Did Mike Grier, Sharks make correct moves on busy Day 1 of NHL free agency?

Did Mike Grier, Sharks make correct moves on busy Day 1 of NHL free agency? originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The rebuild is over.

The San Jose Sharks are now, without a doubt, Mike Grier’s team.

On the first day of NHL free agency, the Sharks signed winger Mason Marchment to a five-year, $33.75 million contract ($6.75 million AAV) and defenseman Jacob Trouba to a four-year, $33 million contract ($8.25 million AAV). Then, they acquired defenseman Darnell Nurse from the Edmonton Oilers for young blueliner Shakir Mukhamadullin and prospect Zack Sharp.

But were these the right moves?

On the same day, Grier allowed the last continuous holdover of the Doug Wilson era, defenseman Mario Ferraro, to walk in free agency. Ferraro inked a three-year, $12 million contract with the Winnipeg Jets. This came on the heels of trading 2021 first-round pick William Eklund to the Ottawa Senators last week.

Grier, for better or worse, put his stamp on the Sharks today.

Face it, San Jose had to get better right now.

Grier served the Sharks’ future with what an NHL scout called “an insane haul” at the 2026 NHL draft, highlighted by first-round picks Ivar Stenberg, Keaton Verhoeff, and Ryan Lin.

But the Sharks, just four points out of the Stanley Cup playoffs this past season with a frankly patchwork defense, needed to improve the team around 20-year-old superstar Macklin Celebrini.

With loads of cap space at his disposal, these are the players that Grier chose to help take his team to the postseason.

I’m open-minded to it: Nurse, Trouba and Marchment do improve the Sharks right now.

San Jose Hockey Now reached out to four NHL scouts — none with the Sharks — to determine where Trouba and Nurse, who don’t come without flaws, compare against San Jose’s top two defenders last year, Dmitry Orlov and Ferraro.

Three of the four, without question, took Nurse and Trouba over Orlov and Ferraro. They’re also excellent locker room additions to make up for the loss of the popular Ferraro and Vincent Desharnais.

Another way to put it: the Sharks didn’t add a consensus top-pairing blueliner, à la Zach Werenski or Bo Byram, but they added two top-four defensemen in Nurse and Trouba, on top of Orlov. In addition, Grier acquired defender Michael Kesselring from the Buffalo Sabres two weeks ago, with some reasonable expectation that he’ll be able to take on a top-four role next year.

Of course, Nurse and Trouba are 31 and 32, respectively, and both are on expensive contracts that end in 2030. So, what will these contracts look like in three or four years?

That’s a valid concern, but that’s the price of real improvement in a buyer’s market. What risk-free bargains were there to be had for bona fide top-four defensemen?

Ideally, you could’ve brought in a 30-something top-four defenseman on a two-year contract: 36-year-old John Carlson, for example, would’ve been perfect, but the future Hall of Famer wanted to sign out east.

Ideally, you could’ve brought in 28-year-old superstar Zach Werenski without gutting your farm system. But that’s a moot point, because Werenski reportedly didn’t want to come to San Jose anyway, and you were getting him for a song.

The dream defenseman wasn’t out there for the Sharks this summer.

So Grier pushed out the ideal length of contract and still kept it much shorter than the seven-, eight-year contacts that UFAs Darren Raddysh and Rasmus Andersson commanded from their respective teams.

And Grier preserved the future of his franchise, keeping his No. 2 pick, instead of dealing it for Bo Byram. The Chicago Blackhawks traded their No. 4 pick to the Buffalo Sabres for the 25-year-old Byram before the draft.

Nurse and Trouba, in my mind, were necessary-but-responsible moves to improve the team right now. They make San Jose better without taking anything significant off the table, and their risks aren’t red alert.

Meanwhile, Marchment was a less necessary risk for the Sharks, insofar as they already had a truly promising group of forwards right now. The 31-year-old now makes seven arguable top-nine wingers on the roster — he’ll be competing with Stenberg, Will Smith, Collin Graf, Kiefer Sherwood, Tyler Toffoli and Igor Chernyshov for playing time — but that’s a good problem to have, too.

This is, undoubtedly, the deepest group of Sharks forwards, including Celebrini, Michael Misa and Alex Wennberg up the middle, since the last time they made the playoffs. May the best man win, and also, injuries happen, so San Jose probably will be grateful for the depth.

Power forward Marchment is a Grier signing through and through. He has been said to be a free agency and trade target of the Sharks for years and, at his best, plays that hard-to-play-against style that the GM has been sticking his neck out to acquire for years, à la the Sherwood and Zack Ostapchuk trades.

The Sharks aren’t Stanley Cup contenders yet, and these contracts for 30-something’s could blow up in their faces, but they should make the team better now and shouldn’t cripple them long-term.

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Pittsburgh Pirates vs. Philadelphia Phillies: Paul Skenes vs. Zack Wheeler

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - JUNE 26: Paul Skenes #30 of the Pittsburgh Pirates pitches during the first inning against the Cincinnati Reds at PNC Park on June 26, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Pittsburgh Pirates vs. Philadelphia Phillies, July 1, 2026, 6:40 p.m. ET

The Pittsburgh Pirates are looking to end their disastrous run of Paul Skenes starts as he takes the mound for the Buccos in Game 3 of their four-game set in the City of Brotherly Love.

The Pirates have dropped their last eight games in which Skenes pitched. During that stretch, Skenes is 0-5.

In his last start against the Cincinnati Reds on June 26, he pitched five innings, giving up six hits and four earned runs in a 6-4 loss to their division rival. The game that began this streak came back on May 17 against the Philadelphia Phillies. Skenes pitched five innings, giving up six hits and five earned runs in a 6-0 shutout loss against Philly at home.

Meanwhile, the Phillies will turn to Zach Wheeler, who is enjoying another stellar season and could be on route to his third consecutive All-Star appearance. In his last start against the New York Mets, he pitched seven innings, giving up four hits and one earned run in a 2-1 victory at Citi Field. He also pitched against the Pirates earlier in the year, pitching seven innings of shutout ball in that 6-0 win on May 17 at PNC Park.

Perhaps Skenes and the Pirates can turn things around against the Phillies.

Location: Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA

Broadcast: KDKA AM/FM, Sportsnet Pittsburgh

Pitching Matchup: Paul Skenes (6-7, 3.10 ERA) vs. Zack Wheeler (8-1, 2.03 ERA)

BD community, chime off in the comments section below.

LeBron James reportedly planning tell-all on Lakers departure in upcoming docuseries

LeBron James won’t return to the Los Angeles Lakers for the 2026-27 season, but the cameras will still be on him.

On Tuesday, James notified the Lakers he is leaving the franchise after eight seasons under the bright lights of Hollywood. As he enters the next (and perhaps final) chapter of his career, James is reportedly in talks to document the entire upcoming NBA season through a documentary or episodic series.

NBA analyst Kevin O’Connor was first to report the news.

LeBron James informed the Lakers Tuesday that he would not return to the franchise for the 2026-27 season. Corey Sipkin for NY Post

James is in the midst of searching for what could be the final team of his storied NBA career. Rich Paul, his agent, revealed the 41-year-old is searching for happiness — not money — at this stage. James is reportedly willing to join a contender on a league minimum contract.

The Lakers have also moved on from their recent divorce from James as the team’s free agent signings were headlined by Jazz center Walker Kessler. While general manager Rob Pelinka has been aggressive this offseason, it’s unclear whether the Lakers have done enough to emerge as legitimate contenders during the 2026-27 season.

James is leaving Los Angeles, and the Lakers are ushering in a new era headlined by Luka Dončić, Austin Reaves and Walker Kessler.

James could have ended his career with the Lakers but ultimately chose to leave the organization in a league-altering move. Now, the two parties will make do without the other.

The Lakers have kicked off a new era in Tinseltown with Luka Dončić, Austin Reaves and Kessler at the helm.

As for James, he’s clearly searching for a farewell title and the team that can give him his best chance at leaving the league as a champion.

Regardless of where James lands, NBA fans will surely be interested in watching a documented version of what could be the superstar’s final season.


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Padres pummeled by Cubs 23-3 in an embarrassing series finale

The San Diego Padres would like to forget about Wednesday afternoon.

The Padres got run out of Wrigley Field by the Chicago Cubs 23-2, a blowout so lopsided that San Diego handed the ball to catcher Rodolfo Duran for the final two innings rather than burn another arm.

It capped a three-game sweep by the Cubs and sent the Padres to Los Angles for a four-game series against the Dodgers on the sourest of notes.

The box score looks like a video game. Eight home runs, 23 RBI, 17 hits. The Cubs went 8-for-12 with runners in scoring position and left just two on base all day. It was more like batting practice for Chicago, especially Dansby Swanson.

The shortstop hit three home runs and drove in eight runs. Michael Conforto added two home runs and four RBI. In all, the Cubs had eight homers out of 17 total hits.

Padres' starter Walker Buehler gave up nine runs and three home runs in four innings. Kyle Hart came out of the bullpen and gave up six runs, five earned, on three hits - all home runs - over two innings. Duran gave up eight earned runs on seven hits, including two home runs.

San Diego avoided a shutout on Sung-Mun Song's first MLB home run and a Samad Taylor triple, which could have been an in-the-park home run if not for the ball getting stuck in the ivy and stopping the play.

The Padres head into a National League West series against their rival Dodgers having lost five straight and sitting at 43-42.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Padres pummeled by Cubs 23-3 in an embarrassing series finale

Steve Cohen says David Stearns is safe in his job

PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 16: New York Mets President of Baseball Operations David Stearns looks on during spring training workouts at Clover Park on February 16, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida.

With the Mets’ 2026 season having gone completely off the rails, the owner of the team is standing by his president of baseball operations. Steve Cohen was a guest on a podcast, and while being interviewed, he offered up a variety of responses that offered support to Stearns just a few days after the organization fired manager Carlos Mendoza.

In supporting Stearns, Cohen highlighted the need for the organization to be able to commit to a long-term plan and mentioned that it would be tough to attract people to the club if he were to fire someone like Stearns for short-term plans. He also made a point that Stearns was in charge when the Mets made it to the National League Championship Series in 2024.

Stearns is in the third season of a five-year, $50 million contract as the team’s head of baseball ops. The Mets are 208-202 thus far in the regular season under his leadership.

It's not hard to rattle off good reasons for Sixers' staggering Jaylen Brown trade

It's not hard to rattle off good reasons for Sixers' staggering Jaylen Brown trade  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

No typos here: The Sixers have traded for Jaylen Brown.

There’s a boatload of details to sift through, but the simple fact is staggering. Almost exactly two months after the Sixers stormed back for a seven-game first-round playoff series win over the Celtics, Brown’s on the other side of the rivalry. The Sixers are shipping Paul George, two first-round draft picks and two second-rounders up to Boston.

Beyond the allure of adding another star, is the move backed by sound logic?

It’s not hard to rattle off good reasons. Availability is a solid place to start. The Sixers’ peculiar brand of horrendous injury luck could always strike, but Brown appears to have a high chance of playing many games. He’ll turn 30 years old in October, logged 71 games last season, and averaged 67.4 over the past five years. The 36-year-old George had a variety of physical issues pop up over his two years as a Sixer and made candid comments about lingering injuries and lost explosiveness.

It’s so easy to picture how Brown could thrive for a Sixers team that vaults up to true contention status. He’s full of deep postseason experience and has an NBA Finals MVP on his résumé. Brown is comfortable taking the sort of self-created, tightly guarded jumpers that often decide playoff games. Defensively, Brown’s presence should expand Sixers head coach Nick Nurse’s options. Look at the list of players he’s defended and you’ll see guards, forwards and the occasional center. 

As far as on-court fit, it’s fair to note Brown’s flaws and raise questions. Tyrese Maxey and Joel Embiid are unique co-stars and everything won’t click from the jump.

Brown was fifth in the NBA last year in isolation possessions per game and averaged a career-high 28.7 points largely because the Celtics needed him to be their offensive hub with Jayson Tatum sidelined for most of the season by a ruptured Achilles tendon. He hasn’t historically been a great three-point shooter (34.7 percent last season, 35.8 percent for his career) or a brilliant passer. The Sixers will have to be smart about how they structure their offense and rotations. For instance, Brown and Joel Embiid both enjoy operating in the mid-range. Embiid ranked first in the NBA in shot attempts per game between 15 and 19 feet and Brown was right behind him.

Zooming out, the sheer boldness of Mike Gansey’s very first trade with the Sixers is worth highlighting. He was honest a mere three weeks ago about still wrapping his head around the tricky matters ahead as the organization’s president of basketball operations. With 20-year-old VJ Edgecombe, 25-year-old Maxey, 32-year-old Embiid and post-prime George on the roster, Gansey was asked about the Sixers’ timeline. 

“My world’s spinning right now,” he said at his introductory press conference. “I just want to get to (the players) and see what they’re feeling, too. Get Coach’s input, get their input, and see if we can get this thing together. But I don’t just look at it as two timelines. They’re our four guys. They’re under contract. We’ve got to do our best to get them to their best selves. Every night at 7 o’clock, we’ve got to get them to their best to help us win.”

Gansey landed on an emphatic answer.

The Sixers see special two-way potential in Edgecombe and don’t view Maxey as a finished product. Rookie guard Labaron Philon Jr. is in the mix now, too.

By parting with picks and taking on Brown’s hefty salary, Gansey chucked his chips into the present. The Sixers have even “expressed interest in acquiring” LeBron James, The Athletic’s Tony Jones reported Wednesday night. 

We’ll see how that plays out. Regardless, the Sixers will bank on a bright future via internal growth and try to win the Eastern Conference next season. If Embiid’s injury troubles subside — an enormous if — the idea doesn’t sound foolish at all. 

“I’m as confident as I’ve ever been,” Embiid said at his exit interview in May. “Obviously, (the knee) was the biggest concern and I’m not thinking about it. As long as we keep doing what we’ve been doing, I won’t have to think about it anymore. I’m looking at next year, obviously being more available, and being more available might mean being a high seed as a team. The personal goals don’t matter. 

“I know that if I’m available and I play as much as possible, everything else is going to follow. … I’ve accomplished everything else. I’m in a good mental place. It sucks losing, but I just know that moving forward, I’ll be better for my team.”

Jaylen Brown’s now on that team.

It will sink in for everyone eventually. 

Gamethread 7/1: Pirates at Phillies

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JUNE 29: Trea Turner #7 of the Philadelphia Phillies celebrates with Bryce Harper #3 after hitting a solo home run in the bottom of the first inning against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Citizens Bank Park on June 29, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:

For the Pirates:

Let’s talk about it.

Former Chicago Blackhawks Captain Nick Foligno Continues NHL Career With Minnesota Wild

Nick Foligno was a great Chicago Blackhawks captain following the departure of the legendary Jonathan Toews. He did all of the things that a captain needs to do in order to help develop a young team. 

The early years of Connor Bedard's career were positively impacted by his being there as a great mentor. It isn't only Bedard who benefited from playing with him, either. Everyone on the team who is a part of the future raved about him as a teammate.

At the 2026 NHL Trade Deadline, the Blackhawks did him a solid by trading him to a Stanley Cup contender in the Minnesota Wild. He was a pending unrestricted free agent, and the Blackhawks took back "future considerations", which was Kyle Davidson doing right by his captain. 

This trade also allowed Foligno to play with his brother Marcus for the first time in their NHL careers. It was an exciting moment for the entire Foligno family when Nick joined Marcus as a member of the Wild. 

Minnesota won its first-round series over the Dallas Stars but was defeated in the second round by the Colorado Avalanche. There is a long way to go for the Wild to get over the hump, but they are going to be a good team for a long time. 

When the season was over, many wondered if that would be it for 38-year-old Nick Foligno, who will turn 39 on Halloween. However, that wonder is now over. 

On Wednesday, the first day of NHL Free Agency, Foligno signed a one-year extension with the Minnesota Wild, which will carry a cap hit of $900K. 

Likely for the last time, Nick Foligno will have a crack at winning the Stanley Cup. It will once again come alongside his brother Marcus. As a defensive-minded 4th line player, Nick will be a solid complementary piece on a team loaded with stars. 

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The unlikely duo of Nasim Nunez and Andres Chaparro power the Nationals to a 10-2 win

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JULY 01: Jacob Young #30 reacts after scoring on a three-run home run hit by James Wood #29 of the Washington Nationals during the seventh inning of a game against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on July 01, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After the 4th inning brawl last night, there was only one team up for the fight the rest of the series. That team was the Washington Nationals, who totally outclassed the Red Sox following that dust up. At one point, the Nats were out scoring the Sox 18-0 post brawl before the Red Sox got a couple runs in garbage time.

It is unusual to have such a clear turning point in a three game regular season series, but that is exactly what happened here. At the time of the Contreras vs Cavalli fight, the Red Sox were winning 1-0. However, the Nats ended up taking control of that contest and dominated from start to finish in this one.

As they tend to do, the Nats offense set the tone early. Against young Red Sox ace Payton Tolle, a pair of right handed bats got to him. Curtis Mead started the fun with a triple in the gap. After that, we got a homer from an unlikely character.

Today felt like a pretty important game for Andres Chaparro. With a batting average well below .200 and no homers, the heat was turning up on the 27 year old first baseman. He responded in a big way, destroying a Tolle heater and sending it over the Green Monster.

The Nats had a chance to make that first inning a monstrous frame, but ended up having to settle for two. However, they kept the pressure on Tolle all afternoon. Even in the innings where they did not score, the offense was really making Tolle work. On a hot day in Boston, the big lefty began to fade. 

A big turning point in the game actually came in the bottom of the third. The Red Sox had a rally going against opener Brad Lord. With runners on first and third, Blake Butera wisely pulled his opener and went to Andrew Alvarez, the bulk man. Alvarez rewarded his manager right away, inducing a double play on the first pitch he threw.

That set up the 4th inning where the Nats really began to run away with it. If the Andres Chaparro home run was surprising, Nasim Nunez going yard was a stunner. Nunez has provided value on the bases and in the field, and has even been hitting better lately. However, he did not have a home run all year despite playing most of the games. He changed that in a big way though, clubbing a first pitch fastball over the monster.

Tolle really began to labor after that, giving up a hit and walking a pair. After that his day was done. Even with a new pitcher on the mound, the Nats went right back to work. They made it a massive inning thanks to knocks by Luis Garcia Jr. and Jacob Young to stretch the lead to 7-0.

From there it was real smooth sailing for the Nats. Andrew Alvarez was sitting down Red Sox hitters with his sharp breaking balls, while the Nats offensive machine kept humming. They had good at bats all game long, and eventually had another homer, this time from a usual suspect in James Wood.

This was one of the more emotional series wins of the year. It further reinforced the idea that the Nats are back after the Phillies disaster. Turning the tides of the series after that brawl was also a great thing to see. That fight seemed to bring the team together and lock them in.

Tomorrow the boys have a much deserved off day, but it is back to business after that. They will face off against the Pirates on July 4th weekend in what should be an exciting series. The Nats and Pirates are right next to each other in the standings, so that series should be hotly contested. I can’t wait to see what unfolds, but this was one heck of a series win for the Nats.

Former Avalanche Forward Victor Olofsson Returns To Vegas In Power Play Reunion

The Colorado Avalanche included Victor Olofsson in a broader roster shake-up tied to the Nazem Kadri framework, and now the veteran winger is back in familiar territory—rejoining the Vegas Golden Knights to help fill a need on their power play.

Olofsson is returning to Vegas, according to TSN, just days after the club dealt Pavel Dorofeyev to the New York Rangers, opening up a vacancy for a proven shooter in the top special teams unit.

The 30-year-old is no stranger to the Golden Knights’ system. He previously scored 15 goals and 29 points in 56 games during the 2024–25 season on a one-year deal signed that July, with six of those goals coming on the power play. That specific role—stationed as a finish-first option on the man advantage—is exactly what Vegas is betting on again.

Before this latest turn, Olofsson spent the 2025–26 season with Colorado, where he posted 25 points (11 goals, 14 assists) in 60 games. While the overall production was modest, his scoring touch surfaced in key moments. Three of his goals were game-winners, and he also recorded his first career hat trick on October 28 in an 8–4 win over the New Jersey Devils at Ball Arena.

Still, his time in Denver was shaped as much by organizational direction as on-ice output. Olofsson was moved as part of a larger trade package sent to Calgary as Colorado adjusted its roster structure in pursuit of different forward balance, another reminder of how quickly middle-six roles can shift in a cap-driven league.

Vegas, meanwhile, is leaning into familiarity. Across his NHL career, 43 of Olofsson’s 118 goals have come on the power play—a 36 percent clip that underscores why he remains a sought-after specialist despite a journeyman path in recent years. When given time and space, his release remains his calling card.

There’s also a personal layer to the return. Olofsson’s wife, Taylor, gave birth to their second child during the Olympic break—and at this point, she’s probably hoping the family can stop crisscrossing the continental United States for a while.

For Colorado, it’s another ripple effect of roster churn. For Vegas, it’s a straightforward calculation: they’ve seen this fit before, and they’re betting Olofsson's scoring touch is begging to be reignited.

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Yankees again plagued by mistakes in seventh straight loss: 'It’s been a terrible week for us'

Despite having just four hits and being shut out through the first eight innings, the Yankees had multiple chances to come away with a win late in Wednesday’s game against the Detroit Tigers. 

But in a continuance of what’s been a week to forget for the Yankees, they couldn’t push a run through when they needed it most, falling 6-2 in 11 innings in their seventh straight loss. 

After scoring a couple of runs to tie the game at 2-2 in the ninth, the Yankees had Anthony Volpe thrown out trying to steal second base for a pivotal second out. In the 10th, New York had a runner at third with one out (the game-winning run), but Oswaldo Cabrera and Ali Sanchez both went down swinging.

In the 11th, Camilo Doval had two outs with a runner on third, but he followed an intentional walk with two more walks, and things snowballed from there.

“Tough one… had chances in the ninth and certainly in the 10th to put it away and weren’t able to do it,” manager Aaron Boone said after the game. “Then we get two outs and man on third there (in the 11th) and ahead 0-2 with (Hao-Yu) Lee and can’t get back in the zone.

“Obviously, a tough one going into the off day, but we’ve got to get over it and start playing better baseball.”

The Yankees also committed a pair of errors (Sanchez and Austin Wells), and Jose Caballero missed the cutoff man on throws from the outfield on multiple occasions. 

Jazz Chisholm Jr., back in the lineup after colliding with Jasson Dominguez on Monday, made an impact with a couple of hits and a couple of steals while also scoring the tying run in the ninth inning on a wild pitch. He says the club still believes in itself, but they need to clean things up.

“I feel like we’ve just got to lock in, do all the small stuff,” he said. “We make a lot of mistakes and I feel like we beat ourselves.”

Chisholm later added: “We know that we’re a good team, we know that we have a lot of bumps in the road right now and have a lot of people down, but at the end of the day, we still believe in ourselves and believe in our teammates… we’ve just got to be better and focus more.”

After being swept by the Red Sox in a four-game series, the Yankees followed up with three more losses to Detroit.

They’ll host Minnesota on Friday on the other side of an off day, and Boone knows his club needs to play better.

“It’s been a terrible week for us, there’s no way of sugarcoating it,” said the skipper. “We’re capable of way more, obviously. Look, you’re going to have stretches where it’s tough, where you’re missing some guys, but this was a really difficult week for us offensively, and coupled with not playing clean enough and taking care of the ball well enough, that’s what you get. You get an awful weak. 

“Hopefully we regroup on this off day and start playing better baseball this weekend.”

Red Wings Trade For Stanley Cup-Winning Forward Keegan Kolesar

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The bottom six of the Detroit Red Wings' forward units needed some sandpaper, and GM Steve Yzerman has made the first step to address it. 

The Red Wings have acquired forward Keegan Kolesar from the Vegas Golden Knights in return for a third-round pick in 2029 and a seventh-round pick in 2027. 

Selected with the 69th overall pick in the 2015 NHL Draft by the Columbus Blue Jackets while playing in the WHL for the Seattle Thunderbirds, the Brandon, Manitoba native was eventually traded to the Golden Knights in 2017.

He made his NHL debut with the Golden Knights in 2020, and would soon become a regular in their lineup. 

Kolesar lifted the Stanley Cup with the rest of his Golden Knights teammates in 2023 after defeating the Florida Panthers; he contributed two goals and three assists in 22 postseason games during their title run. 

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Kolesar has skated in a total of 439 career NHL games, and has scored 44 goals with 76 assists. He's also added four goals and seven assists in 77 career Stanley Cup Playoff games. 

He's under contract through the 2027-28 NHL season with a salary cap hit of $2.5 million. 

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Mets reliever Joey Gerber exits Wednesday's game against Blue Jays with blister

Mets reliever Joey Gerber exited Wednesday’s 9-3 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays with a blister on his right finger, interim manager Andy Green confirmed after the game.

In his first inning of work, Gerber worked around a leadoff walk for an 11-pitch fifth, and after getting the first man of the sixth on five pitches, the trainer was called upon.

This isn't the first time Gerber has dealt with the blister on that finger. He landed on the injured list in April due to the blister and, when it flared up again in June, he was forced out of a game against the St. Louis Cardinals.

Entering Wednesday's game, Gerber had pitched six innings on the year over four outings, allowing one run on five hits and a walk with eight strikeouts.

Flyers Lose Hard-Nosed Defenseman To Avalanche

The Philadelphia Flyers have officially lost one of their depth defensemen. 

The Colorado Avalanche have announed that they signed have signed former Flyers defenseman Noah Juulsen to a two-year contract. 

Juulsen spent this past season with the Flyers and was a decent part of their blueline. In 52 games with the Flyers during the 2026-27 campaign, the 6-foot-2 blueliner recorded one goal, 10 points, and 104 hits. This was after he had zero points and 101 hits during the 2024-25 season with the Vancouver Canucks. 

Overall, Juulsen was a decent depth defenseman during his time with the Flyers, but it makes sense that they moved on from him. They have young right-shot defenseman like David Jiricek and Oliver Bonk who should be competing for NHL spots next season. 

Juulsen will likely be a candidate to play bottom-pairing minutes with the Avalanche after signing with the Central Division club. It will be interesting to see how much of an impact he can make after signing with Colorado from here.