Penguins Top-20 Prospects 2025: Forward Prospect Continues To Build Two-Way Game

Heading into the 2025-26 season, the Pittsburgh Penguins have shifted the focus to youth and development.

With more talent in the system than Pittsburgh has had in years - and 13 picks in the 2025 NHL Draft - top prospects lists are becoming more competitive and more difficult to discern. Since the prospect pool is deepening, The Hockey News - Pittsburgh Penguins takes a look at the top-20 prospects in the organization. 

For No. 7, we turn our focus back to the forward front, where a second-round pick from 2024 - currently on the shelf with a long-term injury - has plenty of raw potential. And that is Tanner Howe.


#7: F Tanner Howe

Credit: Keith Hershmiller - Regina Pats/WHL Images

Howe, 19, hit some pretty unfortunate injury luck during 2024-25, as an ACL tear ended his season prematurely and will keep him out through the end of 2025. 

But despite the injury, there is nothing to suggest that it will be anything more than a minor setback for Howe, who continued to impress the Penguins' organization last season. The 5-foot-11, 182-pound left wing is speedy, versatile, and has a lot of potential to develop a formidable two-way game.

Selected 46th overall by the Penguins in 2024 and subsequently signed to an entry-level contract, Howe began the 2024-25 season with the Regina Pats of the WHL, registering six goals and seven points in 10 games. He was then traded mid-season to the Calgary Hitmen, where he amassed 12 goals and 39 points in 37 games, and he spent a good chunk of time playing with eventual Penguins' 2025 11th overall pick Ben Kindel.

Top-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: New Penguins' Goaltender On Verge Of BreakoutTop-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: New Penguins' Goaltender On Verge Of BreakoutHeading into the 2025-26 season, the Pittsburgh Penguins have shifted the focus to youth and development.

He fit in with the Pats right away, and the progress he made throughout the season should pick up right where it left off when he tore his ACL.  Howe's defensive game is still a work in progress, but he has the hockey sense, the motor, and the edge to keep improving upon it. Offensively, he's great around the net front, has some craftiness to his game, and has displayed a finishing touch and a lethal shot that could very well translate to the NHL level.

It seems that there are a lot of forwards with "middle-six potential" in the Penguins' organization, but Howe is one of those players with a higher ceiling. He may not be on the same level as Rutger McGroarty or Ville Koivunen, but there is a lot of room for him to continue climbing Penguins' prospect charts if he can lean into that 200-foot game and situational versatility.


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With 2025-26 Season Just Around The Corner, Penguins’ Path Is Unclear

Apr 3, 2025; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins right wing Rickard Rakell (67) is congratulated by center Sidney Crosby (87) and right wing Bryan Rust (17) after scoring against the St. Louis Blues during the third period at Enterprise Center. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

The 2025-26 NHL season will be a pivotal one for many teams.

The Detroit Red Wings are at a dire crossroads in a nine-year “will they, won’t they” mystery of playoff contention. The Edmonton Oilers have not yet locked up their all-time great talent - a pending unrestricted free agent - entering a season that follows two consecutive Stanley Cup Final losses to the Florida Panthers. The Boston Bruins need to decide whether it’s time to tear things down to the studs and trade their best player or try to rebuild on-the-fly around the few veterans they have. The San Jose Sharks need to figure out whether it’s worth trying to tank one more time for a true generational talent or if they’re better off letting the youth they already have fully take the wheel.

There are many other compelling storylines to follow across the NHL. And one of the most compelling - and perplexing - is that of the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Many expected the Penguins to be quite active in the trade market over the summer. Although they made some moves - such as acquiring goaltender Arturs Silovs from the Vancouver Canucks and sending Alex Nedeljkovic to the Sharks - they weren’t the Erik Karlsson, Rickard Rakell, or Bryan Rust-type moves that a lot of people anticipated. Yet they also - surprisingly - decided to keep all 13 of their 2025 draft picks instead of leveraging any of them for young talent.

As a result, it’s difficult to tell what exactly the plan is for these Penguins in 2025-26. They have missed the playoffs for three consecutive seasons - which follows a 16-year postseason streak - and still have a core of 38-year-old Sidney Crosby, 38-year-old Kris Letang, 39-year-old Evgeni Malkin, and 35-year-old Karlsson. They also have what appears to be a bleak defensive corps and questionable-at-best goaltending, with Silovs, rookie Joel Blomqvist, and Tristan Jarry - waived in the middle of the 2024-25 season - presumed to be the frontrunners jockeying for the starting position.

Even if the Penguins are certainly getting younger and more talented on the periphery of their roster - among others, prospects Rutger McGroarty, Ville Koivunen, Filip Hallander, and Owen Pickering should have a decent shot at making the team out of training camp - they still lack a lot of the younger core pieces needed to sustain contention in the future.

Do The Penguins Have A Legitimate Shot At McKenna In 2026?Do The Penguins Have A Legitimate Shot At McKenna In 2026?WIth the 2025-26 NHL season just around the corner, teams are looking ahead to their respective training camps beginning in mid-September.

Penguins’ general manager and president of hockey operations has reiterated that he isn’t just interested in building a short-term winner as quickly as possible. Instead, he wants to build back up a culture of sustained success, which typically takes some time. He even expressed in his post-season press conference that the Penguins making the playoffs in 2025-26 would be an accomplishment.

If this is the case, it is a bit puzzling that the Penguins aren’t making the kinds of moves that indicate they’re going for the full rebuild - especially in a draft year that includes the best talent since Connor McDavid in 2015.

Of course, it’s never clear what is going on behind the scenes with Pittsburgh. Dubas and his staff keep a rather tight-lipped operation, so any number of things could be happening that folks simply aren’t privy to. Perhaps the offers for Karlsson, Rakell, and Rust simply aren’t high enough for Dubas’s liking. Maybe they are actively working on something involving one or more of those players. There could be other moves in the works that have nothing to do with those guys, too.

The Pittsburgh Penguins' Top-Three Trade Candidates For The 2025-26 SeasonThe Pittsburgh Penguins' Top-Three Trade Candidates For The 2025-26 SeasonWhether they are retooling or rebuilding, the Pittsburgh Penguins are focusing on the future rather than being a playoff team right now. 

But it’s also very possible that nothing of the like is happening. After all, the Penguins did just overhaul their coaching staff this summer, and they also made some moves on the forward front to make their roster better than it was last season. 

In other words, there may be a world where Dubas and the Penguins don’t deem it necessary to draft Gavin McKenna in order to contend in the near- and long-term. Perhaps they see a vision of a contending future that includes at least one of Karlsson, Rakell, and Rust. Maybe they’re convinced that the defense and the goaltending is poor enough to put them in lottery contention even if they don’t move any of those guys.

After all, think about it: If the Penguins were to strike lottery gold and have the opportunity to draft McKenna next season - and Karlsson, Rakell, and Rust remain on the roster at that point - it stands to reason that they could turn things around both quickly and sustainably. They already have enough prospect talent and draft capital to target - for example - a young, talented left defenseman that could be part of their contending future. And that prospect talent, again, should begin to fill out the periphery of the roster this season and even more so in 2026-27. They’ll also have near-unlimited spending power in free agency next summer.

How Will A Rising Salary Cap Affect The NHL's Parity?How Will A Rising Salary Cap Affect The NHL's Parity?The NHL has had thrilling matchups night in and night out because of parity.

It’s not really that difficult to see that potential vision. It’s still likely that at least one of the “big three” trade candidates won’t be on the roster through the end of next season, but it’s not impossible for the Penguins to compete with one or two of them still around. 

But, at the end of the day, the Penguins are still too good as of right now to be surefire McKenna contenders. And - if keeping some of their veterans around in hopes of a quick but sustainable turnaround is the plan - they are still banking almost everything on a lottery ball falling the right way next season.

There are many paths Dubas and the Penguins can take from here, and there are still a lot more dominoes to fall. But even if that uncertainty makes the Penguins an interesting story for this upcoming season, it sure doesn’t make things any easier for them looking ahead to the future.


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Ex-Canadiens Forward Elected To U.S. Hockey Hall Of Fame

Scott Gomez (© Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images)

The U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame class of 2025 has been announced, and it includes a former Montreal Canadiens forward.

Former Hab Scott Gomez is among the five players who have been elected to the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame. In addition to Gomez, Joe Pavelski, Zach Parise, Tara Mounsey, and Bruce Bennett have all been named to the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame. 

Gomez appeared in 1,079 NHL games over 16 seasons, posting 181 goals, 575 assists, and 756 points. He was also a two-time Stanley Cup winner, two-time All-Star, and the NHL's Calder Memorial Trophy winner in 2000. Thus, he undoubtedly had a strong career. 

Gomez spent three seasons with the Canadiens from 2009-10 to 2011-12, where he recorded 21 goals, 87 assists, and 108 points in 196 games. His time with the Canadiens ended when he was bought out in 2013. 

Canadiens: Insider Provides Latest On Carey Price RumorsCanadiens: Insider Provides Latest On Carey Price RumorsThe Montreal Canadiens are one of the most-talked-about teams in the rumor mill right now. This is especially the case when it comes to the possibility of the Canadiens trading away Carey Price's contract

Slumping Dodgers lose again to the lowly Pirates

Los Angeles Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani reacts after striking out against Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Braxton Ashcraft during the first inning of a baseball game in Pittsburgh, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)
Shohei Ohtani reacts after striking out in the first inning Wednesday. (Gene J. Puskar / Associated Press)

It was a pivotal moment, in a pivotal game, in what’s become a pivotal week for the Dodgers in the National League West standings.

Which, rather predictably given their recently floundering form, meant they found a new way to mess it all up.

In the top of the second inning on Wednesday night at PNC Park, the Dodgers appeared to be in optimal position.

Earlier in the day, the second-place San Diego Padres had been swept by the woebegone Baltimore Orioles, opening the door for the Dodgers to extend their 2½-game lead in the division. And despite trailing by a run in their own showdown against a last-place team, the Dodgers had the Pittsburgh Pirates on the ropes, loading the bases with no outs for a chance to take the lead.

The task, at that point, was simple.

Get the ball in play. Manufacture some early scoring. And, at the very least, set a positive tone for a night in which the NL West lead could grow.

“That’s a situation where you get shorter with your swing, use the big part of the field and you’ve got to drive in a run,” manager Dave Roberts said.

That approach, however, never materialized.

Over the rest of an inexplicable 3-0 loss to the Pirates, what happened next would instead loom large.

First, second-year outfielder Andy Pages came up, worked another full count against Pittsburgh starter Braxton Ashcraft … then went down swinging chasing a slider that would’ve been ball four.

Next, rookie infielder Alex Freeland again ran the count full, got an elevated slider up in the zone to hit … but kept the bat on his shoulder as the umpire rung him up for a called third strike.

A Kiké Hernández flyout would ultimately end the inning. But it was the first two at-bats that had Roberts fuming afterward.

“You never want to say that one inning kind of win or loses a game,” Roberts said. “But the second inning, bases loaded, nobody out — I just felt that we had two bad at-bats and didn't come away with anything.”

“That flipped the game,” Roberts later added. “It flipped the momentum.”

Read more:‘Want to see that edge.’ How Dodgers hope Teoscar Hernández turns around difficult season

Indeed, on a night the Dodgers (78-61) failed to score any of their 11 baserunners or record a hit in seven at-bats with men in scoring position, no sequence was more frustrating than their second-inning fizzle.

It was the latest epitome of the team failing to produce in a clutch situation. Another example of their roster flunking some basic fundamentals.

“We've got to collectively get all of us on board understanding the magnitude of each at-bat, each situation,” Roberts bemoaned from his office postgame. “I sound repetitive [about how] it's got to get better. But I do believe that having the right approach, the right mindset, the right urgency in a particular at-bat lends itself to better results."

This has been a recurring theme for the Dodgers during the second half of the season; the kind of fine-margin miscues that have haunted them during a perplexing 22-29 stretch since July 4.

Sometimes, it’s their big-name superstars that falter. In other cases, it’s younger contributors like Pages and Freeland who fail to execute when required.

The only constant: Every time the Dodgers seem to be turning a corner, they find another way to trip themselves up.

“I do believe that the guys that we have in the room are capable of putting together consistent team at-bats of urgency from the first pitch on,” Roberts said. “But at the end of the day — and I'm sure our players are echoing the same message — we just got to get it done.”

This week’s series at PNC Park (the fourth straight the Dodgers have dropped here over the last four years) has exemplified the club’s maddening current rut in other ways.

One night, they explode at the plate for seven runs … only for their pitching staff to give up nine as it did in Tuesday’s loss.

The next, they piece together a decent pitching effort (even after Shohei Ohtani was scratched from his scheduled start because of an illness) … only for the offense to squander every single opportunity they had to take control of the contest (and lose catcher Will Smith along the way to a bruised hand he suffered on an errant foul ball, though postgame X-rays came back negative).

“We haven’t really put it together at all for a while now,” first baseman Freddie Freeman said. “We need to start playing better.”

On Wednesday, the Pirates jumped in front in the first inning, when Bryan Reynolds homered in the 12th pitch of his at-bat off spot starter Emmet Sheehan. Andrew McCutchen doubled the lead in the second, adding to the sting of the Dodgers’ squandered bases-loaded opportunity with a line-drive home run in the game’s very next at-bat.

After that, “we just really couldn't put anything else together,” Roberts said.

Or, more precisely, they failed to finish any other chances off.

Read more:What's behind Clayton Kershaw's pitching revival in his 18th season? 'The bowl'

The Dodgers loaded the bases again with two out in the third, before Alex Call hit a dribbler up the first-base line to retire the side.

The team had two runners aboard again in the fifth and seventh, but continued to come up empty each and every time.

“We had guys on, we just didn’t get the hit,” said Freeman, who rolled into a fifth-inning double-play to extinguish that threat. “Frustrating night.”

The only saving grace right now is that the Padres (who have lost four in a row while dealing with a string of deflating injuries) haven’t made up ground against them.

“I’m very much aware of that,” Roberts said. “But they’re feeling the same thing we are. We’ve got to control what we can control. And we’re certainly not.”

A different approach in Wednesday’s second inning might have changed all that. Instead, it served as another regrettable failure, turning a potentially pivotal chance to stretch the division lead into one of the season's most dispiriting losses.

Smith update

Smith exited Wednesday's game after the second inning, when a foul tip bounced off the dirt and hit his right throwing hand as it was hanging behind his right thigh.

Because Smith's X-rays came back negative, Roberts said the club was hopeful he could avoid the injured list. However, given the swelling and soreness he was feeling postgame, the team was still planning to call up a third catcher on Thursday for more roster insurance.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

2026 NBA All-Star Game reportedly to feature three-team, USA vs. World round-robin format

We already knew next February's NBA All-Star Game — broadcast on NBC and Peacock — was going to be a USA vs. World format, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver confirmed it.

Now we have a few more details. The NBA's Competition Committee was presented with the idea of three 8-man teams — two USA, one World team — playing in a round-robin format, reports Shams Charania of ESPN. These would be 12-minute games, three of them, with the undefeated team (if there is one) taking the title. The idea was presented by the NBA and the players' union to the committee (made of owners, GMs and players) and received positive feedback, according to the report.

A few quick thoughts on this:

• The USA vs. World format fits perfectly on NBC and Peacock in 2026 because the NBA All-Star Game falls in the middle of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics. While Silver was vague on details, this is expected to be a Ryder Cup-style format, featuring the USA vs. the World.

• The 2026 NBA All-Star Game in Southern California (at the Clippers' new Intuit Dome) will be played in the afternoon Pacific time, allowing for a Winter Olympic lead-in and more Olympic content on NBC and Peacock after the NBA exhibition.

• Making it a three-team round robin eliminates the need for a fourth team to fill out a bracket-style tournament, as was done last year in San Francisco. The fourth team in that tournament was the winner of the Rising Stars game (rookies and sophomores) and those youngsters getting on the Sunday All-Star stage was not popular with veteran players and other All-Stars who were voted onto the team by fans or selected by coaches for their play.

• An eight-man World Team roster would be stacked — the last seven MVP winners were international players. The world team could be an eight-man roster of Nikola Jokic, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Luka Doncic, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Victor Wembanyama, Joel Embiid, Pascal Siakam and Jamal Murray — and that doesn't include Franz Wagner, Lauri Markkanen, Kristaps Porzingis, Alperen Sengun and Rudy Gobert.

• When asked about a potential USA vs. World format at last February's All-Star weekend, international players were far more enthusiastic than the Americans.

"I would love that. Oh, I would love that," Antetokounmpo said. "I think that would be the most interesting and most exciting format. I would love that. For sure, I'd take pride in that."

Mets' Francisco Alvarez hits grand slam in latest rehab game with Triple-A Syracuse

Francisco Alvarez is getting closer to a return to the Mets, and in his potentially final rehab game with Triple-A Syracuse, the backstop showed his prodigious power.

After flying out in his first at-bat against Buffalo on Wednesday, Alvarez came up to the plate with the bases loaded and two outs in the fourth inning. Stepping to the plate against CJ Van Eyk, Alvarez was down 0-2 in the count when a fastball was left up in the zone. Alvarez got around the pitch and launched the ball 405 feet -- at 105.6 mph -- for the grand slam. The blast gave Syracuse a 7-0 lead.

Alvarez finished 1-for-4 with a walk but caught all nine innings of Syracuse's 8-2 win on Wednesday. In five games with Triple-A, Alvarez is 4-for-19. 

In addition to Alvarez, the Mets had Jose Siri rehabbing with Triple-A. In his second game with Syracuse, Siri went 1-for-4 with two RBI and a run scored. Siri was the DH in Tuesday's game, but played center field on Wednesday for seven innings before he was pulled. In two games, Siri is 2-for-9 with two RBI and four strikeouts.

In the prospect department, Jett Williams went 2-for-4 with a walk and a run scored. His big hit came in the eighth, a two-run shot that went 384 feet. 

Carson Benge and Ryan Clifford went a combined 0-for-8 with a walk and an RBI, and four strikeouts. 

Kevin Parada made his Triple-A debut after his promotion and started as the team's DH. He went 1-for-4 with a walk and a run scored. He also stole a base.

Ottawa Senators Sign Donovan Sebrango To One-Year Contract

The Ottawa Senators have signed defenseman Donovan Sebrango to a one-year, two-way contract for the 2025-26 season, per PuckPedia. 

The contract will pay him $775,000 at the NHL level and $140,000 in the AHL. He was tendered a qualifying offer by the Senators on July. 1.

Sebrango notched eight goals and 20 points in 50 games with the Belleville Senators while serving as an assistant captain and went pointless in two games with Ottawa last season, the first NHL games of his career. 

The Ottawa, Ont., native has 13 goals and 45 points in 220 career AHL games with the Senators and Grand Rapids Griffins. 

Originally a third round selection of the Detroit Red Wings in 2020, Sebrango was dealt to Ottawa in July 2023 in the trade that sent Alex DeBrincat to Detroit. 

The 23-year-old seems set to play big minutes in Belleville and could be in line for more NHL games with Ottawa's lack of left-handed defensive depth.

Check out our AHL to KHL signing tracker and AHL Free Agency signing tracker.

Former Sabres' GM Gerry Meehan Was Interested in Dale Hawerchuk (1990)

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Meehan Interested in Winnipeg's Star Center - Jun. 1 1990 - Volume 43, Issue 38 - Jim Kelley

Several general managers have expressed cautious interest now that Winnipeg Jets’ center Dale Hawerchuk has become available on the open market.

But Buffalo Sabres’ general manager Gerry Meehan was anything but cautious.

“We are very much interested,” Meehan said when asked about the six-time 100-point scorer. “He has a reputation in this league as a powerful offensive player, the kind of player every team in the league would like to have.

“We have a top centernan already in Pierre Turgeon, a center who is a potential superstar, and to add a player like this (Hawerchuk) would give us a formidable 1-2 punch.”

Meehan said he had no indications from Winnipeg what price tag might be attached to Hawerchuk. but he expected Hawerchuk’s market value would be determined in the days leading up to the June 16 NHL entry draft in Vancouver. Meehan also said he would “pursue discussion” with the Jets.

It’s not uncommon for a general manager to express interest in a high-quality player when he comes on to the market, even if he has no intention of making a bid. However. Meehan’s interest appeared both genuine and serious and indicated he was at least exploring opportunities to change the mix on a Sabres’ team that had a strong regular season but once again disappointed in the playoff’s.

Naturally, bringing Hawerchuk or a player like him to Buffalo would mean giving up a player or players of similar value, both in terms of talent and expense.

More Winnipeg Jets: Jets First-Round Pick Gears Up for First Pro Season in the AHL

  Christian Ruuttu has been mentioned in several trade rumors.  

No one in the Sabres’ organization has publicly singled out players, at least not by name, for Buffalo’s failure to get by Montreal in the first round of the playoffs this season. But the players as a group have certainly taken heat from management and some big names have suddenly shown up in trade rumors.

Defenseman Phil Housley and right winger Mike Foligno recently were linked to a possible trade with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Christian Ruuttu’s name has also cropped up in some less-known rumors. A solo deal involving Foligno and Toronto was reported.

The Sabres, having again hiked ticket prices, would be hard-pressed to return the same lineup to the ice despite a 98-point regular season. Buffalo fans measure a team’s worth by how well it performs in the playoffs and this team, like almost all the rest of the last decade, has done nothing.

Another reason Meehan might be interested is because Hawerchuk threatens to upset the current balance of power in the Adams Division.

At the general manager’s luncheon at the Stanley Cup final in Edmonton, both Montreal GM Serge Savard and Hartford GM Ed Johnston also expressed an interest in Hawerchuk. Buffalo, Montreal and Hartford finished second, third and fourth, respectively, in the Adams last season and all three teams were among the top seven in the NHL. Hawerchuk, with any one of the three, could be enough to push one team past another.

“I’ve already worked up a few charts with Hawerchuk in our lineup and with players we might have to give up coming out,” Meehan said. “It’s something that has to be discussed (and evaluated). Everything is determined by the price, but are we interested? Sure we are. Who wouldn’t be?”

More Winnipeg: Winnipeg Youth Hockey Player in Running For Sports Illustrated Youth Athlete of the Year

Report: NHL to implement a playoff salary cap beginning this season

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Winnipeg Jets at Dallas Stars

May 11, 2025; Dallas, Texas, USA; A view of an NHL puck with logo during the game between the Dallas Stars and the Winnipeg Jets in game three of the second round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The NHL will implement a playoff salary cap and remove team dress code requirements beginning this season, a person with knowledge of the situation said.

The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Wednesday because the decisions had not been announced.

The league and Players’ Association agreed to those changes as part of a new collective bargaining agreement that begins in September 2026.

The sides opted to make the playoff cap and dress code policy adjustments immediately rather than waiting another year. Teams will be required to submit a cap-compliant 20-player roster for each playoff game.

Several teams over the past decade have used the lack of a postseason cap to win the Stanley Cup or make a deep run, with players on long-term injured reserve not returning until the first round. Chicago did so with Patrick Kane in 2015, Tampa Bay with Nikita Kucherov in 2021, Vegas with Mark Stone in 2023 and Florida with Matthew Tkachuk this past year, going on to become champions, and it was all allowed under the current CBA.

Extending the regular season to 84 games from 82, reducing the maximum length of contracts and other changes will go into effect in 2026-27. Until Sept. 15, 2026, players can re-sign with their own teams for up to eight years or join another for up to seven - and that will go to seven and six, respectively.

EXCLUSIVE: Reilly Smith Funny Moment With Comedian Another Highlight In Enjoyable Summer That Included Contract Extension To Stay Home

Vegas Golden Knights right wing Reilly Smith (19) warms up before game two of the second round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Edmonton Oilers at T-Mobile Arena.

LAS VEGAS -- Reilly Smith's phone began blowing up around 4 am on Wednesday, with non-stop text messages.

A viral video from comedian Will Burkart hit social media late Tuesday, with the Vegas Golden Knights' left wing sitting front and center during a recent show.

The punchline: Burkart had no clue who he had just called out.

Burkart: "What's your name sir?"

Smith: "Reilly."

Burkart: "Are you working during the week?"

Smith: "Not in the summer"

Burkart: "Are you a teacher?"

Smith: "I'm not"

Burkart: "You're not, silly me. What kind of job do you have?"

Smith: "I'm a hockey player."

Burkart: "Who do you play hockey for? Is this like a... how high are we?"

At that point, as it will be opening night against the Los Angeles Kings on Oct. 8, the crowd immediately cheered in unison: "Go Knights Go! Go Knights Go!"

With the 34-year-old wearing a coy smile that had a "yep, that's me" all over it and his proud wife, Melissa, smiling ear-to-ear during the exchange, Burkart told Smith, who signed a one-year, $2 million extension this offseason to stay with the Knights, he was honored to have him in his audience.

Of course, the moment wouldn't have been complete if Smith hadn't pulled out his teeth when the comedian asked if his choppers were still intact.

Nevertheless, Burkart commended Smith for downplaying his celebrity status when initially being called out, remaining lowkey.

But that's Smith. One of the most genuine professional athletes to ever represent Southern Nevada, and someone who will long be known as a fan favorite since first joining the Knights via trade during the 2017 expansion draft.

Always has been.

"Thankfully, there were a lot of other members in the crowd who did recognize me, so I didn't have to talk too much; they filled in a lot of the gaps," Smith said during a phone interview with The Hockey News. "I'm grateful that the people in this community are ... everyone here in Vegas has always been so nice and kind.

"They never ask for anything. They're always just, 'It's really nice to meet you. Didn't want to bother you.' It's always been very nice and very kind in this community, in this market. So, me and my whole family, we're very grateful for the people that we're able to live around, and it's been awesome. Just a lot of really nice people in this community, and we're very thankful to be living here."

STAYING HOME

After being shipped to Pittsburgh two weeks after the Golden Knights won the Stanley Cup in 2023, and then later to the Rangers, things were different for Smith.

While his production slipped, as he registered just 69 points in 134 games combined with the two franchises, it was more than that.

The Smiths knew the inner glow they got from the place where the veteran's star shone brightly, and the city where they brought their first child into the world, had dullened.

Las Vegas had become home, and that hadn't changed, regardless of the sweater he wore on game nights.

Thus, after returning at the deadline last season, Smith said it was nice to get his extension out of the way this summer, as he enters his 15th NHL season, knowing he won't have to move Melissa and their two daughters: Isla, age 2, and Navy, age 1.

"It's really nice," said Smith, who's played in 919 games and has his 1,000th-game milestone in sight, provided he stays healthy this year. "It was a big selling point on signing a contract here, having a no-trade part of that. My whole family loves it here. I love how much my kids enjoy it here. I feel like they're just outside so much more and just enjoying life a little bit better.

"So, for me as a dad, that's probably the highlight of everything for me. There's other parts of staying here that are unbelievable. The commute to work every day, and the people that I met eight, nine years ago, they're still in the organization, and being able to see those faces all the time, not just the players, but also the staff members that do a lot of work behind the scenes. Everyone has gone way above in making this feel like home for us. So, to be able to stay here for another year, it's pretty special."

As he's gotten older, Smith said he's learned how to do contextualize different aspects of his career, like being traded as a family man as opposed to being a younger player.

And from a mental health aspect?

"That's why I go to comedy shows, keep everything light," Smith said with a laugh. "But in the grand scheme of things, (being settled with family) makes your life more full. The traveling part is the hardest part. If you have kids, you got to put them into a new school, you have to find new friends for them. There's just so many different aspects.

"Playing on three different teams in the last two years, there's a lot of that movement, and there's a lot of stuff away from just playing hockey that you have to focus on and think about. And then, even at that, if you're not playing probably up to what you expect of yourself, there is a little bit of added doubt that comes in there. I think I've learned over many years and many trades that you just have to take it one day at a time, and every day is not going to be your best day, but tomorrow can be better."

Smith, who has 553 career points, has 297 points in 420 games with the Golden Knights.

During the postseason, Smith has 70 points for the Golden Knights, including 14 during the championship run in 2023, when he was the second player to hoist the Stanley Cup after captain Mark Stone.

"I think I've realized over the last couple of years, playing on different teams, it's hard to make the playoffs, and teams want to do that every single year," Smith said. "I was very fortunate to play on this Knights team that we made the playoffs pretty much every single year, and everything was kind of easy. And then you can get moved to a different team for whatever reason, and things aren't as easy, but you're expected to win. You're not, and it takes a toll, not just on yourself, but on everyone in the organization, top to bottom.

"So those little pressures can add up, and they can turn on your mind a little bit. And it's easy to get down on yourself. It's nice to have a good support system around you, whether it be you know your wife, your kids, your family, your extended family, and friends. Because when teams aren't winning, it's easy to go down a little bit of a dark turn."

THE NEXT CHAPTER

With Vegas general manager Kelly McCrimmon pulling off the biggest acquisition of the offseason, luring Mitch Marner from Toronto, the Knights are once again one of the favorites to win the Stanley Cup.

Smith figures to play a prominent role, again, as he did in the team's first run to the Cup Final in 2017 and during the title run in 2023.

"I think expectations as a team are always sky high," Smith said. "Winning a cup a few years ago shows us that this group can do it. That expectation wasn't created a couple of years ago. It's been there for a while, and I don't think it's going to change anytime soon, especially how management pushes to get better every single year."

Aside from being 81 games away from the 1000th of his career, Smith could potentially reach the 600-point plateau, being just 47 away. He's most certain to get his 300th point as a member of the Knights.

But just as humble as Smith was in the front row of Burkart's recent comedy show, one of Vegas' original beloved misfits downplayed the notion of personal gains for the upcoming season, as he's looking forward to contributing in whatever way coach Bruce Cassidy asks of him.

"I think personally, I try my best just to think of the season as just, let's enjoy every day," he said. "Let's have very optimistic mindset and in the process, getting better. Now, there's personal things that I want to get to, and those would be great, but I think if you put yourself in a positive mindset where you're really enjoying every day, it kind of takes care of itself, and one kind of pushes the other one.

"And so there are a lot of things to love about being back here in this organization, and I just want to soak it all in and take it day by day and just enjoy the ride and see where we're at, at the end of season."

Boston's Roman Anthony is expected to miss the rest of the regular season with an oblique injury

BOSTON — Red Sox rookie Roman Anthony is expected to miss the rest of the regular season after he was placed on the 10-day injured list on Wednesday with a left oblique strain.

The 21-year-old Anthony departed Tuesday's 11-7 victory over Cleveland after striking out in the fourth inning. An MRI revealed the extent of the injury.

There is no timetable for Anthony's return, but manager Alex Cora said players are typically sidelined for four to six weeks with this kind of oblique issue.

Entering Wednesday's action, Boston was 2 1/2 games back of AL East-leading Toronto. It also was in position for the second AL wild card.

“We keep going,” Cora said of how his team will deal with the loss of Anthony. “At one point, he’s going to be part of it, so just got to be patient, keep pitching, keep putting good at-bats, keep playing.

“I told him to envision (American League Championship Series) first at-bat. Put that goal in your mind and hopefully it happens.”

Anthony missed two games last month with mid-back tightness, but the outfielder said Tuesday night that this injury felt worse.

The Red Sox also recalled infielder-outfielder Nick Sogard from Triple-A Worcester before Wednesday night's game against the Guardians.

Anthony, one of baseball's top prospects, made his major league debut on June 9. He is batting .292 with eight homers and 32 RBIs in 71 games with the Red Sox.

Anthony, a second-round pick in the 2022 amateur draft, signed a $130 million, eight-year contract on Aug. 6.