Four Penguins Prospects To Watch At The 2025 Prospects Challenge

The Pittsburgh Penguins released their Prospects Challenge roster for this weekend's games in Buffalo on Wednesday.

The roster is headlined by 2025 first-rounder Ben Kindel, 2024 second-rounder Harrison Brunicke, 2022 fourth-rounder Sergei Murashov, 2022 first-rounder Owen Pickering, and 2021 first-rounder Ville Koivunen, who came over in the Jake Guentzel trade and made his NHL debut back in March.

Pickering also made his NHL debut this past season and appeared in 25 games, compiling one goal and three points. 

This is an excellent opportunity for each prospect to keep developing since the 2025-26 season is just around the corner. With that in mind, let's look at four prospects that fans should have their eyes on during these games. 

Jun 27, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Benjamin Kindel is selected as the 11th overall pick to the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft at Peacock Theater. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Ben Kindel

Kindel is one of three prospects that the Penguins selected in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft. He was taken with the 11th overall pick in the draft, and he has a lot of skill. He was one of the best players in the WHL last year, finishing with 35 goals and 99 points in 64 games. 

Kindel has a great release and doesn't need a lot of time to utilize it. He also showed improvement as a playmaker and has a great motor. He can really win the 1v1 battles along the boards and has a strong Hockey IQ. 

He isn't ready for the NHL right now and will go back to the Calgary Hitmen for another season, but this is a perfect chance for him to show that he is arguably the top prospect in the Penguins' system. 

Quinn Beauchesne

Beauchesne was picked in the fifth round of the 2025 NHL Draft by the Penguins and showcased his strong skating ability as a defenseman last season with the Guelph Storm, compiling six goals and 24 points in 49 games. It was his second season with the Storm, and he'll return to them for a third season this year as an alternate captain.

He appeared at development camp back in July and also showcased his skating ability each day before the scrimmage took place on the final day. He created space each time he had the puck. 

The Penguins took four defensemen in the 2025 NHL Draft, and there's a chance Beauchesne has the highest ceiling of them all if he keeps developing. 

Penguins Announce Prospects Challenge Roster, McGroarty OutPenguins Announce Prospects Challenge Roster, McGroarty OutOn Wednesday, the Pittsburgh Penguins announced their rosters for the 2025 Prospects Challenge in Buffalo, which takes place Sept. 11-15.

Kale Dach

Dach is the perfect under-the-radar player for fans to watch this weekend. He was picked in the seventh round of the 2025 NHL Draft and lit up the BCHL last season, finishing with 22 goals and 87 points in 54 games. 

He will take things up a notch this season when he plays for the WHL's Calgary Hitmen with Ben Kindel. Those two will likely get quite a bit of ice time together this season, and fans could get a glimpse of that over the next few days. 

Dach has some raw offensive skill and even got to showcase some of it in the scrimmages during development camp. He had a nasty between-the-legs cross-ice pass for a good scoring chance, but the puck didn't find the back of the net. 

It's never a bad bet to take a late-round chance on a player who has some good traits. 

Sergei Murashov

Murashov is one of two goaltenders who will play with the other Penguins' prospects, joining Gabriel D'Aigle, who was selected in the third round of this year's draft. Murashov came over from Russia last year and was too good for the ECHL, finishing the season with a 2.40 goals-against average and a .922 save percentage in 26 games. 

He also got time with the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins and made history by winning his first 10 starts. It's the longest winning streak in WBS history for a goalie in his rookie season. He finished the year with a 2.64 goals-against average and a .913 save percentage.

The WBS starting goaltender job is wide open for this upcoming season, and he's going to do everything in his power to win it. He's not ready for the NHL yet, but his time is coming. The key is to make sure the Penguins don't rush his development. Murashov's side-to-side movement is excellent, and he actively challenges shooters at the top of the crease. 

We'll see how many of the three games he starts when the Penguins start playing on Friday, September 12.

Speaking of that, the Penguins will open the Prospects Challenge against the Boston Bruins on Friday at 5:30 p.m. ET before playing the Columbus Blue Jackets on Sunday, September 14, at 3:30 p.m. ET. They'll end the challenge against the Buffalo Sabres, who are hosting the tournament, on Monday, September 15, at Noon ET. 

All games will be available to watch on the Penguins' official website. 


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Mets Postgame Notes: Carlos Mendoza, Francisco Lindor on inconsistency as losing skid hits five

Here’s the reaction from the Mets’ locker room as their losing streak stretched to five after falling to the Phillies 11-3 on Wednesday night…


Why these skids seem to pile up

Carlos Mendoza: “I think some guys from the rotation are having a tough stretch. When you’re playing a lot of games in a row and you’re not getting decent length or decent outings it has a trickle down effect. That’s on the pitching staff, the at-bats, the game is obviously different. The there was times when where we get some starting pitching and the offense seems to cool down, we just haven’t been able to consistently put it together, the whole package.”

Francisco Lindor: “We haven’t been consistent. It's just one of those years that things haven’t clicked for a long time — in baseball you have ups and downs, those are guarantees, but you try to limit the downs and ride the highs as long as you can and for some reason it’s been a very wavy season. We are still in a position that we can make the year look completely different and everyone here is pushing towards that, fighting to try to get on that wave and ride it as long as we can. Baseball is a game of momentum and we haven’t been able to capitalize on the time we’ve had the momentum.” 

What it’s going to take to get out of this stretch

Mendoza: “26 guys pulling for each other. It’s not easy, I don’t know how many times we’ve gotten into streaks like this where nothing seems to be working for us, but again you have to stay positive, we’re still in control of the situation here. It’s not ideal where we’re at compared to the whole year, but like I said we just have to take it one game at a time, it starts on the mound obviously and then we’ll go from there.”

Lindor:“We just have to stay optimistic, fight for each other, and just play better. I have to play better, I haven’t gotten a hit in this series, and at this point in the year I have to get on-base and I have to help the team. Pete is having good at-bats, Nimmo is having good at-bats, Soto is having good at-bats. I have to be better for this team because like I said, at the end of the year it comes down to playing baseball the right way."

Another short outing from Holmes

After seemingly turning a corner, Clay Holmes' struggles have resurfaced over his past two outings. 

The right-hander was knocked around in the first and then couldn't work deep, allowing a total of four runs on six hits and three walks while striking out five across 4+ innings.

Despite the struggles, Mendoza says the team will stick with him in the rotation...

Holmes: "They got a little traffic there in the first and then that put us behind early and we really had to be perfect from there on out. I made a bad two-strike pitch to Bader there and then to two back-foot sliders just created the traffic, then two balls got through the infield and at that point we're playing from behind. These games can mean a lot, so we can't really afford to have those mistakes there."

Carlos Mendoza: "I said it yesterday with Sean [Manaea] and it's the same thing with Clay, we need those guys."

Kaprizov vs. McDavid: The $16 Million Question Shaking the NHL

One of the biggest storylines in the NHL took an interesting turn on Wednesday.

While the Edmonton Oilers wait on Connor McDavid to find out what it is exactly he needs to see to sign an extension with the team, Kirill Kaprizov, his closest comparable in terms of expected annual average salary, turned down $128 million from the Minnesota Wild. 

Reports are that Kaprizov turned down an eight-year deal for $16 million per season. That would have put him right beside McDavid's rumored ballpark number on an extension, and it's more money than insiders were projecting Kaprizov would get.

Much like the Oilers don't really know why McDavid is hesitating in signing his contract, the Wild are trying to find out what Kaprizov is looking for. 

Michael Russo of The Athletic writes:

"They need to determine if this is agent Paul Theofanous playing hardball because he thinks more money than $16 million is waiting in free agency for Kaprizov next summer, or if this is the beginning of the end of Kaprizov in Minnesota. Either way, the decision will be pivotal in determining the path of this franchise for the next decade."
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If Kaprizov wants money and the Wild give in, what will that mean for McDavid and other top-end elite NHL talent set to hit free agency?

It's a $16 million question that no one can seem to answer. 

Perhaps this Kaprizov news means nothing when it comes to McDavid. After all, these two superstars might not be looking at what the other is making when it comes to negotiating their respective deals. Both are elite-level talents, and their motivations and situations are different. 

At the same time, that's a lot of money for Kaprizov to turn down, and most would agree that McDavid holds more value on the open market than Kaprizov does. As good as the winger is, McDavid should be paid more. 

Kaprizov Is Looking For "Something" In His Next Deal

The most logical explanation for this Kaprizov shocker is that he a) wants a shorter term or b) wants to play elsewhere. 

Seravalli’s report has been contested by other sources, including Rob Reinhart, who called the story “completely fabricated." Other trusted reporters, like Russo, seem to think there's something to this, and he is about as connected as anyone when it comes to the Wild. He believes this could get nasty if the Wild can't uncover what's motivating Kaprizov. Russo said, "If Kaprizov won’t entertain a contract extension by the Wild, it could be incumbent on Guerin to get a handful of teams Kaprizov would consider a trade to."

Did Kirill Kaprizov turn down $16 million per season over eight years from the Wild? Photo By: 

© Sergei Belski Imagn Images

Wild GM Bill Guerin said the two sides are still talking and played down the urgency of the negotiations, taking what appears to be a sideways turn. He said later in the day on Wednesday, "I know two things: that info didn’t come from us, and it didn’t come from Kirill’s agent. I don’t know where it came from."

McDavid Is Still Contemplating His Next Move

The potential $16 million mark is notable because it is right in line with what many insiders thought McDavid might be making on his next contract.  The Oilers' captain is currently taking his time to go through his process, figure out what he wants to do with an extension, and then he'll sign, if and when he's ready to. 

Is Connor McDavid Prepared To Shake Up The Entire NHL?Is Connor McDavid Prepared To Shake Up The Entire NHL?Connor McDavid’s pending contract with the Edmonton Oilers is more than just a story about one player's tough decision and how it will affect him and his family. This is potentially a story about the dominoes that fall after McDavid makes his extension preference clear.

Like the Wild, the Oilers say they aren't panicking. They're being patient and believe it's less about money for McDavid. He wants to win, and it sounds like he's willing to take less to do so, assuming he feels confident the Oilers will be good beyond this season and for many seasons after that.

McDavid knows that to build a contender, he's going to need to leave a little on the table. Some thought he might take less than $16 million to ensure the Oilers could add other pieces. 

One has to wonder if this Kaprizov news will make McDavid wonder if $16 million is too big a discount. 

Meanwhile, other big-name unrestricted free agents across the league are waiting and watching McDavid’s negotiations closely before making long-term commitments.

How Will This Impact the NHL's Top Tier Salaries?

Even without waiting to see McDavid’s final contract, Kaprizov seems prepared to push Minnesota to the limits to maximize his earning potential. If he refuses to sign, the team could be forced to explore trade options to avoid losing their star for nothing.

“Is This Real?” Insider Says McDavid’s Comments Has NHL on Alert

Frankly, if Kaprizov doesn't think $16 million is enough, the Wild have a choice to make. And, if they budge and pay him more than that, what is the domino effect across the league?

Will McDavid wonder if $16 million is enough if Kaprizov makes more? Photo by: 

© Bob Frid Imagn Images

If the NHL salary cap rises to $120 million within a few years, Kaprizov could theoretically command upwards of $20 - $24 million per season, making any $16 million deal today appear comparatively modest. Is this the kind of thing that is also running through McDavid's mind? 

Is this what players like Jack Eichel, Kyle Connor, Artemi Panarin, and others are thinking?

Once Kaprizov or McDavid sets the market, it becomes the marker for agents and players to start negotiating. 

And, if for some reason McDavid winds up going to market, teams that just heard Kaprizov turned down $128 million now know they'll need to pony up and make a ton of cap space available for a player who is better and should be paid more in McDavid. 

People thought $16 might be the high mark. That appears to no longer be the case. 

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New York Yankees hold moment of silence for conservative activist Charlie Kirk after his death

Sep 10, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; A general view of the main scoreboard at Yankee Stadium during a moment of silence for Charlie Kirk before the game between the New York Yankees and the Detroit Tigers. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images
The Yankees honored Charlie Kirk with a moment of silence on Wednesday. (Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images)
IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / Reuters

The New York Yankees held a moment of silence ahead of their 11-1 loss to the Detroit Tigers on Wednesday night to honor Charlie Kirk, a conservative activist who was shot and killed in Utah earlier in the day.

Kirk, a right-wing talk show host and the founder of “Turning Point USA,” was speaking at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, on Wednesday when he was shot in the neck. He was transported to a local hospital, where he was later pronounced dead. He was 31.

The shooting is still under investigation, and officials have not yet arrested the alleged assailant. Further specifics are not yet known.

Kirk is a Chicago-area native and a noted Cubs fan. It’s unclear if he has any connection to the Yankees. President Donald Trump, whom Kirk repeatedly campaigned for and supported, is set to attend the Yankees’ game against the Tigers at Yankee Stadium on Thursday, which is the 24th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Yankees offense, bullpen spoil Carlos Rodon's quality start in 11-1 loss to Tigers

The Yankees mustered just one run while the bullpen allowed nine runs in New York's 11-1 loss to the Tigers at Yankee Stadium on Wednesday night.

New York has dropped the first two games of their series with Detroit after scoring a combined three runs. After the Blue Jays' loss to the Astros earlier in the evening, the Yankees remain 3.0 games behind Toronto in the AL East race.

Here are the takeaways...

-Carlos Rodon was on the mound, searching for his career-best 17th win of the season but he was in for a fight with fellow starter Jack Flaherty in this one. Rodon was pitch-efficient, allowing just two hits through the first four innings on just above 60 pitches. But the Tigers threatened after a one-out single and walk put two runners on. Rodon hit Javier Baez with a pitch to load the bases but struck out Jahmai Jones swinging to bring up Gleyber Torres. The former Yankee lined a 3-2 fastball in front of Trent Grisham in center to drive in two for Detroit. The Yankees' southpaw struck out Wenceel Perez swinging to get out of further trouble. 

Rodon was very good, with just the one inning marring his line. The lefty allowed two runs in six innings (102 pitches/66 strikes), on five hits, one walk and six strikeouts. 

-The Yankees bullpen, after allowing 10 runs in Tuesday's series opener, was not much better. Mark Leiter Jr, fresh off of allowing four runs without recording an out, gave up back-to-back singles to start the seventh. He then bounced a ball in the dirt that got stuck in catcher Austin Wells' chest protector, which was ruled a wild pitch. Leiter struck out Kerry Carpenter before being pulled for Camilo Doval. Doval got Torres to ground out, but the runner on third would score. 

Doval would start the eighth, and after a leadoff single, Riley Greene took the right-hander deep to put the Tigers up 5-0. After picking up an out, Dillon Dingler doubled and advanced to third on a Cody Bellinger error in left field. Doval was lifted for Tim Hill, who allowed a single up the middle to allow the sixth run of the game. Two batters later, and Carpenter launched a two-out, two-run homer to put up a five-spot in the eighth. 

Even Luke Weaver struggled, allowing three runs on three hits, capped off by a two-run homer from pinch-hitter Colt Keith. With the score ballooned to 11-1, outfielder Austin Slater came in to finish off the top half of the ninth. Slater allowed a hit but got the final two outs to mercifully get the game to the bottom of the ninth.

-On the other side, Flaherty kept the Yankees down through five innings, allowing just two hits and one walk. While not as efficient as Rodon, the Tigers' right-hander made pitches when needed to get outs, including seven strikeouts. Flaherty would pitch five shutout innings on 99 pitches (57 strikes). 

-The Yankees offense was a no-show. Aaron Judge went 0-for-3 with a strikeout and grounded into two inning-ending double plays. Giancarlo Stanton, playing in right field, went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts.

The only run came on a Wells solo shot in the eighth inning. The backstop went 1-for-4. 

Jose Caballero got the start in place of the struggling Anthony Volpe. The shortstop went 1-for-3 with a strikeout, but made some impressive plays on defense. 

Game MVP: Tigers pitching

Whether it was Flaherty or the bullpen, Detroit's pitching held down the Yankees bats for a second consecutive game.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees and Tigers complete their three-game set on Thursday evening. First pitch is set for 7:05 p.m.

Cam Schlittler (2-3, 3.24 ERA) will take the mound. Detroit has yet to announce a starter. 

Silver has broad powers to punish Clippers, says he'd be reluctant to at 'mere appearance of impropriety'

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said he has broad powers that could be wielded to punish the Los Angeles Clippers and owner Steve Ballmer if it is proven that they circumvented the salary cap to get Kawhi Leonard more money through an endorsement deal with a team sponsor. However, he also said he would be reluctant to use that power for the "mere appearance of impropriety."

Mostly, Silver sounded like a cautious, patient lawyer when speaking after the NBA's Board of Governors meeting on Wednesday.

"I'm a big believer in due process and fairness, and we need to now let the investigation run its course," Silver said.

When asked about possible punishments the Clippers could face if it is proven the franchise knowingly circumvented the salary cap, Silver sounded like a man who understands he has a hammer to bring down.

"My powers are very broad," Silver said. "Full range of financial penalties — draft picks, suspensions, et cetera. I have very broad powers in these situations."

However, sounded cautious about using that hammer. While the NBA's Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) says a case for cap circumvention can be based on circumstantial evidence — which is all that is public right now, although there is a flood of it — Silver sounded like a lawyer who wants something more concrete.

"We and our investigators look at the totality of the evidence... I would be reluctant to act if there was sort of a mere appearance of impropriety," Silver said. "I think that the goal of a full investigation is to find out if there really was impropriety."

The Clippers and Ballmer have vehemently denied any impropriety, Ballmer saying he was "dupped" by the company Aspiration and its CEO Joe Sanberg (who has pled guilty to bilking investors of $248 million).

The appearance of impropriety in this case is still pretty damning. In early August of 2021, Ballmer made a personal investment of $50 million in Aspiration, a "green bank" company planting trees to gain carbon credits they could sell to clients. A couple of weeks later, Leonard signed a four-year, $176 million max contract extension with the Clippers. By the opening of Clippers training camp that year, Aspiration was a $300 million key sponsor of the Clippers, as Ballmer was building the Intuit Dome and had made a priority of making it a green building. A couple of months later, Leonard formed an LLC and, through that, signed a $28 million endorsement deal with Aspiration. This deal eventually grew to $48 million after a later $20 million stock deal (stock that is now worthless as the company went bankrupt).

The core of the problem for the Clippers and Leonard is this: He did nothing, absolutely nothing, for this endorsement money. No appearances, marketing or advertising, not even a social media post. He got the money for nothing.

That all smells fishy, but proving that Ballmer and the Clippers knew about this or orchestrated it is a much higher bar. The original report from Pablo Torre and the Pablo Torre Finds Out podcast reported that there were seven people in the office who said they were told Leonard's endorsement deal was lined up to help the Clippers circumvent the salary cap. Okay, but investigators will want to know "told by whom?" and where did that person learn of it? What is the source of this knowledge, and is it verifiable?

There are too many coincidences here for this all to be random, but is it more likely that the Clippers orchestrated this, or that "Uncle Dennis" — Leonard's uncle and business manager, who had asked for “no show” endorsements before in Toronto — just worked this out with Aspiration, and the Clippers really did know nothing? Every option is on the table. All the existing evidence we know matters, but how much weight will Silver and the other owners give it?

"The answer is we're not a court of law at the end of the day, either," Silver said. "We have broad authority to look at all information and to weigh it accordingly."

Silver said that his cautious approach has been echoed by the other owners he has spoken to on the matter.

"At least what's being said to me is a reservation of judgment," Silver said. "I think people recognize that that's what you have a league office for. That's what you have a commissioner for, someone who is independent of the teams... At least what those governors have said directly to me, to the extent we have had discussions, they've been limited."

Some around the league feel, considering all that is already known, that there is a burden on the Clippers to prove they didn't put this together, or at least know about it. The NBA CBA suggests there is some burden on the Clippers. However, Silver said the burden of proof remains with the NBA and investigators.

"The burden is on the league if we’re going to discipline a team, an owner, a player or any constituent members of the league," Silver said. "I think as with any process that requires a fundamental sense of fairness, the burden should be on the party that is, in essence, bringing those charges."

It's possible that when all this ends, the NBA will realize its current system of oversight on player endorsements needs updating (something the NBA players' union would have strong opinions about). NBA owners may be hesitant to want to punish Ballmer if it sets a precedent where they could be in trouble if one of their sponsors goes rogue with a player. When asked about that oversight, Silver's patient, cautious side came to the front.

"Let's get through this investigation. We'll reassess," Silver said. "We'll see what happened here. Then we'll sit down both among our owners and then potentially with the Players Association because some of that is a function of collective bargaining, and see if there's additional things we need to do."

For now, Silver is willing to sit back and let the New York law firm of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz lead the investigation. What Silver does with that hammer he wields will depend on what the investigation finds.

Mets' losing streak reaches five games with 11-3 loss to Phillies

The Mets' offense stayed cold and their pitching struggles continued in an 11-3 loss to the Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday night at Citizens Bank Park.

New York (76-70) has now lost five games in a row, falling 10 games back in the NL East.

Here are some takeaways...

-- Clay Holmes struggled out of the gate, hitting Bryce Harper on the back of the foot to load the bases and giving up a RBI-single to J.T. Realmuto. After getting a strikeout, Holmes hit Max Kepler in nearly the exact same spot as Harper to walk in a run as the Phillies took a 2-0 lead. 

The right-hander avoided damage in the second despite letting up a one-out double to Harrison Bader. Holmes got in a little groove through the third and fourth innings, allowing just a single and a walk. The fifth inning was a different story -- the righty let up a leadoff single followed by a double to Brandon Marsh as the Phillies went up 3-1, ending his night after 76 pitches.

Overall, Holmes allowed four runs on six hits over four-plus innings with five strikeouts and three walks.

-- New York failed to capitalize after Juan Soto's one-out single against Cristopher Sánchez in the top of the first inning, as Mark Vientos and Pete Alonso both struck out. Sánchez kept it going and retired the next six Mets to breeze through the second and third innings.

-- In the fourth inning, Soto blasted what looked like would be a home run, but due to fan interference, resulted in a double. He moved to third on Alonso's single and scored on Starling Marte's single to left field as the Mets trailed, 2-1.  That's all the Mets would get on the board with Brandon Nimmo grounding into the double play.

-- Gregory Soto replaced Holmes with a runner on second and gave up a RBI-single to Kepler. The run was tacked on Holmes' line and made it a 4-1 game. Soto dialed in a retired the next three Phils, including back-to-back strikeouts. The left-hander couldn't stop the bleeding in the sixth inning, hitting two batters and letting two straight singles to Marsh and Kepler as the Phillies went up 7-1.

Ryne Stanek gave up a sac-fly and walk before ending the inning on a strikeout. Stanek surrendered another run in the seventh, a solo homer to Harper to make it a 9-1 game.

-- Soto got his homer in the eighth with a 410-foot shot, his 39th of the season, as the Mets trailed 9-2. Soto finished the night 3-for-4, combining with Marte (2-for-4) for five of the team's six hits prior to the ninth inning. New York recorded three straight hits against Lou Trivino with Brett Baty driving in a run to make it 11-3.

-- Ryan Helsley's struggles continued in the eighth, allowing two runs on three hits, including a homer to Kepler.

Game MVP: Max Kepler

Kepler finished his monster night 3-for-4 with five RBI.

Honorable mention: Sánchez, who gave up six runs against the Mets on Aug. 25, bounced back and dominated over six strong innings. He allowed one run on four hits with six strikeouts, lowering his season ERA to 2.57.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets and Phillies wrap up their four-game series on Thursday at 7:15 p.m. on FOX.

It'll be a battle of the left-handers, as David Peterson (9-5, 3.72 ERA) faces Jesús Luzardo (13-6, 4.01 ERA).

Red Wings Lose Second Minor Leaguer To New Opportunity

A pair of depth players have departed the Detroit Red Wings organization in as many days to seek other opportunities. 

Just as 2020 Draft selection forward Cross Hanas (55th overall, 2nd round, 24th pick) signed a professional tryout agreement with the Dallas Stars, defenseman Brogan Rafferty (undrafted, signed as a UFA in July 2023) has also departed.

The West Dundee, Illinois native has taken his career overseas and signed a two-year contract with the Vaxjo Lakers of the Swedish Hockey League.

He was highly regarded by the club as evidenced by comments made by Vaxjo general manager Henrik Evertsson, saying that the team had coveted him for some time. 

“Brogan is a defender we have had our eye on for a few years,” he said. “With his exceptionally good passing game, he fits really well into our style of play."

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Rafferty was never drafted into the NHL, and instead officially entered the League when he was signed by the Vancouver Canucks in 2019 to a one-year entry level contract.

He had previously played for the Quinnipiac University Bobcats, and was also extended a pair of invitations by the Chicago Blackhawks and New York Rangers as a Training Camp invitee, though he ultimately fell short of claiming a roster spot with both clubs. 

Following a stint with the Coachella Valley Firebirds, the American Hockey League affiliate of the Seattle Kraken, Rafferty signed with the Red Wings as a free agent with a two-year, two-way contract in July 2023. 

He spent the majority of his time with the Grand Rapids Griffins, scoring 13 goals with 16 assists in 62 games in his first campaign with the organization, followed by six goals and 13 assists in 52 games played last season. 

Sergei Fedorov’s Mentorship Helps Boost Former Red Wing Daniel SprongSergei Fedorov’s Mentorship Helps Boost Former Red Wing Daniel SprongThe tenure of former Detroit Red Wings forward Daniel Sprong was relatively short, lasting only a single season. He played a role in Detroit's offensive attack by scoring 18 goals in 76 games, the second-highest total of his career in a single season. 

While he was called up to the Red Wings at various points during his tenure, he ultimately never saw the ice in regular season play in a Detroit uniform. 

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Luka Doncic's 39 not enough as Germany beats Slovenia at EuroBasket; Markkanen, Finland advance

Luka Doncic's run of dominant play at EuroBasket continued Wednesday, but this time it was not enough.

Doncic scored 39, with 10 rebounds and seven assists, and pushed Slovenia to a seven-point lead late in the third quarter. But then Germany's Tristan da Silva hit a half-court shot at the buzzer, and in the fourth the momentum swung to Germany, which pulled away for the 99-91 win.

Germany got 23 points and seven rebounds from Orlando's Franz Wagner, as well as 20 points and seven assists from Sacramento's Dennis Schroder. Center Daniel Theis added 15 points and nine rebounds for a deep German side that proved to be too much for Slovenia.

Germany, still undefeated at EuroBasket, will face a surprise Finnish team in the semifinals after Finland knocked off another upstart in Georgia, 93-79, in the other quarterfinal. This was another impressive game from Lauri Markkanen, who had 17 points and maybe, more importantly, four blocks in the win.

Mikael Jantunen, who played his college ball at Utah, led Finland with 19 points in the game.

Germany and Finland will face off in one EuroBasket semifinal on Saturday, while the other sees a showdown between undefeated Alperen Sengun and Turkey, and Giannis Antetokounmpo and Greece.

Sam Rinzel Believes He Must Earn Spot On 2025-26 Blackhawks

The belief is that Sam Rinzel will be on the roster for the Chicago Blackhawks come opening night of the 2025-26 season. He only played nine games to end last season after his year with the University of Minnesota ended, but he immediately looked like he belonged in the NHL. 

He could produce offense, eat minutes, and properly position himself so that he would defend at a high level. The tools are there for him to be a top-pair defenseman. 

On Wednesday, the Blackhawks held their first prospect practice as they prepare for the 2025-26 Tom Kurvers Prospect Challenge. Rinzel, of course, made the roster and will participate in the event. 

After the first practice, a very physical one at that, was complete, Rinzel was one of the players to speak to the media. He was adamant that he wasn't a lock to made the team. 

"I gotta earn it, just like everyone else," Rinzel said when talking about making the team. That is the attitude to have when you've only played a short amount of games, despite playing well in them. If he gives the effort needed to make the team, he will. 

He talked about the things that he's been working on, including improving his shot, getting bigger and stronger, and being harder to play against in his own end. 

"I think being able to just change the angle," Rinzel said on improving his shot. "Being able to find little holes at the point." 

If Rinzel can become a goal-scoring defenseman by improving his shot, that will make him even more valuable to his team. His first goal in 2025-26 will be his first career NHL goal. 

As far as getting bigger and stronger, Rinzel said he played at 180 pounds last season and is up to 195 right now. He claims that drinking shakes helped him gain that weight. "It's always easier to drink the calories."

When the Blackhawks drafted Rinzel in the first round back in 2022, Kyle Davidson believed that he had the tools to become a great NHL player. Now, he's seeing the reward of taking that chance. 

Look for Rinzel to be one of the key Blackhawks players during this event, while giving him a really good chance to make the NHL team out of camp. 

Visit The Hockey News Chicago Blackhawks team site to stay updated on the latest news, game-day coverage, player features, and more.

Sabres 2025-26 Player Expectations: Veteran Winger Zucker Looked To For Cluch Offense

Jason Zucker (Timothy T. Ludwig, USA TODAY Images)

The NHL’s 2025-26 season is nearly upon us, and here at THN.com’s Buffalo Sabres site, we're continuing our player-by-player series in which we break down expectations for each Sabres player this season. We've looked at Buffalo's goalies and defensemen, and in this latest column, we're turning our attention to veteran winger Jason Zucker.

This year, Zucker is entering the first season of a two-year contract extension. He obviously did enough last year to warrant his return to the Sabres, but even at a slight cut in salary, Zucker can still be a valuable contributor as Buffalo tries to end its 14-year Stanley Cup playoff drought. 

Let's look at Zucker's impact last year, and what is fair to expect from him in '25-26:

Player Name: Jason Zucker

Position: Left Wing

Age: 33

2024-25 Key Statistics: 73 games, 21 goals, 53 points

2025-26 Salary: $4.75-million

2025-26 Expectations: Zucker has never been the most spectacular performer, but after a down season that saw him produce only 14 goals and 32 points in 2023-24, Zucker put up. 21 goals and 53 points in 73 games last year. For the mid-tier salary of $5-million, Zucker provided the secondary scoring the Sabres need from their veterans.

And this year, given that he's taken a $250.000-pay cut to come back to Buffalo, you have to give him credit for putting his chips behind a Sabres team that direly needs a strong year in 2025-26.

Sabres 2025-26 Player Expectations: Entering Contract Year, Star Winger Tuch Will Be Feeling The HeatSabres 2025-26 Player Expectations: Entering Contract Year, Star Winger Tuch Will Be Feeling The HeatThe NHL’s 2025-26 season is almost here, and it’s a great time on THN.com’s Buffalo Sabres site to continue our player-by-player series in which we analyze expectations for every Sabres player in 2025-26.

Zucker did get some no-trade protection in his contract extension with the Sabres, but for both seasons of his new two-year deal, Zucker will be able to veto a trade to only five teams of his choice. That leaves 26 teams Zucker can be traded to. So he's hardly going to be able to stomp his feet and demand to stay in Buffalo if things don't work out well.

Indeed, if the Sabres do fall out of the playoff picture once again -- and so long as Zucker continues producing at a 20-goal pace -- there will be a market for Zucker's services. But that's a worst-case scenario for him. The best-case is that he stays in Buffalo, the Sabres do rebound, and Zucker gets to 25 goals and 60 points. 

Sabres 2025-26 Player Expectations: Buffalo Center McLeod Has New Contract, Heightened Bar To ClearSabres 2025-26 Player Expectations: Buffalo Center McLeod Has New Contract, Heightened Bar To ClearThe NHL’s 2025-26 season is close at hand, and here at THN.com’s Buffalo Sabres site, we're continuing our player-by-player series in which we analyze expectations for each Sabres player this coming year.

If Zucker can be a thriving contributor on a Buffalo team that, against all odds, becomes a playoff team next year, the gamble the Sabres took on Zucker will be regarded as well worth it. But if by this time next year Buffalo is playing without Zucker, it will be because the experiment ended and Sabres management tried to make the most of him as a hockey asset and get a return for the future.

Zucker will almost assuredly be a 15-goal-scorer next season. But it's that next level of five-to-10 goals that is separating Zucker from cementing his status in Buffalo from being on the move once again when the Sabres move in a different direction.

Pedro Martinez joins list of former Mets returning for Alumni Classic

Pedro Martinez wasn’t expected to be in attendance at the Mets’ Alumni Classic this weekend at Citi Field. 

However, after changing some things around in his schedule, the three-time Cy Young award winner will now be on hand on Saturday afternoon.

“I couldn’t miss the opportunity to see my Mets family again,” Martinez told Jay Horwitz. “It will be great to see the fans, they were always wonderful to me during my time there and I can’t wait to say hello again.”

Martinez spent four years at the backend of his career in the Big Apple, locking up his final two All-Star appearances. 

His former teammates Carlos Beltran, Carlos Delgado, John Maine, Jose Reyes, Endy Chavez, Paul Lo Duca, and Mike Pelfrey will also participate on Team Shea Stadium in the three-inning exhibition. 

The action is set to get underway prior to the 4:10 first pitch between the Mets and Rangers.

Healthy, dominant Jacob deGrom looking forward to Citi Field return: 'It’s going to be fun'

Jacob deGrom already made his return to New York earlier this season. 

He took the mound when the Rangers visited the Yankees in the Bronx for a three-game set back in May, but Friday night will mark the talented right-hander’s first time pitching at Citi Field as a visitor.

DeGrom is set to face-off with young Mets top prospect Jonah Tong in the opener of a three-game set.

“I’m excited to go and pitch at Citi Field,” he told reporters including Kennedy Landry of MLB.com. “That’s where I started my career, so it holds a special place in my heart -- their alumni game is going on there too so some guys I came up with will be there as well, it’ll be an all-around cool experience.”

DeGrom spent the first nine years of his big-league career in orange and blue.

Despite being a ninth-round draft pick he went on to solidify himself as one of the greatest pitchers in franchise history -- logging a Rookie of the Year, two Cy Young awards, and four All-Star appearances. 

He seemed like a lock to have his No. 48 sent up into the Citi Field rafters, but when he hit free agency following the 2022 season, he opted to leave to the Rangers on a big money five-year deal.

DeGrom made just nine starts his first two years in Texas after battling through injuries, but has finally been able to stay healthy thus far this season and he’s returned to his once dominant form atop their rotation.

He logged his fifth-career All-Star appearance earlier this year in Atlanta and has recorded a 2.78 ERA and 196 strikeouts across 155.2 innings of work, his most since 2019.

The 37-year-old is expecting some nerves when he finally toes the Citi Field rubber once again, but he’s looking forward to what he thinks will feel like a playoff atmosphere.

“I’ve pitched a lot there, Mets fans were always good to me,” he said. “Pitching in front of that crowd was always a fun experience, now I’m on the other side doing it, it’ll be interesting to see how it goes -- all these games are important for us, same for them with the spot they’re in, so it’s going to be fun."

Juan Soto, Cedric Mullins, and Starling Marte are the only three Mets with experience against deGrom. 

The latter two don't have much success, but Soto has a homer and a .909 OPS across 18 career at-bats. 

Providence Bruins Sign Jacob Perreault To One-Year Contract

The Providence Bruins announced they have signed forward Jacob Perreault to a one-year deal for the 2025-26 AHL season. 

Perreault went pointless is in six games with the Laval Rocket and notched five points in five ECHL games before being dealt to the Bakersfield Condors where he picked up three goals and 14 points in 31 games.

A first round pick of the Anaheim Ducks in 2020, Perreault has 36 goals and 107 points in 218 career AHL games with the Rocket, Condors, and San Diego Gulls. He is pointless in one career NHL game with the Ducks. 

The 23-year-old has flashed high-end offensive skills at different points throughout his AHL career and looks to become a more consistent producer with a good Providence team. 

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