Examining the possible ‘pathway’ with Darnell Nurse and the Penguins

EDMONTON, CANADA OCTOBER 25: Darnell Nurse #25 of the Edmonton Oilers races for the puck against Rickard Rakell #67 of the Pittsburgh Penguins during the first period of the game at Rogers Place on October 25, 2024, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Photo by Leila Devlin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Last week’s note about Darnell Nurse’s trade request got a little more interesting when David Pagnotta reported that Pittsburgh and Los Angeles were two teams that Nurse told Edmonton where he would accept a trade. Pagnotta talked a little more:

Given how the Tristan Jarry trade worked out so wonderfully for Pittsburgh, it’s encouraging to hear that the Oilers are still taking calls from the 412 area code and considering future possible transactions. “Make as many trades as possible with Ken Holland” sounds like a very worthwhile managerial strategy these days.

Whether a deal can be made likely hinges on just how much the Penguins think Nurse can add to them at this point of his career in his 30’s and with a hefty $9.25 million cap hit compared to just what the Oilers are looking to get in return.

Nurse can be a fascinating topic on the internet, many recoil at the mention of him. Under the hood, he provides some value, though not to the levels of his contract.

In part, Goldman writes:

His comps point to some dicey outcomes, too — Michal Rozsival, Derek Morris, Jake Muzzin and Erik Johnson are potential cautionary tales. 

Separate the player from that $9.25 million contract, and get him out of Edmonton (where defense was a team-wide struggle most of this year), and there could still be something left to extract. Maybe he becomes the next Brayden McNabb and extends his career. A Brad Stuart path would be pretty neutral, too. 

This part also stood out:

Past reclamation projects show potential. Fowler and Trouba upped their game with new teams. Rasmus Ristolainen has played some of his best hockey in Philadelphia because the team’s structure insulates him so much, even when he manages the puck poorly. Seth Jones’ game was revitalized in Florida, thanks to their defensive foundation and a role change from a No. 1 to a second-pair player.

Ultimately, the Pens would have to hope to get something of a Trouba, Jones or Ristolainen outcome out of acquiring Nurse, if that’s how it went. The belief that Nurse could have a bounce back would come baked into any assumption that Pittsburgh would be interested in this player, which may or may not be the case at the highest levels of management. As we mentioned in the story last week, Jason Spezza and Kyle Dubas were with Team Canada at the recent World Championships and saw plenty of Nurse in person, so it figures they would have a pretty good recent impression of what they’re dealing with. (Whether that impression makes them more or less inclined to want Nurse at this point would be an unknown).

One path for the Penguins to make this acquisition make more sense would be to include Ryan Graves. Graves has $4.5 million annually for three more seasons. Graves is a virtual non-factor having been scratched more than he plays in the NHL, and that’s when he’s not been outright waived and sent to the AHL. Having an overpaid defenseman like Nurse that is at least NHL quality would be better than a complete liability like Graves – with a big kicker being that Nurse’s contract lasts one extra year.

For their part, the Oilers probably wouldn’t be too keen about taking on Graves though they might not have many other options given Nuse’s full no movement clause. Edmonton would benefit by dropping a $9.25 million player that isn’t working out in exchange for a $3.275 million cap penalty (assuming they buried Graves in the AHL, $1.225 million of his $4.5m cap hit would be attained in space) for one less year, which might be palatable in the big picture.

Should that come to effect, Pittsburgh would likely have to sweeten the pot for the Oilers since the reputation/perception of Nurse as a contributing player with an enlarged salary ought to still carry some level of positive value – especially if some of those salary concerns get balanced out by taking a bad contract.

If Edmonton isn’t looking to ‘eat money’ either directly by retaining salary on Nurse or indirectly by taking back some money on a contract the Pens would want to shed, a path towards a deal becomes more difficult. Pittsburgh has plenty of cap space to accommodate Nurse but the question would then become do they really want this player at a high rate for four more years that doesn’t fit the goal of getting younger? That becomes less likely of a realistic proposition.

Resolution to Nurse’s trade request will be worth tracking, given that the player has put the Pens on a short list of locations. Culminating a deal with the salary involved and hammering out an acceptable value is going to be tricky for Edmonton and whomever they end up making a trade with in this case. With the draft looming next weekend and the active July 1st date coming up, there could be an answer on this sooner than later to see if the Penguins are able or want to make another transaction with the Oilers. The path to get there could be made, if both sides are interested, though it might take some tricky compromises to find footing to have each team figure that they accomplish objectives in the process.

Maple Leafs' NHL 2026-27 Stanley Cup Winning Odds Revealed

The 2025-26 NHL season officially came to a close when the Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Vegas Golden Knights in the Stanley Cup final on Sunday. 

Though the Toronto Maple Leafs' campaign ended a while ago, all eyes are on next season, and it'll be an important year for the GM John Chayka's team in his first year in the front office.

Attached to this critical upcoming campaign, BetMGM have already revealed the odds for the 2026-27 Stanley Cup. And it's safe to say, after missing the playoffs for the first time in nine years last season, the Maple Leafs are not among the top favorites for next year's Stanley Cup.

BetMGM has given Toronto 61.00 (+6000) odds to win the Stanley Cup next year. Across all NHL teams, those odds make them tied for 19th, sharing the same odds as the Pittsburgh Penguins and San Jose Sharks.

Those odds going into next year are vastly different from what the Maple Leafs' odds were to win the Cup in the 2025-26 pre-season.

Ahead of last season, Toronto were the ninth-favored team to win the Stanley Cup at 17.00 (+1600) odds, according to hockeyreference.com. They were placed just above the Los Angeles Kings and behind the New Jersey Devils.

Report: Maple Leafs' John Chayka, Mats Sundin Talking With Morgan Rielly's Representative About Off-Season PlansReport: Maple Leafs' John Chayka, Mats Sundin Talking With Morgan Rielly's Representative About Off-Season PlansFor what seems like a possible end for Morgan Rielly's career with the Toronto Maple Leafs, conversations between the defenseman and GM John Chayka and senior executive advisor Mats Sundin are reportedly "ongoing."

For the 2026-27 campaign, while the Leafs are ranked at 19, they aren't at the bottom of the barrel when it comes to the Atlantic Division. Of course, the Atlantic is arguably the toughest division in the NHL, with every team owning a .500 record or better as late as April 8 this past year.

In the 2026-27 Stanley Cup odds ranking, the Maple Leafs stand ahead of two division rivals. Toronto sits behind the Florida Panthers, Tampa Bay Lightning, Buffalo Sabres, Ottawa Senators and Montreal Canadiens. Meanwhile, they stand ahead of the Detroit Red Wings, who fell out of the playoffs in the second half of the year and the Boston Bruins, who made the post-season.

The Maple Leafs were also slapped with 31.00 (+3000) odds to win the Eastern Conference. That's tied for the 11th-favored odds of the bunch.

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Jets Re-Sign Walker Duehr Ahead of Free Agency

The Winnipeg Jets have taken care of a piece of internal business ahead of NHL free agency.

The club announced Monday that it has agreed to terms with forward Walker Duehr on a two-year, two-way contract extension. The deal begins for next year's 2026-27 season and carries an average annual value of $875,000 at the NHL level. Duehr will earn just under half of that number ($425K) if playing in the AHL. 

Photo by Steve Sasaki/Game On Magazine
Photo by Steve Sasaki/Game On Magazine

Duehr, who was set to become an unrestricted free agent on July 1, will instead remain with the organization after carving out an important role as a veteran contributor with the Manitoba Moose in his first year with the team in 2025-26.

The 28-year-old winger appeared in three games with the Jets this past season, while spending the majority of the campaign in the American Hockey League. With Manitoba, Duehr recorded 17 goals and 17 assists for 34 points across 62 regular-season games. He added three points in seven postseason contests. 

The Sioux Falls, South Dakota product brings size and experience to Winnipeg’s depth chart and gives the organization another player capable of moving between the NHL and AHL when needed.

Originally signed by the Calgary Flames out of Minnesota State University, Duehr has suited up in 95 career NHL games between Calgary, San Jose and Winnipeg, recording 11 goals and 21 points. At the AHL level, he has collected 112 points through 205 career appearances. 

By getting Duehr signed before the market opens, the Jets retain a reliable depth option and a proven piece for the Moose as they continue shaping what should be a much different looking roster for the 2026-27 season.

Former Red Wings Forward Kyle Calder Passes Away At 47

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There is sad news to report on Tuesday morning with the passing of former NHL forward Kyle Calder, who spent part of his career with the Detroit Red Wings, at the age of 47.

The unfortunate news was confirmed by his daughter, Madison Calder, with a heartfelt post on Instagram. 

Born in 1979 in Mannville, Alberta, Calder broke into the game with the WHL's Regina Pats before eventually being selected in the fifth round (130th overall) of the 1997 NHL Draft. He would continue his career playing with the IHL's Cleveland Lumberjacks before eventually transitioning to the AHL's Norfolk Admirals. 

He would play several years as a member of the Blackhawks, which included a stint in the SHL with Södertälje SK during the 2004-05 NHL Lockout. 

His time in Chicago ended in 2006 when he was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers for forward Michal Handzus. As part of a three-team trade, he would be sent back to Chicago at the 2007 NHL Trade Deadline, who immediately flipped him to the Red Wings in return for Jason Williams.

Ironically, Calder's first game as a Red Wing took place in Chicago at United Center against the Blackhawks, and he scored a goal just 1:45 into the contest, converting on a centering feed from Johan Franzen. 

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He played in 19 total regular season games with the Red Wings, scoring five goals with nine assists. He also had an assist in 13 postseason games as Detroit advanced to the Western Conference Final. 

Not retained by the Red Wings after the 2007 postseason, he signed a two-year contract with the Los Angeles Kings. He would spend time with both the Kings and the Anaheim Ducks organizations, and later played 13 games in the KHL with Barys Astana. 

In 590 career NHL games, Calder scored 114 goals with 180 assists, and added two goals and one assist in 18 career Stanley Cup Playoff games. 

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Florida Panthers Among Teams With Shortest Odds To Win 2027 Stanley Cup

It’s time to start looking ahead to next season.

Now that the Stanley Cup has been awarded, there is nothing left for teams to do except gear up for the future.

Next week, the 2026 NHL Draft will take place in Buffalo, and a few days later, the new league year begins on July 1 with the start of free agency.

There are going to be plenty of changes across the league landscape between now and Opening Night in October, but that doesn’t mean we can’t start predicting who is going to win the next Stanley Cup.

That’s right, official betting odds on the next Cup winner are out.

Checking in with BetMGM, the official betting partner of The Hockey News, the favorite to win the Stanley Cup didn’t even reach this year’s Final.

The favorite to win the 2027 Stanley Cup Final is the Colorado Avalanche, coming in at +700.

This year’s champion, the Carolina Hurricanes, are next at +750.

As for the Florida Panthers, they come in with the fifth-shortest odds to win the Cup next year, which isn’t bad considering the Cats didn’t even make the playoffs this past season.

For Panthers fans who are feeling confident that a healthy Florida squad will get back to their Stanley Cup winning ways, they can lock it in at +1100 odds, the same as the Edmonton Oilers.

Only the aforementioned Avalanche and Hurricanes, and the Vegas Golden Knights at +1000, come in with shorter odds than Florida and Edmonton.

To check out the full list of teams and where their odds stack up, visit the BetMGM hockey futures page here.

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Regrading the last 10 drafts for the Penguins

PITTSBURGH, PA - MARCH 31: Pittsburgh Penguins center Ben Kindel (81) skates during the third period in the NHL game between the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Detroit Red Wings on March 31, 2026, at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, PA. (Photo by Jeanine Leech/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

As the draft gets closer, let’s look back at the results for the Pittsburgh Penguins over the last 10 years. We’re going off of the look we took last year, to see what changes and developments have happened in the last twelve months that might have changed the way we see the draft now.

 let’s see how the Pens have done recently in the draft.

2025

Grade: Incomplete (but hell yeah!)

One year isn’t near long enough to find deep meaning withing how an NHL draft went, but we still are including it to show what happened more than try and cast a critical eye at this point. For starters, getting a non-top 10 pick to play all season and be a contributing player is a unicorn occurrence, the Ben Kindel pick looks like it could be a very, very good one for the Pens. That alone will likely set them up for a good grade once it gets time to tell exactly what has panned out.

Beyond Kindel, it’s very much wait-and-see, which again is normal, expected and completely fine. Horcoff had a solid year in the NCAA, Zonnon turned heads making a seamless transition to the AHL in the playoffs and the rest of the many picks all had various degrees of success this season. There could be a few diamond in the rough hopefuls (Ryan Miller and Kale Dach are longshots worth keeping tabs on, for starters) and still plenty of time for the others to make their way. It’s early to make bold statements in any particular direction, but with that qualifier out of the way, the 2025 draft haul for the Pens could one day end up being very good. It certainly shows a lot of promise 12 months later.

2024

2025Grade: Incomplete (but trending nicely enough)
2026 Update: Yeah, that sounds about rightfor the time being

Brunicke became the rare teenaged defenseman in the NHL, though briefly and to spotty results. His future looks bright, especially after a great turn in the AHL playoffs. Several other players from this class like Howe, Pietila and Harding also completed modestly successful AHL seasons. It doesn’t look like a nearby NHL future is assured for any besides Brunicke, but considering that the Pens didn’t have a first rounder and only made two picks within the top-100, this is a so far so good situation for having a few decent prospects a couple years later. There’s enough going right at the moment that you don’t have to squint too hard to see several reasonable candidates for NHL action in the future, though it remains to be seen if any of them (besides Brunicke) will end up as important and long-lasting pieces of a future NHL roster.

2023

2025Grade: Incomplete (and also trending nicely enough)
2026 Update: Uh oh

Yager made his NHL debut for Winnipeg at the tail end of the season, but his overall prognosis is not looking very rosy at the moment based on underwhelming AHL stats. The Pens may have done well to trade him early on based on the post-draft developments, or lack thereof. (Of course, they’d be doing better still had they selected one of Matthew Wood, Samuel Honzek or Axel Sandin-Pellika, the next three choices off the board after they took Yager…)

Pieniniemi was just traded in what looks like a throwaway deal to move on from a young player after he failed to report to the ECHL at one point and held a virtual lock out for himself for a couple of months. Not unusual to see a third rounder flame out, but the circumstances around it were unfortunate to see that situation come to a resolution so quickly.

Ilyin had some nice moments in his AHL debut this spring and could well salvage this class, even if we include Rutger McGroarty as a stand-in for Yager, which he was as a prospect for prospect trade (McGroarty was drafted in 2022). The results from Pittsburgh’s 2023 picks is not looking like it’s going to create a lot of waves at the NHL level. At this point, you really need to see a big step from McGroarty in 2026-27 and Ilyin take a leap in order to get something out of it.

2022

2025 Grade: C- (with time remaining to improve the grade)
2026 Update: C- (with time starting to run out for the class)

Pickering had a very troublesome draft+4 that only saw him play in four NHL games and venture into the territory where he’s moving towards potential bust in a hurry. Next year will be big for him to sink/swim when it comes to his NHL prospects. The same could be said last year with some optimism but now is a lot more measured about what the possibilities are shaping up to be.

With that in mind, it looks like Murashov will likely be a one-man class out of this as far as candidates to play a major role as an NHLer for the long haul. (Plante and Devlin are in the NCAA with rights retained but not much pro projectability). Murashov has been a great AHL goalie and will likely soon get a chance to show if he has what it takes to make it in the NHL. Expectations around him have arisen monumentally within some segments of the media and fanbase, and not without reason. But it’s going to be a lot to live up to for him at this point. If Murashov becomes a quality NHL goalie, this grade goes up. Until then, it’s staying the same.

2021

2025 Grade: F (with a slight chance of improving)
2026 Update: Not much has changed

There was only one top-150 pick, so this class was likely always bound to be whatever Broz could develop into. He’s gotten right on the verge to see some NHL action but for one reason or another (sometimes due to him being hurt/sick when the opportunity was open), he’s only played one NHL game through his draft+5. Broz still has some intrigue and upside, but at this point he doesn’t look like a long-term difference maker either. Given the nature of this draft, a failing grade was almost bound to happen, so the harsh grade isn’t directed as a negative to the team so much as acknowledging the circumstances that occurred to make the result happen.

2020

2025 Grade: D+ (with slight chance to increase)
2026 Update: Moving to an F, for now

Clang provided the Pens with value when they moved him as part of the Rickard Rakell trade, and now he’s signed to a Swedish team after a few AHL seasons. Blomqvist has gotten stuck in the pecking order clearly behind Murashov. Blomqvist is a decent AHL goalie but hasn’t grown much beyond that to this point. The book isn’t closed on him helping the Pens at some point, but it doesn’t look like he’s going to be a major player either with Murashov and Arturs Silovs in his age range and firmly ahead of him.

Again, not much for high-value picks to work with so this is what it is. The curious decision to take goalies with both of the only two top-100 picks the team held was questionable then as it is now. It’s always good for a team to strategize taking the best player they think is out there, it might have been better if they tried to find a skater they liked for at least one of those picks.

2019

2025 Grade: D-
2026 Update: F

For all the hope that Poulin and Legare inspired, they have amounted to 19 games, 0 goals and two points between themselves. Even seven years later that is a bitter pill to swallow, following the expectations of developing some young talent. Sometimes, it’s just not meant to be and it wasn’t in this case.

Puustinen showed some flashes but didn’t have much staying power at the NHL level, and now the Pens have nothing from this draft class remaining in their organization with only the most modest of contributions to show from it (almost all of it at the NHL level from the seventh round pick). Disappointing result to end up with so little.

2018

2025Grade: I don’t know, maybe a C?
2026 Update: D-

The Pens brought Hallander back for 2025-26 to see what he looked like as a fully formed 25-year old, and the results weren’t that impressive before he suffered an unfortunate blood clot. He’s still under contract and might be a fringe player for next season if cleared to play but doesn’t look like much gained or lost either way. The best of this class was trading Addison when he had value to be a part of the Jason Zucker trade. Beyond that, another classic Jim Rutherford year of not prioritizing draft picks and ending up gaining virtually nothing out of the draft as a result.

2017

2025 Grade: F (or a 0 if we’re being really stern but accurate)
2026 Update: Yup

As written last year, “for the first time since the team’s initial two-pick amateur draft in 1967, the Pens produced a draft class that has zero NHL games played. None at all. Might as well have stayed home.”

Such is a risk with no first round picks and only two inside of the top-150. They weren’t set up for success in the 2017 draft and didn’t come close to finding any. Oh well, the banner will fly forever.

2016

2025 Grade: D+
2026 Update: B-

Gustavsson’s rise into an NHL starting goalie, and a decent one at that, has changed my outlook about this draft class. If just grading that, you have to give the Penguins credit for mining a starting goalie out of a late-second round pick. (Perhaps less credit for trading said goalie less than two years later as part of the Derick Brassard deal, but that’s a different subject for a different day). Gustavsson did losing his starting job by playoff time to an even better goalie in Jesper Wallstedt but he’s turned into a very respectable player.

Considering the Pens again didn’t have a first round pick to make and little draft ammo to work with, they at least found one legit NHL player. That’s more than what they can say most other recent seasons.

2 Blackhawks Ranked Among NHL's Best Pending Free Agents

The Athletic's Chris Johnston recently ranked the top 75 pending unrestricted free agents (UFAs) in the NHL with July 1 rapidly approaching. Two Chicago Blackhawks were among the players ranked, as Ilya Mikheyev and Matt Grzelcyk made the cut. 

Mikheyev was given the No. 31 spot on Johnston's pending UFA rankings. It is not difficult to understand why Mikheyev has made the cut, as he put together back-to-back strong seasons for the Blackhawks. The 31-year-old's solid secondary scoring ability and strong defensive play should make him a popular target if he decides to test the market this off-season. In 77 games this season, he had 18 goals and a career-high 36 points.

As for Grzelcyk, he landed the No. 67 spot on Johnston's list. The 32-year-old blueliner recorded zero goals, 12 assists, and a minus-9 rating in 69 games this season for the Blackhawks. This was after he scored one goal and set career highs with 39 assists and 40 points in 2024-25 with the Pittsburgh Penguins. Teams looking for more defensive depth could consider taking a flier on the veteran defenseman if he reaches the market on July 1.

It will be interesting to see what kind of deals these two Blackhawks end up landing from here. 

BET MGM: Islanders Have 10th-Worst 2027 Stanley Cup Odds

With the Carolina Hurricanes winning the Stanley Cup on Sunday, the sports books already have lines for who they think will lift Lord Stanley in 2027. 

The Colorado Avalanche, who were swept by the Vegas Golden Knights in the Western Conference Finals come in at +750 while the Hurricanes are looking to repeat at +750. 

The Golden Knights round out the top three, coming in at +1000. 

Where do the New York Islanders land?

Heading into the 2025-26 season, the Islanders came in at +15000 to win the Cup.

Now, they are coming in at +6,600, the 10th worst odds. 

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The cross-town rival New York Rangers sit behind Long Island at +8,000. 

The Islanders have some work to do before becoming a true Stanley Cup contender.

Flyers 2027 Stanley Cup Odds: Worse Than Expected?

The Philadelphia Flyers are not exactly widely expected to do what they did last season again in the upcoming season.

With a late-season surge after the 2026 Winter Olympics, the Flyers carried an electric run of form into the Stanley Cup playoff spot, clinching a berth in Game 81 and then eliminating the rival Pittsburgh Penguins in six games.

The eventual Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes put a commanding halt to that with a sweep of the Flyers in the second round, and that was the end of it.

Although those Flyers put up about as good a fight as you can in a series sweep, especially against a suffocating team like the Hurricanes, they have done little to improve their odds at a Stanley Cup of their own.

Now that the Hurricanes are officially Stanley Cup champions, BetMGM released its early odds for the 2027 Stanley Cup winner, placing the Flyers 17th overall at +5000.

Flyers Legend Rod Brind'Amour Joins Exclusive Company in NHL HistoryFlyers Legend Rod Brind'Amour Joins Exclusive Company in NHL HistoryPhiladelphia Flyers Hall of Famer Rod Brind'Amour is now a member of one of the most exclusive clubs in sports after winning another Stanley Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes.

At those odds, the Flyers are tied with the likes of the Columbus Blue Jackets and Washington Capitals, both of whom missed the playoffs and play in the same division.

Ahead of the Flyers are teams such as the New Jersey Devils (missed), the Utah Mammoth (Round 1 exit), the Anaheim Ducks, the Los Angeles Kings (swept by Colorado) and, somehow, the Ottawa Senators (swept by Carolina).

Admittedly, it is strange that the Mammoth, (+3000), Kings (+3500), and Senators (+1800) all have significantly better odds than the Flyers, who at least won a playoff round, even if it was against the Penguins.

The Senators, who lost to the same playoff opponent as the Flyers, showed nothing in their four games to justify such a massive gap between the two teams.

Out West, the Mammoth are probably about equal to the Flyers, and the Kings are annual pretenders, not contenders. At least the Flyers have some upward momentum.

With a strong showing at the 2026 NHL Draft and in free agency, the Flyers can easily position themselves to make such mediocre odds look short-sighted.

2025-26 Season in Review: Ilya Solovyov

BUFFALO, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 05: Ilya Solovyov #7 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates against the Buffalo Sabres during an NHL game on February 05, 2026 at KeyBank Center in Buffalo, New York. (Photo by Bill Wippert/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Vitals

Player: Ilya Solovyov
Born: July 20, 2000 (25 years old)
Height: 6’3”
Weight: 208 pounds
Hometown: Mogilev, Belarus
Shoots: Left
Draft: Seventh round pick (205th overall) in 2020 by the Calgary Flames
2025-26 Statistics: 0 goals and 5 assists for 5 points in 14 regular-season games; 0 points in three playoff games.
Contract Status: Signed through 2026-27 ($850,000 cap hit)

Story of the Season

The Penguins acquired Solovyov’s expiring contract in January by sending Valtteri Puustinen and a 2026 seventh-rounder to the Colorado Avalanche.

At the time Solovyov had skated in 16 games with the Avalanche and three games with the team’s AHL affiliate.

The trade came around the time Kris Letang was sidelined for two games with an upper-body injury. He suffered a fractured foot about a week and a half later that gave Solovyov a chance to slot into the lineup.

Solovyov spent most of his time in the regular season the bottom pairing with Connor Clifton.

He made his playoff debut in Game 4 as a substitute for Clifton on the right side of Ryan Shea. The Flyers never scored a goal with Solovyov on the ice, which was enough for head coach Dan Muse to keep dressing him over Clifton until the Penguins’ Game 6 elimination.

The Penguins re-signed Solovyov in May to keep him under contract for one more season before he hits unrestricted free agency in 2027.

Monthly Splits

via Yahoo

Solovyov was traded to the Penguins on Jan. 20. He saw his ice time climb after the trade from 11:34 per game in Colorado to over 14 minutes per game in Pittsburgh.

Regular season 5v5 advanced stats

Data via Natural Stat Trick. Ranking is out of 11 defensemen on the team who qualified by playing a minimum of 150 minutes.

Corsi For%: 52.21 (2nd)
Goals For%: 51.85 (3rd)
xGF%: 57.16 (1st)
Scoring Chance%: 56.84 (1st)
High Danger Scoring Chance%: 56.99 (1st)
5v5 on-ice shooting%: 15.56 (1st)
On-ice save%: .833 (11th)
Goals/60: 0
Assists/60: 1.57 (1st)
Points/60: 1.57 (1st)

These numbers come with the major caveat that Solovyov played just 14 games this season with the club. Within that small sample size, however, Penguins were generally excellent at generating scoring chances and poor at stopping opponents from scoring when Solovyov (generally paired with Clifton during the regular season) was on the ice in a sheltered role.

Charts n’at

Via Advanced Hockey Stats and NHL Edge

Solovyov is dealing with a limited sample, but he is a player that WAR sees some positive and encouraging signs for the minutes that he has played by being able to put a nice impact offensively and defensively overall in what he’s been asked to do. The goals and finishing will likely come down in time once he plays more, but it shows some tools. One possible issue is taking penalties, Solovyov was called for five minor penalties in 15 games with the Penguins (and three more in 16 games with Colorado), he’ll want to cut down on the amount of times he gets whistled for infractions relative to the small amount of time he’s played in the future.

Solovyov does have some power on his shots and as shown in the lower left chart, had the versatility to spend time on the left and right points during different stretches. He doesn’t have a lot of dynamic puck skills but that nice shot power could be part of the reason to get him into games in the future.

Solovyov’s skating is functional, he’s good in short areas and making pivots when needing to defend. His straight-line speed and acceleration is in-line with his 6’3, 210 pound frame to not exactly be thought of as one of the speedier skaters in the league.

Highlights

Solovyov assisted on a Ryan Shea goal in his Penguins debut on Jan. 29.

He later fed Avery Hayes for the breakaway that allowed Hayes to score in his own NHL debut on Feb. 5.

Questions to Ponder

After extending Solovyov, the Penguins have Sam Girard, Ryan Graves, Parker Wotherspoon, Caleb Jones and Owen Pickering as some of the left-shot defensemen signed through next season.

With Shea hitting free agency and potentially set for a raise that could push him out of the Penguins’ pay range, will Solovyov be able to win a more regular roster spot in training camp? If not, he could be set to head into next season in a similar seventh-defenseman role to what Clifton (also a pending free agent) played last season.

Ideal 2026-27

Solovyov spent three seasons as a fringe roster player and part-time AHL player with the Calgary Flames and Colorado Avalanche. His ideal 2026-27 season would likely include him earning a spot in training camp and playing his first full-time campaign in the NHL.

Bottom line

The Penguins saw Solovyov in a limited sample size and mostly in a sheltered role last season, but he served as a largely reliable bottom-pairing option when called into the lineup. There’s a chance a strong training camp could earn him a longer look at the NHL next season.

Pensburgh Grade: B

Canadiens’ Highly Touted Prospect Played Through Injury

It’s well known that the Montreal Canadiens have one of the deepest pools of prospects in the NHL, thanks to years of high draft picks. One of their most successful prospects this past season has been right-shot defenseman Bryce Pickford. The third-round pick who was selected 81st overall by the Habs at the 2025 draft has had a season for the ages with the Medicine Hat Tigers in the WHL.

On Monday, the CHL announced that Pickford had been named the defenseman of the year, thanks to an 83-point season, which included 45 goals and saw him finish the campaign with a plus-55 rating. No defenseman has scored more goals than Pickford in the last 40 years, and he’s impressed the Canadiens so much in the early goings of the season that he was signed to his ELC just before Christmas.

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However, the news wasn’t all good on Monday, as The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler reported that the prospect may need shoulder surgery this offseason after playing through an injury this season. While this is definitely not good news, it’s impressive that he was able to perform the way that he has, considering the injury.

While Pickford has had a dominant season in the WHL, it’s important to remember that the step between that junior league and professional hockey is a steep one. Given where the Canadiens are in their rebuild, it will also be interesting to see whether they choose to let him develop or include him in a package for some immediate help.

Some would advocate that trading a right-shot defenseman when he has that much potential would be ill-advised, and it’s certainly not a course of action that would have been entertained back in 2022, but things have changed since then. The playoffs have made it obvious that the Canadiens need another right-shot defenseman, preferably one who can handle top-four minutes.

If the Canadiens aren’t convinced that David Reinbacher can be that player, they may need to go outside of the organization to fill that need. You have to give something to get something, as they say, and they won’t get an established right-shot blueliner if they do not dangle an enticing asset in front of a possible trade partner.


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Rookie Or Replacement: How Should The Penguins Address The Right Side Next Season?

Following a magical 2025-26 season in which the Pittsburgh Penguins made an improbable run to the playoffs, it has clearly been stated by general manager and president of hockey operations Kyle Dubas that the plan is to keep improving next season. 

Of course, a lot has to happen for the Penguins to continue taking steps toward becoming a legitimate contender again. The path forward is still not an easy one, even if 2025-26 was a springboard.

And one of the things they will certainly need to address in 2026-27 is how they are going to balance the drive to contend and the necessity to integrate youth onto the NHL roster for good.

Goaltending seems to be the most obvious shoe-in for a youth movement, as veteran Stuart Skinner is a UFA, leaving pending-RFA Arturs Silovs and the up-and-coming Sergei Murashov to be the likely NHL tandem next season. And, on the forward front, there are plenty of names (Ben Kindel aside) who saw smidgens of NHL action last season - including Rutger McGroarty, Ville Koivunen, Avery Hayes, and Tristan Broz - and will likely take on a bigger role in 2026-27.

Then, there is the blue line. Yes, it's already been discussed how the left side is a big question mark heading into next season, as the Penguins have some names on the NHL roster in Parker Wotherspoon and Sam Girard to fill in two of three spots but are in need of more youth talent at the position. Whether that help comes via the NHL Draft, the trade market, or both remains to be seen. 

But, the right side? Well, there is a bit more assurance there, but this is exactly where the conundrum of "rookie or replacement" takes hold. We know that Erik Karlsson and Kris Letang are highly likely to occupy two spots, leaving one spot wide-open.

Loss Of Pieniniemi Further Exposes Glaring Positional Need For PenguinsLoss Of Pieniniemi Further Exposes Glaring Positional Need For PenguinsThe Pittsburgh Penguins have a glaring organizational weakness on the left side, and with the departure of one of their better prospects at the position, the hole becomes even deeper.

Will the Penguins look to add on the right side this offseason, or will it be rookie and top defensive prospect Harrison Brunicke's spot to lose?

As it's been well-documented at this point, the now-20-year-old defenseman's 2025-26 season was a bit of a whirlwind, as he made the big club out of training camp but only played in nine games at the NHL level before an AHL conditioning stint, a trip to the World Junior Championship, and a sentence back to the Kamloops Blazers of the WHL for the back half of the season.

After the conclusion of his WHL season, he rejoined Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) for the last portion of the AHL regular season and its playoff run, which stretched to six games in the Eastern Conference Final. And Brunicke was a huge part of that run, as he played top-pairing minutes and was deployed in key situations throughout the postseason.

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Yes, the sheer offensive numbers are nice to look at: He paced point-per-game (two goals and 24 points in 24 games) with Kamloops to close out their regular season, had a goal and eight points in 11 AHL regular season games, and contributed two goals and seven points in 15 Calder Cup Playoff games.

Numbers aside, the version of Brunicke on display during the AHL playoffs was not necessarily a different version from the onset of the 2025-26 season, but it was a vastly improved and much more mature version -- one that was more physically imposing, stronger in his own zone, better at breakouts, and sturdier at the net-front. And this was all while he managed to build even more on his elite skating ability, strength in transition, and offensive instincts. 

Some think that Brunicke showed enough in that final AHL run to prove that he is NHL-ready. However, while that might be the case, him being "NHL-ready" also needs to come with the expectation that there are still going to be growing pains in his adjustment to the NHL. Given the type of player he is, he is going to make mistakes, and some of those mistakes are going to be loud ones. 

So, given the Penguins' need to see what they have in some of their young talent like Brunicke but also their desire to build on the playoff push that began this spring, is it worth risking to, essentially, leave that final right-side defensive slot open for Brunicke without much of a failsafe for him? Or should the Penguins look for outside help to give Brunicke someone to compete against for an NHL roster spot and for someone to fill as a nice stopgap between Letang or Karlsson's eventual departure and Brunicke's top-four readiness?

Honestly, there's no easy answer.

Sure, many advise that the Penguins say goodbye to Letang, who is 39 and underperformed last season, in order to make way for both Brunicke and someone else to populate the right side behind a still-capable No. 1 defenseman in Karlsson. But, the reality is that it's not that simple. Letang has a full no-movement clause, and even if he was willing to waive that to go somewhere else, a mutual team would have to want to take on him and his $6.1 million for two more years. 

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Realistically, Letang will be wearing a Penguins' sweater next season, but that doesn't mean his role shouldn't be subject to change. The problem is that, if Letang is destined for a reduced role on a bottom pairing, it's a tall ask to rely on a high-ceiling but still-stabilizing rookie in Brunicke to take on a top-four role out of the gate. 

If the Penguins truly want to compete and take a big step next season, it likely doesn't involve Letang in a top-four role anymore, but it realistically probably doesn't involve Brunicke in one quite yet, either. Which puts them in quite the pickle.

All that said, seeking outside help may not be the worst idea -- especially if that outside help is a mid-20 something with upside and the potential to act as that bridge - or, potentially, as more - between where Brunicke is now and him eventually accepting the baton from Letang or Karlsson. 

This has been written about, but Buffalo Sabres defenseman Michael Kesselring seems to make a lot of sense here, as he is more proven at the NHL level than Brunicke but, at 26, could use a change of scenery after injuries and inconsistency pushed him out of a potential top-four role in Buffalo. He is also a pending-RFA, and the Sabres will be cap-crunched if they look to add substantially this summer, rendering a deal between the two clubs actually making sense. 

This Sabres Defender Could Be One Of The NHL's Hottest Trade TargetsThis Sabres Defender Could Be One Of The NHL's Hottest Trade TargetsMichael Kesselring has the potential to generate some serious trade interest this summer.

If someone like Kesselring can be had for a fair price, it could, potentially, be the best situation for the Penguins and for Brunicke. They would be getting a player who should be able to help them in the now and, potentially, be a mainstay for future contention, and they would also be getting a player to tow the line of challenging Brunicke while also shielding him from taking on too much too soon. 

And, yes, there is a fine line between blocking young talent and handing them the keys, and Dubas and the Penguins must tread carefully and hold that line when it comes to their most promising defensive prospect and, arguably, their most promising prospect in general. Because of their lack of true prospect depth on the blueline, they cannot afford to miss on Brunicke, and they have to do everything in their power to set him up for success.

For everyone's benefit, introducing, at least, a stopgap "replacement" might not be the worst thing for the "rookie" who has a hefty load of the team's future weighing on his shoulders. 

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Why the Avalanche's Biggest Battle Will Start on Day One of Training Camp

Nobody expected Scott Wedgewood to take over Colorado's crease, but training camp could determine whether he ever gives it back.

The most intriguing storyline surrounding the Colorado Avalanche next season won't be a trade deadline addition or a midseason surge. It'll begin the first day training camp opens.

Can Mackenzie Blackwood take the starting job back from Scott Wedgewood?

The Avalanche will continue to call it a tandem, and that's the expected answer. But when the games carried the most weight, the rotation largely disappeared. Wedgewood got the lion's share of the starts in the Stanley Cup Playoffs, making it clear who Jared Bednar trusted when everything was on the line.

That has become a talking point for a fanbase still trying to process how a team that looked like a legitimate Stanley Cup favorite was swept by the Vegas Golden Knights in the Western Conference Final.

As always, the search for blame began almost immediately.

Brock Nelson's production was scrutinized. Martin Necas became an easy target. Nathan MacKinnon's injury entered the conversation. But reducing Colorado's collapse to one player or one moment ignores what actually happened.

The Avalanche were pushed around from the opening faceoff of Game 1. They lost battles along the boards, struggled to manage the puck, and repeatedly surrendered leads. The speed and offensive firepower that masked so many flaws during the regular season suddenly disappeared, leaving behind the defensive lapses and careless turnovers that had quietly followed the team all year.

That's why the spotlight has now landed on Wedgewood.

He certainly had difficult moments against Vegas, but there were remarkably few instances where you could point to an obvious bad goal and say he cost Colorado the game. More often than not, he was dealing with odd-man rushes, broken coverage, or self-inflicted mistakes in front of him.

Ironically, this entire conversation may have started months before the playoffs.

Blackwood entered the season recovering from a lower-body injury that Bednar later acknowledged to The Hockey News took longer than expected to heal.

The Hockey News attended several voluntary offseason skates, and Blackwood participated in one late in the summer alongside several AHL players. From this writer's vantage point, he looked noticeably slow—enough that it raised concerns. During another session a few days later, Blackwood audibly groaned in pain during a drill before leaving the ice and disappearing from workouts for an extended stretch.

It became increasingly obvious he wasn't fully healthy.

While Blackwood worked his way back, Wedgewood quietly took advantage of the opportunity. He handled the majority of the reps, looked comfortable from the start, and carried that confidence into the regular season.

That's really where this story began.

Wedgewood came out flying and stayed that way for long stretches, while Blackwood never quite found a consistent rhythm. He started slowly, caught fire, cooled off again, and spent much of the season alternating between brilliant and ordinary performances. Even so, he closed the year with a tremendous effort in Game 4 despite the loss.

It's also worth remembering that Blackwood and Wedgewood are built differently as goaltenders.

Bednar has explained that Blackwood is at his best when he has consistent preparation, regular reps, and the chance to settle into a rhythm over multiple starts. Wedgewood, meanwhile, is almost a throwback. He can sit for a week, step into the crease without warning, and immediately give his team a chance to win.

That's been the story of his career.

He's bounced around the league enough to earn the journeyman label, but somewhere along the way he quietly became one of the NHL's most dependable—and underrated—goaltenders.

There's a reason Avalanche fans embraced the nickname "The Lumberyard."

Wedgewood didn't simply keep the net warm while Blackwood recovered. He grabbed the opportunity and turned it into the best season of his career.

He finished 31-6-6 in 45 appearances with a 2.02 goals-against average and a career-high—and league-leading—.921 save percentage. Those numbers went a long way toward explaining why he and Blackwood shared the William M. Jennings Trophy as the NHL's top goaltending tandem.

Blackwood's season deserves a little more context than the raw numbers provide.

Despite never fully settling into a rhythm, he still posted a 23-10-2 record with a 2.51 goals-against average and a .904 save percentage. Considering his save percentage dipped below .900 at multiple points before climbing back over the mark by season's end, the finish was more encouraging than it might appear at first glance.

It's difficult to find timing and confidence when you miss training camp, skip the preseason, and spend the opening weeks trying to catch up while the goaltender sharing your crease is putting together one of the best statistical seasons in hockey.

And that's exactly what makes this training camp so compelling.

If Blackwood arrives healthy and finally gets the preparation Bednar believes he needs, the Avalanche could once again have the luxury of two starting-caliber goaltenders pushing each other every night. Wedgewood has already proven he can carry a contender for extended stretches, while Blackwood still possesses the ceiling that convinced Colorado he could be its long-term answer.

Maybe the Avalanche truly do have a tandem.

Or maybe Wedgewood has earned the right to keep the crease until someone takes it away.

Either way, "The Lumberyard" enters next season as one of Colorado's biggest strengths—and perhaps the most fascinating position battle on a roster built to win the Stanley Cup.

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Islanders extend Ethan Bear in AHL depth move with other blue line questions looming

New York Islanders defenseman Ethan Bear (74) during a drill at practice.
Ethan Bear skates during a September 2025 practice for the Islanders.

The Islanders brought back organizational depth for their blue line Monday, inking defenseman Ethan Bear to a one-year, two-way extension, the team announced.

He was set to become an unrestricted free agent July 1.

Bear, 28 years old and a fifth-round pick by the Oilers in 2015, has skated in 275 NHL games across his career — most recently in March 2024 with the Capitals — but hasn’t found a route back to that level the last two seasons.

With AHL Bridgeport in 2025-26, Bear sustained an injury during training camp and appeared only in 40 games during the regular season, collecting four goals and 23 assists to lead the affiliate’s defensemen in scoring.

But earlier in his career, Bear, on occasion, secured a regular role in NHL lineups, logging 71 games for the Oilers in 2019-20, 58 for the Hurricanes in 2021-22 and another 61 for the Canucks the following season.

He was waived by Washington in October 2024, assigned to AHL Hershey for the 2024-25 campaign after clearing, earned an AHL All-Star Game nod and ended up with Bridgeport last season on a two-way deal.

Bear will be far from the only question the Islanders have to answer regarding the right side of their organization’s blue line this summer.

Ethan Bear skates during a September 2025 practice for the Islanders. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

Tony D’Angelo will be an unrestricted free agent.

They have plenty of depth on the left side, starting with Calder Trophy winner Matthew Schaefer, Adam Pelech and a recovering Alexander Romanov, but Ryan Pulock and Scott Mayfield are the only certainties on the right side.

Those calls and additions will likely impact Mathieu Darche’s club at the NHL level more imminently than the Bear transaction.

But for now, in the weeks before free agency begins, the Islanders began by addressing their depth.

Former Flames Forward Duehr Signs Extension With Jets

On Monday morning, the Winnipeg Jets announced that they have extended Walker Duehr, the fifth leading scorer of their AHL affiliate, the Manitoba Moose. Less than a year ago, the 28-year-old undrafted right winger signed as a free agent with the Jets, only skating in three NHL games last season.

According to the press release, Duehr's new deal is two years in length and worth $1.75 million, with a $850,000 salary in the NHL.

After four seasons in the NCAA with Minnesota State University, Duehr joined the Calgary Flames organization, skating five games with the Stockton Heat and making his NHL debut on Nov. 14, 2021. He'd spend parts of four seasons with Calgary before the San Jose Sharks claimed him off waivers on Jan. 22, 2025. Instead of staying on the main roster, he played only eight games with the Sharks and 16 with the Barracuda in the AHL. 

Interestingly, since turning professional in 2021, Duehr actually skated the most games last season, suiting up 62 with the Moose, tallying 17 goals and 34 points, and going pointless in three contests with the Jets. The 2025-26 campaign also marked the first time in his hockey career, since AAA hockey, that he scored more than 15 goals and 30 points.

As a member of the Tri-City Storm, Duehr won the USHL Clark Cup in 2015-16, and followed that up with an NCAA (WCHA) championship in 2018-19. After six seasons in the AHL, his stat line includes 59 goals and 112 points in 205, while in the NHL, he's got 11 goals and 21 points in 95 games. 

By adding Duehr's contract to the books, the Jets have roughly $21 million left in cap space with a couple of unrestricted and restricted free agents left to sign, in addition to adding a backup goalie for Connor Hellebuyck. 

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