In Need of a Retool: Who Should the Devils Target in Trades?

ST. LOUIS, MO - OCTOBER 30: Pius Suter #22 of the St. Louis Blues scores a goal against the Vancouver Canucks on October 30, 2025 at the Enterprise Center in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Joe Puetz/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

For the purposes of this article, I am not going to touch the question: “should Tom Fitzgerald be making trades?” Regardless of what I think of him, he has the job. He should keep doing his job as long as he has it, and it’s entirely on ownership to decide whether or not he should continue in his role today, tomorrow, and in July. The person in the GM chair should have no bearing on what kind of moves the Devils need to become a competitive, contending team.

I am going to break this down into three sections. The first group of players are those who I think are largely uncontroversial. They are not top line players, but they can contribute in the right roles. The second group of players are those who I think are breakout candidates: your “boom or bust” types. The third group of players are those who I expect to inspire some readers to ask me if I recently suffered a head injury (especially with the state the team is in). However, the third group are those who can make a real, guaranteed long-term difference. Regardless, I do not think the Devils cannot go into next season with the same roster, and there are some moves I could support regardless of who is running the show.

Group 1 — A New Supporting Cast

Target #1: Pius Suter, C, St. Louis Blues

The New Jersey Devils faced the St. Louis Blues last night, and Pius Suter did not fare a whole lot better than his teammates at five-on-five as the Blues were dominated in puck possession. However, Suter did have a good night on the penalty kill as their only forward without an on-ice shot attempt allowed (1:04) in their two penalty kills, and he skated away with an assist and no on-ice goals against. But Pius Suter is not meant to be a top-line center (19:51), he is meant to be a second or third-line defensive center.

Last season, for the Vancouver Canucks, Suter had 25 goals and 21 assists playing over 17 minutes per game. Many of these minutes (184:24) came on the penalty kill, where Suter was one of the best penalty killing forwards in the league. With Suter on the ice, the Canucks had 14 power play goals against, or 4.56 GA/60 for a net goal differential of -3.91 GA/60 when accounting for shorthanded goals. Translation: his top-end penalty killing output is nearly twice as good of what you would want from a PK1 center. Even this season, with a much worse St. Louis team, Suter’s penalty killing performance has come out to a net goal differential of -5.49/60, which is still better than:

  • Luke Glendening (-7.54/60)
  • Nico Hischier (-6.46/60)
  • Connor Brown (-6.35/60)
  • Dawson Mercer (-5.93/60)

So, Pius Suter would be an expected improvement over all of the Devils’ top four penalty killing forwards by minutes killed this season. I have argued on many occasions that Nico Hischier would be better served killing fewer penalties and playing more offensive situations at five-on-five, and an acquisition like Suter would be perfect for that. He might not be a 50 or 60-point scorer, but he is effective in his minutes and can handle a shutdown role while still contributing 15-25 goals. Suter’s contract runs through 2027, and his cap hit is only $4.13 million. He is extremely affordable and would be able to give the Devils a Hughes-Hischier-Suter-Glass center lineup, perhaps with more of an ability to use Jack Hughes on Hischier’s wing in must-score situations.

Target #2: Morgan Frost, C, Calgary Flames

Like Pius Suter, Morgan Frost is under contract through next season, though his cap hit comes in a bit higher at $4.38 million. However, he is a few years younger and less defensively polished. He wins a lot more in the faceoff dot than Suter, but he does not play the penalty kill and relies a bit too much on the power play for his point production. In 58 games for Calgary this season, Frost has 12 goals and 15 assists, though his career high is 19 goals and 27 assists for 46 points in the 2022-23 season under John Tortorella in Philadelphia. With Frost heading towards unrestricted free agency, I wonder if the Calgary Flames would be willing to part ways with him, as things have not really gone too well for them since acquiring Farabee and Frost.

I would be more on board with acquiring Suter than Frost, but Frost would still be a welcome addition. I think his skillset is more of a winger than that of a center, as his offensive chance generation is weak but he has the skill to score when given the chances. Historically, he has positive defensive impacts, but Calgary has been pretty weak in all three zones this season. Frost might be a good choice as a left wing for a player like Jack Hughes, who benefits from having a winger who can win more than 50% of his faceoff draws and deflect pucks into the net. Over the last three seasons, 10 of Frost’s 39 goals have come by a tip or deflection, per HockeyViz. This season, the Devils are one of the worst teams in the league at deflecting pucks into the net with 17 goals on 23.7 expected deflection goals.

Target #3: Morgan Barron, C/LW, Winnipeg Jets

Under contract with the Winnipeg Jets for another season at a cap hit of $1.85 million, Morgan Barron is a great bottom six player who can add a ton of size with positive two-way impacts. He is not going to light the scoresheet up by any means, but he has had an on-ice goals for percentage of 53.14% in his five years in Winnipeg. This season, the 6’4” and 220 pound Barron has picked up some centering duties, winning 200 of 422 draws while putting up seven goals and 10 assists through 49 games, playing about 12 and a half minutes per game.

Barron, 27, is the perfect age to become a fourth-line regular for a team like the New Jersey Devils. He is physical without taking a ton of penalties (104 PIMs in 305 career games), he can win a decent amount of faceoffs (48.0% of 820 career draws), and he can play both center and wing. While I appreciated the Nick Bjugstad trade, the Devils need a younger presence on their fourth line who can still be counted on to be around in 3-5 years. He may not be as established of a penalty killer as Pius Suter, minutes-wise, but he can be relied on for PK2 duties at the very least, and he can still take some of those minutes away from Nico Hischier (especially if Cody Glass also starts to take more of those situations). Last season, Barron killed 89:48 and had a net goal differential of -4.67/60 on the penalty kill, while he has a -5.74/60 net differential in 94:09 this season.

Target #4: Mackie Samoskevich, RW, Florida Panthers

Due a new contract in July 2026, the Florida Panthers might be hard-pressed to convince the 23-year old winger to take less money to continue playing in a bottom six role. After being scratched for all but four games of their 2025 Stanley Cup run, Samoskevich took the league minimum salary to remain with Florida this season. His ice time has not increased much, and he has had an unlucky shot. Now entering an arbitration year, he is going to have to start making a name for himself, and the Florida top nine will be even tougher to crack consistently with Matthew Tkachuk back from LTIR.

This season, Samoskevich has six goals and 15 assists in 57 games. In his career, he has been a very poor finisher, though his two-way impacts are positive and he has drawn a ton of penalties. Samoskevich has the highest CF% on the Florida Panthers (56.93) and the third-best xGF% (55.01), the second-most hits at five-on-five (102), and the second-most penalties drawn (24). I was really disappointed when Samoskevich was selected five spots before Chase Stillman in 2021, but maybe the Devils could afford to give Samoskevich more of a role than the Panthers have been able to.

Group 2 — Under the Radar

Target #1: John Leonard, LW, Detroit Red Wings/Grand Rapids Griffins

Talk about someone who is too good for the AHL.

I first mentioned John Leonard, a native of Westwood, New Jersey, back in June when I wrote about AHLers the Devils should target during the offseason. Leonard, a free agent then, signed with Detroit. With Grand Rapids, Leonard has 26 goals and 14 assists in 32 games this season, with his pace skyrocketing up from his 36-goal, 61-point season from Charlotte last season.

Nobody on the Utica Comets has 26 points. But Leonard, a 27-year old winger, nearly doubles Brian Halonen’s 21 points in similar games played while also having four points in nine NHL games for the Red Wings. In those nine NHL games, Leonard also has six blocked shots and eight hits: he’s trying in all areas. In the AHL, per AHL Tracker, Leonard has an on-ice goals for percentage of 54.3% at five-on-five. He has played some shorthanded minutes, creating two shorthanded goals while only allowing two power play goals against. And with the net empty, Grand Rapids has scored twice and allowed three empty netters with Leonard on the ice.

If you want a “make something happen” third-line winger, John Leonard could be that guy. And shooting 23.2% while getting 3.5 shots on goal per game, with only five of his 40 points being secondary assists, it’s very difficult to argue that his production is not a true sign of his ability.

At 27, if Detroit is not willing to give Leonard regular ice time, I cannot imagine they would ask for a ton in a trade. But every time Leonard has played in the NHL, he has tracked like a middle-six winger. Give him a chance with regular ice time, and the Devils might have their unlikely local native story.

Target #2: Josh Samanski, C/LW, Edmonton Oilers/Bakersfield Condors

Fresh off of a two-point performance in five games for Team Germany at the Winter Olympics, Josh Samanski could use a team with more openings for ice time than the Edmonton Oilers. The undrafted center has two points in five games for Edmonton this season, but his path to the NHL right now is by getting some fourth line minutes as an injury fill-in. Unlike Leonard, though, Samanski is young. At only 23 and under contract through 2027, the Oilers could very well be holding onto him for next season.

That does not mean nobody should be asking about him. Per AHL tracker, Samanski has the 20th-best five-on-five on-ice goals for percentage among centers who have played 15 or more AHL games this season (59.6%). With the Condors, Samanski has 28 points in 39 games, though he has not been much of a goal scorer. Prior to signing with Edmonton, he had 40 points in 52 games for the Straubing Tigers of the DEL last season. In the NHL, he has won 16 of 27 draws, and his 6’2”, 195-pound frame at center is a solid fit for a playmaking or checking role.

Group 3 — Longshots, One Way or Another

Target #1: Matvei Michkov, RW, Philadelphia Flyers

Yeah, yeah, I know. But if Rick Tocchet and the Flyers are going to misuse Matvei Michkov to this extent, I cannot imagine that his representation is particularly happy with his situation and may welcome a trade. Regardless of the state of that relationship, the New Jersey Devils need one thing above all: skill, and Michkov has it.

Would they have to pay Philadelphia a premium to trade for Michkov? Surely.

Would it be worth it?

For a player as skilled as Michkov, at his age, there are not many limits to what I would be okay with the Devils giving up to get him. They could give Philadelphia two first-round picks (with some level of protection for 2026), Briere’s choice of any prospect not in the NHL, and a non-core NHL player, and I would be happy. You get the picture: unless the Devils miss the playoffs and win the Draft Lottery, they are not likely to get a player as talented as Michkov.

It’s a huge bet, undoubtedly. Michkov has well-documented defensive struggles in the NHL, his coach has called him out for being out of shape, and he has regressed in his second season at 21 years old. But with this Devils roster, I am beginning to have a bit of a “go big or go home” sort of attitude. Michkov is still on an ELC, and will still be on it next season. I think the Devils need another source of top-level skill, but they will not be able to add an established top-line winger with their contract situation. They need to go young. Would you not want to see what Jack Hughes could do with a younger winger with as much potential as Matvei Michkov?

I do.

Target #2:Jason Robertson, LW, Dallas Stars

If there’s ever anyone to throw the kitchen sink at in a trade, it’s Jason Robertson.

Robertson is in an arbitration year of restricted free agency this offseason. The Dallas Stars should not trade him in the midst of a season where they are in contention for the Stanley Cup, but I think he is worth mentioning. As of now, Robertson is second on the team in points with 33 goals and 35 assists in 54 games, as he already has about as many shots through 59 games as he had in all of last season. Robertson has not missed a game since 2021-22, when he missed eight games, and he is on track for about 95 points this season. If the Devils had a winger like Robertson next to Jack Hughes, we could see the kind of scoring heights from the team’s top offensive center that fans have been hoping for since the 2022-23 season.

It would be a very high acquisition cost to get Robertson, and there is no guarantee Dallas will even move him. He has been in general rumors and whispers for awhile, though, and I would be happy if any Devils general manager kicked the tires there. Dallas is looking for a right-handed offensive defenseman who can handle top pairing minutes, and the Devils have one in Dougie Hamilton. Right now, Dallas has three lefties playing over 23 minutes a game in Heiskanen, Lindell, and Harley, while their righties all play between 15 and 17 minutes per game, with their leading right-handed scorer on defense being Alex Petrovic with 9 points in 51 games. Pairing Dougie Hamilton with Miro Heiskanen or Esa Lindell could give them ridiculous top four pairings, as Hamilton has recently shown that his goal scoring ways might not be in the rear view mirror. Over his last 16 appearances (i.e. since Keefe stopped using him as a defensive defenseman), Dougie has three goals and 11 assists, which rates to a 15-goal, 72-point pace per 82 games.

If the Stars preferred a younger return, Robertson is one of the few players in the league I would also include Simon Nemec in a trade for. Likewise, I would have no issue with including players such as Anton Silayev, Lenni Hameenaho, Seamus Casey, or any other prospect the Stars would want in return for a player as good as Robertson. But, since Dallas is in Cup contention mode, I imagine they would like to add more players who can contribute to them in a playoff run. On the other end of things, Robertson would command a lot of money (I imagine $12-13 million) from 2026-27 and beyond, and the Devils may even need to look for a way to shed salary on top of Hamilton if they were to acquire him.

Final Words and Your Thoughts

I know this an awkward time to suggest any sort of “buying” moves, but it is clear that the Devils do not just have a coaching problem, they have a roster problem. Aside from a few players who have the ability to score and impact the game on both ends of the ice, the roster has far too many offensive passengers and players paid to pay defense who are apparently not quite good enough at doing so consistently. Unfortunately, I do not have a lot of faith in the 2026 unrestricted free agency class, and I question how much the Devils can actually improve there. Trades are the best path this team has out of their issues, but not necessarily in the sense that they should sell players like Dougie off for low returns and draft picks. I still have not recovered from the Devils only getting second and third-round picks for Tyler Toffoli when I argued beforehand that I would prefer re-signing Toffoli to taking a late first-rounder for him. Fitzgerald didn’t even get that much for him. I said then:

Making a rash move like trading Tyler Toffoli for the shiny object of a first-round pick, which could very well turn into the next Chase Stillman — just because the Devils are only hanging around in striking distance of a playoff spot with their top offensive player out of the lineup — would be an insane way to let the team’s stars know that management is serious about winning a Stanley Cup.

Tyler Toffoli might be past the age of a max-length extension, but that does not mean the team’s top scorer would presently be better utilized in a trade for futures. Toffoli has struggled at times, but trading him would be punting the season. At that point, you might as well tell Jack and Jonas not to bother returning from their injury. You might as well fire Lindy Ruff and let Travis Green hack around the bench for 35 games and not do a better job.

Do you think Nico Hischier or Jack Hughes would find it acceptable that management gave up on the season? How long would it be until they gave up on management and requested trades? These guys are in the primes of their lives and careers — and the Eastern Conference Stanley Cup Finalist in 2023 had 92 standings points, getting in on the last game of the season.

A pure teardown and rebuild is still not appropriate for this roster. Jack Hughes was just the best skater at the best-on-best Olympics, in my opinion, on a minute-per-minute basis. Shift in, shift out, he generally looked like the best player on the ice. Nico Hischier and Timo Meier just looked good for Switzerland and Meier has looked like the monster they traded for since returning to New Jersey. Simon Nemec looked awesome at the Olympics in top pairing minutes all the way to an unlikely path to the Bronze Medal Game and Luke Hughes looked great in his first game back last night in St. Louis.

This is not about making the playoffs this season. The team is so far out of it that they would probably need to win 18 of their remaining 22 games to make the playoffs. It’s a one-in-one-thousand shot at this point, so there is not much need to waste ink about whether the Devils are keeping pace with wins and losses among teams above them. It doesn’t matter what other teams do, the Devils need to win games. On the other hand, I am starting to look at top-10 prospects in the 2026 Draft. It’s just where they’ve ended up.

This is about making an honest effort to the core players on the roster that the team is serious about winning. Even if they do not finish this regular season in a playoff spot, wasting hockey games not caring about putting the team into a position to contend is a bad message. Whether that means coaching changes or switching out some of the supporting players for different ones, the team should continue to try fixes that do not involve trading those core players away until they get into a run of good hockey that can either pull off the impossible or get something better going into next season.

I will say that I think the Devils should look for young players. The supporting cast on the current roster skews on the older side, and it may be that too many different guys are aging and can maybe still succeed on another team, but not on one with so many teammates on the older side of 30. I have seen the Steven Stamkos rumor surface again, but it would be a risk. It is not necessarily a move I would recommend now, but I was not against it when it was first talked about a few months ago, when the Devils were winning games. He is a goal scorer and the Devils need more of them, but I would not be looking for more players any older than Pius Suter in this year’s trade deadline. Maybe, after shaking out their offseason cap situation and seeing where the roster stands then, it would make more sense.

But what do you think of these trade option ideas? Are there any more you can think of? What do you think of the resurfacing Stamkos rumor? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

LA Kings fire coach Jim Hiller and name D.J. Smith as the interim replacement

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Kings fired coach Jim Hiller on Sunday after losing five of their past six games and falling out of playoff position.

D.J. Smith was named the interim replacement for the rest of the season in the first coaching change by general manager Ken Holland, who kept Hiller behind the bench when he took over the front office last May. Player development coach Matt Greene is joining Smith’s staff as an assistant.

“I want to thank Jim Hiller for his dedication, professionalism, and the commitment he showed to our players and our team every day: He is a respected coach and person, and we appreciate the work he’s done behind our bench,” Holland said. “At this point in the season, we believe a change in leadership is necessary to give our group the best opportunity to reach its potential and compete at the level we expect. These decisions are never made lightly, but our responsibility is to position this team for success now and moving forward.”

Hiller was in just his second full season in the charge of the Kings, who looked lifeless in an 8-1 loss to the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday. Fans broke into repeated chants of “Fire Hiller!” while the Oilers poured it on in the second and third periods of Los Angeles’ largest defeat of the season by far.

One night earlier, Los Angeles allowed five goals in the third period of an embarrassing 6-4 loss to short-handed Vegas in both teams’ first game back from the Olympic break. A 2-0 win against Calgary on Saturday was not enough to save Hiller’s job.

Hiller went 93-58-24 with the Kings and made the playoffs twice, but never won a postseason series.

The 56-year-old Hiller was a longtime NHL assistant who got his first chance to lead a team when the Kings promoted him to replace the fired Todd McLellan in February 2024. He righted their season and got the Kings to the playoffs, but they lost in the first round to Edmonton — just as they had in each of the previous two seasons under McLellan.

Los Angeles tied its franchise records for victories (48) and points (105) last year in its first full campaign under Hiller, but they landed in yet another first-round matchup with the Oilers — and Connor McDavid sent them packing yet again in six games.

Hiller maintained McLellan’s commitment to defense-first hockey as the Kings’ primary identity, even if it sometimes meant playing a boring style for fans.

Holland addressed their offensive problems by acquiring high-scoring Artemi Panarin in a trade with the Rangers before the break, but the Kings then lost star forward Kevin Fiala for the season when he broke his leg while playing for Switzerland at the Olympics.

With back-to-back losses out of the break, Los Angeles slipped three points behind Seattle, which is in position for the final wild-card playoff spot in the Western Conference.

“We didn’t feel good tonight,” Hiller said immediately after the 8-1 shellacking from Edmonton. “I don’t feel good standing here. Those players don’t feel good today, but we’ve got a job to do.”

Smith was the coach of the Ottawa Senators from 2019 to 2023, leading four non-playoff seasons before he was fired 26 games into his fifth season. He joined the Kings’ staff after Hiller replaced McLellan.

He is the Kings’ fifth coach since the firing in 2017 of Darryl Sutter, who led Los Angeles to its only two Stanley Cup championships.

The Kings haven’t won a playoff series since raising that second Cup in 2014, winning just nine total games in six first-round exits.

Hiller is just the second coach fired in the NHL this season. Columbus replaced Dean Evason with Rick Bowness in January.

Stamkos: Predators Trying To 'Stay The Course' In Chase For Final Playoff Spot

The Nashville Predators are the closest they've been this season to moving into the final Wild Card spot in the Western Conference: one spot out. 

On Saturday, with a 2-0 lead against the Dallas Stars and needing two points to tie the Seattle Kraken and surpass them in wins for the final spot, the opportunity was "for the taking." 

However, Nashville gave up three unanswered goals, including the game-winning conversion in overtime to Jason Robertson, in a 3-2 loss to the Stars. Once again, Nashville finds itself on the outside looking in. 

"The game was there. It was for the taking," Steven Stamkos said. "Both teams had stretches where they were the better team, and we obviously had a great start...but you can't just sit back."

The joy of being in playoff position was going to last at most two hours anyway as the Kraken defeated the Vancouver Canucks, 5-1, to move back into the second Wild Card spot.

However, losing a point to the Stars puts the Predators off-pace with the Kraken, now needing to win two games instead of one to potentially surpass Seattle in the standings.

The Predators have accomplished a lot in dragging themselves out of the basement in the NHL, but have been chasing the Wild Card for nearly two months now, coming up to it, but failing to cross the threshold. 

"We're disappointed in not getting two (points), but coming out of the break and getting three of four is positive," Stamkos said. "We need as many points as we can. We're trying to stay the course and we've gotten on a little streak of collecting points. We'll take it." 

Nashville will host two teams this week that are in desperate positions as well. Both Detroit (Monday at 1 p.m. CST) and Boston (Thursday at 7 p.m. CST) are in Wild Card positions, with Washington just two points behind the Bruins for the final spot. 

While the Predators have a wide 6-3 win over the Red Wings this season, they've dropped an overtime result to the Bruins, losing 15 seconds into the extra frame.

An early start to Monday's game benefits the Predators, as a victory will give them a feel of where they stand before the evening games start.

Seattle also hosts the best team in the Eastern Conference, Carolina, and Los Angeles (62 points, tied with Nashville) hosts Colorado, the best team in the NHL. Of the three, the Predators have the "easier" opponent. 

After Saturday's disappointing loss, head coach Andrew Brunette said the key is to get back to the basics and even get into a learning mindset. 

"We have to grow our game, build our game. It was a great experince for our group to go through...We've got some really good teams coming in this week. It's another big week for us." 

Flyers trade for forward who had two different stints with Lightning

Flyers trade for forward who had two different stints with Lightning originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Flyers added some organizational depth at forward Sunday night when they acquired Boris Katchouk in a trade with the Wild.

In exchange for Katchouk, the Flyers sent Roman Schmidt to Minnesota. Schmidt was acquired by the Flyers in December, but the 23-year-old defenseman never played for the big club. He went scoreless in 16 games with AHL affiliate Lehigh Valley.

Katchouk, who will report to the Phantoms, is a 27-year-old with 179 games of NHL experience between three teams. He played three games with the Lightning this season before being traded to the Wild in December. He saw eight games with Minnesota’s AHL affiliate Iowa, recording a goal and two assists.

The 2016 second-round pick started his career with Tampa Bay and scored his first NHL goal against the Flyers in 2021-22. It came in a 7-1 win for the Lightning, a game that ended up being Alain Vigneault’s last as the Flyers’ head coach.

Katchouk has also played for the Blackhawks and Senators. In 2022-23, he set a career high with 16 points (five goals, 11 assists) over 58 games for Chicago.

He set AHL career highs last season with Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, putting up 21 goals and 49 points.

Katchouk is 6-foot-2 and has played primarily as a winger, but he also has some ability down the middle.

Ex-Ottawa Senator D.J. Smith Returns To NHL Head Coaching Ranks

There’s a familiar name stepping back into the NHL head coaching spotlight, this time in Southern California.

The Los Angeles Kings have hired former Ottawa Senators head coach D.J. Smith to take over their bench on an interim basis after the firing of Jim Hiller on Sunday. Hiller becomes the second coach to be fired this season after Columbus parted company with Dean Evason and gave the role to Rick Bowness back in January.

Interestingly, this season's two NHL coaching subs share something in common. They were both doomed to fail, taking over Ottawa Senators teams that were years away from being good.

Smith was hired by the Senators in 2019, just after they had traded away all their best players. Bowness took over the expansion Senators in 1992 at a time when expansion teams were still universally bad by design.

Smith coached four seasons for the Sens posting a record of 131-154-32, good for a points percentage of .464.

Prior to his time in Ottawa, Smith and Hiller were assistants together in Toronto under Mike Babcock. When Smith was fired by Ottawa in Dec. 2023, Smith took a job in LA as Hiller's assistant coach.

On Sunday, he took Hiller's job.

The Kings had just dropped five of six, including a massive beatdown at the hands of the Edmonton Oilers, and it sounds like that was probably the final straw. 

"Couple of tough games going into the Olympic break and I was hoping that the time off and then the mini training camp, that our team was able to respond," Kings GM Ken Holland told LA Kings Insider. "Tough couple of games coming out, especially the game against Edmonton on Thursday night.

"On Friday, I did a lot of thinking. I didn't do it on Friday because Friday was an off day, the players weren't here and we played at 4:00 on Saturday. I didn't want just a new coach behind [the bench] and make the move going into a game."

The Oilers game had to be particularly frustrating as the last thing anyone wants is to be pounded 8-1 by the team they used to run. Holland was GM of the Oilers from 2019-24.

During that same time period, Smith was in Ottawa, vainly trying to mould a young roster that was poorly insulated by fading veterans. GM Pierre Dorion was patient with Smith, almost to a fault, and never got the chance to fire him. Dorion lost his job a month before Smith got his walking papers.

Now in Los Angeles, the personable 48-year-old Smith now has a more veteran roster to work with, one that's built to win now, so it's hard to believe that his second NHL coaching chapter won't be more successful than the first.

Steve Warne
The Hockey News 

This article was first published by The Hockey News. More headlines here:

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After Clearing Waivers, Former Ottawa Senator Mathieu Joseph Sent To AHL
Tkachuk Fields Questions on USA Celebrations and Desire To Remain In Ottawa
20 Years Later: The Rise And Fall Of One Of The Greatest Teams In Senators History
Senators Goalie Prospect Thriving After Trade To QMJHL's Top-Ranked Club

Canadiens Have Target To Consider In Blackhawks D-Man

The Montreal Canadiens are a team to watch between now and the 2026 NHL trade deadline. With the Canadiens being one of the top teams in the Eastern Conference, they should be looking to add to their roster ahead of the playoffs. 

One area that the Canadiens could look to strengthen is their defensive depth. Bringing in another right-shot defenseman, in particular, could benefit the Canadiens. 

When looking at trade candidates around the NHL who could be good fits for the Canadiens, Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Connor Murphy is an interesting option. 

The Canadiens were recently linked to Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen, so they at least are open to adding a big right-shot defenseman. With this, it would be understandable if a player like Murphy grabbed their attention. Like Ristolainen, Murphy is a solid defensive defenseman who could play on Montreal's bottom pairing if acquired. Murphy is also less expensive than Ristolainen, but signed for just the remainder of the season.

Murphy could be a nice addition to a Canadiens' blueline that would benefit by adding a bit more stability. In addition, Murphy could be a good mentor for the Canadiens' younger players, as he is a well-known leader.

Nevertheless, it will be interesting to see if the Canadiens look to bring in Murphy. On paper, there looks like there could be a good fit here. 

Penguins/Golden Knights Recap: Pens bounce back, shutout Vegas 5-0

PITTSBURGH, PA - MARCH 01: Bryan Rust #17 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates his second period goal against the Vegas Golden Knights at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 1, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Pregame

Same lineup for the Penguins again, Arturs Silovs gets back in the net.

First period

Fun first period with free-flowing play and limited faceoffs. Vegas is the better team in the first 5-10 minutes, Pittsburgh then battles back and tips the scales as play moves along. Evgeni Malkin sets the tone with a huge hit on Tomas Hertl, then later helps build momentum with Egor Chinakhov with several scoring chances.

Back-and-forth play ambles along, Ben Kindel has two Golden Knights in front of him when he snaps a long-range shot. It catches Adin Hill a little off guard, 1-0 Pens.

The rest of the period slips away quickly, there are only eight faceoffs in the whole period. Shots are low too, 6-5 Pens.

Second period

Mitch Marner takes the first penalty of the game when he trips Erik Karlsson. The ensuing power play doesn’t get much going but does have a lot of zone time. That leads to Tommy Novak hitting Chinakhov with a pass soon after the penalty expired, Chinakhov displayed his lightning quick release to beat Hill to the far side. 2-0.

A bit later, Avery Hayes hits Colton Sissons, pretty routine. Cole Reinhardt skates over and asks for a fight, Hayes is very willing to give it to him. They throw a few punches and then get tied up, nothing major. The Pens come out of that deal with a power play with Reinhardt picking up an extra minor. The power play scores quickly, Erik Karlsson throws a high shot to the net, the puck bounces around and Bryan Rust is the first on it. Rust flicks it by an out of sorts Hill. 3-0.

The Golden Knights get their first power play of the game, Kris Letang is sent off for tripping. The strong Pens PK takes care of it.

Pittsburgh then gets another power play, Vegas is caught with too many players on the ice. The Pens make quick work of it again, Karlsson finds Rickard Rakell who sweeps a puck in past Hill. 4-0.

The penalty-fest continues when Blake Lizotte gets called for reaching in and tripping Jack Eichel, another successful penalty kill.

The three-goal second period puts the Pens up a commanding 4-0 after 40 minutes, shots were 11-7 PIT in the middle frame.

Third period

The Knights start trying to get it into gear late but hit a road block when Reilly Smith trips Lizotte.

Hertl pays Malkin back from the first period with a massive open ice hit of his own.

Play continues on, Kindel drops a puck in the offensive zone for Justin Brazeau in support and skates to the net. Brazeau shoots from distance, Hill doesn’t pick up on it. 5-0.

Some thoughts

  • Chinakhov is up to seven goals in his last nine games. Even when he doesn’t score, the threat of his shot and the possibility is there almost every shift. Really impressive to watch him operate these days, such a talent. He doesn’t need a lot of time or space to get a hard shot away.
  • The Bob Grove stat of the day: 2-7-3 in their last 12 home afternoon games and 0-4-2 in the last six Sunday home games. Games like this can be tricky with out of cycle starts and usually back-to-backs on a Sunday.
  • Very disjointed game from Vegas, made worse when Mark Stone left with an injury in the first period and didn’t return. Couldn’t have helped matters there, weird occurrence where Letang gave a little push on Stone’s upper arm. No twisting or huge force but something went awry.
  • Vegas played to type from the preview, they don’t give up a ton of shots but they don’t get a lot of saves. The Kindel shot was tricky but caught Hill back in his crease. The third goal Hill was also a bit out of position from the mayhem in front and Rust made him pay.
  • Unique way for Hayes to pitch in by getting in a fight that drew an extra penalty on the other guy. As it should have, there was nothing wrong with Hayes’s hit in the first place. Reinhardt, understandably, was looking to do something to provide a jolt to his team in that moment (down 2-0 and looking sleepy throughout) yet it backfired since the Pens scored quickly and turned it into a 3-0 game.
  • Big game from the special teams, the power play scored twice (plus scored a defacto PPG six seconds after one expired), the PK was 2/2. That’s the foundation for a winning recipe.
  • a

Good bounceback from the Pens for letting a point getaway yesterday, the party moves onto Boston on Tuesday night.

Surging Sabres Sweep Road Trip, Could Be Buyers Before Deadline

Concerns over whether the Buffalo Sabres would be able to recapture their winning momentum after the Olympic break have been put to the side, as the club swept all three games coming after the lengthy hiatus. The Sabres snuck by New Jersey and the reigning Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers with one goal wins, and punctuated the three-game sweep with a dominating 6-2 victory over the Atlantic Division-leading Tampa Bay Lightning on Saturday.

"We got off to a great start. Skated really well, moved the puck well,  got support of the puck well. Coming out of the zone led a lot of good opportunities,"Sabres head coach Lindy Ruff said after the game. "We got around net-front where (we had a) tip goal and we a lot of great opportunities."

Buffalo surged out to a 5-0 lead in the second of back-to-back games in the Sunshine State, with Josh Norris leading the way with a pair of tallies, and got a strong 36-save performance from Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen to move into sole possession of second place in the division, one point ahead of the Montreal Canadiens and just four points in back of the Lightning. 

"When you look at opportunities, there's a lot of nights you get a lot of good opportunities, (that) you don't take advantage," Ruff said. "In Florida, we had a lot of good ones, the two-on-ones we gave, we didn't generate a lot (of chances), I thought today, we made some good plays, and then we put them in the back of the net, which, early on, really put (Tampa) in a bad place and they tried to press a little bit, and then we caught him, we got on the other side of them and created some even better opportunities."

 Other Sabres Stories

Six Former Sabres Who Signed Elsewhere

Rasmus Dahlin - Norris contender?

Questions of whether the Sabres will make the playoffs are beginning to fade, as the club is seven points ahead of the Washington Capitals (who are in ninth place in the Eastern Conference standings). The unknown with five days remaining before the NHL trade deadline is whether GM Jarmo Kekalainen will take the opportunity to add to the roster before 3 pm Friday.

The Sabres do not have their second-round pick in 2026, due to the swap with Ottawa for Norris, but have extra picks in the middle rounds, all their picks in 2027, and a bevy of prospects in the organization. Youngsters like Isak Rosen and Devon Levi are blocked within the organization’s depth chart. Both will lose their waiver exemption next season, so they could be pieces that Kekalainen uses to bring back a significant return. Using some of their draft capital could bring back a depth rental in a key area, and there are indicators that the Sabres are looking to add a veteran right-handed blueliner, with Michael Kesselring having health issues all season and veteran Conor Timmins currently on injured reserve recovering from a broken leg. 

Follow Michael on X, Instagram @MikeInBuffalo

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The Kings Defense Is Still Searching For Consistency

Regardless of where anyone fell on the spectrum of belief that the Kings would be this mediocre after being the second seed in the Pacific Division last season and having the best record at home, we could all agree that their most realistic path to at least making it to the playoffs would be on the defensive side of the ice. 

With the recent blowout loss to the Edmont Oilers, an 8-1 loss on their home floor, the Kings decided to take action and fire head coach Jim Hiller, the team announced on Sunday. 

The biggest question will be whether the defense improves under new interim coach DJ Smith, who will take the job for the remainder of the season, the team announced.  We will soon find out whether the problem was all on Hiller or if some blame lies with the Kings' defensive lapses, unstable goaltending, and inconsistent offense. 

Breaking News: Kings Fire Head Coach Jim HillerBreaking News: Kings Fire Head Coach Jim HillerEarlier on March 1st, the Kings announced that they had fired head coach Jim Hiller.

Under Hiller, even though the numbers say he had the Kings 12th in defense, right in the middle of the pack, you wouldn't think that when you actually watch them play on ice. 

The fact of the matter is, the last two games in which they gave up 14 goals combined were the defining factor in Hiller being fired, and now it will be interesting to see where the defense goes and adjusts with Smith promoted as the interim head coach. 

The two losses out of the Olympic break, the Kings gave up more than double the goals they're giving up on average, 14 goals combined in the back-to-back games against the Edmonton Oilers and Vegas Golden Knights. That's not a good sign, especially against the two best teams in their division that they're trying to overtake. 

 The one defensive stat that you can look at and be happy as a Kings fan is the goals against average. Los Angeles is giving up 2.91 goals against per game and is ranked in the top 10, so that's good news, but their recent skid coming out of the Olympic break has been the total opposite of that stat.   

Sure, they've had some moments where, in overtime, the defense has shown up, or in late-game situations, they've come back, forced it into overtime, and won the game, but it hasn't been sustainable. 

But, when the captain of your defense is an aging 36-year-old who clearly isn't the same player he once was on defense a few years ago, that's a problem, especially in the playoffs and later on in games when fatigue hits you. 

It's not just the defensive line, though; it's also Darcy Kuemper, who has pretty much been unplayable recently at the goaltender position, and that's very hard to say, given how great he was last season and some parts of this season. 

But that's the truth: mostly because of injuries, he hasn't been the same player since coming back. But it is what it is; he hasn't performed up to expectations, and the backup goaltender, Anton Forsberg, has been the better player overall. Just tonight, the Kings won a shutout over the Calgary Flames with Forsberg in the crease for Los Angeles. 

Sure, they traded for Artemi Panarin, who will certainly help boost their offense, as they're also a very bad offensive team, sitting 29th out of the 32 teams in the NHL, only scoring 2.60 goals per game and 0.48 on power play goals, which is also an issue, given how many talented offensive players Los Angeles has. 

The results on offense also just haven't been consistent, and there's no excuse for that because this is a very talented team from a scoring standpoint.  On paper, when you look at it, from Artemi Panarin, Quinton Byfield, Kevin Fiala, Alex Laferriere, etc, a lot of these guys are playing very well, but the offense sometimes isn't present when needed to make a spark. 

But the defense, Los Angeles won't go anywhere if they don't improve their defense. It could be making a trade to get help up front because acquiring forwards isn't going to change a thing; it's the defense that remains a problem. 

This team is known for its strong defense. Over the last few years, Los Angeles has been at least a top-5 or top-10 team on defense because of the grit and grind we know the silver and white has. 

At times, it's there, especially when Los Angeles jumps up to big leads and both their defense and offense are clicking, but then in the second and third period specifically, all that crumbles down, and it's either an overtime loss or a regulation loss. 

Individually, while things have not always been perfect, just see the end of the team's loss against the Edmonton Oilers and Vegas Golden Knights, both games have been about the defense evaporating, and to some point, the offense. 

Kings Humiliated In 8–1 Beatdown By Edmonton OilersKings Humiliated In 8–1 Beatdown By Edmonton OilersAfter suffering that disappointing loss last night against the Vegas Golden Knights, where the Kings surrendered five goals in the third period, Los Angeles followed that up tonight with an even worse performance, losing in an 8-1 dismantling to the Oilers, which was over before the horn sounded.

Panarin is the only player on the Kings who's in the top 50 of any category on offense. The 34-year-old forward is currently no. 24 in points this season with 60; no other Kings player is in the top 50 in either category on offense. 

It just shows that even though on paper, this roster has some solid forwards and depth, no one is playing at the elite level like Panarin is, who the Kings should be lucky that they acquired. 

It's pretty clear that the biggest issues are a lack of defense, inconsistent offense, and coaching. It seems like every game, fans are calling to fire Jim Hiller, even after wins, just to get in a fresh voice out there on the bench. 

Kings' Jim Hiller Is 'Always Concerned' About His Job After Embarrassing 8-1 Loss To OilersKings' Jim Hiller Is 'Always Concerned' About His Job After Embarrassing 8-1 Loss To OilersFollowing an embarrassing 8-1 loss to the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday, the Los Angeles Kings coach Jim Hiller admits he is 'always concerned' about his job status. The Kings players were also asked if the team had quit on their coach.

Questionable rotations and guys not getting enough minutes on ice who deserve them, like Taylor Ward, who, since being recalled from the Ontario Reign, has been a solid forward playing in his limited minutes, with two goals, two assists, and four points. 

The team, at this point, is pretty clear about what they are and what they're trying to do: build to win now, rather than rebuild for future draft capital and young players. But the worst situation to be in sports is being a mediocre team that's always in the middle, and that's exactly what the Kings are, good enough to make the playoffs but destined to go home in the first round. 

In a season where it will be Anze Kopitar's last with the silver and white after announcing retirement early in the season, it sucks to see the Kings wasting another season of being a legitimate contender and even a playoff team under Kopitar. 

Whatever decisions are made,  though, need to happen now. Coming out of the Olympic break is a massive sprint to the finish line, where the playoffs are the ultimate goal. Injuries have not allowed the team to get the footing that it would have liked, but the race does not stop, so you can get your bearings.

The Kings don't have time to linger or falter on ideas. If there's a trade out there that can help the team specifically on defense, Los Angeles has to pull the trigger right now. Because if they don’t, they’ll have a very long offseason to consider where they went wrong…again.

Image

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Canucks Place Defenceman Guillaume Brisebois On Waivers

After spending the entire season out due to injury, the Vancouver Canucks have announced that Guillaume Brisebois has been placed on waivers in preparation for assignment to the AHL. If he clears waivers, Brisebois will report to the Abbotsford Canucks. 

Brisebois took part in Vancouver's training camp back in September, but was soon ruled out of play after undergoing surgery to repair a lower-body injury. As a result, he has yet to make his season debut this season. 

As one of the longest-tenured members of the Canucks organization, having been drafted 66th overall in the 2015 NHL Draft, Brisebois has been a staple in Vancouver's D-core depth. He played in three NHL games during the 2024-25 season and won the Calder Cup with Abbotsford during their playoff run back in June. 

Brisebois' return will give Abbotsford a massive boost on their blueline. Through the 2025-26 season, the AHL Canucks have been forced to shift their defensive pairings around due to injury issues and NHL call-ups. 

Abbotsford plays later today at 12:00 pm PT, but will return to the Rogers Forum for a six-game home stand directly after. 

Jan 3, 2025; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks defenseman Guillaume Brisebois (55) handles the puck against the Nashville Predators in the first period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images
Jan 3, 2025; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks defenseman Guillaume Brisebois (55) handles the puck against the Nashville Predators in the first period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

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Los Angeles Kings fire coach Jim Hiller, name DJ Smith as interim

The Los Angeles Kings have fired head coach Jim Hiller, the team announced on Sunday, March 1. In an effort to salvage their playoff hopes in Anze Kopitar's final season, the Kings will look elsewhere for leadership.

"I want to thank Jim Hiller for his dedication, professionalism, and the commitment he showed to our players and our team every day," Kings general manager Ken Holland said in a statement. "He is a respected coach and person, and we appreciate the work he’s done behind our bench."

Holland named DJ Smith interim head coach through the remainder of the season. Smith, who is in his second full season as associate coach, was previously the head coach of the Ottawa Senators from 2019-2023. He was also an assistant coach alongside Hiller in Toronto from 2015-2019.

Kings player development coach Matt Greene will serve as an assistant coach under Smith.

"At this point in the season, we believe a change in leadership is necessary to give our group the best opportunity to reach its potential and compete at the level we expect," Holland said. "These decisions are never made lightly, but our responsibility is to position this team for success now and moving forward.”

The Kings (24-21-14) currently sit three points out of a playoff spot. They lost their last three games going into the Olympic break and their first two games coming out of it, culminating in an 8-1 loss at home to the Edmonton Oilers that led fans at Crypto.com Arena to break out into "Fire Hiller" chants.

Hiller took over for Todd McClellan in February 2024 as an interim and led the Kings to a 21-12-1 finish to the season that ended in a first-round playoff loss to the Oilers in six games. He was named permanent head coach that May.

In his first full season, Hiller coached the Kings to 48 wins and 105 points, a franchise best. They met the Oilers again in the first round and held a 2-0 lead after the first two games at Crypto.com Arena, but fizzled out and lost the series in six games. It was the Kings' fourth consecutive first-round loss to the Oilers, who advanced to their second straight Stanley Cup Final.

Hiller came under fire for his decision-making during that series, but team president Luc Robitaille and Holland stuck by him.

In December, Holland again voiced his support for Hiller amid the team's struggles.

"I expect him to be here the rest of the season," he told reporters.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Los Angeles Kings fire coach Jim Hiller, hire DJ Smith as interim

Islanders B2B Gameday News: Home for the Panthers

Simon knows best. | Aaron Doster-Imagn Images

No rest for the victors, as the Islanders return to Long Island to host the Florida Panthers after winning in Columbus last night. The Panthers are rested and might even be a little healthier, having lost at home to the Sabres on Friday night.

The two-time defending champs are 30-26-3 on the season and sit eight points behind the second wild card spot. Atlantic teams occupy both of those spots right now, so that’s really the only avenue they have to make a big climb back into it. If they miss the playoffs, they certainly wouldn’t be the first Cup champ to do so, but they’d have a little more grace considering how much hockey they’ve played and how many key injuries they’ve had for much of the season.

Amid that backdrop is the status of Sergei Bobrovsky, who’s having another mid-career-level Bobrovsky season rather than anything close to his Columbus and Panthers Cup-run peaks. His top-dollar contract certainly carried him through some highs and lows, so the Panthers are right not to want to rush into a premium extension for a guy who will be 38.

The Isles won’t concern themselves with any of that, of course. They’ll just want to have a better performance than the last two games, where they found ways to pull off 4-3 OT wins despite some shoddy play.

First Islanders Goal picks go here.

Islanders News

  • Dmitry Kulikov might return for the Panthers tonight; he hasn’t played since the second game of the season. [NHL]
  • The Skinny: Ilya Sorokin remains unbeaten in regulation against Columbus, and the Isles are 7-2-0 in their last nine games… The Isles improve to 14-2-3 when tied after two periods; the 14 wins lead the NHL. [Isles]
  • Gross: The OT win over the Blue Jackets is an example of the desperation the Isles will need to carry through to a playoff spot. [Newsday]
  • Sears: The Isles’ OT success has been the difference between playoff position and playoff chasing. [Post]
  • Patrick Roy, who has been burned on multiple goalie interference challenges this season, said he wouldn’t have issued the challenge the Blue Jackets did on the J-G Pageau goal last night:

Elsewhere

Thirteen games in the NHL Saturday night, including the Penguins getting a point against the Smurfs.

  • The Kings have fired coach Jim Hiller, who was once an Isles assistant, replacing him with DJ Smith, who gets the interim tag for the remainder of this season. [NHL]
  • The “embarrassing” losses continue to pile up for the Leafs, who lost at home to Ottawa. [Sportsnet]
  • Elias Pettersson’s slump hits a new low. [Sportsnet]
  • Evgeni Malkin will wait till after the season to engage in his latest round of contract drama with the Penguins. [TSN]
  • Adam Henrique has a no-trade clause and no intention of waiving it in Edmonton. [TSN]

NHL fans complain after ABC cuts away from Bruins-Flyers to announce Khamenei’s death

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Bobby Brink (10) of the Flyers tries to wrap the puck around Bruins goalie Jeremy Swayman (1) during the second period on Feb. 28, 2026, Image 2 shows ABC's David Muir interrupts the Flyers-Bruins broadcast to report on the death of Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Feb. 28, 2026

Hockey were ticked off Saturday after ABC put the Bruins at Flyers game on ice Saturday afternoon to announce the death of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

“We have to go now to an ABC News special report,” play-by-play voice Bob Wischusen informed viewers as the score was tied 0-0 with just over 7:30 left in the period while the Bruins were on a power play.

The broadcast cut to “World News Tonight” anchor David Muir, who reported that Khamenei was killed in strikes from the United States and Israel.

While Muir said ABC was interrupting the game “for just a moment,” the report lasted approximately eight minutes, according to Awful Announcing.

This didn’t sit well with some sports fans.

“Can’t be doing this dawg,” one X user wrote.

“Couldn’t have done it during an intermission?” fumed another.

One user said the report was “a waste of time” because “people can find out tomorrow in the newspaper.”

“There’s no reason for these interruptions to exist,” another user wrote.

“Anyone watching cable or ABC probably watches the news too and everyone else is on social media in some kind which probably already told them this.”

Another user offered up an alternative way of handling the newsbreak.

ABC’s David Muir interrupts the Flyers-Bruins broadcast to report on the death of Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Feb. 28, 2026. ABC

“Why can’t they split screen at the very least? We can watch sports without audio. Happens at bars all the time,” they wrote.

The Bruins-Flyers game was switched to ESPN and was available on the ESPN app during the news break, per Awful Announcing.

As Muir wrapped up his report he signed off in part: “We’ll return you now to the game. Our thanks to the team at ESPN.”

Bobby Brink (10) of the Flyers tries to wrap the puck around Bruins goalie Jeremy Swayman (1) during the second period on Feb. 28, 2026. AP

When ABC returned to the game the score was still 0-0 and the Bruins were on another power play with 3:40 left in the second period.

The Flyers won the game 3-1, with all four goals coming in the third period, including a late empty-netter by Sean Couturier.

The hockey game wasn’t the only sporting event interrupted for coverage on Khamenei’s death. NBC cut into its broadcast of the third round of the PGA Tour’s Cognizant Classic.

How The Ottawa Senators Roster Has Been Influenced By The Gretzky Effect

Take a look at the birthplaces of the Ottawa Senators’ top five scorers.

Viersen, Germany.
Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Whitefish, Montana.
Whitehorse, Yukon.
Scottsdale, Arizona.

There's not a thing wrong with any of that, but a generation ago, you'd rarely see those cities/towns appear on an NHL roster, much less attached to its five best players.

There was a time when top scorers seemed to come almost exclusively from Canada. Even smaller Canadian cities, towns, and villages were pumping out more NHL talent than entire hockey-playing countries. 

So how did we get here? As others have done before, you can probably trace a straight line back to one trade. The trade.

When Wayne Gretzky was sent to the Los Angeles Kings in 1988, it wasn't just a trade away from Edmonton. It was a trade from Canada. But whether anyone knew it at the time or not, it's now crystal clear that it planted the seeds for the incredible growth we've seen in the league and the sport over the past four decades.

Hockey moved into Hollywood, celebrities filled the rink-side seats, and kids in California, who had never seen an ODR much less skated on one, suddenly had the game's greatest superstar right in their backyard. It was cool to be a hockey fan in places that hadn't cared about the sport before. Like, at all.

And from there, the league blossomed.

Within five years of the Gretzky deal, the NHL had taken up residence in San Jose, Tampa Bay, Florida, and Anaheim. When Gary Bettman became commissioner in 1993, he leaned even further into the belief that NHL hockey could now thrive anywhere in North America, thanks to the Gretzky effect.

And it has.

League revenues are at record levels, player salaries continue to skyrocket, the salary cap keeps climbing (moving to $113.5 million in 2027-28), and the world is taking notice.

Meanwhile, international tournaments are always a battle for Canada. We're still the best at hockey, but losing isn't just a once-in-a-while thing anymore. Collectively, the rest of the world wins just as much as Canada now, and after the American sweep in Milan, who knows what the future holds?

But the full measure of hockey’s growth isn’t found just at international events. It’s found in NHL dressing rooms. 

Admittedly, I'm taking liberties with the Sens' birthplaces as a jumping off point. The Sens top five scorers, Tim Stutzle, Drake Batherson, Jake Sanderson, Dylan Cozens, and Brady Tkachuk hail from non-traditional markets for various reasons, and they didn't all grow up exactly where they were born. Batherson, Sanderson, and Tkachuk had dads who were pros and ended up elsewhere.

But Tkachuk grew up in St. Louis, which wasn't always the minor hockey hotbed it's become, and Batherson spent his early minor hockey in Germany.

Speaking of which, Stutzle is also a fine example of the game's growth, that a player so fast and skilled developed completely in Germany. He never played in the CHL and made a last second decision to play pro at home instead of the University of New Hampshire. It's a feather in the cap of Germany's developmental model and the level of passion for the game that now exists there.

Markets that once felt experimental have become established. Kids in Germany or Arizona (or wherever) have grown up with both an interest and opportunity that simply didn’t exist before.

The Senators’ top five scorers aren’t a gimmick or a trivia answer. They’re just a reflection of hockey's growth and its ever-growing worldwide popularity. And if you’re wondering how we got here, you can still trace that line back to 1988, when Gretzky's arrival woke up America.

The dominoes just fell from there.

Steve Warne
The Hockey News

This article was first published by The Hockey News. More headlines here:

Senators At Leafs: NHL's Battle Of Ontario Takes An Unexpected Step Back
After Clearing Waivers, Former Ottawa Senator Mathieu Joseph Sent To AHL
Tkachuk Fields Questions on USA Celebrations and Desire To Remain In Ottawa
20 Years Later: The Rise And Fall Of One Of The Greatest Teams In Senators History
Senators Goalie Prospect Thriving After Trade To QMJHL's Top-Ranked Club

Gamethread: Golden Knights @ Penguins

PITTSBURGH, PA - MARCH 11: Erik Karlsson #65 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates against Tomas Hertl #48 of the Vegas Golden Knights at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 11, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Talk about the game with Pens fans here!