Colorado football coach Deion Sanders is finally back, looking svelte in a gray suit and acing just as flamboyant as ever at Big 12 media days.
The Hockey News Big Show: How Many 2025 NHL Draft Picks Could Immediately Make The Jump?
The Hockey News Big Show is here to discuss the biggest topics as the NHL off-season is well underway.
Here’s what Michael Traikos, Ryan Kennedy and Drew Shore discussed in this episode:
01:30: Are hockey’s enforcers the same off the ice as on the ice?
04:00: Gavin McKenna commits to Penn State. What does it mean for the junior hockey and NCAA landscape? For Drew, what was it like playing college hockey?
06:55: Does college hockey benefit players more than major junior?
09:00: Is the NCAA more difficult than the WHL?
11:30: The Edmonton Oilers traded Sam O’Reilly to the Tampa Bay Lightning in exchange for Isaac Howard. Thoughts?
14:30: Where do we see Howard playing? Is it OK when young players call their shots and refuse to sign with the team that drafted them? Why didn't Howard want to play for the Lightning?
16:40: What was Drew’s experience like in rookie and development camps?
18:30: Are there any surprises from the NHL’s summer development camps?
21:00: Summer training: what are the early summer routines like? How long after a season ended should someone start to train? What’s the diet like? What kind of gym work happens?
23:00: Would Drew be on the ice constantly in the off-season?
25:30: How much did Drew’s diet change in the off-season?
28:40: How many players from the 2025 draft could go straight to the NHL?
32:45: What makes you able to tell if players are ready for the NHL level right away?
35:00: Who's the best UFA still on the market?
40:00: In honor of the Nittany Lions signing McKenna, what's your favorite NCAA mascot name?
42:00: What's the best summer food?
42:55: Yay or nay: kids playing organized hockey in the summer
Subscribe to The Hockey News Big Show on your preferred platform.
Insider Reveals Why Blackhawks Had Quiet Free Agency
Last off-season, the Chicago Blackhawks went on a shopping spree in free agency. They added an array of veteran players, including Teuvo Teravainen, Tyler Bertuzzi, TJ Brodie, Alec Martinez, Craig Smith, and Pat Maroon, in hopes of taking a step forward in their rebuild.
However, Blackhawks general manager Kyle Davidson had a different game plan when it came to July 1 this year. Instead of using their high amount of cap space to bring in new talent, the Blackhawks were incredibly quiet in free agency, only signing depth forward Dominic Toninato to a two-year, two-way contract.
During a recent episode of 32 Thoughts: The Podcast, NHL insider Elliotte Friedman revealed that the Blackhawks were not very happy with how last season went with some of their veteran additions, so they went in a different direction this year in free agency.
"They weren't exactly thrilled with how things went last year with some of their vets, and I think they just decided 'we're not going to do that again,'" Friedman said about the Blackhawks. "So, I'm not surprised they were pretty quiet."
Friedman then noted that the Blackhawks aren't a club that the NHL's top free agents will sign with as they continue to build their roster.
"I can understand why the Blackhawks did not want to repeat what happened a year ago. The best free agents, they aren't going there right now. They aren't going there right now. So, you're not going to sit there and say we're making some of the same mistakes we thought we had a year ago."
With this, it is understandable that the Blackhawks took a more conservative approach with free agency this year. This is especially so when noting that this year's free agency class was notably weaker. In addition, the Blackhawks have several impressive prospects who should be competing for spots on the NHL roster in training camp.
Nevertheless, it is going to be fascinating to see how the Blackhawks perform next season after their quiet off-season from here.
Photo Credit: © David Kirouac-Imagn Images
Is Trevor Story back? Red Sox' patience with veteran has paid off
Is Trevor Story back? Red Sox' patience with veteran has paid off originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston
The Boston Red Sox didn’t give up on Trevor Story, and the veteran shortstop has rewarded them for it with a scorching stretch at the plate.
Story has been one of the hottest hitters in MLB since the calendar flipped to June. In that span, the 32-year-old is slashing .315/.346/.567 with eight homers and 34 RBI in 33 games. His three-run blast in Tuesday’s win over his former team, the Colorado Rockies, gave him four homers and 16 RBI with a 1.277 OPS over his last 10 games.
Story’s surge has proven that the Red Sox were right to stay patient throughout his brutal slump. We pondered the possibility of designating the two-time All-Star for assignment after he went 9-for-78 (.115) with one homer, four RBI, and a .332 OPS in 19 games from April 22 to May 15. With top infield prospect Marcelo Mayer looming, Story’s underwhelming tenure with Boston appeared to be nearing an unceremonious end.
Now, Story leads the Red Sox in batting average (.313), hits (30), homers (seven), RBI (24), runs scored (19), and stolen bases (four) over the last 30 days. He and Cincinnati Reds phenom Elly De La Cruz are the only MLB shortstops with at least 15 homers and 55 RBI this season, and Story has one fewer RBI (57) than Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani.
This is the first season that Story has stayed healthy since he signed his six-year deal with the Red Sox in 2022. He has played in 89 of 93 games, nearly matching his total production in his previous three years with the club (163 games).
He needs only 54 more hits, six homers, and 33 RBI to match his total from 2022-24.
Story has gone from unplayable to unstoppable, and the Red Sox need him in the lineup every day as they aim for their first postseason berth since 2021. So, what does that mean for Mayer?
Mayer has proven capable of playing third base at a high level, but Alex Bregman will soon reassume his role as the everyday third baseman when he returns from injury. That means the 22-year-old could shift over to second base, or he may be sent back down to Triple-A when Bregman is activated from the injured list. Mayer has struggled at the plate since his promotion — particularly against left-handed pitching — posting a .672 OPS with 34 strikeouts and six walks in 35 games.
The Red Sox might also look to sell high on Story ahead of the July 31 trade deadline, but they’re trending toward being buyers. They entered Wednesday on a five-game win streak and only one game back in the American League Wild Card race.
Story and the Red Sox will look to stay hot in Wednesday’s series finale against the Rockies at Fenway Park.
EA Sports ‘College Football 26’ predicts the 2025 season
Warriors, Kings NBA Emirates Cup groupings announced for 2025-26 season
Warriors, Kings NBA Emirates Cup groupings announced for 2025-26 season originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
The NBA Emirates Cup in-season tournament is back for its third season and the 2025 group draws were announced Wednesday.
Some basketball fans already are calling one West grouping the “Group of Death.”
The Warriors won Group C last season and find themselves in that same group for the 2025-26 season. The competition is stiff enough that teams have labeled it this year’s “Group of Death.”
Joining the Warriors in Group C are the Kevin Durant-led Houston Rockets, the Denver Nuggets, the San Antonio Spurs and the young Portland Trail Blazers.
The star-studded group boasts names like Steph Curry, Nikola Jokic and Victor Wembanyama, among others, and will be one for fans to keep an eye on.
As for the Kings, they’ll have their hands full in the West’s Group A, with the reigning NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder, the Minnesota Timberwolves, the Phoenix Suns and the Utah Jazz.
Sacramento did not fare as well in the 2024 NBA Cup, going just 1-3 during the four matchups, finishing dead last in their group.
The Kings will look to improve on their NBA Cup performance this season, but they’ll have a tough hill to climb against teams featuring 2024-25 MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Anthony Edwards and Devin Booker.
For the Thunder, they fell to the Milwaukee Bucks in last season’s NBA Cup championship before beating the Indiana Pacers in the NBA Finals in June.
The league implemented the NBA Cup in 2023 and it’s comprised of six groups – three Western Conference and three Eastern Conference — with five teams in each group.
The teams play four round-robin games, with the winner from each group and one wild card from each conference advancing to the knockout round.
The tournament tips off with “Cup Nights” every Friday, which begin on Oct. 31 and wrap up on Nov. 28. There will also be Cup games the week of Thanksgiving on Nov. 25, Nov. 26 and Nov. 28. Following group play, the semifinals and finals will take place in Las Vegas on Dec. 13 and 16, respectively.
While the schedule for the tournament isn’t out yet, we’re just a few short months away from some mid-season tournament basketball.
Spurs agree £54.5m deal to buy Mohammed Kudus from West Ham
Ghana attacker will sign six-year deal subject to medical
West Ham want at least six signings and must raise funds
Tottenham have reached an agreement to sign Mohammed Kudus from West Ham for £54.5m.
Kudus is due to undergo a medical on Thursday and will sign a six-year deal. The Ghana attacker will become the first player to leave West Ham for Spurs since Scott Parker in 2011.
Continue reading...Sham Yankees: MLB Suit Targets Alleged Counterfeiter With 5 Names
A man who goes by as many as five different names is accused in a new federal lawsuit of repeatedly selling counterfeit New York Yankees merchandise around Yankee Stadium.
MLB Advanced Media and MLB Properties contend that Jemal Dortch—who is also called Jamal Dortch, Jamal Wiggins, Jemal Wiggins and Jamaal Wiggins—is liable for trademark counterfeiting, trademark infringement and related claims. The case is detailed in a 34-page complaint filed on Tuesday in the Southern District of New York.
MLB Advanced Media and MLB Properties (hereinafter MLB) own and officially license various apparel and other products that feature among the more than 1,000 trademarks of MLB and its teams. As MLB tells it, Dortch has been a serial counterfeiter and infringer who has ignored “repeated warnings” to stop the distribution and selling of baseball caps, headwear and other products bearing MLB trademarks.
The complaint, authored by Robertson D. Beckerlegge and other attorneys from BakerHostetler, refers to undercover investigators hired by MLB to pose as buyers of merchandise outside of Yankee Stadium. MLB cites 18 separate examples of Dortch running afoul of the law between September 2022 and last month by selling counterfeit and infringing goods.
Despite being arrested or caught in the act by private investigators, Dortch doesn’t appear deterred by the consequences. He’s accused of simply trying again months, weeks, days or even hours after being caught.
For example, on Sept. 23, 2022, Dortch was arrested for trademark counterfeiting in connection with his distributing, offering for sale, and/or selling infringing goods. On April 1, 2023, Dortch was arrested again for the same offense. On July 7, 2024, Dortch was observed selling caps bearing Yankees logos. MLB then served Dortch with a cease-and-desist letter and he agreed to surrender 56 counterfeit Yankees caps.
But a couple of weeks later, he was observed engaged in the same activity, leading to another cease-and-desist letter and him surrendering more than two dozen counterfeit Yankees caps and hats.
MLB cites still other incidents that occurred closer in time. On Aug. 24, 2024, Dortch surrendered 18 counterfeit Yankees caps and hats. A day later there were two separate incidents. In the first one he surrendered counterfeit Yankees caps, hats and t-shirts and later in the day he was spotted again. He then turned over more caps, hats and t-shirts.
The complaint’s inventory of incidents is extensive and includes surveillance photos.
MLB highlights that the sale of counterfeit goods is likely to “cause confusion and mistake in the minds of the purchasing public.” Some consumers might wrongly believe they’re buying officially licensed products. MLB also points out its intellectual property and goodwill are harmed since its trademarks stand for “the reputation for quality” that officially licensed products demand.
Among the demanded remedies, MLB wants a permanent injunction to block Dortch from selling any “any reproduction, counterfeit, copy or colorable imitation of the MLB Trademarks to identify any goods or the rendering of any services not authorized.” The league also demands that Dortch be barred from “making any statement or representation whatsoever” that could induce consumers into believing he’s selling legit items. The destruction or “otherwise dealing with the unauthorized products” is also demanded, as is a requirement that Dortch supply MLB “with the name and address of each person or entity from whom or from which it has purchased any item bearing the MLB Trademarks.” In addition, MLB wants Dortch’s profits and other financial compensation as well as total sales figures for any sales of unauthorized MLB items.
The case has been assigned to U.S. District Judge Loretta A. Preska, who has presided over several high-profile cases over the years. In the late 1990s, Preska was the judge for the defamation lawsuit brought by wrongly accused Olympic Park bombing suspect Richard Jewell against the New York Post. That litigation settled out of court.
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EXCLUSIVE: Jack Eichel Talks Summer Vacation, Starting Camp With Newest Knight Mitch Marner
LAS VEGAS -- Golden Knights star Jack Eichel knows what it means to leave an organization and city that brought you into the NHL, and then having to start over in a brand-new city.
Which is why the 2015 second overall pick is more than willing to lend a hand with the newest Golden Knight, Mitch Marner, who arrived last week via a sign-and-trade deal with the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Marner, an area native of Toronto, was taken by the Maple Leafs two picks after Eichel in the same draft.
"Having went through the situation of leaving an organization in the city and having a fresh start in Vegas, I think I can relate, to a point, to some of the things he's going through," Eichel said. "I think he's obviously had his own situation, and however that ended, I'm sure he's super excited to have a fresh start and be in a place like Vegas, and I know he'll excel.
"I'm looking forward to continuing to get to know him and then getting the opportunity to play with him."
Eichel spoke to The Hockey News via phone call Tuesday, discussing the Marner acquisition, his summer vacation on the East Coast, preparation for the 2025-26 campaign, and looking forward to returning with a fresh mindset in September.
During the "Leaf Morning Take" podcast, Vegas coach Bruce Cassidy said it's hard to predict if Eichel and Marner will end up on the same line, but he is looking forward to seeing the two when camp opens in September.
"There needs to be chemistry, first of all," Cassidy said. "And there might be some automatically, and there might be none, you never know. They're going to get an opportunity at some point, whether it's early on or later, to play together. Because you want to see what it looks like.
"Mark Stone was up there with Jack last year, pretty good hockey player, right? So we have (Tomas) Hertl, we have (William) Karlsson, so (Marner's) going to get a good center, and what's the best fit where he can play his game? I'll say this about Jack and Mitch, they're probably both distributors first, so it'll be interesting to see if they do play together. And I'm sure they will in situations, even if they're not in the same line, and see how that works out if one of them becomes more of a shooter. But those questions will all get answered as we go along."
Said Eichel: "Obviously, incredible signing in addition to our team, world-class player and somebody whose game I really admire and respect. Somebody who can create so much and do so much in different areas of the game. Had some brief conversations with Mitch, and everyone that I've spoken to that knows him, that's been around him, has the best of things to say about him. So we're super excited to have him in Vegas."
With training camp still a couple of months out, Eichel said his summer vacation at home in Massachusetts has been nothing short of relaxing.
"It's been good," he said. "I mean, it's always nice to be able to come home and see some friends and some family and catch up.
"Obviously, the season is a whirlwind and you're constantly in the mode of preparing for the next game and trying to put your efforts towards winning hockey. In the offseason, I think it's just a little bit of a mental reset, given the time and demand of the season. Give your body a rest, and then get back to training and figure out what you want to try and do to improve yourself and come back in good shape."
Outside of spending time with family and friends, breathing in life off the ice, Eichel said he hasn't done anything special or out of the ordinary in the gym during the offseason, but has stuck to a regimen that will have him ready for the start of camp in September.
"I think it's about being consistent and then obviously finding ways or things that you want to try and improve on in your body, and something that will help you respond better on the ice," he said. "So, for me, it's always been the simple things. You want to lift weights, you want to try and get some running in, obviously keep your conditioning and cardio at a good point, and just try and give yourself the opportunity to feel as good as you can on the ice. I don't really think that there's necessarily a special sauce. It's more so, for me, about consistency."
Eichel is coming off his best season, which saw him register career-bests in points (94) and assists (66). The 28-year-old earned his fourth All-Star bid, and finished fifth in voting for both the Hart and Selke awards.
He also finished third in the voting for the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy, presented each year to the "player adjudged to have exhibited the best type of sportsmanship and gentlemanly conduct combined with a high standard of playing ability."
His high character has been on display this week, with time dedicated toward community outreach, beginning Monday with Vegas coach Bruce Cassidy's second annual Cassidy Murray Golf Classic.
The event benefits the Cassidy Murray Foundation, named in honor of 13-year-old Cassidy Murray, who was killed in a water accident in Aruba in 2022. Cassidy Murray and Bruce Cassidy’s teenage daughter, Shannon, were classmates and best friends.
On Tuesday, the star center was in Vermont, making an appearance at a hockey camp.
Saturday, the fan favorite will captain a squad of current and former Golden Knights in the Battle For Vegas charity softball event at Las Vegas Ballpark.
Later this month his JE9 Hockey Camp will be held at City National Arena.
With most of the components in place and the Knights signing players almost daily, questions continue to revolve around a contract extension that could make Eichel the highest-paid player in franchise history.
Eichel, who helped deliver Vegas its first Stanley Cup in 2023, said it's the last thing he's worried about while enjoying his summer vacation.
"Obviously, happy in Vegas, the organization has been great to me," Eichel said. "I think that that stuff kind of takes care of itself, and I kind of worry more so about the things I can control and try to prepare for next season."
Knicks not adding Pelicans assistant James Borrego to Mike Brown's coaching staff
While the staff working alongside new Knicks head coach Mike Brown has yet to be finalized, there's one league assistant the team can cross off its wish list.
According to SNY NBA Insider Ian Begley, the Knicks won't be poaching Pelicans associate head coach James Borrego, who was among the candidates who interviewed for the head coaching position last month. The 47-year-old assistant will remain in New Orleans, where he's held in high regard and under contract.
Borrego joined the NBA's coaching ranks back in 2003, and served as an assistant with the Spurs for seven years. He then worked in assistant roles with the Hornets (2010-12), Magic (2012-15), and Spurs again (2015-18) before landing his first head coaching job with the Hornets in 2018. He was fired after the 2021-22 season with a 138-163 overall record.
Brown's tenure with the Knicks officially began on Tuesday, as he laid out his vision for a roster with championship goals in a wide-open Eastern Conference.
“Nobody has any bigger expectations, first of all, than I do. My expectations are high,” Brown said during his introductory news conference. “This is the Knicks… I love and embrace the expectations that come along with it... I’m looking forward to putting a plan in place and working with those guys on both ends of the floor, I love their length, I love their versatility."
Pelicans associate head coach James Borrego, a Knicks target for a lead spot on Mike Brown’s staff, will be staying in New Orleans, per league sources familiar with the matter. Knicks interviewed Borrego for their head coaching position and had interest in adding him to Brown’s…
— Ian Begley (@IanBegley) July 9, 2025
Mike Brown on coaching Knicks: 'Nobody has bigger expectations… than I do'
Expectations are sky-high around the Knicks — the team just fired the coach who led it to its first Eastern Conference Finals in a quarter century. That sets the bar at finals-or-bust high for his replacement.
Mike Brown leaned into that at his introductory press conference.
"Nobody has bigger expectations, first of all, than I do," Brown said at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday. "My expectations are high. This is the Knicks. I talked about Madison Square Garden being iconic. I talked about our fans. I love and embrace the expectations that come along with it. I'm looking forward to it."
There are reasons Brown won out on a long and winding coaching search. First and foremost, he's a good coach. Brown is a two-time NBA Coach of the Year who led the LeBron-era Cleveland Cavaliers to the Finals, and he was the coach who broke Sacramento's 16-year playoff drought. Second, he has coached stars before, including LeBron James and Kobe Bryant. However, reports out of New York suggest that what was the real selling point was Brown's collaborative nature, working with the front office and his assistant coaches. That was not the Thibodeau way, and it wore on Leon Rose and the Knicks' front office.
"I had great conversations with [Knicks' owner James] Dolan and, obviously, Leon and his group," Brown said. "My whole thing is that I want to form a partnership with (Leon). I want to do this together. It's impossible to do it on your own."
Brown takes over a roster that won 51 games and finished as the No. 3 seed in the East a season ago. Those Knicks had the fifth-best offense in the NBA behind Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns, but were also 14th in the league in defense. Brown is known as a defense-first coach, but then again, so was the fired Thibodeau — a coach can only do so much with the talent on hand, and the Knicks front office has not built a defensive juggernaut.
The question with the Knicks is less tactical — although Brown will want less isolation and more ball-and-player movement, remember he was Steve Kerr's lead assistant with the Warriors for a couple of titles — and more whether having a different voice in the locker room is the key. Do the Knicks just need a change?
"I thought what this group did this past year in the playoffs, it just shows their potential, not just defensively but offensively, too," Brown said at his press conference. "I'm looking forward to putting a plan in place and working with those guys on both ends of the floor... Implementing my vision is very exciting for me and, hopefully, it is for everyone else. I think the ceiling is high on both ends for the group."
Brown and the Celtics need to reach that ceiling — the expectations he walks into are that high.
Lane Lambert – A Look Back on the New Kraken Head Coach's Playing Career
Many Seattle Kraken fans are excited to get to know Lane Lambert, the coach, for this upcoming NHL season, but did you know that Lambert had a lengthy career as a right-handed center in his playing days? Let's take a look at Lane Lambert, the player, before we get a chance to see Lane Lambert, the coach, in the next few months.
Lambert was born in Melfort, Saskatchewan in Canada in 1964. He began his junior career in 1980 with the Swift Current Broncos of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League, scoring 97 points in 55 games. After that standout season, he signed to play in the Western Hockey League with the Saskatoon Blades notching an impressive 237 points in 136 games between two seasons. Lambert was also was very familiar with the penalty box, serving a total of 237 penalty minutes in those two years.
The Detroit Red Wings selected Lambert in the 2nd round of the 1983 NHL Draft. The 25th overall pick shared the draft stage with Hall-of-Famers such as Pat LaFontaine, Cam Neely, and Steve Yzerman. In addition, fellow head coach Bruce Cassidy, who is currently the head coach of the Vegas Golden Knights, was also drafted in 1983, by the Chicago Blackhawks.
Lambert Immediately started playing for the Red Wings in the fall of 1983, where he spent two full and one partial seasons. In his Red Wings tenure, he scored 65 points (36 goals and 29 assists). Lambert also racked up 349 penalty minutes in 176 games, mostly due to fighting. In his first three NHL seasons, he dropped the gloves a total of 37 times.
The 1986-87 season saw Lambert start on the New York Rangers roster, playing only 18 games, before being traded to the Quebec Nordiques where he played the remainder of the season and until 1989. In his time with the Nordiques, he recorded 55 points and 139 penalty minutes in 89 total games. 1989 would be the last season that Lambert would play in the NHL.
Between 1989 and 1996, Lambert played overseas primarily in Germany for Duesseldorf EG and Switzerland for Ajoie HC and Langnau SC, with an additional 58 games for the Canadian National Team.
From 1996 and 2001, Lambert played the remainder of his pro career in the International Hockey League, splitting time with the Cleveland Lumberjacks and Houston Aeros. In 1999, he helped the Aeros win the Turner Cup which was the IHL championship trophy at the time. Once he was done playing, he quickly turned to coaching, starting as an assistant coach with the WHL's Moose Jaw Warriors in 2002.
Even though Lambert is well past his playing days, he still has quite a bit in the tank as a coach. We look forward to seeing the energy and competitiveness he brings to the bench this upcoming season as the Kraken look to rebound from last year.
Related
Lambert featured photo by - via hockeydb.com
Lambert hero photo by - via Detroit Free Press
Who will make College Football Playoff? EA Sports College Football 26 simulates season
NHL Prospect Pool Overview ’25-26: Yes, The Colorado Avalanche Actually Have One
The Colorado Avalanche are today’s focus in an NHL off-season series examining each team’s prospect pool.
Tony Ferrari digs into the Avalanche’s strengths and weaknesses, latest draft class, positional depth chart and next player in line for an NHL opportunity. A player who no longer holds rookie eligibility in the NHL is considered graduated and no longer a prospect for these exercises.
Initial Thoughts
I’m not going to sugarcoat things. The Avalanche have one of the most barren prospect pools in all of hockey.
They traded their one high-end prospect at the deadline this past year when they acquired Brock Nelson, sending Calum Ritchie to the New York Islanders. They recently acquired Gavin Brindley in a trade that saw Charlie Coyle and Miles Wood head to the Columbus Blue Jackets. That helped, but it’s not nearly enough.
Brindley is a fantastic middle-six prospect who brings a high-end motor and some impressive skill. He’s always been questioned because of his stature, but he’s never let that get in the way of his ability to make a positive impact. He struggled in his first full AHL season, but he was constantly using his speed and tenacity to get involved. His style of play should fit right in with the Avs’ top players.
Oskar Olausson’s time to prove himself is getting shorter, as the speedy Swede hasn’t found his footing in the AHL. The 22-year-old has shown himself to be an excellent transition player and a decent playmaker, but he hasn’t found a way to consistently impact the game offensively. Olausson is a good shooter, skilled passer and a decisive puckhandler. He has all of the tools, but he hasn’t figured out how to leverage them in the North American game.
The Avalanche have a bit more promise on the back end.
Mikhail Gulyayev is a potential impact player, with high-end skating and some nice puck-moving as a passer. Gulyayev plays the game with a ton of speed, and he could be a valuable depth offensive blueliner for the Avs one day. His KHL contract runs through this season so we could see him make the jump at the end of the year. His defensive game needs a bit of work, but he’s a fun player to watch.
One of the Avs’ most promising defensive prospects, Sean Behrens, missed all of this past season with a knee injury he suffered during a practice scrimmage in October. Behrens has been a very successful defender who plays a sound two-way game and uses his skating to take the puck away. A healthy season will go a long way, but we may not see Behrens at full strength until the latter half of the season.
Tory Pitner played his freshman season at the University of Denver and registered just one assist, but his game has always been centered on the defensive side of the puck. His best shifts are when the opposing team can’t get anything going, and Pitner closes lanes down and uses an intelligent stick to kill momentum. He’s not a fun player to watch, but coaches love a no-nonsense defender.
2025 NHL Draft Class
Round 3, 77th overall - Francesco Dell'Elce, D, UMass-Amherst (NCAA)
Round 4, 118th overall - Linus Funck, D, Lulea Jr. (Swe.)
Round 7, 214th overall - Nolan Roed, C, Tri-City (USHL)
In the third round, Colorado picked Francesco Dell’Elce, a 20-year-old defender from UMass. He had a unique path, going from prep school in his original draft year to the BCHL and then the NCAA this past season. Dell’Elce has always had an offensive touch, using his skating to escape and open lanes against forecheckers, but he’s never been truly elite, which has held him back. The Avalanche made an interesting swing on a late bloomer.
In the fourth round, Colorado took a bet on a big, Swedish blueliner who has shown some flashes of puckhandling and passing ability that could translate to the next level. In Funck’s own end, he is more of a stick-checker than a player who takes the body. He dislodges the puck, jumps on it and makes a quick first pass. He isn’t quite dynamic enough to be a big offensive performer, but he has the tools to be a solid, defensively focused transition defender.
After splitting 2023-24 between high school and the United States League, Nolan Roed garnered some NHL attention as a draft-plus-one forward who put up almost a point per game for the Tri-City Storm. He’s heading to St. Cloud State next season, and his game will be tested there. His offense comes from being an off-puck complementary player to his linemates. Roed times play well and gets into pockets at the right moment. It will be interesting to see how his NCAA campaign goes in the fall.
Strengths
Most teams have at least one area of strength. The Avalanche have a couple of nice prospects, but calling any one position or any group of prospects a true strength is being too optimistic.
For the most part, Colorado’s best prospects play Avs-style hockey. Brindley, Gulyayev and Olausson are all high-pace speedy players. Having a type and sticking to it is important. The Avalanche, at the very least, do that when they can.
Weaknesses
While you could realistically say everything is a weakness, the Avs don’t have any players who realistically have a chance of playing center at the next level.
A few players are listed as centers, but they are long shots to play, and if they do, they’ll likely move to the wing. Max Curran, Christian Humphreys and Nolan Roed are all potentially centers, but the upside is quite low.
The Avs have no centers in the system if we're being blunt. Losing Ritchie at the deadline in March took away their top prospect and their lone center prospect.
Hidden Gem: Mikhail Gulyayev, D
Just about every prospect in the Avalanche’s pipeline could be considered a hidden gem, but Gulyayev plays in the KHL, and he doesn’t get the love some of the top players from that league get because he doesn’t rack up an insane amount of points. That said, he’s a gifted skater and a puck-mover. The Avs thrive with defenders who can make plays on the back end and evade pressure. Gulyayev might be the next man up in that line.
Next Man Up: Gavin Brindley, RW
Colorado doesn’t have anyone who is immediately ready to jump into the lineup, but Brindley could make the most immediate impact if he’s called up. His speed and energy could bring some value to the bottom six, or he could be used in spots in the top six. He has the requisite skill, but he just needs a bit of time to adjust after a middling AHL rookie year. Brindley has the highest upside of any forward they have in the system, but that doesn’t mean he’s ready to jump into the NHL.
Prospect Depth Chart Notables
LW: Nikita Prishchepov, Christian Humphreys, Cooper Gay, Chase Bradley, Taylor Makar
C: Max Curran, Nolan Roed
RW: Gavin Brindley, Oskar Olausson
LD: Sean Behrens, Mikhail Gulyayev, Francesco Dell’Elce, Saige Weinstein,
RD: Tory Pitner, Linus Funck, Nikita Ishimnikov
G: Ilya Nabokov, Ivan Yunin, Louka Cloutier
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.
Red Sox ‘monitoring' Twins pitcher ahead of trade deadline: Report
Red Sox ‘monitoring' Twins pitcher ahead of trade deadline: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston
The Boston Red Sox must upgrade their starting pitching if they hope to stay in the postseason hunt. It appears the Craig Breslow-led front office is already doing its due diligence with the 2025 MLB trade deadline looming.
On Wednesday, Jon Morosi of MLB Network named the Red Sox as one of the teams “monitoring” Minnesota Twins right-hander Joe Ryan as a potential trade candidate.
“They could be a buy-and-sell posture with a focus on adding a longer-term arm to the starting rotation,” Morosi said of the Red Sox. “And the man that the Red Sox and a number of teams in the Major Leagues are monitoring, at least right now, (is) Joe Ryan of the Minnesota Twins. Ryan has been excellent so far this season. … I think he’s one of the best starting pitchers in the American League and he’s only getting better.”
Shortly after mentioning Ryan as a Red Sox trade target, Morosi noted that Minnesota will “need to be out of the AL postseason picture and completely overwhelmed by an offer” to part ways with the 29-year-old. The Twins are currently 14 games back in the AL Central and four games back in the Wild Card race.
Ryan is in the midst of the best season of his five-year MLB career. Through 18 games (17 starts), he boasts a 2.76 ERA and 0.89 WHIP with 116 strikeouts and 21 walks in 104.1 innings. He would immediately slot in as a rock-solid No. 2 starter in the rotation behind ace Garrett Crochet.
As Morosi mentions, Ryan will be costly as a frontline starter under team control through 2027. But if the Red Sox are serious about contending, they’ll have to get uncomfortable and part ways with some of their prized prospects to bring in proven MLB talent. Breslow showed his willingness to trade highly-touted prospects for pitching in the offseason when he sent catcher Kyle Teel to the Chicago White Sox for Crochet.
Perhaps the Red Sox would sweeten the trade package by including 2024 All-Star Game MVP Jarren Duran. Boston’s outfield logjam with the emergence of MLB’s No. 1 prospect Roman Anthony has made Duran the subject of trade rumors ahead of the deadline.
“Jarren Duran posts,” Morosi added. “And not to necessarily say that this would be the deal, Ryan for Duran, but the Twins (are) a team that has needed guys that post consistently.
“Duran would fit very nicely for the long term in a lineup like what the Twins have. I’m not putting two and two together and getting 10, but these are just scenarios where the Red Sox, when you’ve already traded Rafael Devers, what’s one more consistent, everyday player who’s been an All-Star in the past in Jarren Duran?”
The 2025 MLB trade deadline is set for 6 p.m. ET on July 31.