. 

The Penguins will play their second preseason game on Wednesday night against the Columbus Blue Jackets. Puck drop will be at 7 p.m. ET, and fans can watch the game live on the Penguins' official website. 


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Flyers Cut 2 2025 Draft Picks from Training Camp Roster

(Photo: David Kirouac, Imagn Images)

The Philadelphia Flyers have announced their second round of training camp cuts, headlined by two 2025 draft picks.

On Wednesday, the club announced that center Matthew Gard and defenseman Luke Vlooswyk, 2025 second- and fifth-round picks, respectively, have been returned to the WHL Red Deer Rebels.

Gard, 18, featured in Tuesday night's preseason loss to the Montreal Canadiens, winning one of five faceoffs and recording a shot on goal in 11:11 of ice time.

Vlooswyk, 18, did not play in either of the Flyers' two preseason games.

Also cut from the training camp roster was defenseman Andre Mondoux, who initially attended rookie camp on an amateur tryout offer alongside goalie Joey Costanzo.

Mondoux, 18, only appeared in eight OHL games for the Kingston Frontenacs last season, recording one assist.

He spent 49 games with the OJHL Pickering Panthers, so he'll need to play a full season at the OHL level and continue to develop before the Flyers or another NHL team offer him an entry-level contract or otherwise consider drafting him in the 2026 NHL Draft.

The Flyers' next preseason game will take place on Thursday, Sept. 25, when they face the Washington Capitals at the Giant Center, home of the AHL Hershey Bears, at 7 p.m.

Flyers fans can catch this game on NBC Sports Philadelphia.

Former Flyers Goalie Signs With Overseas Club

Felix Sandstrom (© Eric Hartline-Imagn Images)

Former Philadelphia Flyers goalie Felix Sandstrom is taking his talents overseas, as he has signed with Karpat of the Finnish Liiga. Karpat also announced that the contract is a short-term one, as it lasts until Nov. 2. Furthermore, Sandstrom's deal also comes with an NHL opt-out clause. 

Sandstrom spent the entirety of this past season with the Buffalo Sabres' American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Rochester Americans. In 19 games with the AHL squad this past campaign, he posted a 12-5-2 record, a .899 save percentage, and a 2.86 goals-against average. 

Sandstrom was selected by the Flyers with the 70th overall pick of the 2015 NHL Entry Draft. In 30 games over three seasons with the Flyers from 2021-22 to 2023-24, the 28-year-old goaltender posted a 4-18-4 record, a .880 save percentage, and a 3.66 goals-against average. He has not played at the NHL level since his time with the Flyers ended. 

Sandstrom will now look to make an impact with Karpat after landing this short-term deal. It will be intriguing to see what kind of season he puts together from here. 

Hockey's Oldest Business – Since 1847: Chapter 11 – Nike Bauer

A lot can happen in just a short period of time in any facet of life, so you can imagine the twists and turns that have fundamentally altered the history of hockey equipment manufacturing since the early 1990s, when Canstar Sports and its many brands – namely Bauer – dominated the industry.

Canstar is a predecessor company of Roustan Sports Ltd., and to say that it dominated is really an understatement.

An article published in The Globe and Mail in 1992 referred to Canstar as “the Wayne Gretzky of hockey gear.” And although the article also referred to the game of hockey “as Canadian as maple syrup,” this wasn’t entirely a case of a writer simply searching for easy metaphors. (1) Rather, the author used the Gretzky comparison to illustrate how the company, like The Great One himself, had achieved tremendous success at home in Canada before being successfully exported all around the world.

The various Canstar brands – Bauer, Cooper, Micron, Mega, Lange, etc. – generated approximately $80 million worth of sales in the United States and Europe in 1990, representing more than half of the company’s total revenue that year. Significantly, it was devoting two to three percent of its sales to research and development, which the article pointed out was “more than double the Canadian average.” This commitment to innovation and manufacturing, most of which was happening at home in Canada, was expected to help Canstar Sports remain a global industry leader. (2)

It was around this time that Canstar’s historic hockey stick factory in the Hespeler section of Cambridge, Ontario, under the direction of plant manager Ross Huehn and Canstar product manager Larry Koabel, evolved to begin producing high-end wooden Bauer sticks for use by NHL players.

For many years, the factory had produced budget-priced Cooper sticks and Hespeler-branded sticks before that.

The early 1990s marked a change in how things were done, and the marketplace responded.

“We always seemed to have pent-up demand on the stick side (of Canstar), and they kept growing every year,” Koabel, who is now Roustan Sports’ costing and purchasing manager, said in an interview. “And that's what drives the profits is volumes and the stick business. It's all about volumes.”

Roustan Sports still maintains spreadsheets of Bauer’s NHL clientele back in the mid-1990s, and it reads like a Hockey Who’s Who of the era. Bauer produced sticks for players from each of the 26 teams in the league at that time, including superstars like Mario Lemieux, Eric Lindros, Pavel Bure and others. Even Gretzky is on the list, although that was his Easton era, so it’s not clear if he ever used his Bauer sticks in games. (See the sidebar below for a more comprehensive but by no means complete list of players.)

Pavel Bure seen using a Bauer stick in 1999. (RVR Photos-Imagn Images)

Canstar Sports had something else in common with Gretzky in that its remarkable success made it a target of bigger fish in the comparatively small pond of sports equipment manufacturing, which was going to go through a massive upheaval. Gretzky had to leave the Edmonton Oilers in 1988 due to changing market factors that were going to hinder the Oilers’ ability to keep paying him what he was worth. Likewise, footwear giant Nike became aware of Canstar’s success and decided to make its principals an offer they wouldn’t be able to refuse.

By this time, Canstar president and chief executive officer Gerry Wasserman, the man who was most responsible for its success, had left the company. He began his exit by transitioning first to the position of vice-chairman, replaced as president by Donald MacMartin, but he eventually left Canstar entirely and began running Weider Health and Fitness in Los Angeles – Weider fitness empire co-founders Joe and Ben Weider were, like Wasserman, natives of Montreal. MacMartin did not remain with Canstar long, though, and on Wasserman’s recommendation, he was succeeded in February 1994 by Pierre Boivin.

Hockey's Oldest Business – Since 1847: Chapter 9 – Canstar Sports 1Hockey's Oldest Business – Since 1847: Chapter 9 – Canstar Sports 1 As a practice goalie with the Montreal Canadiens in the late 1950s, Gerald Wasserman put his life on the line every time he saw Bernie 'Boom Boom' Geoffrion coming down the wing and winding up for a slap shot.

Boivin is also a Montreal native and, like Wasserman was, he is a career executive with a deep interest in sports. One of his early roles was president of a Montreal-based sporting goods distributor called Norvinca. (3) He was working alongside Wasserman with Weider in California when he was invited to return to Montreal and take the reins of Canstar Sports.

One of his first tasks as the company’s new president was to meet with Nike and negotiate a research-and-development and licensing project that would see the shoe company distributing some of Canstar’s projects. That deal didn’t pan out, but in October 1994, the two firms began talking again. This time, though, the stakes were much higher.

In December, it was announced that Nike would buy Canstar Sports for a whopping $545.8 million. (4)

Nike chairman and co-founder Phil Knight was quoted as saying Canstar’s success in hockey was a major factor in the takeover.

“Canstar’s dominance in the elite ice skate market is unsurpassed, with more than 70 percent of NHL players wearing Canstar skates,” Knight said in an article published by the Kitchener-Waterloo Record. The article said Canstar would “remain an autonomous unit in the Nike’s worldwide empire,” but noted in reference to the company’s hockey stick factory in Hespeler and the Bauer skate and equipment plant in nearby Galt that it was “still uncertain what impact, if any, the deal might have on the Cambridge operations.” (5)

Nike was adamant that Canstar would keep running as it had, “without any change to its structure, operations, management or personnel.” Boivin certainly seemed convinced, assuring a Montreal Gazette reporter at the time of the sale that he could “take that to the letter... We’ll be fully autonomous and a stand-alone company. When it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” (6)

But he was singing the exact opposite tune less than three years later, after Nike had begun to dismantle the Canstar Sports empire piece by piece.

“I’m an adherent of the philosophy, ‘If it’s not broken, break it.’ The time to reinvent is when things are going well, not when your business is struggling,” Boivin, now the president and CEO of what had been renamed Bauer Inc., told The Financial Post Magazine in June 1997, by which time the business was indeed struggling.

“The reality was that we had peaked with our internal competencies and financial capabilities. We felt that Nike would liberate us and give us the opportunity to advance to the next level,” Boivin said. (7) There was no elaboration of what he meant by “liberate,” and there was no explanation in this burst of corporate jargon for his apparent change of heart.

It may have come from the same place that others, like Larry Koabel, had resisted going to. Soon after the sale was completed, Koabel was sent to Nike corporate headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon. Koabel was a successful product manager working in the marketing department in Canstar’s Mississauga office after having begun his career at the hockey stick factory in 1974, when it was owned and operated by Cooper Canada. He had long been accustomed to working in environments where he was encouraged and trusted to perform his various duties in ways that made sense to him, based on his experience and his knowledge.

Now it was made clear that Canstar employees would be expected to do things differently – the so-called Nike way – even though Nike executives had no comparable experience or knowledge in the fields where people like Koabel excelled. He saw the visit to Beaverton for what it was.

“They sent me to be reprogrammed,” he said. “I knew when I walked out of there, there wasn’t going to be one factory that was going to survive. These people were in no way going to do anything good for hockey.”

Koabel made his exit soon after, as overtures to move to Montreal didn’t interest him, nor did other opportunities to stay with what remained of Canstar as it transitioned to Bauer Inc. and eliminated Canstar’s other brand names, including legendary Cooper. (The company would soon be renamed again to Nike Bauer Hockey Inc.)

“Nike, they were so far out to lunch when it came to hockey. It was ridiculous. And their attitude was just, you couldn’t tell them anything, because they were Nike,” he said, adding that Boivin didn’t help matters as a chief executive because, while he did have a sports background, he was really not a hockey guy. “Boivin didn’t know as much about hockey as he did about the ski business.”

It was in January 1997 when Nike announced that Bauer was “underperforming” and would be “repositioned.” A Montreal Gazette reporter noted that Nike had a history of outsourcing its production to Asia and wondered if Bauer would be following that path. Boivin managed to answer that question with “no” and “never say never” in the same interview.

“We have an ongoing responsibility to make sure that we’re globally competitive,” he said. “But the bottom line is that there are no plans for layoffs.” (8)

If anyone believed that statement, they were in for an unpleasant surprise when it was announced only three months later that the skate and equipment plant in the Galt section of Cambridge would begin to wind down its operations, putting more than 400 people out of work. The plan then was for Canadian skate and equipment production to be consolidated at the company’s factory in Saint-Jerome, Quebec, but it was made clear that no jobs would be added at that facility. A spokesperson confirmed the obvious, that outsourcing would be the outcome, claiming it was “because of very competitive pricing” by rival manufacturers already operating overseas. (9)

Another reporter, quoting a disgruntled worker who was losing his job in Cambridge, alleged that, “Nike never had any interest in preserving Bauer’s operations. All it wanted was the legendary Bauer name and access to the company’s technical expertise, so it could teach workers in Asia how to make hockey skates.” (10)

That point of view would have been hard to refute when, within four years, the Saint-Jerome factory had also been gutted, and the Nike Bauer head office in Montreal was closed and moved across the US border to Greenland, New Hampshire. Only a skeleton crew was being maintained in research and development in Saint-Jerome so that the company could continue to qualify for tax credits from the province of Quebec. (11)

As Chris Zimmerman tells the story, there’s more to it than that.

Zimmerman, now the St. Louis Blues’ president and CEO of business operations, had joined Nike in 1995 as the company’s advertising director for North America. He remembers that Nike had taken notice of the booming inline skate market, which Wasserman had cultivated as he built Canstar into an industry giant. Nike was still very much a footwear and apparel company but saw inline skates as a natural progression in footwear. Unfortunately, they were late to the game and did not foresee that the roller-blading boom was, in reality, a fad that had played out.

“I think about a week or two after Nike bought Bauer, that market started a decade-long crash,” Zimmerman said in an interview.

“When Nike bought Canstar, they didn't really buy it for the hockey business. They bought it for the roller blade business,” Mark Duggan, another Nike executive of the era, said in a separate interview. “Nike wanted to get into that business because it was something that everybody had told them – you need to get into this business because it’s so big. At one point, I think Rollerblade, the company, was worth almost a billion dollars, so it couldn't be ignored.”

In retrospect, Koabel’s memory of being sent to Oregon to be “reprogrammed,” as he put it, bears out because it appears that Nike was still trying to figure out its own strategy at the same time. It was trying to build revenue in products and in a market it didn’t understand as well as it should have.

“The hockey part of it was important, but it wasn't the priority as I understand it,” Duggan said. “And the business model that Canstar had was not necessarily the same business model that Nike was familiar with, meaning that Canstar owned a lot of factories. Nike doesn't really own factories – they lease them, or they contract exclusively with factories.

“It was an interesting acquisition. The problem became that the roller blade business died quickly. I mean, it went from, I want to say it was a $200 million business with Bauer, and it ended up being worth about $15 million when Zimmerman took over. So it went from a significant revenue to almost, what's going on here?”

In retrospect, then, it’s understandable that Bauer was “underperforming” by 1997 as far as Nike was concerned. Boivin, having overseen the beginning of the end of the good times, left the company in 1999 to become president of the Montreal Canadiens. His replacement didn’t last, and Zimmerman eventually stepped in to become president and chief executive officer of what was soon renamed Nike Bauer, with the parent company putting its stamp – or, more accurately, its swoosh – on its subsidiary.

Unlike Boivin, Zimmerman was a hockey guy, with serious credentials. A native of Waccabuc, New York, he had played hockey since childhood and was good enough to play four years of NCAA Div. I at the University of Vermont, where he earned a BA in economics. He then served as an assistant hockey coach at Babson College, a Div. II program, while studying for his MBA. In fact, being given the opportunity to coach at the end of his playing days was what drew him to Babson, where the coach was future New York Islanders bench boss Steve Stirling.

“I would say I was mostly a third-line kind of guy, working up and down and nothing flashy, but trying to maximize whatever talent I had,” Zimmerman said when asked to describe himself as a player. He is credited with having played 123 games with the Vermont Catamounts between 1977 and 1981, scoring a total of 22 goals and 60 points.

“I had an amazing experience, and then I got to coach. I had done a lot of hockey camps and had a passion for coaching, and so when I went to get an MBA, I spoke to them about working as an assistant coach, and I did that at Babson for two years.”

Zimmerman worked in the advertising business in New York City for a decade before joining Nike as its North American director of advertising in 1995, just after the deal closed to buy Canstar. He took over Nike’s golf business in 2000, and then in 2003, he was invited to head up the Nike Bauer division. The hockey equipment industry was continuing its transformation, as other shoe and apparel companies were moving into sport and creating an even more crowded marketplace alongside the traditional players.

Earl Takefman, the former president and chief operating officer of Charan, had quickly found his way back into the world of hockey after that company sold off what had been Cooper Canada and imploded. In 1990, he became the co-chief executive officer of SLM International Inc., a Montreal-based firm that acted as a holding company, similar to Canstar Sports’ predecessor, Warrington Products. One of the firms it had acquired was Sport Maska Inc., which – small world – owned CCM after snatching it away from Jack Cooper and Cooper Canada in the early 1980s.

Unfortunately, Takefman hadn’t learned much about hockey equipment manufacturing in the interim, and SLM International went bankrupt in 1995.

Enter Gerry Wasserman, the turnaround expert who, after leaving Canstar Sports and successfully operating Weider Health and Fitness in California, was living in retirement in Malibu. Wellspring Associates LLC took control of SLM and, in late 1996, enticed Wasserman to come aboard as the new chairman, CEO and president.

“I wouldn’t have come out of retirement for any other company,” he told the Montreal Gazette. “I think I know a little bit about hockey, and they convinced me this is an opportunity to resurrect a company that was truly in dire straits.” (12)

Hockey's Oldest Business – Since 1847: Chapter 10 – Canstar Sports 2Hockey's Oldest Business – Since 1847: Chapter 10 – Canstar Sports 2The business world mostly remembers the early 1990s as a difficult time due to a significant recession in North America that lasted for more than two years, but the sporting goods industry in Canada was a sector of the economy that surprisingly thrived during that time.

As he had done with Warrington Products/Canstar Sports, Wasserman oversaw SLM’s transformation into a new entity called The Hockey Company, and its brands eventually included not only CCM but also Canadien, Jofa, Titan and Koho.

By the time Wasserman exited the company and retired permanently, it billed itself as the world’s largest manufacturer of hockey equipment and had an exclusive licence to make and sell jerseys for all 30 NHL teams at the time. (13)

The Hockey Company had three manufacturing centers around the world, the largest being in Montreal, and approximately 1,000 of its 1,300 employees worked in Canada. It claimed that its share of the global hockey market was 30 percent, compared to Bauer’s 19 percent, and that at least 99 percent of NHL players were using its equipment. (14)

But, as with Canstar, The Hockey Company’s success made it a target for acquisition.

It went public in June 2003, and Reebok, following Nike’s lead from a few years earlier, came forward with an offer that was too good to turn down. In April 2004, it bought The Hockey Company for $436 million. (15)

Unlike Nike, however, Reebok committed to Canada by moving its Canadian head office to a new headquarters in Montreal and maintaining research and development and some manufacturing there. That’s still largely the case even though there have been a few ownership and name changes over the years, beginning in 2005 when Reebok itself was acquired by Adidas. The hockey sector of the business was first renamed Reebok Hockey, then Reebok-CCM in 2007, and then simply CCM in 2016. It has been owned by two different private equity firms since 2017. The manufacturing of hockey equipment has mostly left Canada, but CCM’s head office remains in Montreal, in a new headquarters building.

Other new players in the industry included yet another footwear company, New Balance, and its subsidiary Warrior Hockey (now Warrior Sports), which right from the beginning manufactured composite sticks, made of carbon fiber, resin and foam.

Easton had entered the pro market in the 1980s with its aluminum-shafted sticks – Brad Park is believed to have been the first NHLer to use them – and then made a huge splash in 1990 by convincing Wayne Gretzky to drop his wooden Titans and play with them, joining other all-stars like Brett Hull, Brian Leetch and Scott Stevens. (16) Easton eventually started building its own composite stick, the well-received Easton Synergy. Even Canstar Sports had dipped its toes in the water as far back as 1994 with its own composites, produced at a factory near Ottawa. (17)

This early experimentation was apparently not successful and, as Zimmerman notes, Nike Bauer’s business when he took over in 2003 “was not strong.” The company lagged behind Easton and CCM in general, he said, “and the stick business, they just didn’t have a meaningful composite stick offering, and the wood stick market had crumbled.

“We had to make some significant changes... Nike had lost over $100 million (on Nike Bauer) by the time I joined the business.”

Players of all ages and abilities were finding that they could shoot faster and more accurately with lighter composites than with wooden sticks, and it didn’t matter that they weren’t as durable and cost significantly more.

The writing was on the wall as far as wooden sticks were concerned. There would always be a market for them, but it wasn’t going to be as it was before. The NHL clientele that plant manager Ross Huehn and product manager Larry Koabel had carefully cultivated in Hespeler was shifting away from them.

The first real sign of trouble was a shutdown of the factory that lasted seven weeks in the summer of 2003 due to unexpected lower demand for sticks. Production had only just begun again when it was announced in early October that the plant would close for good no later than March 2004. The decision had been made at Nike Bauer headquarters in New Hampshire, but Zimmerman, much to his credit, showed up to deliver the bad news in person.

“It wasn’t really a discretionary decision,” he says now. “It was really one that had to happen along with other facility reductions or closures.”

Zimmerman might have been heartened by what he didn’t know at the time. He would definitely have been surprised to know then that not only would the business still operate in 2025, but he would also still be connected to it.

Even though Nike Bauer was closing the doors, the Hespeler hockey stick factory still had almost two decades of life left in it, thanks to the employees who put their hearts into every stick they made. They were the key to saving the wooden hockey stick business and paving the way for its revitalization at its current home, Roustan Sports Ltd. in Brantford. The next chapter will tell how they did it.


The historic hockey stick factory in the Hespeler section of Cambridge, Ontario, was in its heyday in the 1990s, when it manufactured Bauer sticks and blades for players from every NHL team. According to records maintained by Roustan Sports Ltd., this is a sample of just some of the skaters and goalies – among them numerous Stanley Cup champions and more than a dozen future Hockey Hall of Famers – who received sticks and/or blades from the Hespeler plant.

It should be noted that the players listed here did not necessarily use their Bauer sticks in games and may have ordered them for promotional or other purposes. For instance, it’s well known that Wayne Gretzky mainly used Easton sticks during the last decade of his playing career.

*Daniel Alfredsson, Ottawa Senators

*Ed Belfour, Chicago Blackhawks

Rod Brind’Amour, Philadelphia Flyers

*Pavel Bure, Vancouver Canucks

Wendel Clark, Toronto Maple Leafs

Eric Desjardins, Montreal Canadiens

Shane Doan, Winnipeg Jets

Adam Foote, Colorado Avalanche

*Grant Fuhr, St. Louis Blues

*Doug Gilmour, Toronto Maple Leafs

Adam Graves, New York Rangers

Travis Green, New York Islanders

*Wayne Gretzky, Los Angeles Kings

Bill Guerin, New Jersey Devils

Derian Hatcher, Dallas Stars

Kevin Hatcher, Dallas Stars

*Dale Hawerchuk, Philadelphia Flyers

Kelly Hrudey, Los Angeles Kings

Curtis Joseph, Toronto Maple Leafs

Kenny Jonsson, New York Islanders

Ed Jovanovski, Florida Panthers

Sami Kapanen, Hartford Whalers

Nikolai Khabibulin, Winnipeg Jets

Saku Koivu, Montreal Canadiens

*Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh Penguins

Trevor Linden, Vancouver Canucks

*Eric Lindros, Philadelphia Flyers

Kirk Maltby, Detroit Red Wings

Markus Naslund, Vancouver Canucks

Michael Peca, Buffalo Sabres

*Chris Pronger, St. Louis Blues

Mike Richter, New York Rangers

*Denis Savard, Chicago Blackhawks

Ryan Smyth, Edmonton Oilers

*Scott Stevens, New Jersey Devils

*Mats Sundin, Toronto Maple Leafs

Darryl Sydor, Dallas Stars

Tim Thomas, Boston Bruins

Rick Tocchet, Los Angeles Kings

*Mike Vernon, Detroit Red Wings

Peter Zezel, St. Louis Blues

* - Honored Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame

Jonathon Jackson is a hockey historian based in Guelph, Ontario.

Follow along as we post new chapters of Hockey's Oldest Business – Since 1847 on TheHockeyNews.com.

Read the previous chapter:  Chapter 10 – Canstar Sports 2


(1) Harvey Enchin, “Canstar pirouettes across the big pond,” The Globe and Mail, February 10, 1992.

(2) Enchin, “Canstar pirouettes.”

(3) Pat Hickey, “Habs fill Corey’s post,” Montreal Gazette, August 28, 1999.

(4) Francois Shalom, “Nike to buy Canstar for $545.8 million,” Montreal Gazette, December 15, 1994.

(5) Tom Nunn, “Nike to buy top area sports gear company,” Kitchener-Waterloo Record, December 15, 1994.

(6) Shalom, “Nike to buy Canstar.”

(7) Shona McKay, “Marriages of convenience,” The Financial Post Magazine, June 28, 1997.

(8) Francois Shalom, “Changes are afoot at skatemaker Bauer,” Montreal Gazette, January 11, 1997.

(9) Carol Goodwin, “400 lose jobs at Bauer,” Kitchener-Waterloo Record, April 11, 1997; François Shalom, “Nike just does it to Cambridge plant,” Montreal Gazette, April 12, 1997.

(10) John Heinzl, “Nike’s hockey plans put Bauer on thin ice,” The Globe and Mail, July 2, 1997.

(11) Francois Shalom, “Olympic great Boucher among turfed workers,” Montreal Gazette, June 6, 2001.

(12) Francois Shalom, “CCM is back in the game,” Montreal Gazette, February 17, 1997.

(13) “Hockey Co. snags NHL deal,” Montreal Gazette, June 1, 2000; “The Hockey Co. gets financing,” Montreal Gazette, February 20, 2001.

(14) David Bruser, “Reebok laces up CCM deal,” Toronto Star, April 9, 2004.

(15) David Bruser, “Reebok laces up CCM deal.”

(16) Don Campbell, “Aluminum sticks, Gretzky approved,” Ottawa Citizen, February 3, 1991.

(17) Oscar Rojo, “New hockey stick packs a lot, Canstar Sports says,” Toronto Star, June 10, 1994.