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From The Archive: Baby Blues
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By Ken Campbell
For most NHL GMs, the World Junior Championship provides an opportunity to get in a quick scouting trip at a relatively soft time in the schedule. So, they tend to come in like a visiting potentate for a few days, watch a couple of their prospects, shake some hands and kiss some babies, then beat a hasty retreat to allow their scouting staff to do the boots-on-the-ground heavy lifting. But not St. Louis Blues GM Doug Armstrong, who spent enough time in Sweden in late 2023 and early 2024 to apply for landed immigrant status.
“I got there early,” Armstrong said, “and I stayed there late.”
There’s a really good reason why Armstrong, who is in his 30th season of having an executive parking spot with an NHL hockey-operations department, approached the WJC in Gothenburg with the zeal of a kid with a handful of hockey cards and a fresh Sharpie. It’s because his team had seven prospects playing in the tournament, and they weren’t 13th forwards or seventh defensemen. They were serious contributors, none more so than defenseman Theo Lindstein, the third of three first-round picks the Blues had last year (the 29th overall selection, which St. Louis picked up from the New York Rangers in the Vladimir Tarasenko trade). Lindstein was originally cut by the Swedes, then started the tournament as a depth defenseman. Twenty-five seconds into the first game of the tournament against Latvia, Swedish blueliner Elias Salomonsson took a major and a game misconduct for boarding, which resulted in a suspension in the second game. Lindstein took advantage of the increased role, led all defensemen in scoring with two goals and eight points and was named to the tournament all-star team with a silver medal around his neck.
Lindstein’s teammate, center Otto Stenberg, finished the tournament second in goals for Sweden with five, right winger Jimmy Snuggerud had eight points for the juggernaut U.S. team, center Dalibor Dvorsky and left winger Juraj Pekarcik were solid contributors for Slovakia, Aleksanteri Kaskimaki had four points for a disappointing Finnish team and Jakub Stancl of Czechia signed Canada’s death warrant with two goals in the quarterfinal, including the game-winner with 11 seconds remaining. One of the things that has Armstrong excited is that five of the players were taken in the 2023 draft. Since each of the five 2023 Blues draftees to play at the WJC was born in 2005, that means they’re all eligible to return to the 2025 tournament. “And with some of the other guys we have,” Armstrong said. “We could have six or seven guys from (the 2023) draft there next year, along with whomever we pick up this year.”
It’s been a long time since the Blues have had a prospect pool this deep and this impressive. A really, really long time. When they took Dvorsky 10th overall in 2023, it represented the first time since the 2008 draft they picked in the top 10. Their second of three first-rounders was Stenberg, who was chosen with the pick the Blues got in the large haul they received from the Toronto Maple Leafs for Ryan O’Reilly and Noel Acciari. Then, faced with the prospect of losing Ivan Barbashev after the season, Armstrong dealt Barbashev to the Vegas Golden Knights at the deadline for Zach Dean, who put up solid numbers in junior hockey as a two-way center and is learning how to be a pro in the AHL this season.
That was the one positive to the Blues dropping out of the playoff race before the trade deadline last season. Had they still been in contention, they could have pointed to, well, themselves and convinced themselves that after what happened in 2019, anything is possible. But being out of the playoff picture allowed them to trade away O’Reilly, Tarasenko, Barbashev and Acciari for futures, which Armstrong believes actually accelerated the process by a couple of years.
And so the Blues are now on a different path. Armstrong will not use the word “rebuild” on account of the fact it seems to be a term that turns current season-ticket holders into former ones. It’s also not a rebuild when you go into the All-Star Weekend holding down the last wild-card spot in the Western Conference. And you can’t really claim you’re in a rebuild when you have a 32-year-old Torey Krug, a 31-year-old Justin Faulk and a 30-year-old Colton Parayko each taking up $6.5 million in cap space for the next three seasons. That’s not to mention a 32-year-old Nick Leddy occupying $4 million in cap allocation for each of the next two seasons. (For those keeping score at home, that’s $23.5 million in cap space until the end of 2025-26 claimed by four defensemen who are 30 or older.)
But Armstrong actually has pretty apt verbiage for the course the Blues find themselves taking these days. “It started, quite honestly, a year earlier than we thought,” Armstrong said. “If we had had a good year last year, we would’ve kept those players and got nothing for them. The silver lining in a bad year last year was that we were able to start our re-whatever-this-is a year earlier and with more assets.”
A re-whatever-this-is won’treally fit on a promotional brochure, but Armstrong is wise to frame it that way. With what the Blues have coming, they feel good about their long-term future. Along with the youngsters, Robert Thomas is only 24 and Jordan Kyrou and Scott Perunovich are 25, and 21-year-old Jake Neighbours – whose name sounds like he should be a character on The Andy Griffith Show – seems to be settling into the NHL quite nicely, thank you very much. So, perhaps it’s more of a rebuild on the fly. One of the good things about having all those older guys on long-term deals is they have serviceable placeholders on the roster – expensive and difficult-to-trade placeholders, but placeholders nonetheless – until the youngsters are ready for prime time. Plus, the salary cap is going up, and don’t forget, kids, the long-term injury list can be a wonderful tool.
They aren’t the only legitimate prospects the Blues have, but the seven players who played in the WJC gave the organization a tangible indication that it is on the right track. Success in this tournament is not a guaranteed harbinger of future NHL success, but it certainly beats having a bunch of prospects who weren’t good enough to take part in a best-on-best tournament for their age group. It’s particularly useful for gauging the progress of European prospects, many of whom are playing against men in their home countries and playing bottom-six minutes as forwards or No. 4 or 5 roles as defensemen. The World Junior Championship has always been a good barometer of where your young players stand in comparison to their peers. And in the case of the Blues’ young players, there was a lot to like. And while the idea that the WJC is not a tournament for 18-year-olds has shifted over the years, it’s heartening to see that so many players with a year remaining of junior eligibility compared so favorably against some of the best under-20 players in the world (with the exception of the eligible players in the NHL and, this is a big one, the best under-20 Russian players).
“It’s not a 100-percent fact, but it’s an indicator,” Armstrong said. “As an evaluator, all you can evaluate is what you see. I’m a big believer in, when it’s best-on-best, that’s a pretty good indicator of how players will perform later on. When you’re given the opportunity to play against the best players, how you do there is a pretty good indicator.”
THE SILVER LINING IN A BAD YEAR LAST YEAR WAS THAT WE WERE ABLE TO START OURRE-WHATEVER-THIS-IS EARLIER AND WITH MORE ASSETS– Blues GM Doug Armstrong-
Prior to the tournament, Armstrong made a trip to Europe to see Lindstein, Stenberg and Kaskimaki. Lindstein has spent most of this season with Brynas in Sweden’s second-division Allsvenskan, while Stenberg has played regularly with SHL Frolunda and Kaskimaki with HIFK in Finland’s Liiga. Sweden, in particular, is notorious for sheltering teenage pros and keeping them firmly on the fourth line. It’s difficult to argue with the results, since most young Swedish players who aren’t rushed into the NHL show up ready to compete in the world’s best league and prove to be both very good and incredibly low maintenance.
“They’re sheltered players on their club teams for sure,” Armstrong said. “You’re going to get that when they’re 18- and 19-year-old players playing with men. But you watch them and you say, ‘The way they’re playing with the opportunity they’re getting, if you translate that against their peer group, they could have good tournaments.’ I’m really proud of the way they performed because they did transfer what they were learning playing against men to their peer group.”
Of all the Blues’ prospects, the most ready to make the jump is Snuggerud, the son of former NHLer Dave Snuggerud. Even though he was born 11 years after his father last skated in The Show, there is no denying that bloodlines and NHL experience that can be passed on give a player an advantage. The 2024 WJC was Snuggerud’s second, after finishing third in scoring in the 2023 tournament behind only Connor Bedard and Logan Cooley. Playing with Cooley and Matthew Knies on the top line at the University of Minnesota in 2022-23 as a a freshman, Snuggerud finished fifth in NCAA scoring and sat 10th overall in goals this season without his two high-scoring linemates. There’s a very good chance this year will be the last Minnesota sees of Snuggerud, who is primed to be signed at the end of his college campaign and will likely get in some games with the Blues before the end of the season.
Essentially, the Blues and Snuggerud will have to balance the risk of rushing things – something neither side wants – against the notion that there might not be anything more for the player to accomplish at the college level. When Dylan Larkin signed with the Detroit Red Wings just before his 19th birthday and after one season at the University of Michigan, Wings GM Ken Holland told Larkin and his parents that if he was looking out the window of a bus on a winter night pulling into Grand Rapids, they’d have to remember they made the decision to turn pro.
“You always want to have one thing where you can say, ‘This is an NHL-caliber skater; this is an NHL-caliber competitor; this is an NHL-caliber faceoff guy,’” Armstrong said. “He’s an NHL-caliber shooter. He obviously has to have other parts of the game there, but when you’re walking in with one NHL-caliber attribute, you have something to hang your hat on.”
The other intriguing prospect is Dvorsky, who dropped out of the top five in the 2023 NHL draft but continues an impressive run of young Slovak talent. Dvorsky had spent the past two seasons playing in Sweden – getting into 55 pro games with AIK in the Allsvenskan. Ahead of the 2023-24 season, Dvorsky moved up to the SHL with Oskarshamn. But there, Dvorsky saw limited ice time and failed to score a point in 10 games, so he decided to come to North America. He joined the OHL’s Sudbury Wolves, where he was among the league leaders in points per game. Everything he’s shown suggests a high skill level and the potential to be an offensive difference-maker. But as Armstrong points out:
“You don’t want a 90-point player who is minus-30.” So, there is a lot of work to do, but there’s also a lot of time to do it – especially for a player who can provide offense. “It wouldn’t have been a wasted year if he had stayed (in Sweden), but he’s probably in a better place now than he would have been if he had been a bit player on a struggling team,” Armstrong said. “When you’re picking in that area of the draft, you’re looking for players who can make a difference offensively, and he has all of those top-of-the-circle-down skills that you need to be good. That’s how we see him, and that’s how we project he’s going to excel. Now, it’s our job to work with him on the teachable things.”
So, now the Blues, for the first time in a while, have a critical mass of prospects and some real bulk to their futures list. Development, of course, is critical at this point. And it’s also where players go from being top prospects to players who can actually contribute at the NHL level. Prior to coming to St. Louis, Armstrong had worked for years with the Dallas Stars, and he has long lived by the words of former Stars assistant GM Les Jackson, who maintained that when players don’t work out, more often than not, it’s the team that fails the player and not the other way around.
I’M A BIG BELIEVER IN, WHEN IT’S BEST-ON-BEST, THAT’S A PRETTY GOOD INDICATOR OF HOW PLAYERS WILL PERFORM LATER ON– Blues GM Doug Armstrong on the WJC-
And that’s why timing is so important. There are not too many players out there who suffered from being brought along at a slow and methodical pace, but there are a lot of examples of players who didn’t work out after being brought along too quickly and placed in situations and roles for which they weren’t prepared. And although you might want to follow “a pack mentality” as Armstrong calls it, putting all your prospects in the same place to grow together, either in the NHL or the minors, the reality is that no two players are the same. Thomas became a full-time NHL player at 19, won a Stanley Cup as a rookie and has never looked back. Kyrou spent time shuttling between the AHL and the NHL for his first two pro seasons and is now a point-per-game player. Goalies always take a little longer, but before Joel Hofer earned the backup job with the Blues this season, he had spent three full seasons in the minors, one of which included a run to the Calder Cup final with the Springfield Thunderbirds.
The thing Armstrong doesn’t want to do is accelerate the development process to prove that he made some good trades. Barbashev and Tarasenko were popular players who helped the Blues win the first and only Stanley Cup in franchise history, but the assets they were able to get in exchange for their expiring contracts could help the club contend again. But only if the prospects are brought along at a pace that suits them. To be sure, the players involved will have a lot of say in that process by how they perform, but it will also be dictated by the support they get from the Blues.
“We don’t want to fail our players by putting them in positions to fail,” Armstrong said. “We want to give them the opportunity to succeed, and that means we’re in for the marathon. And if it takes until 2025-26 or ’26-27 for these guys to be comfortable playing in the NHL, then we’re OK with that.”
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Sabres Prospect Profile – Luke Osburn
The Buffalo Sabres have been considered to have one of the deepest prospect pools in the NHL, which is in part due to them selecting high in recent drafts because of their not qualifying for the playoffs. The Sabres have displayed an eye for talent, but the organization’s developmental model has not yielded enough results.
Leading up to the opening of training camp in mid-September, we will look at the club's top 40 prospects. All are 25 years old or younger, whose rights are currently held by the Sabres or are on AHL or NHL deals, and have played less than 40 NHL games.
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#9 - Luke Osburn - Defense (Youngstown - USHL)
Osburn was the Sabres fourth-round pick at the 2024 NHL Draft in Las Vegas. The Plymouth, MI native is a product of the Compuware youth hockey system and played for Youngstown of the USHL in his draft year. After scoring 23 points for the Phantoms as a 17-year-old, the offensive-minded blueliner broke out last season, scoring 41 points (10 goals, 31 assists) in 55 games and was named the USHL’s Defenseman of the Year.
Elite Prospects says that Osburn’s “activation looks instinctive; he instantly joins the play at the right moments and stays inside passing lanes. From the point, he uses stop-starts and heel-to-heel skating to pull in defenders before slipping down the boards. In the rush, he manipulates defenders with crossovers, weight shifts, and fakes, then walks inside for a scoring chance.”
The 18-year-old impressed at the 2025 World Junior Summer Showcase for Team USA and is considered in the mix for a spot for the 2026 IIHF WJC in Minneapolis this December, but that will depend on how he performs as a freshman for the University of Wisconsin this fall.
Follow Michael on X, Instagram, and Bluesky @MikeInBuffalo
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Kraken and Flyers Swap AHL Forward Prospects
The Seattle Kraken have acquired forward Jon-Randall Avon from the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for Tucker Robertson.
Avon is a 22-year-old center/winger who has spent the past two seasons playing in the AHL with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms. In 125 games, Avon has scored 16 goals and 35 points.
Listed at six feet, 174 pounds, Avon was an undrafted prospect who signed with the Flyers in September of 2021.
Heading to the Flyers is Robertson, a 22-year-old center who the Kraken drafted in the fourth round (123rd overall) in the 2022 NHL Draft. Robertson has also spent the previous two seasons in the AHL, racking up 10 goals and 19 points in 77 games.
Listed at 5-foot-10, 190 pounds, Robertson's game revolves around his defensive work. He anticipates the game very well and uses sound positioning to win the puck back for his team.
The move at the moment is currently an AHL-based deal, as neither of these players shows much NHL potential, but with a change of scenery, anything can happen.
Phillies shutout Brewers to take series in Milwaukee
Phillies shutout Brewers to take series in Milwaukee originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
MILWAUKEE – The pace of play in Thursday’s game made some think the Phillies and Brewers wanted to be done quick enough to get settled in to watch the Eagles-Cowboys game.
In reality, the quickness in the early part was due to two outstanding starts by Ranger Suarez and Milwaukee’s Freddy Peralta.
Once the Brewers’ ace was out, the Phillies finally broke a scoreless game in the seventh when Alec Bohm drilled a one-out triple to rightfield and scored on Trea Turner’s two-out single to give the Phillies the only run they needed in what became a 2-0 win over the Brewers. The Phillies took two-of-three from the Brewers and improved to 81-59. Milwaukee fell to 86-55.
The Phillies chased Peralta after just five innings, not because they were hitting him around, but because he had thrown 92 pitches, which included eight strikeouts and three walks. The National League pitcher of the month for August has not allowed an earned run in 29 innings. In his last six starts encompassing 33 innings, Peralta has given up just 13 hits, one earned run, 15 walks and 42 strikeouts.
Suarez was pitch-for-pitch with Peralta, as he once again had terrific command and masterfully worked himself out of tough situations. He allowed a runner in each of his six innings and appeared to be tiring a bit in the sixth.
“He was fantastic,” said Rob Thomson of Suarez. “Strikes, command, kept them off balance, curve ball was really good. I thought he was outstanding, I really did. And the bullpen was great, too. Our offense on their starter was really good. We got his pitch count up, we had 84 pitches after four which is really good even though we didn’t have anything to show for it. Really good defense. All around great team win.”
William Contreras led off that sixth inning with a walk and moved to third on a double by Andrew Vaughn. That’s when Suarez zoned in. With the infield drawn in, he got Caleb Durbin to ground out to Bryson Stott at second, then coaxed Danny Jansen into a shallow fly out to Harrison Bader in center. He got out of the inning when Andruw Monasterio grounded out to Alec Bohm at third.
Suarez finished the day giving up six hits and struck out four in his six innings and 60 of his 89 pitches were strikes.
“We all know how great of a team they are,” said Suarez, who improved to 11-6. “Today I just focused on being myself on the mound and just throwing the pitches that I wanted and the counts that I wanted, too. I think just be myself and how I am naturally, calm. I think that helped me and locating my pitches. The curveball helped me a lot. I threw it a lot in that last inning.”
The Phillies got an insurance run in the eighth when Bader doubled down the leftfield line to lead off the inning and scored on a double by Stott.
After Suarez’s terrific outing, the bullpen was perfect in closing out the Phillies’ fifth win in their last seven games. David Robertson, Matt Strahm and Jhoan Duran each pitched scoreless innings and Duran picked up his 26th save of the season and 10th as a Phillie. He was aided on a leaping catch near the fence in center by Bader off the bat of Monasterio.
“I think our attitude is just keep pushing and keep competing and good things will happen,” said Turner. “We were making (Peralta) work and our pitching staff did a great job today. Ranger was really good and the bullpen was great. Getting that lead and holding onto it was big because you’ve got to win games like that.”
'I Got Notice And Liked It Instantly': Why Dennis Hildeby Signed Unique Three-Year Contract With Maple Leafs
Dennis Hildeby is excited for the upcoming season after signing a rather unique three-year, $2.53 million extension with the Toronto Maple Leafs.
The reason it’s an interesting deal? The first two years are a two-way contract, with Hildeby earning $841,667 in the NHL and $350,000 in the AHL in the first year (and $450,000 the next season), before it shifts into a one-way deal in the third year.
“I’m aware it’s a rare deal for a guy in my position,” Hildeby told reporters on Thursday afternoon. “I got notice that it was on the table and I liked it instantly. I thought it gave me three more years, as I said. I like it here, so I was very pleased with that.”
The 24-year-old goaltender is entering his third season with the Maple Leafs since coming over from Sweden in the spring of 2023. Hildeby finished his first year in Toronto with a .913 save percentage in 41 AHL games before putting up a .908 in 30 games with the Marlies last season.
He also hit a massive milestone early in the year, making his NHL debut with the Maple Leafs on Oct. 22 against the Columbus Blue Jackets. He allowed six goals on 38 shots, with Toronto losing 6-2.
Hildeby played five more games with the Maple Leafs, winning three and returning to the Marlies with an .878 save percentage through six NHL appearances.
“It was kind of a rollercoaster of a season. A little bit up and down,” Hildeby said.
“There was a lot of new stuff I tried to implement into my game that maybe didn’t work out at first. I tried a lot of new stuff and kind of figured out my game more. This season is more about back to trying to take all this new stuff and make it come together into a way it works for me.”
Hildeby will enter this next season as the Maple Leafs’ third goaltender, behind Anthony Stolarz and Joseph Woll. He’ll likely spend a lot of this year with the Marlies again, unless Toronto needs someone up in the NHL.
The Jarfalla, Sweden-born netminder had a down year last year, in terms of statistics (though he was an AHL All-Star), but as he said, he’s looking forward to a new season where he’ll again try to show the Maple Leafs what the future could look like with him in net.
“I’m super excited about camp to get going here and try and prove myself and see where it goes from there.”
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Carmelo Anthony earned his induction into the Hall of Fame. Many times over.
This weekend, in Springfield, when Carmelo Anthony slips on the orange jacket and joins the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame, he will have earned that spot. Many times over.
• He earned it by having arguably the best college freshman season ever, leading Syracuse to a national championship.
• He earned it by winning three Olympic gold medals with USA Basketball, setting 13 Olympic records along the way and being in the conversation for America's greatest international player ever.
• He earned it by being one of the most prolific scorers the NBA has ever seen, the foundation of a legendary NBA career.
Starting this fall, you can all that wisdom come into play as Carmelo Anthony joins NBC's broadcast team as the Association returns to NBC and Peacock.
‘Melo’s NBA Hall of Fame Case
That part about 'Melo's NBA Hall of Fame has gotten some odd pushback on social media, as if Anthony's NBA career alone wouldn't have made him a first ballot Hall of Famer.
Maybe that's a seed that got planted with some of his former coaches — George Karl and Phil Jackson, specifically — calling out 'Melo for dominating the ball too much or not playing enough defense during his career. Maybe there were fans who disliked Anthony's ball-dominant style and the physicality of his play. Perhaps it's because Anthony was the No. 3 pick in the 2003 NBA Draft, and some tried to hype up a "Magic vs. Bird" rivalry with LeBron James that never materialized on the court (and they remain close friends off it). Maybe it's online trolls just doing what they do for attention. Whatever the reason, even Karl — the Nuggets coach who had a long-running feud with Anthony — is saying he is an unquestioned Hall of Fame.
Melo’s Hall of Fame enshrinement is well deserved this weekend.
— George Karl (@CoachKarl22) September 4, 2025
Carmelo Anthony is one of the best scorers in basketball history and should be celebrated. I’m happy for him! pic.twitter.com/1fnbtXDIuX
Look at Anthony's NBA resume:
• 22.5 points and 6.2 rebounds a game across 19 NBA seasons
• Six-time All-NBA
• 10-time NBA All-Star
• 10th all-time in points scored (28,289)
• 2013 NBA scoring champion
• Member of NBA's 75th Anniversary Team member
• Finished in the top 15 in MVP voting six times
All of that doesn't even touch on him lifting up the Knicks organization in dark times, or the cultural impact he had on the league. The only knock can be "he didn't win a ring," but that's not exclusion worthy. Winning a title takes more than just being a star player, it's about being in the right organizations at the right time with the right teammates, and a little bit of luck. Maybe that didn't all come together for Anthony, but it doesn't diminish his NBA Career.
‘Melo in Olympics, at Syracuse
Nothing dispelled the "Carmelo is a ball hog" myth like watching Olympic 'Melo.
3 Olympic golds
— USA Basketball (@usabasketball) May 29, 2020
336 Olympic points
13 Olympic records
One Melo. HBD @carmeloanthonypic.twitter.com/FFq1WuKrRn
Surrounded by elite teammates she could trust, Anthony became the ultimate team player — he definitely still could get a bucket, but he also played within the up-tempo system and got his teammates going as well. He found his groove.
The debate about the greatest USA Basketball men's player ever on the Olympic stage is between Anthony and Kevin Durant. That's it. Which alone could be Hall of Fame worthy.
Then there is college, where Anthony had arguably the greatest freshman season in the history of NCAA hoops, leading Syracuse to the national title.
7 DAYS OF MELO HIGHLIGHTS
— CTRL the Narrative (@ctrlnarrative) September 3, 2025
Carmelo Anthony had the greatest CBB freshman season ever, leading the Syracuse Orangemen to their first ever NCAAB championship (h/t @Frankie_Vision)
pic.twitter.com/1O1B9cekKV
In his one season with the Orange, Anthony averaged 22.2 points, 10 rebounds and 2.2 assists a game. He put up those numbers efficiently, despite defenses throwing everything they could at him.
Combine all that, and there can be no doubt. Some NBA fans forget this is the "Basketball Hall of Fame" — what happens internationally, what happens in college and high school matters, too.
However, even if this were an NBA-only Hall of Fame, Carmelo Anthony would be voted in on the first ballot. Without question. To suggest otherwise is just being a troll.