Tennessee's Blake Grimmer (14) rounds third base towards home plate during an NCAA college baseball game against Texas in Knoxville, Tennessee on May 8, 2026. | Saul Young/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
After testing the MLB Draft waters, Blake Grimmer has opted to withdraw his name from this month’s event. He will instead return to Tennessee baseball for another season in Knoxville.
— Tennessee Baseball (@Vol_Baseball) July 1, 2026
Grimmer hit .283 with 13 home runs and 36 RBIs during the 2026 season, which was his first full season as a starter. He will be a redshirt junior next season, where he can play either first, second or third base. Grimmer hit .18 with four home runs during the 2025 season. He redshirted during Tennessee’s 2024 national title season.
Grimmer eventually settled in the No. 2 spot in Tennessee’s lineup for Josh Elander after dealing with an injury that cost him the early portions of the season. The former top 150 overall prospect in the class of 2023 will now be one of Tennessee’s top returners next season.
After playing second base for much of last season, Grimmer will likely slide elsewhere with former Air Force second baseman Wyatt Hanoian now in the lineup. Hanioan hit .357 with 49 RBIs last year for the Falcons.
The MLB Draft is set to begin on July 11th, where Elander and the staff will get a clearer picture of next year’s roster.
INGLEWOOD, CA - DECEMBER 23: Bogdan Bogdanovic #10 of the LA Clippers plays defense during the game against the Houston Rockets on December 23, 2025 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
It was Bruce Lee who said, “Be water, my friend”.
Water is shapeless. Formless. Water will take the shape of whatever it’s in.
Water is weak, right?
Marcus Aurelius said that one should “Be like the rock that the waves keep crashing over. It stands unmoved, and the rage of the sea falls still around it.” Should an NBA team want to be the rock, or the waves crashing over it?
The Houston Rockets’ brain trust has shown signs of being each. Rafael Stone has some H20 in his approach. Perhaps he should lend his surname to Ime Udoka, who is rock solid in his principles. At times, it’s felt like Udoka’s rigidity has overridden Stone’s flexibility. The Rockets have been seemingly exclusively interested in signing “Udoka guys”.
Not anymore.
If you expected Marcus Smart to be the Rockets’ first signing of the summer, you weren’t alone. He is officially a Rocket now, but he wasn’t first in line. That would be Bogdan Bogdanovic. He is decidedly not a Udoka guy:
But he’s exactly what the Rockets need.
Rockets sign elite movement shooter
The last two seasons have not been kind to Bogdanovic. Last season, he managed just 23 appearances. The year before, he played 54 games, but scored just 10.3 points per game while shooting a solid-but-unexceptional 36.3% from long-range.
If you want a best-case scenario, look to 2023-24. In 79 games, Bogdanovic averaged 16.9 points per game while shooting 37.4% from deep. The year before that, he hit 40.6% of his triples.
Bogdanovic can hit movement threes, come off screens, and shoot off the dribble. He isn’t strictly a shooting specialist, either. Bogdanovic can handle the ball and set up teammates. He can do just about anything you like:
Besides rebound or defend, that is.
It’s not that Udoka would insist on rebounders at every position, but the idea that the Rockets would ever sign a subpar defender under his watch was unthinkable before now. This could represent an organizational shift:
Hopefully.
Rockets badly need spacing
The details surrounding the Bogdanovic signing haven’t emerged as of this writing, but it’s a one-year deal, so we can safely assume it’s a minimum.
Quick: Find a list of players with Bogdanovic’s offensive skillset who are also strong defenders. Sort them by salary. You’re going to find that these are $25 million-a-year players at a minimum.
Yet, the Rockets need shooting. They also need additional ball-handling. They do not have $25 million to spare.
Simply put, they need non-Udoka guys.
They got one. The extent of Bogdanovic’s role remains to be seen. Udoka may not trust him defensively.
Still, he is a Houston Rocket. That’s the point here. The Rockets made a signing that was contrary to Udoka’s principles. They were able to address roster needs in the process.
Apr 23, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Buffalo Sabres defenseman Bowen Byram (4) skates against Boston Bruins right wing David Pastrnak (88) during the second period of game three of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at the TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images
Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images
CHICAGO — Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Bowen Byram has agreed to a 6-year, $75 million extension with his new team.
The deal was announced Wednesday, the first day that Byram was eligible to sign an extension. It runs through the 2032-33 season.
The 25-year-old Byram was acquired in a trade with Buffalo on June 23. The Blackhawks sent the No. 4 and No. 45 selections in the NHL draft and defenseman Louis Crevier to the Sabres for Byram and forward Jordan Greenway.
It has been a very busy summer for Byram, who got married last weekend in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
The Blackhawks are counting on Byram to take over as their No. 1 defenseman — and they paid him accordingly.
“We’re going to provide the opportunity to become one of the top defensemen around the league and we feel 100% wholeheartedly that he can be that guy and he will be that guy,” Blackhawks general manager Kyle Davidson said after the trade was completed. “So, when you take it like that, a top-pair defenseman and we feel a potential No. 1 defenseman, there aren’t many pieces around the league that are more valuable than that.”
Byram, who has never been the top defenseman on his NHL team, thinks he is ready for the job.
“I’ve just got to come in and prove what I can do,” he said after the trade. “I know that I’m confident in myself. You know I feel that, after this move, the Blackhawks are confident in me, so it’s a great feeling to have a team believing in you.”
Byram’s father, Shawn, played for Chicago on Nov. 3, 1991, in the last of his five NHL games. The Blackhawks had a chance to take Bowen Byram in the 2019 draft, but they opted for Kirby Dach at No. 3, and Byram went to Colorado at No. 4.
Byram had 23 goals and 40 assists in 146 games over three-plus seasons with Colorado before he was traded to Buffalo in March 2024 for Casey Mittelstadt. He helped the Avalanche win the Stanley Cup in 2022.
Byram had 11 goals and a career-high 42 points last season. He was part of a strong group of defensemen who helped the Sabres to the Atlantic Division title and the franchise’s first playoff appearance since the 2010-11 season.
HOUSTON, TX - APRIL 24: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket during the game against the Houston Rockets during Round One Game Three of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 24, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
It’s day two of LeBron James being the hottest free agent on the market. While no one knows his next move just yet, our latest update might tilt the scales in favor of the Cleveland Cavaliers.
ESPN’s Shams Charania reports that money isn’t the driving factor behind LeBron’s next destination — and that the King is even willing to accept the veteran minimum if it means competing for a championship.
LeBron James is willing to accept a minimum contract to play for a contender, per @ShamsCharania
— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) July 1, 2026
Naturally, this opens the door to all 29 teams. Everyone has enough cap space to offer LeBron the minimum. But only one team has roots as deep as Cleveland. And money was one of the only obstacles they had to clear.
The Cavs were never going to be able to offer James a large chunk of cash to return. Any homecoming would be contingent on James wanting to be back in Cleveland. That’s because the Cavs flat-out don’t have any money to offer.
From that perspective, the Cavs were starting this race with a heavy disadvantage. Other teams, including the Golden State Warriors, would be able to give James a contract that they couldn’t match. Now it looks like that might not matter.
Cleveland had the highest payroll in NBA history last season. They were far above the Second Apron and have been working to get below it this summer. They’ve already lost Dean Wade and Keon Ellis to free agency, while James Harden has opted out of his contract to help restructure a more team-friendly deal.
All of this can work towards keeping money available for James. But if this report is true, money might not be that important.
Of course, James won’t complain if the Cavs can offer him more. Though it sounds like that won’t be a deal-breaker. James wants happiness and an opportunity to win another title. In my opinion, Cleveland can offer both.
The Cavs made it to the Eastern Conference Finals last season. And while they were thumped in four games by the eventual champions — the one thing that’s been missing this entire time is a wing. Now? They might have the quintessential wing on their roster. James can complete the puzzle and make his hometown team a championship contender again. Money won’t get in the way of that.
The Chicago Blackhawks signed defenseman Bowen Byram to a six-year extension that, for now, will make him the highest-paid defenseman in NHL history.
The July 1 deal will average $12.5 million and kick in during the 2027-28 season. The top cap hit next season among defensemen is Erik Karlsson at $11.5 million, followed by Rasmus Dahlin and Drew Doughty at $11 million.
Byram, 25, has been in a second-pairing role in his career because Colorado's Cale Makar and Buffalo's Dahlin were ahead of him, but he will be the Blackhawks' top defenseman. His top season was 42 points in 2025-26.
Byram's status as top-paid defenseman should end soon because former Norris Trophy winners Cale Makar and Quinn Hughes are eligible to receive contract extensions.
The Major League Baseball Players Association is seeking to expand major league rosters by 60 players to open the regular season in their latest proposal with MLB on Wednesday, with teams rosters increasing from 26 players to 28 players for the first 15 days of the regular season.
It was one of several proposals designed to increase roster size that also included the ability for players to be placed on the 60-day injured list before clubs are required to submit 40-man rosters, enabling clubs to protect more players.
The union is also seeking to reduce the number of times a player can be optioned to the minor leagues in a season from five times to three.
It also wants to reduce the amount of time a team can protect minor league players from being subjected to the Rule 5 draft beginning in November before the Collective Bargaining Agreement expires on Dec. 1, 2026.
Teams would also be prohibited from optioning pitchers to the minor leagues immediately after games and during the All-Star break if they meet certain thresholds to help reduce roster manipulation.
Pitchers who record at least nine outs or throw at least 50 pitches in a game and is optioned afterwards would be credited with four days of major-league salary and service. If pitchers reach that criteria within seven days of the All-Star break, pitchers would receive salary and service time up to four games after the All-Star break.
The union is also asking that clubs share their non-proprietary performance data and video with all of their players.
The union said their proposals are “designed to improve the game, protect players’ health and safety, strengthen the free market, and provide meaningful support to our full fraternity."
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 11: Luke Kennard #10 of the Los Angeles Lakers dribbles the ball against the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game Four of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena on May 11, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images) | Getty Images
With the acquisition of Miles Bridges, the Phoenix Suns opened one roster spot. After sending both Grayson Allen and Royce O’Neale to Charlotte, the organization needed to replace the shooting it lost. That became the priority, and the Suns addressed it by signing veteran sniper Luke Kennard to a two-year, $13 million contract with a player option for the second season.
On paper, it appears to be exactly what Phoenix needed. But how much does it ultimately improve the roster? Does Kennard adequately replace the shooting the Suns lost? And how should this signing be viewed in the context of the entire Miles Bridges transaction?
So what grade do the Suns deserve for adding Luke Kennard? Let’s talk it out.
Player Grade: B
Luke Kennard isn’t going to wow you with a complete basketball skill set. He’s a sharpshooter. That’s what he does, and that’s why he’s here. He’s not going to grab a bunch of rebounds, he’s an average playmaker, and he’s a below-average defender. When you look at his overall report card from Basketball Index, the holes in his game are easy to spot.
But when you’re truly elite at one skill, and it’s the exact skill your team needs, you begin to understand why his overall grade comes in at a B. The Suns aren’t asking him to rebound. They aren’t asking him to be a stopper defensively. They’ll surround him with players on the second unit who can help cover those deficiencies while allowing him to operate where he’s most comfortable.
There will absolutely be nights when he frustrates you. He’ll miss a defensive assignment. He won’t have the lateral quickness to keep someone in front of him, and opposing guards will get downhill. The hope is that Phoenix’s interior defense is improved enough to compensate for those shortcomings. That’s why fit matters when evaluating Kennard. I can easily see him playing 20 minutes a night and knocking down 3 to 4 three pointers. That kind of production would be incredibly valuable for the second unit.
He’s your stand in the corner and let it fly guy. And over the course of his career, he’s proven to be one of the best in the league at doing exactly that.
Acquisition Grade: A+
When you looked at the list of available free agents whose primary skill was shooting, I thought Kennard would simply be out of Phoenix’s price range. The Suns ended up using their full mid-level exception to sign him, but it’s not like they were the only team interested. He had other options, and some of those teams are viewed as much stronger championship contenders. He also could have stayed with the Los Angeles Lakers, a team that clearly valued what he brought during its postseason run.
The fact that the Suns were able to bring him to Phoenix despite those alternatives continues to reinforce something we’ve seen throughout this offseason. Phoenix is still a desirable destination. It’s still a place that attracts free agents.
Knowing Kennard and Grayson Allen were teammates at Duke, I’m sure the two had conversations about what it was like to play in Phoenix. While Grayson’s first couple of seasons were spent in a locker room dealing with plenty of turmoil, the organization looks much different today. You can see the direction the franchise is headed. You can see the way it’s operating. And that’s something players want to be a part of. Clearly, Kennard does.
Overall Grade: A-
This was a great acquisition for Phoenix. It’s refreshing not to spend free agency digging through the veteran minimum market, hoping one of those signings can outperform expectations. Instead, the Suns identified a player who fills a clear need and used one of the few meaningful tools at their disposal to acquire him.
Kennard is going to be part of the rotation. He’s going to play meaningful minutes, and he’ll provide much-needed offense for the second unit through efficient three-point shooting. That’s exactly what this roster lacked after the Miles Bridges trade, and it’s exactly what the Suns addressed.
It’s an impressive signing, and about as close to a best-case scenario as Phoenix could have hoped for. Once again, it showcases the Suns’ ability to operate effectively on the margins, maximizing the limited flexibility they have while continuing to add quality talent to the roster.
SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 29: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers gets showered with sunflower seeds by Teoscar Hernandez #37 after Ohtani hit a three-run home run against the Athletics in the top of the six inning at Sutter Health Park on June 29, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images
When they started this road trip, the Dodgers already had one of the better road records in all of baseball, but in one fell swoop, they’ve taken that into unserious territory. Winners of seven of their last eight games away from home, the Dodgers now have a 30-16 record on the road, with the latest of these 30 wins representing the number 1.000 of Dave Roberts’ career.
To claim that the offense has been outstanding in this road trip might not do it justice; it has averaged seven runs per game throughout these eight duels, scoring nine in each of the first two games against the Athletics in West Sacramento. Between these two matchups, a total of five different hitters have left the yard: Shohei Ohtani, Andy Pages, Max Muncy, Tommy Edman, and Miguel Rojas. Definitely looking to join in on the fun for this series finale will be Mookie Betts, the leader in home runs on this road trip with three. A’s starter J.T. Ginn has been the team’s ace this season, but having handled Gage Jump with relative ease, the Dodgers offense will likely be unfazed by the best the A’s have to offer.
On their pitching side of things, the Dodgers will most likely go with a bullpen game, having pushed Shohei Ohtani back a couple of days. Roki Sasaki will take the ball on Thursday night against the Padres when the Dodgers return home, while Ohtani pitches on Friday.
PITTSBURGH, PA - NOVEMBER 09: Los Angeles Kings left wing Andrei Kuzmenko (96) waits for play to begin during the second period in the NHL game between the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Los Angeles Kings on November 9, 2025, at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, PA. (Photo by Jeanine Leech/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
The Pittsburgh Penguins keep adding, the latest is the report that winger Andrei Kuzmenko is joining the team for one year and $5.0 million.
Kuzmenko has been among the NHL’s slowest skaters, but has the hands and scoring ability to cover up that deficiency. Curiously, his salary is right in the price range of Rickard Rakell and Bryan Rust – two players often in the trade rumor mill. Could this signing be a precursor to a move to come? The Penguins are definitely loading up on talent coming in the door, it’s just a matter of time before action starts heading in the other direction for players heading out.
Andrei Kuzmenko, signed 1x$5M by PIT, is a middle six scoring winger who makes up for near league-worst skating and physicality through sheer craftiness. Great hands in tight and efficient finishing – a career 20% shooter. pic.twitter.com/saRTe7IJjq
Kuzmenko, 30 has had mostly abbreviated seasons, far from his impressive NHL rookie campaign of 39 goals and 74 points for Vancouver back in 2022-23, as seen below in his hockeydb card. He has played for three different teams since the start of the 2024-25 season, and in some ways could be seen as a replacement option for the role than Anthony Mantha filled last season for the Pens.
It’s been a very active day for the Pens in free agency, this $5 million signing is their biggest move of the period yet. Despite that, CapWages shows Pittsburgh with still over $33 million in space under the salary cap (with restricted free agents like Egor Chinakhov and Arturs Silovs to take from).
PHILADELPHIA, PA - MAY 8: Kelly Oubre Jr. #9 of the Philadelphia 76ers smiles during the game against the New York Knicks during Round Two Game Three of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 8, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
And there goes the other unrestricted free agent.
ESPN’s Shams Charania has reported that Kelly Oubre Jr. will be signing a two-year, $17 million dollar deal with the Pacers, ending his tenure in Philadelphia after three seasons.
Free agent forward Kelly Oubre Jr. has agreed to a two-year, nearly $17 million deal to sign with the Indiana Pacers, sources tell ESPN. pic.twitter.com/qzUyLGX7DP
Given their financial restraints, it always felt likely the Sixers could only retain one of Oubre or Quentin Grimes. That only got trickier when Grimes scored a contract that will pay him $15 million per year from the Lakers.
Oubre though went for a much more reasonable number, one the Sixers could have spent while staying under the first apron.
In his three years in Philadelphia, Oubre started 150 games, averaging 14.9 points, 5.4 rebounds and 1.6 assists per game on 45.7%/32%/75.4% shooting splits. In the 2025-26 campaign, he posted the highest three-point percentage of his career at 36% on 4.8 attempts per game.
Oubre was a productive wing in his time here, especially when his shot was falling. He was put through the Sixers injury ringer more than most role players. He missed 32 games this past season with various ligament injuries in his elbow and knee. He got off to a torrid start his first season as a Sixer, averaging 16 points per game in his first eight games before being struck by a car while riding a bicycle.
In the two seasons the Sixers made the playoffs with Oubre, he’d been given some of the toughest defensive assignments ranging from Jalen Brunson to Jaylen Brown.
NEWARK, NJ - DECEMBER 03: Vladislav Kolyachonok #44 of the Dallas Stars defends Cody Glass #12 of the New Jersey Devils during the game on December 3, 2025 at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Rich Graessle/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images
After a quiet first couple hours of free agency, Sunny Mehta finally made a signing. Vladislav Kolachonok, a depth defenseman who has spent time with the Arizona Coyotes/Utah Mammoth, Pittsburgh Penguins, Dallas Stars, and Boston Bruins in his five-year NHL career. In 87 games, the 25-year old Kolyachonok has five goals and 12 assists with 22 penalty minutes while averaging 13:58 of ice time per game. He has also been credited for 88 blocks and 77 hits with 23 takeaways. Player agent Dan Milstein broke the news on Twitter.
It is a league minimum deal at one year and $850,000, which will be paid out the same regardless of whether Kolyachonok plays in the NHL or AHL. In 184 career AHL games, he has 14 goals and 43 assists. Born in Minsk, Belarus, Kolyachonok is listed at 6’2” and 195 pounds by the AHL (198 pounds by the NHL) and was drafted 52nd overall in the 2019 Draft by the Florida Panthers. When he does get into NHL games, though, the profile is very good from an analytical standpoint. This is from HockeyViz:
In addition to Declan Chisholm, the Devils now have five left-handed defenseman under one-way contracts. If Sunny Mehta is looking to shed salary in the near future, I would think that Brenden Dillon ($4 million, one year) or Jonas Siegenthaler ($3.4 million, two years) may be trade pieces, allowing one of Chisholm or Kolyachonok (or maybe even Topias Vilen or Ethan Edwards) to earn playing time on the third pairing in 2026-27. However, considering Siegenthaler’s relationship with Nico Hischier, I have a hard time seeing him get moved.
We will see. For now, this is the first free agent signing of Sunny Mehta’s GM tenure with the New Jersey Devils, and it fits his bill perfectly: Kolyachonok is a no-risk, low-cost defenseman who has a plus analytical profile in limited usage who may prove to be something more if a team gets him on the ice with more regularity.
What do you think of the deal? What do you think is next? Leave your comments here or in the Free Agency Frenzy open post, and thanks for reading.
Amongst all of the chaos surrounding the Pittsburgh Penguins with the dawn of 2026 NHL free agency, they made a smaller move today to reward an upside prospect for his growth over the last two seasons.
On Wednesday, the Penguins signed forward prospect Atley Calvert to a two-year, entry level contract. The contract comes in at an average annual value of $930,000 and kicks in for the 2026-27 season, and it also comes with a $55,000 signing bonus.
Undrafted, the 22-year-old center was signed by the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) Penguins on an AHL deal two seasons ago after a few standout years with the Moose Jaw Warriors of the WHL - which happens to be his hometown team - posting 16 goals and 38 points in 70 games to go along with a plus-19 last season. In two seasons between WBS and the ECHL's Wheeling Nailers, Calvert has amassed 38 goals and 88 points in 134 games.
The #GoPensGo signed undrafted 22 y/o F Atley Calvert to a 2 year ELC
$930K Cap hit/AAV
Yr 1: $850K NHL, $55K Signing Bonus, $85K Minors Yr 2: $900K/$55K/$85K
The 6-foot-1, 190-pound forward has shown a penchant for goal-scoring over the last couple of seasons - including his last two seasons with Moose Jaw, when he scored 40 and 47 in back-to-back years - but the bread and butter of his game is still in his playmaking ability. He has shown ability around the net-front, in high-danger areas, and off the rush, and his hockey IQ is a defining aspect of his game.
With Calvert, the Penguins now have 39 of their 50 NHL contract slots filled.
The New York Rangers have reportedly signed center Joe Veleno to a one-year, $1.2 million contract.
Veleno spent the 2025-26 season with the Montreal Canadiens, recording two goals, three assists, and five points in 61 games.
The 2018 first-round pick took on a two-way role with the Canadiens, earning a spot on the penalty kill, while averaging 12:05 minutes per game.
During Mike Sullivan’s exit interview, he emphasized the Rangers’ need to add some depth to their bottom-six forward unit, specifically looking for a player who has the ability to contribute on the penalty kill.
“I think there might be some opportunities to improve our bottom six at the forward position, where players might be able to play certain roles that could allow us to take some of our core players out of situations,” Sullivan said. “For example, the penalty kill, if we could take Mika and J.T. [Miller], [Vincent Trocheck] and these guys out of some of those situations.
“I mean, obviously, they’re very good at it, so we’re not trying to remove that element of their game completely. But it gives us the ability to manage their minutes, which I think gives them the ability to sustain performance game in, game out.”
Veleno, a 26-year-old forward, could fill in the fourth-line center role for the Rangers, previously vacated by Sam Carrick, who was traded to the Buffalo Sabres in March.
Former Florida Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky has signed a three-year, $7 million AAV contract with their Atlantic Division rivals, the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Bobrovsky played seven seasons with the Panthers, guiding the team to two Stanley Cup victories and another finals appearance. With the Panthers, Bobrovsky recorded a .903 save percentage and a 2.80 goals-against average in 349 regular-season games.
In his playoff career, Bobrovsky recorded a .909 SP and a 2.55 GAA in 83 games.
His time with Florida wasn’t always perfect, as he got off to a very slow start following the massive seven-year, $10 million AAV contract he signed as a UFA in 2019. But once he found his game, the Panthers were rejuvenated and became the team to beat in the NHL.
Throughout the process leading to Bobrovsky signing with the Maple Leafs, there were many reports about what he wanted from the Panthers, and what the Panthers were willing to offer.
Several reports stated that Bobrovsky was seeking a six- or seven-year contract, but in the end, he settled for a three-year deal that will carry him into age 40.
Ultimately, the Panthers went with Jacob Markstrom, who is a year younger, $1 million cheaper, and has one fewer season on his contract.
Bobrovsky will now be reunited with Anthony Stolarz in Toronto, as the pair were dominant for the Panthers in the 2023-24 season.
The Bobrovsky era in Florida is truly over, and there is now a high chance the two sides will meet again in the playoffs.
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Toronto Maple Leafs GM John Chayka has made another acquisition of a player who can play the center position in the NHL.
After inking Jack Roslovic and Colton Sissons to two-year contracts, the Maple Leafs have acquired center Teddy Blueger, offering him the same term as the other two additions. Across Blueger's two years, he'll earn $2.5 million per season, per Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.
Blueger's last contract was with the Vancouver Canucks, when he earned $1.8 million per season on a two-year deal.
This past year, the 31-year-old recorded nine goals and 17 points in 35 appearances for Vancouver. He missed over three months to start the campaign with an injury.
In a full 82-game season in 2024-25, Blueger scored eight goals and 27 points, which is around the range of offensive production that should be expected from the Latvian.
It's worth mentioning that Blueger is a former Stanley Cup champion as he hoisted the Cup with the Vegas Golden Knights in 2022-23. He was a trade deadline pickup, scoring six points and averaged 13:16 of ice time in the regular season.
He wasn't utilized much more when it came to that post-season, racking up just two points in six appearances, playing 10:30 of ice time per game.
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