2 Former Devils Defensemen Who Are Still Free Agents

The 2025 calendar will soon switch over to August. For many players around the NHL, it is a month that represents the final weeks with their friends and family before traveling to their respective hockey cities for the 2025-26 season. 

Currently, two former New Jersey Devils defensemen are unemployed and seeking their next opportunity in professional hockey. 

Jon Merrill

Former Team: Minnesota Wild 

Merrill has previously played for the Devils, Vegas Golden Knights, Detroit Red Wings, Montréal Canadiens, and Minnesota Wild. Now a veteran with 682 NHL games under his belt, the defenseman is an unrestricted free agent, looking for his next home. 

The 33-year-old became expendable to the Wild with youngster Zeev Buium in the fold. Considered a stay-at-home defenseman, he scored two goals and earned six points last season. 

Merrill would be a good addition for any team looking for depth on the blue line.  

Brendan Smith 

Former Team: Dallas Stars 

Dave McCarthy of NHL.com was the first to report that the veteran defenseman was looking to play one more season. At 36 years old, he is coming off a season in which he appeared in 32 games for the Dallas Stars

Smith will fill whatever role a team needs, including the transition to a forward. A leader in the locker room, Smith has played for the Red Wings, New York Rangers, Carolina Hurricanes, Devils, and Stars, playing 726 career games. 

Smith would be a great mentor to a team with a young blue line and add the depth teams need throughout an 82-game season. 

Make sure you bookmark THN's New Jersey Devils site for THN's latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more.

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Photo Credit: © Aaron Doster-Imagn Images

NHL Prospect Pool Overview ’25-26: Ottawa Senators Have At Least One NHL-Ready Prospect

The Ottawa Senators are next in the NHL prospect pool overview series.

Tony Ferrari digs into the Senators’ strengths and weaknesses, latest draft class, positional depth chart, next player in line for an NHL opportunity and more. A player who no longer holds rookie eligibility in the NHL is considered graduated and no longer a prospect for these exercises, with few exceptions.

Initial Thoughts

The Senators finally did it. They made the playoffs for the first time since 2017 and gave the rival Toronto Maple Leafs a scare in the Battle of Ontario. 

Although they didn’t take down the Leafs in the first round, they had some enlightening performances from some of their most promising young players. Brady Tkachuk was a bit up-and-down, but he ended up with seven points across the six-game series. Tim Stutzle added five points. Jake Sanderson had moments where he looked like one of the best defensemen in the NHL, playing high-level hockey at both ends of the ice. 

The Senators will look to go further next year. Unfortunately for the Sens, they don’t have much in the pipeline that could be highly effective in the NHL, at least not this season. 

The team’s top prospect, Carter Yakemchuk, didn’t have the best year in the WHL, taking a fairly large step back statistically from 30 goals and 71 points in his draft year to 17 goals and 49 points this past season. He did play 10 fewer games, but that isn’t enough to warrant a 22-point drop-off. It’s hard to be a 30-goal defender, and that’s why there was some concern with the realistic projection of his numbers last year.

Carter Yakemchuk (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

That said, Yakemchuk is still quite the prospect. He should have been included in Canada’s world juniors camp last year, and there was talk of him joining the Sens at the end of the season. He still has a big shot, but his mean streak and physicality will get him into the NHL. Yakemchuk could be a very interesting addition to the Sens in another year, but a season in the AHL will likely be good for his development. 

A few of the Sens' more intriguing prospects are also on the back end, with most of them being more defensive-minded than offensive defensemen.

Jorian Donovan had his first full AHL season, and it went well for the defensive-minded blueliner. His game is efficient and simple for the most part. He just tries to snuff out attackers and eliminate the scoring chance. When he gets the puck, he’ll make the most immediate and simple play to get the puck to safety.

When it comes to Gabriel Eliasson, it’s all about adding the physical edge. The hulking 6-foot-7 defenseman is out to eliminate opponents from the ice when he takes his shift. He uses his size to his advantage, crushing players in open ice or along the boards. There isn’t much offense in Eliasson’s game, but he’s a strong physical presence. 

After starting the season in the United States League, Blake Montgomery joined the OHL’s London Knights and helped them win the Memorial Cup. He has an enticing package of tools with a power game to go along with his speed, but this past year was the closest we’ve seen to him putting it all together. There is still room to refine some of the smaller details in his game, but there were plenty of encouraging signs after he arrived in London. He’ll be heading to the University of Wisconsin in the fall, where he can further refine those details. 

When the Sens traded for Xavier Bourgault, there was hope that he could rekindle his game in their system with a fresh set of opportunities. Unfortunately, that bounceback didn’t quite happen, and Bourgault remains a prospect with a frustrating path. His skill and offensive mind are NHL caliber. He understands how to generate offense. He’s just been unable to piece play together consistently enough to produce at the level he is capable of. Turning 23 in October, this might just be the last season in which Bourgault is viewed as a potential NHLer. 

Tyler Boucher will be one of the most interesting case studies to look back on. He was probably drafted a bit too high at 10th overall, but he’s had some tough luck with injuries as well. Last season marked the first time he played over 42 games in a year since his age-16 season with the USA Hockey National Team Development Program. 

Boucher is a physical forward who loves to engage and impose his will on opponents. He has a great shot as well. We haven’t seen Boucher even get the chance at becoming the fully realized version of himself, and we may never get that chance. This season could be the start of the next chapter for Boucher, though. 

After potentially saving the Senators' season in his 12-game run, Leevi Merilainen is set to be the full-time backup for Ottawa. He showed plenty of potential, and his presence could help make Linus Ullmark the best version of himself. Merilainen has built himself into the Sens' top goalie prospect thanks to his size and technical ability.

U-23 Players Likely To Be On NHL Roster This Season

Leevi Merilainen (G), Ridly Greig (C/W)

Logan Hensler and Gary Bettman (Kirby Lee-Imagn Images)

2025 NHL Draft Class

Round 1, 23rd overall - Logan Hensler, D, Wisconsin (NCAA)

Round 3, 93rd overall - Blake Vanek, RW, Stillwater (Minn. H.S.)

Round 4, 97th overall - Lucas Beckman, G, Baie-Comeau (QMJHL)

Round 5, 149th overall - Dmitri Isayev, LW, Yekaterinburg Jr. (Rus.)

Round 6, 181st overall - Bruno Idzan, LW, Lincoln (USHL)

Round 7, 213th overall - Andrei Trofimov, G, Magnitogorsk Jr (Rus.)

Logan Hensler’s draft stock was interesting to follow. Coming into this past year, he was a potential top-10 pick after a successful run with the NTDP. A slow start at the University of Wisconsin had him sitting outside of the first round on many public lists, but a strong finish ultimately got him drafted in the first round at 23rd overall. 

Hensler is a highly mobile defender who is quite effective moving the puck in transition. Henlser’s defensive game took a step this year as well, using his feet to retrieve dump-ins and evade pressure or cut off attackers looking to go wide, forcing them down into the corner. Hensler finished his freshman season strong, but he will likely play another year or two before turning pro. He immediately becomes one of the Sens’ top prospects. 

When Ottawa took Blake Vanek, the son of former NHLer Thomas Vanek, it was a bit surprising. He put up 22 goals and 53 points at the Minnesota high school level, and he played a handful of games with the NTDP and the USHL’s Chicago Steel. He has great size and an excellent shot, and he flashes some nice puckhandling. He struggles to keep up with the pace of play at times, though, so he likes to slow things down with the puck or come in as the third man, trying to attack high-to-low after teammates have already pushed defenders back. He’s heading to the WHL next season, where he will look to work on some of the details in his game. 

The Senators drafting Lucas Beckman in the fourth round was one of the more intriguing selections of the draft. The QMJHL netminder looked great for Baie-Comeau this past season, and when he joined Canada at the World Men’s Under-18s, he was stellar in a backup role, winning both games he played. Beckman doesn’t try to do too much, relying on his mobility and fluidity in the crease. He stays calm in chaos around the net and just looks to cut down angles. He could be the sneakiest goalie pick of the draft. 

In what was a bit of a shock, the Senators took Russian winger Dmitri Isayev. Ottawa doesn’t regularly draft Russians, and Isayev doesn’t even fit the style Ottawa generally goes for. He’s small and skilled, but he tries hard defensively and has some games where he is constantly stripping pucks from his opponents. He plays with pace and has some creativity, but there are plenty of habits to eliminate to find success in North America, but he could be a very good Russian pro in the next couple of years. Isayev will be a very interesting player to track. 

The Senators have never shied away from drafting overage players, and this year, it was USHL standout Bruno Idzan. He started the year playing in the Alps Hockey League with Croatian club Sisak, where he was scoring the lights out with 21 goals in 19 games. He moved to the USHL where he continued to score a ton in preparation for his freshman NCAA season at the University of Wisconsin. Idzan has always been able to flash his speed in transition, and he’s become a very good shooter from all over the zone. He is going to need some refinement, so college is a great route for him. 

To cap off their draft, the Senators took a swing on a Russian netminder, which is always a very good bet to take late in the draft. Andrei Trofimov has decent size and plays with a good technical base. His numbers in Russian junior hockey were very good, and he allowed no goals in a relief effort at the VHL level in his pro debut.

Strengths

Arguably, the Senators’ top two prospects are both right-shot defenders, with Yakemchuk and Hensler looking like legitimate NHLers in different roles. Beyond those two, the projects they have at right defense could be quite interesting. 

Hoyt Stanley is a big defender who has had a couple of solid seasons at Cornell in the NCAA. Djibril Toure is a project who brings incredible size at 6-foot-7 and some very solid skating. He isn’t a refined player and spent time in the ECHL this past year, but there is hope that in the long run, he may be a solid bet who can play some NHL minutes. 

Weaknesses

The reality of the Senators’ prospect pool is that aside from Stephen Halliday and Bourgault, both of whom will likely play on the wing in the NHL level if they make it there, the center depth is incredibly poor. 

The Senators have a prospect pool that’s not indicative of a team that has been out of the playoffs for much of the last decade. They haven’t had a ton of success drafting outside of the franchise-altering 2020 class that brought in Stutzle, Sanderson and Greig. This has left the pipeline with little to no high-end talent, and the pivot position is where that’s most obvious. 

Hidden Gem: Stephen Halliday, C

Stephen Halliday led the AHL’s Belleville Senators in scoring in his first full pro season. His mobility and pace have always been the two issues that have led to some doubting his NHL upside, but he excels at slowing the game down. 

He was drafted as an overage prospect, and now that he’s 23, it might be time for him to get an NHL shot to see if he can slow things down and produce at the NHL level as he did at the NCAA and AHL levels. If he can’t, there may not be much of an NHL future, but if he can, he will bring a unique element to the Sens' bottom six and the kind of depth scoring they need moving forward.

Leevi Merilainen (Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images)

Next Man Up: Leevi Merilainen, G

The Senators don’t have a skater who is ready to jump into the NHL roster, but they’ll have Merilainen start the year as their backup. His run from last season likely should have earned him the role then, but with Anton Forsberg locked in as the backup primarily because of his cap hit, it wasn’t quite time for Merilainen to be in the NHL full-time. 

Merilainen can play somewhere between 25 to 30 games or more. That would allow Ullmark to stay fresh for the playoffs when the Sens are hopefully back in it for a second straight year. 

Prospect Depth Chart Notables

LW: Javon Moore, Blake Montgomery, Dmitri Isayev, Lucas Ellinas, Bruno Idzan

C: Stephen Halliday, Xavier Bourgault, Jake Chiasson, Owen Beckner

RW: Tyler Boucher, Blake Vanek, Oskar Pettersson

LD: Jorian Donovan, Gabriel Eliasson, Matthew Andonovski, Filip Nordberg, Tomas Hamara, Theo Wallberg, Eerik Wallenius

RD: Carter Yakemchuk, Logan Hensler, Hoyt Stanley, Djibril Toure

G: Leevi Merilainen, Mads Sogaard, Lucas Beckman, Vladimir Nikitin, Kevin Reidler, Jackson Parsons, Andrei Trofimov

For a deeper dive into the prospect pool with player rankings, check out the Yearbook and Future Watch editions of The Hockey News in print.

Tour de France Femmes: Lorena Wiebes strikes again in stage four sprint finish

  • Wiebes holds off Marianne Vos to triumph in Poitiers

  • Demi Vollering continues after Monday’s heavy crash

Lorena Wiebes stormed to her second consecutive stage victory at the Tour de France Femmes on Tuesday, winning the fourth leg after denying Marianne Vos in a sprint finish at Poitiers.

Dutch rider Wiebes (Team SD Worx-Protime) made her move around 250m from the line on a short uphill finish, with compatriot and overall leader Vos (Visma-Lease a Bike) unable to overhaul her. Ireland’s Lara Gillespie (UAE Team ADQ) was third across the line in the bunch sprint.

Jeremy Whittle’s full report will follow

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Donald Trump increases his golf footprint in Scotland while world looks elsewhere | Ewan Murray

US president has championed his course Turnberry to stage world’s oldest major but hosting Scottish Open is more realistic

Even a cursory glance towards the scale of this year’s Open Championship at Royal Portrush emphasised why ongoing and occasionally fevered chatter about Turnberry staging the world’s oldest major is futile. Whether the Turnberry owner was Donald Trump or Donald Duck, its lack of adjacent infrastructure makes it unfit for the Open. The Ayrshire venue, lauded again by its owner Trump during a visit in recent days, is simply incapable of hosting the Open in its present form.

This need not be an uncomfortable reality for the US president, who can secure at least a portion of the profile and kudos he desires for Turnberry – one of the world’s most outstanding golf courses – from an alternative source. It would, in fact, now be a surprise if Turnberry does not appear on the Scottish Open’s rota at some point soon. Mutual convenience is staring us all in the face if Trump can even temporarily accept a prize which sits in the shadow of the championship he has craved since buying Turnberry in 2014.

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The Origin Story Of The Ottawa Senators 'Goalie Graveyard' Label

No one on the current roster has been an Ottawa Senator longer than defenseman Thomas Chabot. Chabot played his first game for the club back in the 2016–17 season, so he's been around for a while. He’s seen some things.

A lot of players have come and gone during his time — including no fewer than 18 goaltenders across eight seasons.

Yes, 18 goaltenders.

With a nod to X users @OilersAdam and Senators superfan @JulioHashem, who were both tracking the ugly goalie history of their NHL teams on the social media platform this week, here is every goaltender that Thomas Chabot has played with during his time as an Ottawa Senator:

Craig Anderson
Mike Condon
Daniel Taylor
Anders Nilsson
Mike McKenna
Marcus Högberg
Matt Murray
Anton Forsberg
Joey Daccord
Filip Gustavsson
Mads Søgaard
Cam Talbot
Kevin Mandolese
Dylan Ferguson
Leevi Meriläinen
Magnus Hellberg
Joonas Korpisalo
and Linus Ullmark.

My inside NHL sources tell me that's too many goalies.

It's part of why the Senators have often been labelled a “goalie graveyard,” although the moniker actually predates Chabot's tenure. I thought it started around the time Dominik Hasek mangled his adductor (and we all know how painful that can be) at the 2006 Olympics. But it's even older than that.

The name was coined by my former TSN 1200 radio co-host, John Rodenberg, during the old Battle of Ontario more than 20 years ago. The first time he said it on the air, and he'd say it often after that, I felt like it was maybe a little harsh at first.

But after years of witnessing the struggles – my god, the struggles – and the revolving door in net, the name became so uncannily accurate that I sometimes wondered if JR had inadvertently placed a curse — some kind of voodoo hex — on the men who protect Ottawa’s crease.

"Hasek's injury cemented the label," Rodenburg recalls. "But it dates back to the scars of the losses to the Leafs and especially 2004 and Patrick Lalime in Game 7.

"And it ALWAYS manifested itself, one way or the other, it felt like every season. It's always about the goalie here in Ottawa. Just change the year, rinse and repeat."

With the team having a reputation like that, it was not a surprise that one of Steve Staios' first big moves as a new GM was to try and solve things by going after one of the NHL's best. He managed to pull off a deal last summer for Linus Ullmark, the 2023 Vezina Trophy winner.

Ullmark's first season was pretty decent with flashes of excellence, but injury absences were a concern. Not big enough to get swept into the goalie graveyard conversation, but not insignificant enough to be excused from it either.

Ullmark and his understudy, the very young Leevi Merilainen, do seem nicely poised to finally bury the label once and for all. 

But if they can’t do it, then there's really no choice but to flood JR at TSN 1200 with cards, emails, and maybe a goat sacrifice or two. Because someone’s gotta figure out how to lift the Curse of the Goalie Graveyard.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News Ottawa
Image Credit: Tom Szczerbowski-Imagn Images 

This article orginally appeared at The Hockey News Ottawa, where you'll find all the latest Senators news:
Formenton's Lawyer: 'The Crown Knowingly Forged Ahead With A Hopeless Prosecution'
Mark Stone Jokes That It Wasn't Always Easy Playing On Brady Tkachuk's Line
2018 World Junior Trial Ends: Former Senator Alex Formenton Found Not GuiltyTwo Sens Prospects Set To Shine At World Junior Summer ShowcaseCroatia's NHL Trailblazer: Sens Prospect Bruno Idžan Takes NHL Road Less TravelledSenators Re-Sign 2021 First-Round Pick To One-Year DealWhy Mason McTavish Isn’t Coming Home To The Senators

Mets have discussed multiple names in possible Luis Robert Jr. trade, have competition from Phillies: report

With the MLB trade deadline just over 48 hours away, the Mets are discussing a potential trade with the White Sox that would bring Luis Robert Jr. to Queens. But they could be facing stiff competition.

In addition to the Mets, the Phillies and Padres are also interested in Robert, reports Buster Olney of ESPN.

Olney also noted that the White Sox "are resolute in the stance that they'll either receive a trade return equivalent of what Robert's potential is or hang onto him beyond the deadline."

Mark Vientosand Luisangel Acuña are "among the names that have come up" between the Mets and White Sox, per Olney.

SNY's Andy Martino reported on Monday that the Mets were discussing Vientos in trade talks.

The Mets are currently using Tyrone Taylor and Jeff McNeil in center field, which is less than ideal given Taylor's offensive struggles and McNeil being out of position.

President of baseball operations David Stearns hedged a bit recently when asked about upgrading center field. But he explained that the team would be open to it if the player they acquired passed a certain "bar" for them.

Whether Chicago is bluffing or not when it comes to the return they're seeking for Robert remains to be seen, but it's hard to picture any team paying top dollar in terms of major league talent and/or position players in order to acquire a player who has struggled badly at the plate over the last two seasons, posting a combined OPS+ of 83.

What complicates matters is that while Robert can be a free agent after the season, his contract contains a pair of club options -- worth $20 million each for 2026 and 2027.

That means the Sox could theoretically keep him and pick up his option if he excels down the stretch. It also means an acquiring team isn't taking on much risk, but could reap a serious reward if Robert snaps back into being the player he was as recently as 2023, when he smashed 38 homers and had an .857 OPS.

Still just 27 years old, Robert's potential is immense. And while his offensive ceiling is the most tantalizing part of his game, he's also an elite defensive center fielder.

Giants' struggles since Rafael Devers trade shown by eye-popping stats

Giants' struggles since Rafael Devers trade shown by eye-popping stats originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Rafael Devers trade was supposed to give the Giants a big boost toward a postseason berth.

It’s safe to say things haven’t gone according to plan.

Since acquiring Devers on June 15 in a deal with the Boston Red Sox, San Francisco owns the worst record in baseball at 13-22. 

Dreams of the franchise’s first playoff appearance since 2021 have faded accordingly, with the Giants currently sitting eight games back in the National League West and four games back of the final NL Wild Card spot.

Injuries and inconsistency in the starting rotation have contributed to the downturn, but the main culprit is a lackluster offense. Despite the addition of Devers–considered one of the preeminent hitters in the game–the Giants have scored only 132 runs since the trade, tied for the fewest in baseball over that span. (h/t The Athletic’s Alden Gonzalez)

While Devers’ bat has come around recently, posting an .868 OPS over his last 10 games, his overall production hasn’t reached the level most expected when Giants president of baseball operations Buster Posey brought the 28-year-old slugger to San Francisco. In 35 games with the Giants, Devers is batting .231 with just four home runs and 15 RBI.

Meanwhile, the Red Sox, who received pitchers Kyle Harrison and Jordan Hicks in exchange for Devers, have vaulted into the third and final American League Wild Card spot by going 20-15 since the deal. It’s tied for the fourth-best record in baseball over that span.

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Rays trade for Marlins catcher Nick Fortes a day after sending another catcher to the Brewers

TAMPA, Fla. — Tampa Bay traded for Miami catcher Nick Fortes after the Rays sent veteran catcher Danny Jansen to Milwaukee in another deal as the trade deadline approaches.

The Marlins acquired minor league outfielder Matthew Etzel, who was traded for the second year in a row. Tampa Bay got minor league infielder Jadher Areinamo in the trade with the Brewers.

The 28-year-old Fortes hit .240 with two home runs and 10 RBIs in 59 games for the Marlins. He hit .300 over his final 29 games with Miami.

Fortes is a .225 hitter over a career spent entirely with the Marlins, who took him in the fourth round of the 2018 amateur draft. He has 25 homers and 96 RBIs in 363 games.

Etzel has been on the injured list since June 22. He hit .230 with five homers and 34 RBIs in 56 games with Double-A Montgomery. The Rays acquired him from Baltimore last summer in a trade that sent Zach Eflin to the Orioles.

Katie Ledecky captures yet another gold in signature event at swimming worlds

  • Ledecky’s 1,500m gold is her 31st overall

  • American now has two medals at Worlds

Katie Ledecky has ceded a tiny bit of ground in other events, but she’s still unbeatable in the 1,500-meter freestyle.

She won it again Tuesday in the swimming world championships in Singapore, finishing in 15 minutes, 26.44 seconds. Simona Quadarella of Italy took silver in 15:31.79 – a European record – with bronze for Lani Pallister of Australia in 15:41.18 in a very quick-paced race.

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Brewers hitting coach Al LeBoeuf returns to team after cancer surgery

MILWAUKEE — Milwaukee Brewers hitting coach Al LeBoeuf returned to the team after leaving to have surgery for prostate cancer.

LeBoeuf is coaching in the majors for the first time this year. The Brewers named him lead hitting coach last October after he’d worked as a hitting coach in Triple-A the previous six seasons.

“We’re happy he’s back,” manager Pat Murphy said. “Any time anybody goes through something like that, it’s difficult. We kept in good contact and he was eager to be back and be part of it.”

The Brewers have three hitting coaches on staff: LeBoeuf, Connor Dawson and Eric Theisen.

LeBoeuf, 65, is in his 16th season in the Brewers’ organization with many Milwaukee hitters having long ties with him that began as they worked their way through the minors, including leadoff hitter Sal Frelick.

“We love Buffy so much. I’ve been with him for the past four or five years now,” said Frelick, who was one of three Brewers players to hit home runs in an 8-4 win over the Chicago Cubs. “It was really tough losing him for a little bit. Everyone said their prayers and luckily he was able to have a good procedure and he’s healing up quick. So happy to have him back.”

Rays trade catcher Danny Jansen to his hometown Brewers for minor league infielder

NEW YORK — Veteran catcher Danny Jansen was traded by the Tampa Bay Rays to his hometown Milwaukee Brewers for minor league infielder Jadher Areinamo.

Jansen was in Tampa Bay’s original lineup against the New York Yankees but got pulled about 45 minutes before the first pitch. The trade was announced shortly after the Rays ended a four-game losing streak with a 4-2 win at Yankee Stadium.

Jansen said he found out about the deal after meeting with manager Kevin Cash and president of baseball operations Erik Neander.

“I was getting ready to play the game, and I understand that side of baseball,” said Jansen, in his eighth major league season. “Just grateful for the time spent here with the guys.”

Tampa Bay signed Jansen to a one-year, $8.5 million contract on Dec. 13. He batted .204 with 11 homers and 29 RBIs in 73 games for the Rays, who also sent cash to the Brewers as part of the deal.

“He’s a leader. He’s a hitter. He’s been in big games. I’ve gotten great reports,” Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy said after his team’s 8-4 victory at home over the Chicago Cubs.

Brewers catcher Eric Haase was designated for assignment to clear a roster spot for Jansen.

“It’s a hard day for the Brewers in some ways because Eric Haase for two years has been an incredible team member. When he plays, he helps us win. Anytime we subtract a guy who’s been a leader in that clubhouse, too, it’s a really tough day,” Murphy said. “I don’t know Danny Jansen. I know his reputation. I know he’s a great player. And I trust our front office. I just do. They’re trying to make upgrades in every little area they can.”

The 30-year-old Jansen grew up in Appleton, Wisconsin. He is joining the NL Central leaders to serve as a backup to William Contreras, who is playing through a fractured finger. Contreras is hitting .245 with six homers and 42 RBIs in 100 games.

“I don’t live too far,” Jansen said. “That’s going to be something that my wife and I had never experienced.”

Jansen was moved right around the MLB trade deadline for the second straight season.

Toronto dealt him to Boston on July 24, 2024, and he wound up making baseball history by playing for both teams in a game at Fenway Park that got suspended June 26 and resumed two months later.

“Having gone through a trade last year will probably make this process a little bit easier for me, going into a team as a catcher learning pitchers and all that,” Jansen said. “So, looking forward to the challenge and task at hand with that. I think having a little bit of experience helps.”

Areinamo, 21, was batting .297 with 11 homers, 51 RBIs and 15 stolen bases in 94 games for Class A Wisconsin of the Midwest League. He has started at third base, shortstop and second base.

Last season, Areinamo hit .301 with 30 doubles in 110 games for Wisconsin and won the Midwest League batting crown. He was rated the No. 10 prospect in Milwaukee’s system by Baseball America and No. 24 by MLB.com.

The Rays are 8-18 in their last 26 games following a 25-9 stretch from May 20 to June 26. Tampa Bay is 2 1/2 games back of the final wild-card spot in the American League.

NHL Free Agency: Why Samsonov, Georgiev And Reimer Are Worth Signing

Of the NHL’s remaining free agents, goaltenders are the most intriguing position. 

Three UFA goalies who played at least 20 games last season have yet to sign a new contract: Alexandar Georgiev, Ilya Samsonov and James Reimer.

They’re at different points in their NHL careers, but they have potential of being bargain options in the crease.

Ilya Samsonov

Samsonov may be the most intriguing of the trio. The 28-year-old posted a subpar save percentage of .891 with the Vegas Golden Knights this past season, but he had 0.6 goals saved above expected in 29 appearances, meaning he stopped the scoring chances he was generally supposed to stop. 

Samsonov isn’t all that far removed from his stellar 2022-23 season with the Toronto Maple Leafs, when he had a .919 SP and 2.33 GAA in 42 games. He earned $1.8 million this past season with Vegas, and he likely wouldn’t get more this time. That said, among goalies who played at least 15 games, 28 goalies had a worse goals saved above expected rating, according to moneypuck.com.

Alexandar Georgiev

One of those goaltenders is Georgiev, who put up a minus-17.9 goals saved above expected, which was the second-worst. 

Georgiev split last season between the Colorado Avalanche – where he had an .874 SP and 3.38 GAA in 14 games – and the San Jose Sharks, where he posted a 3.88 GAA and .875 SP in 31 appearances. 

The 29-year-old will certainly have to take a pay cut from the $3.5 million he’s earned in each of the past four seasons, but in the right circumstances, Georgiev could provide some value and support for a younger goalie tandem. While he’s had a goals-against average of more than 3.00 and a sub-.900 save percentage in the last two seasons, he did have a 2.53 GAA and .919 SP in 2022-23, so he has the potential to bounce back.

James Reimer

Reimer put up a .901 SP and 2.90 GAA in 22 appearances with the Buffalo Sabres this past season while earning a very reasonable $1 million for his efforts. Of the three goalies here, Reimer's 8.0 goals saved above expected was the best as well.

Reimer is now 37, but if he doesn’t retire, he can prove he has something left in the tank at somewhere close to the league-minimum salary. He proved that this past season, after all.

At a time when every salary cap dollar counts, Reimer can step in and give a team some reassurance that they effectively have goalie insurance.

Ilya Samsonov (Sergei Belski-Imagn Images)

It's not out of the ordinary for teams to line up three experienced goalies to get them through next year. 

The Buffalo Sabres have presumptive starter Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, youngster Devon Levi and veteran newcomer Alex Lyon. 

The Anaheim Ducks have emerging No. 1 Lukas Dostal, veteran Petr Mrazek and bubble goalie Ville Husso. 

And the Utah Mammoth have three experienced goalies in Karel Vejmelka, Connor Ingram (who entered the NHL and NHLPA Player Assistance Program in March) and first-year Mammoth Vitek Vanecek. As you can see, you can never have more than enough quality netminding.

The Edmonton Oilers could have benefited from signing one of these goalies right now if they had more than $226,000 in cap space. Stuart Skinner had an .896 SP this past season, while Pickard had a .900 SP. They had some solid outings in the playoffs but an inconsistent performance overall, and if the Oilers aren’t ready to give Olivier Rodrigue a larger role, having another veteran wouldn’t hurt.

Whether Samsonov, Georgiev and Reimer get to play NHL hockey next season, or whether they ply their trade overseas is yet to be determined.

Another option for those three goalies would be earning their keep on a professional tryout this fall – Edmonton could be a fit in that case. Alternatively, they can be patient and wait for an injury or disappointing performance from a goalie to open up a roster opportunity for them. At this stage, beggars can’t be choosers, so if Georgiev, Samsonov and Reimer get a solid employment offer, they should take it.

In any case, it will be compelling viewing to see how the rest of the NHL’s goalie market shakes out. Teams that are satisfied with their netminding today might not be satisfied tomorrow, and teams that are healthy in net today might not be healthy between the pipes tomorrow. Things can change in an instant for NHL goalies, and we’ll be watching closely to see where every netminder of note eventually lands.

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