Nashville Predators trade Spencer Stastney to Edmonton Oilers

Less than 25 hours after their dominant win over the St. Louis Blues, the Nashville Predators have made a transaction. 

They have traded defenseman Spencer Stastney to the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for a third-round pick in the 2027 NHL Draft. 

Nashville now owns 11 selections in the 2027 NHL Draft – four in the third round; two in the fourth round; and one in the first, second, fifth, sixth and seventh rounds.

Stastney has seen a massive uptick in his game this season, scoring nine points in 30 games and recording 10 penalty minutes. It's the first season of his NHL career where he's been a regular in Nashville. 

He was drafted in the fifth round of the 2018 NHL Draft, 131st overall, by the Predators. Stastney wouldn't join the Predators organization until 2021, playing four years at Notre Dame. 

Stastney played his first professional season with the Milwaukee Admirals during the 2022-23 campaign, scoring 13 points in 56 games. He also had five points in 16 playoff games.

He also earned his first call-up that season, playing eight games with the Predators and recording two points. 

In the 2024 preseason, Stastney failed to report to Predators training camp and would start the season out in Milwaukee. He'd later reveal that he had been struggling with depression and anxiety, and had entered the NHLPA's player assistance program. 

Stastney exited the program in December 2024 and was called up to Nashville in January, where he played 23 games and recorded 3 points.

During his time in the Predators organization, Stastney has played  81 games, scoring three goals and recording 15 assists for 18 points. 

The Predators face the Colorado Avalanche next on Saturday at 8 p.m. CST in Denver. 

BREAKING: Penguins Deal Tristan Jarry To Edmonton Oilers

The Pittsburgh Penguins have made a blockbuster move.

On Wednesday, the Penguins sent goaltender Tristan Jarry and forward Sam Poulin to the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for goaltender Stuart Skinner, defenseman Brett Kulak, and a 2029 second-round pick. 

Skinner, 27, is currently in the final season of a three-year contract that pays him $2.6 million per season. He has an 11-8-4 record this season to go along with a 2.83 goals-against average and an .891 save percentage.

Kulak, 31, is in the final season of a four-year deal that pays him $2.75 million annually. The 6-foot-2, 192-pound left-side blueliner has two assists on the season and is a minus-7, and he's coming off a career year offensively in 2024-25 that featured seven goals and 25 points in 82 games. 

Jarry was off to a roaring start for the Penguins this season, going 9-3-1 with a .909 save percentage through 14 appearances, which is in stark contrast to a career-worst season in 2024-25 that saw him get waived by the Penguins and featured an .893 save percentage and 3.12 goals-against average. The 30-year-old Alberta native - who played for the Edmonton Oil Kings - has three years remaining on a contract that owes $5.375 million annually, and Edmonton is responsible for that full amount.

Poulin, 24, is a former first-round pick (21st overall in 2019) who hasn't quite been able to find his footing at the NHL level. In 15 career NHL games, he has two points and six penalty minutes. For Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) this season, Poulin had nine goals and 20 points in 22 games, leading the team in both goals and points. 

Takeaways: Penguins Fail To Respond, Fall To Montreal Canadiens For Third Straight LossTakeaways: Penguins Fail To Respond, Fall To Montreal Canadiens For Third Straight LossThere have been a handful of tough losses this season for the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a>, as there are for any team in the NHL. And, typically, the Penguins have been able to respond well when things aren't going their way.&nbsp;

Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!     

Oilers Trade Stuart Skinner and Brett Kulak: Acquire Tristan Jarry, Spencer Stastney & Samuel Poulin

The Edmonton Oilers had a busy morning on Friday, just ahead of hopping on a flight to travel to Toronto for a game on Saturday versus the Maple Leafs. The Oilers made two trades, first acquiring goaltender Tristan Jarry and forward Samuel Poulin from the Pittsburgh Penguins in exchange for Stuart Skinner, Brett Kulak, and a 2029 second-round pick. Second, they added defenceman Spencer Stastney from Nashville for a 2027 third-rounder.  

Pittsburgh did not retain any salary on Jarry in the trade and the deal is essentially money in and money out. Brett Kulak (2.75M) and Stuart Skinner (2.6M) were both pending UFAs, while Jarry has two seasons remaining on his current contract at a cap hit of $5.375 million. 

Skinner was a very well respected player in the Oilers' locker room and incredibly nice. He was always willing to talk about his ups and downs and never shied away from the tough questions, of which there were many. He backstopped the Oilers to two consecutive Stanley Cup Finals appearances, but the Oilers ultimately fell short both times to the Florida Panthers. Skinner often played well, but took a lot of heat for his inconsistencies. 

Trending Stories:

Oilers Grind Out Win Against Red Wings Behind Hyman’s Hat Trick

Signs That The Shift Is Coming: Inconsistent Oilers Searching For A 'Full 60'

There were rumors for a couple of weeks that the Oilers had interest in Jarry. The trade, reported by one outlet as done, had not been completed, in part because the Oilers did not want to move Skinner in the deal. A change of heart must have taken place as Skinner was beginning to find his game for the Oilers. Meanwhile, Jarry was continuing to put up solid numbers for the Penguins. 

Stan Bowman spoke to the media after the trade and said that Calvin Pickard will remain with the Oilers. He also noted on the Oilers targeting Jarry: “He’s a big part of the reason their team is off to such a great start. I think watching his performance, it solidified in our mind he is the goalie we had seen for many years.”

Image

This brings Jarry back to Edmonton, although he never played with the NHL club. The Oilers wrote in their release: "A former Edmonton Oil King and 2014 Memorial Cup champion, Jarry was Pittsburgh's second-round selection in the 2013 NHL Draft (44th overall) and appeared in 307 games for the club over 10 seasons including his single game debut in 2016-17. The Surrey, B.C. native has also appeared in eight playoff games over three postseasons."

Jarry brings a strong resume, posting a 9-3-1 record, 2.66 GAA, and .909 save percentage in 14 games this season, along with two NHL All-Star appearances and 161 career wins.

Defenceman Spencer Stastney adds depth after recording nine points in 30 games this season.

Forward Samuel Poulin provides organizational scoring, tallying 135 points in 207 AHL games and appearing in 15 NHL contests.

Bookmark The Hockey News Edmonton Oilers team site to never miss the latest newsgame-day coverage, and more  Add us to your Google News favourites, and never miss a story.

Former Canadiens Defender Traded In Big Swap

A former Montreal Canadiens defenseman is on the move.

The Edmonton Oilers have traded former Canadiens defenseman Brett Kulak to the Pittsburgh Penguins in a big swap.

Here are the full trade details, which include the Oilers bringing in goaltender Tristan Jarry from Pittsburgh. 

Oilers Get: 

  • Tristan Jarry
  • Samuel Poulin

Penguins Get: 

  • Stuart Skinner
  • Brett Kulak
  • 2029 Second-Round Pick

While Kulak is not the biggest name in this trade, he still has the potential to be a very solid addition to the Penguins' roster. It is no secret that the Penguins needed another left shot defenseman, and Kulak now gives them a good one with plenty of experience. 

Kulak appeared in 31 games this season with the Oilers before being traded to Pittsburgh, where he posted two assists and 38 blocks. 

In four seasons with the Canadiens from 2018-19 to 2021-22, Kulak recorded 11 goals, 34 assists, 45 points, 96 penalty minutes, 216 blocks, 258 hits, and a plus-4 rating in 215 games.

Wennberg Caps Comeback as Sharks Edge Leafs in OT

Alexander Wennberg buried the winner just 2:49 into overtime, capping a spirited San Jose comeback as the Sharks erased a two-goal deficit and edged the Toronto Maple Leafs 3–2 on Thursday night.

Following an offside review, the goal was confirmed and the Sharks improved to 15-14-3 on the year, while the Leafs fell to 14-11-5

John Klingberg delivered a standout performance with a goal and an assist, while Dmitry Orlov supplied the remaining offense for San Jose (15-14-3). Alex Nedeljkovic was sharp throughout, turning aside 28 shots, and Wennberg—who orchestrated much of the Sharks’ push—added two primary assists to accompany his OT heroics.

Auston Matthews and Dakota Joshua found the back of the net for Toronto (14-11-5), which couldn’t hang on to its early cushion. Dennis Hildeby made 29 saves in a solid outing, and William Nylander chipped in with a pair of assists as the Leafs settled for a single point despite a strong start.

SHARKS CLAW BACK

Matthews pushed the lead to 2–0 midway through the second period, ripping home a power-play marker for his 13th of the season — and his fourth in the past seven outings. The strike finally broke Toronto’s brutal 2-for-28 slump with the man advantage, offering a momentary sigh of relief for a unit that has labored for weeks.

San Jose fought back when Orlov snapped Hildeby’s shutout streak at 132 minutes, six seconds, wiring home his first of the campaign to cut the deficit to 2–1 heading into the intermission. Klingberg later dragged the Sharks level, blasting a point shot through traffic in the dying minutes of regulation after Barclay Goodrow’s earlier pinball-style tally was negated on an offside challenge in the third.

Toronto’s night grew even more precarious on the back end. Already missing top defenders Chris Tanev (upper-body) and Brandon Carlo (lower-body), the Leafs lost Oliver Ekman-Larsson early in the final frame when Sharks winger Adam Gaudette fell awkwardly onto his left ankle along the boards.

Notables

Wennberg sealed the victory in overtime with a slick, instinctive finish, deftly kicking the puck from his skate to his stick in tight before sliding it past Hildeby for the decisive goal.

Matthews scored career goal #414, pulling within seven markers of  Mats Sundin (420) for the most goals in Maple Leafs history.

Next Game

The Sharks travel to face the Pittsburgh Penguins on Saturday at 7:00 p.m. ET. The Pens will look slightly different entering the game as they'll have a new starting goaltender. 

The Penguins traded goaltender Tristan Jarry and forward Sam Poulin to the Edmonton Oilers in a deal that sends Stuart Skinner, defenseman Brett Kulak, and a 2029 second-round draft pick back to Pittsburgh.

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.

Latest On Islanders Depth Defenseman Ethan Bear

On Sept. 26, New York Islanders defenseman Ethan Bear blocked a shot in the club's second-to-last preseason game, which came against the New Jersey Devils at UBS Arena. 

He left the game with an apparent upper-body injury and did not return. Since then, it's been radio silence. 

While Bear, who signed a one-year, two-way deal worth $775,000 on July 1, wasn't a shoo-in to make the Islanders roster, the expectation was that he'd provide some depth and leadership to a young Bridgeport Islanders blue line. 

The Relationship Between Islanders Mathew Barzal & Newcomer Ethan Bear The Relationship Between Islanders Mathew Barzal & Newcomer Ethan Bear When the <a href="http://thn.com/isles">New York Islanders</a> signed defenseman <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/new-york-islanders/latest-news/islanders-sign-goaltender-david-rittich-defenseman-ethan-bear-on-day-one-of-nhl-free-agency">Ethan Bear</a> to a one-year, two-way deal, it didn't seem like anything more than a depth signing.&nbsp;

Bear served as the alternate captain of the Hershey Bears, the Washington Capitals' American Hockey League affiliate, recording 46 points (10 goals, 36 assists) in 62 games last season. 

He was placed on Season-Opening Injured Reserve (SOIR). That meant that he didn't count against the Islanders' 23-man active roster or salary cap. 

However, with Alexander Romanov out for the rest of the season and the Islanders using a few rookies in Travis Mitchell and Marshall Warren, along with veteran Adam Boqvist, could Bear be a factor at some point in the season?

The Hockey News has been told that Bear sustained what is believed to have been a wrist injury when he blocked that shot. 

Bear has been rehabbing in Bridgeport and is expected to be back in a few weeks. 

Defenseman Isaiah George, who played 33 games for the Islanders last season, has been sidelined in Brideport since Nov. 14. He is expected to return this weekend. 

‘I messaged Sia on Instagram. She didn’t get back to me’: cult darts hero Stephen Bunting on his viral walk-on

The world No 4’s entrance to the song Titanium has become an iconic moment in darts, but while he loves the attention what he really wants is the world title

“There’s a lot of people playing darts who haven’t got no character,” Stephen Bunting says in a matter-of-fact tone, his voice still a little croaky from the cold that has been laying waste to him for the last week. “They’re boring to watch. And that’s probably why they’ll never be in the Premier League. You need to have a personality as well as being at the top of your game. You need to balance both.”

And frankly, has anyone in the sport made a better fist of it than Bunting himself? A few years ago, the man they call The Bullet was little more than a capable journeyman on the fringes of the elite, as well-known for his resemblance to Peter Griffin from Family Guy as for his darts. Now he is the world No 4 and a multiple tournament winner, with a loyal and passionate following that – in its most spine-tingling moments – seems to transcend sport itself.

Continue reading...

Bucks have ‘done due diligence' on Kings star guard Zach LaVine, per report

Bucks have ‘done due diligence' on Kings star guard Zach LaVine, per report originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Kings are headed toward a full-on rebuild, which might include parting ways with several of their big-name stars.

One of the players includes sharpshooting guard Zach LaVine, who is in his first full season with Sacramento since being shipped to California’s capital from the Chicago Bulls at last year’s trade deadline.

Now, LaVine could be bracing to pack his bags once again.

The Milwaukee Bucks, who have shown interest in LaVine in the past, have done “recent due diligence” on the 30-year-old guard, The Athletic’s Sam Amick reported in a column Friday, citing sources.

LaVine currently is sidelined with an injury, missing Thursday’s game with a thumb injury. HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto first reported back in November that the Bucks had “conducted background due diligence on LaVine.”

LaVine has a $47.5 million cap hit this season, with a player option worth just under $49 million for 2026-27, which makes it “nearly impossible to move him” without attaching draft assets in return, Amick noted.

In 22 games with the Kings this season, LaVine is averaging 20.6 points on 48.6-percent shooting from the field and 38.9 percent from 3-point range, with 3.1 rebounds and 2.3 assists.

Download and follow The Deuce & Mo Podcast

Records, revenge and rollercoasters: three tales from Adelaide Oval’s rich history

Ahead of the third Ashes Test, Geoff Lemon looks back at some of the surprising stories born of the iconic South Australian cricket ground

As England’s team approach the third Ashes Test, it’s tempting to link their tour so far with the Adelaide rollercoaster launched in 1888. Then you realise it’s not accurate because a rollercoaster has to offer some ups as well as downs. Still, perhaps the players can find inspiration in some of the stories of the past that took place at this very ground.

Continue reading...

The irony of Steph Curry's Warriors return in first game vs T-wolves this season

The irony of Steph Curry's Warriors return in first game vs T-wolves this season originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

One more game, one more day. That’s the thinking that consumed Steph Curry’s mind as he looked to return from a strained left hamstring against the Minnesota Timberwolves last season in the second round of the NBA playoffs. His wishful hope fell short.

Without him, the Warriors lost four straight games after holding the Timberwolves off in Game 1 after Curry left in the second quarter. No extra days together, no more games. No more Curry, no more season.

“Everything was kind of aligned for Game 6,” Curry said at his exit interview press conference when the Warriors returned home. 

A wrinkle in the schedule with the Golden State Valkyries’ own playoff run would have given Curry just enough time to recover to try and keep the Warriors’ season alive. The Warriors would have gone three days without playing between Game 5 and Game 6, but that never became reality. 

Now, as the Warriors and Timberwolves are set for their first game against each other this season on Friday night at Chase Center since that second-round playoff matchup, another schedule twist gave Curry ample recovery to return from a quad contusion against the team he so badly wanted to keep competing against seven months ago. Since the Warriors didn’t make it to the next round of this season’s NBA Cup, they finally were given a stretch without any games after a previous jam-packed stretch. 

The Warriors last played Sunday, giving them a four-day stretch without games. Friday quickly became circled as a return date for Curry, and the Warriors kept him home from their recent three-game road trip so he could stay back and rehab at their facilities. They took Monday and Tuesday off before Curry returned to practice Wednesday and Thursday. 

“I’m feeling great, had a good rehab week,” Curry said Thursday. 

Watching from the bench for two games and back at home for three, Curry saw how the Warriors went 3-2 without him. He took note of the good and bad. Curry couldn’t ignore the emergence of new Bay Area cult hero Pat Spencer, as well as some major shifts to coach Steve Kerr’s rotations. 

How the Warriors responded to Curry’s absence put them one game over .500 with a 13-12 record. The hardest part of their schedule where the start of the season was full of road games and back-to-backs is over. A new test is here, beginning Friday night, where the Warriors have nine more games in 2025 to enter the new year consistently establishing the identity they want to lean on. 

“Nobody’s happy with our record. Nobody’s feeling like we’re a day away from being the best team in the league,” Curry said. “But we also know the journey ahead is right there for us.” 

Curry will be back on the court, but another who would love revenge from last season’s playoff exit will not. Draymond Green missed the Warriors’ last two practices because of an excused personal reason and won’t play against the Timberwolves. The defensive ace was honest and critical at the end of last season with how Timberwolves forward Julius Randle played against him, averaging 25.2 points, 6.6 rebounds and 7.4 assists per game in the five-game series. 

Signing veteran center Al Horford also was supposed to be a resolution to the Timberwolves’ size advantage on the Warriors, but he too won’t be playing against them Friday night. Horford, 39, continues to be hampered by right sciatic nerve irritation and has played in only two of the last nine games. 

Outside of Spencer’s shining star, the Warriors added more reinforcements in the two weeks they were without Curry. The Warriors believe they would have been a different team last season if De’Anthony Melton had stayed healthy instead of playing only six games due to requiring ACL surgery. He made his return last Thursday, one year to the date of his surgery.

Curry’s brother, Seth, was signed shortly after Steph’s injury. A handful of other role players contributed to the Warriors’ successful road trip without their superstar. But one with star aspirations who opened eyes against the Timberwolves in last season’s playoffs now appears out of the rotation. 

Jonathan Kuminga was a healthy DNP-CD (Did Not Play, Coach’s Decision) against the Chicago Bulls in the Warriors’ blowout win to end the road trip. Kerr said he and Kuminga talked before Wednesday’s practice and the coach is happy with how he responded. 

“He had a great practice today. We had a talk before practice and he did the things that I asked him to do and I was thrilled about that,” Kerr said. 

Kuminga received two DNPs in the first round against the Houston Rockets, didn’t dress for another game and was also inactive for one after becoming an afterthought in the last month of the regular season. But in the final four games against the Timberwolves, Kuminga averaged 24.3 points on 55.4 percent shooting with a 38.9 3-point percentage. 

Warriors owner Joe Lacob, sources say, referred back to Kuminga’s performances against the Timberwolves on multiple occasions throughout the offseason when discussing the former No. 7 overall pick’s future with the franchise and holding onto him, for the time being.

As always, though, everything starts and ends with the health of No. 30. 

“At the end of practice today he hit me with like a triple combo and made a rainbow three, if that tells you anything,” Trayce Jackson-Davis said Thursday. 

These two teams are on a path of avoiding the play-in tournament already, even with four months remaining in the regular season. A clear top five in the Western Conference of the Oklahoma City Thunder, Houston Rockets, Denver Nuggets, San Antonio Spurs and Los Angeles Lakers has already come to light. The Timberwolves enter Friday as the No. 6 seed, two and a half games ahead of the No. 8 seed Warriors. 

So much has changed and so much remains the same since the Warriors’ disappointing end to last season against the Timberwolves. Between Curry’s return, the unknown of Kuminga and all the other moving parts of this roster, the irony of the first Warriors-Timberwolves game this season is hard to miss.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast