NHL Waivers: Canucks' Jett Woo Hits The Wire On Dec. 8

The Vancouver Canucks placed defenseman Jett Woo on NHL waivers Monday, according to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman

Woo being placed on waivers means he is ready to begin his 2025-26 season. The right-shot defenseman has been sidelined for all of this campaign after undergoing surgery during the off-season to address an upper-body injury.

Teams looking for more defensive depth could consider taking a chance on Woo, who's on a one-year, two-way contract worth $775,000 in the NHL and $290,000 in the minors. But if the 25-year-old passes through waivers unclaimed, the Canucks can assign him to their AHL affiliate, the Abbotsford Canucks.

Woo was selected by the Pacific Division club in the second round of the 2018 NHL draft with the 37th overall pick. Despite being part of the organization for eight seasons now, he has yet to make his NHL debut.

While Woo has yet to play for Vancouver, he has a lot of experience at the AHL level. In 267 career games over five seasons, he has 21 goals, 62 assists, 83 points, 332 penalty minutes and a plus-32 rating.

Last season as an alternate captain in Abbotsford, Woo posted two goals, 16 assists, 18 points, 90 penalty minutes and a plus-14 rating. He also recorded one goal and six points in 22 playoff games for Abbotsford during their Calder Cup championship run this past spring.

A player cannot be placed on NHL waivers or bought out while they are injured. They could be traded, but in this instance, Abbotsford may want the help. They sit last in the Pacific Division with a 5-15-4 record in 24 games, allowing a league-high 93 goals against.

As for the NHL squad, the Canucks have Filip Hronek, Tyler Myers and Tom Willander, who scored his first NHL goal on Saturday, on the right side of the blueline.


Image

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.

Winter Meetings kick off while MLB's Hot Stove heats up

Winter Meetings kick off while MLB's Hot Stove heats up originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

ORLANDO – The wait continues.

The first day of the Major League Baseball Meetings brought nothing magical to the Phillies, so neighboring Disney World need not worry. Kyle Schwarber, J.T. Realmuto and Ranger Suarez remain for sale in the free agent market, and President of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski and general manager Preston Mattingly pulled no trades in a very quiet first day.

While many expect a Schwarber signing to be the first domino to fall, when and where the designated hitter opts to take his talents will have a massive effect on how the Phillies will be formed for the 2026 season. The leading contenders for Schwarber’s services appear to be the Phillies, Mets, Red Sox and his hometown Reds. It was reported Sunday night by The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal that the Pirates made a four-year offer worth over $100 million. That doesn’t appear to be a serious threat to offers that will probably go to five years and approach the $150 to $160 million, or more, mark.

Many gathered for the meetings still believe the Phillies to be the front-runners to land the National League’s MVP runner-up, and to bring back Realmuto, who will be 35 entering the regular season. If that is the case, it would certainly appear to be another “run it back” season for an organization that has made the playoffs each of the past four seasons but been eliminated in the first round each of the past two.

If Schwarber should move on, certainly Dombrowski, Mattingly and company must have backup plans that may or may not include Pete Alonso, the all-time home run leader in Mets history. Kyle Tucker is a free agent outfielder that is drawing interest from almost everyone. Cody Bellinger would certainly lend a great glove and bat to a Phillies outfield that is certainly going to look different from last season.

On the trade market, Arizona second baseman Ketel Marte has been linked in some reports to the Phillies, but that would probably require the organization giving away a prospect or two that they may not be comfortable in parting with.

“I don’t like that expression,” said Dombrowski of “running it back” in a sit down with the local Phillies media.

“We’re not running our club back. There’s already some changes (with Justin Crawford in the mix) and (Aiden) Miller is getting close to playing. When I say that, I’m not so sure that when you win 96 games, that you should really look to have to do a lot of things differently .But you’re always looking to get better so it’s very dependent upon if you sign guys, how much money you spend, who else is available. If somebody’s better than what you have then by all means we’re open-minded to it.

“I think (Alec) Bohm’s going to have a much better year offensively. He was hurt last year for a time period. He drove in close to 100 runs two years before that. I think he’s much closer to that type of hitter than he was last year. I think that’s a pretty good addition in itself right there. It’s hard to find right-handed hitters. I’m not sure how it will fall. We’ve explored all different type of options.”

The biggest option for the Phillies, and for some other teams, is the signing of Schwarber. Dombrowski reiterated what he’s been saying since last season about the power-hitter and clubhouse leader.

“I’m just not sure what’s going to happen,” he said. “We continue to have that interest and there’s optimism but the reality is at this point is I don’t really know. I don’t really know.”

And the need-to-know time period is coming quickly for the organization, and Dombrowski and company haven’t hidden their feelings when it comes to that.

“I think that we’ve properly expressed that (they want clarity soon),” he said. “The one thing that I would not have wanted to do is that I want those guys to know how much we respect them, how much we’d like to have them back. At some point you have to move some things forward. I think that’s been properly communicated. I’m not saying that we’re sprinting forward with a lot of different things, but that’s been properly communicated that we’re prepared to shift if we need to.”

The catching position is a tricky one with Realmuto as the Phillies don’t appear to have a viable option to replace the three-time All-Star, also a treasured presence in the clubhouse. The guess is that he’ll be back behind the plate for the next for years, if possible, but if not?

“We have done very, very thorough job, I would say thoroughly on every position, so it’s not just catching, but any position that we might think we’ll have a hole or a void,” said Dombrowski. “We’re prepared. We’re ready to move in any position with priority rankings.”

While Schwarber and Realmuto are the top priorities, forming an outfield isn’t far behind for the organization, which currently boasts a contingent of players who don’t possess a bunch of power in Brandon Marsh, Justin Crawford, Otto Kemp and Johan Rojas.

“We’ve got work to do, is what we need to do,” said Dombrowski of the outfield. “Really, we’ve got a couple of options with Marsh and the situation that we’ve talked about with Crawford, we’re going to give him that opportunity to make the club and we feel good about it. Rojas is out there. We’ve got Kemp who can go out there and play. We’ve talked about trying to find a change of scenery for Nick (Castellanos). Really, we’ve got work to do, is what it comes down to. We continue to try to make things happen.”

Is finding some sort of power out there, particularly if they lose Schwarber, a major concern?

“Not really,” Dombrowski said. “I really have always preferred having a good hitting club that’s a doubles-oriented team. And that doesn’t fit everybody, it’s usually a generality. It means you usually have a better approach, you use the whole field, and you score a bunch of runs like that. And then some guys have power, and they hit a few more home runs than other years. I think some guys might naturally hit more home runs still. I just assume have extra base hits. I think that some guys may do that just in a natural progression.”

There seems to be a variety of ways the 2026 Phillies team could look. Perhaps we’ll find out some more this week as the meetings progress through Thursday.

Stay tuned.

NOTES

•Manager Rob Thomson is scheduled to meet with the media Tuesday afternoon.

•Pete Alonso, who many have suggested could be the replacement for Schwarber should he sign elsewhere, was in Orlando for the meetings.

•Jeff Kent, who holds the record for most home runs by a second baseman with 377, was introduced as the most recent Hall of Fame inductee after being voted in by the Contemporary Era Committee and mentioned Phillies legend Dallas Green as someone who taught him how to play the game during an interview session.

•When asked if an extension for Rob Thomson had been discussed, Dombrowski said: “You would know that would happen when we would make an announcement but we’re not at that spot.”

•Dombrowski said he does not see moving Trea Turner from shortstop or Bryce Harper from first base at this time. He lauded the defensive play of Turner, saying he made great strides.

•Dombrowski said three more arms in the bullpen to add with Jhoan Duran, Matt Strahm, Tanner Banks, Jose Alvarado and Orion Kerkering. 

•The Phillies continue to have interest in bringing on Don Mattingly as their bench coach.

Ex-Blackhawks Forward Hangs Up The Skates

Former Chicago Blackhawks forward Craig Smith is moving on, as he has announced his retirement from professional hockey. 

Smith spent part of his final season in the NHL with the Blackhawks in 2024-25. In 40 games with the Blackhawks during this past season, he recorded nine goals, seven assists, 16 points, 20 blocks, and 30 hits.

However, Smith did not finish the season as a member of the Blackhawks, as the Central Division club traded him and goaltender Petr Mrazek to the Detroit Red Wings at the 2025 NHL trade deadline in exchange for forward Joe Veleno. 

Smith was selected by the Nashville Predators with the 98th overall pick of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft. In 987 career NHL games split between the Nashville Predators, Boston Bruins, Washington Capitals, Dallas Stars, Blackhawks, and Red Wings, he recorded 220 goals, 232 assists, 452 points, 395 penalty minutes, and a plus-88 rating. 

Overall, Smith had himself a nice 14-year NHL career. 

Flames Recall Defenceman Hunter Brzustewicz from AHL Wranglers

The Calgary Flames announced Monday that defenceman Hunter Brzustewicz is heading back to the big club after a strong start to his season with the AHL’s Calgary Wranglers.

Brzustewicz, a 2023 third-round selection, has been one of the Wranglers’ most productive blueliners this year, posting 12 points through 22 games.

The smooth-skating defender is coming off a solid rookie campaign in which he collected 32 points across 70 games and also earned his first NHL appearance late last season in a matchup against Los Angeles.

Originally drafted by Vancouver, the Washington, Michigan product became a member of the Flames organization as part of the January 2024 trade that moved Elias Lindholm to the Canucks.

Warriors' Draymond Green shares which NBA on-court fight he regrets to this day

Warriors' Draymond Green shares which NBA on-court fight he regrets to this day originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Warriors forward Draymond Green is no stranger to on-court brawls, especially excessive physical contact toward other players that has caused the NBA to hand down numerous suspensions.

The heat of competition is so emotionally driven that there is no doubt players sometimes lose themselves in that passion, and Green has done well so far in regulating his emotional intensity in the 20 games he’s played in 2025.

Green is tied with nine other players with three technical fouls so far this season, three behind NBA-leading Dillon Brooks. The Warriors forward was asked on Monday by a viewer of his self-hosted podcast, “The Draymond Green Show,” what specific fight or altercation he personally regrets.

“I’m not one that really lives with regrets, that’s kind of how I roll,” Green directly established. “One moment that I really look back on is actually the moment with Jusuf Nurkic, because I actually think that moment cost me an opportunity to win a third gold medal.”

Green referred to swinging and hitting the then-Phoenix Suns center at Chase Center back in 2023, which ultimately led to an indefinite suspension by the league that kept him out of a 41-player pool to compete in the 2024 Paris Olympics. He previously won gold for Team USA in 2016 and 2021.

The NBA’s decision to suspend Green was further fueled by another incident involving Rudy Gobert with the Minnesota Timberwolves less than a month earlier, where the four-time All-Star held Gobert in a crude headlock. The league also required Green to receive mandated behavioral therapy after his ejection with Nurkic.

“So, I look back at that one like ‘Man, that sucks,’ but like I said, I don’t live my life with any regrets, at all,” Green said. “S–t happens, it is what it is.”

Green seemed to get the last laugh in the situation, trolling the Suns getting swept by Minnesota in the first round of the 2023-24 NBA playoffs. Sitting out the 2024 Paris Olympics appeared to help Green deal with the intense backlash from the incident and help regain his reputation.

“Things still turned out to be pretty fine for me, I can’t complain,” Green said. “But I gotta say, looking back at that moment, which is what it is, it would be that one.”

Having a “no regrets” mindset has benefitted Green for most of his career, and his four championship rings and 2016-17 Defensive Player of the Year award have solidified the chance of a statue outside of Chase Center once he retires. However, would the Golden State Warriors still have those four championship trophies if it weren’t for Draymond’s emotional intensity?

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Former Nashville Predators forward Craig Smith announces retirement after 14 seasons

Craig Smith, who played nine seasons with the Nashville Predators from 2011 to 2020 and was drafted by the team in 2009, has announced his retirement after 14 seasons. 

Magnuson Hockey Agency announced on Monday that Smith was retiring. He had played with the Predators, Boston Bruins, Washington Capitals, Dallas Stars, Chicago Blackhawks and Detroit Red Wings. 

During his career, he recorded 220 goals, 232 assists, and 452 points over 987 games. He also played for the United States at the 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 IIHF World Championships, winning a bronze medal during the 2013 tournament. 

Smith was selected by the Predators, 98th overall in the 2009 NHL Draft, after scoring 48 points in 54 games with the Waterloo Blackhawks (USHL). He'd play two seasons at the University of Wisconsin before joining the Predators for the 2011-12 season. 

In his rookie year, Smith scored 22 points in 72 games. During his time with the Predators, Smith played in 661 regular-season games, scoring 330 points (162 goals and 168 assists).

Smith's best season came during the 2013-14 campaign, where he had 52 points (24 goals and 28 assists) in 79 games. He had another 50+ point season in 2017-18, scoring 51 points (25 goals and 26 assists) in 79 games. 

He played in 52 playoff games and scored 16 points (seven goals and nine assists), which included the Predators' 2017 run to the Stanley Cup Final. During that run, he scored a goal in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final in a 5-1 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins. 

Prior to the start of the 2020-21 season, Smith announced that he would not be re-signing with the Predators, heading into free agency and eventually signing with the Boston Bruins. He'd play seven more seasons with five different teams. 

Smith ranks in a few spots in the Predators record books:

  • Games played: 661 (9th)
  • Goals: 162 (6th)
  • Points: 330 (7th)
  • Goals created: 133.7 (6th)
  • Plus/minus: 67 (3rd)
  • Even strength goals: 120 (4th)
  • Power play goals: 42 (T-5th)
  • Game winning goals: 22 (T-9th)
  • Shots: 1,694 (5th)

Smith is also infamously known for missing on an empty net scoring chance in a game against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Nov. 17, 2011. Smith shot the puck high above the empty net after skating all the way to the top of the goalie crease. The Predators still won the game, 4-1.