Monthly Archives: July 2025
Oilers’ Lazar Brings Championship Experience Back to Edmonton
Spitfires Make History, Take Trio at 2025 CHL Import Draft
Jets’ Nyquist Signing Is a Smart Short-Term Solution
NHL Rumor Roundup: The Latest On The Maple Leafs And Canadiens
The Toronto Maple Leafs haven't yet made any big splashes in this summer's UFA pool. Their most notable move was signing former Montreal Canadiens checking-line forward Michael Pezzetta to a two-year deal.
Meanwhile, their most notable trade was the sign-and-trade deal that sent right winger Mitch Marner to the Vegas Golden Knights on June 30 for Nicolas Roy.
Jonas Siegel of The Athletic believes Marner's departure leaves the Leafs in need of a top-six forward. He suggested they add either a right winger to skate alongside Auston Matthews or John Tavares, or a center who could push Tavares to the wing or centering the third line.
This year's thin free-agent market is tapped out of prime scoring talent. Sportsnet's Luke Fox thinks GM Brad Treliving will turn to the trade market for a bona fide top-six forward.
The Hockey News’ David Alter observed that the Maple Leafs have over $4.9 million in cap space for this season. He suggested Treliving could weaponize that space later this summer, targeting cap-strapped teams to acquire a player the Leafs need.
Terry Koshan of the Toronto Sun shares that opinion. He felt Treliving could draw on his glut of affordable bottom-six forwards for trade chips.
That could include Nick Robertson, an RFA with arbitration rights. The 23-year-old left winger created a stir last summer when he requested a trade, only to sign a one-year deal a week before training camp opened last September.
Meanwhile, the Canadiens have been active in the off-season trade market. Less than a week after their bombshell acquisition of defenseman Noah Dobson from the New York Islanders last Friday, they shipped blueliner Logan Mailloux to the St. Louis Blues for middle-six forward Zack Bolduc.
Both moves received positive reviews, but failed to address their pressing need for a second-line center. They must also cope with the departures of veteran forwards Joel Armia and Christian Dvorak.
Arpon Basu of The Athletic believes Canadiens GM Kent Hughes is willing to look within the organization to address that issue in the short term. Sportsnet's Eric Engels thinks their best option would be to try Kirby Dach in the second-line center role.
Engels acknowledged that the oft-injured Dach struggled last season before undergoing knee surgery. However, he didn't have wingers like Bolduc and Ivan Demidov as potential linemates.
Following the acquisition of Dobson, there was speculation that Mike Matheson might be used as a trade chip for a second-line center or winger. The 31-year-old puck-moving defenseman is a year away from UFA eligibility, but Hughes told reporters he's not moving him, citing the big minutes he played last season.
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Meet the Newest New Jersey Devil: Evgenii Dadonov
Ottawa Senators Sign Five Players, Including Former OHL Sniper Arthur Kaliyev
When the Ottawa Senators selected Shane Pinto 32nd overall in the 2019 NHL Draft, some Sens fans raised an eyebrow or two, wondering if Hamilton Bulldogs winger Arthur Kaliyev might have been the better choice. Kaliyev had just put up a 51-goal OHL season, and ended up being chosen by the LA Kings with the very next pick after Pinto.
Needless to say, over the past six years, Pinto has firmly established himself as the better NHL player, leaving Kaliyev in the dust in both development and impact. So that discussion has been dead for a few seasons now.
But Kaliyev re-entered the Ottawa chat a few days ago after the New York Rangers opted not to extend him a qualifying offer. Suddenly, Kaliyev was a UFA at 24. And as we speculated he might earlier this week, Senators GM Steve Staios took the opportunity on Wednesday to grab Kaliyev, one of his star players from his days as Bulldogs GM.
Under Staios and team owner Michael Andlauer, Kaliyev helped the Bulldogs capture the OHL championship in 2018, then scored 95 goals over the next two seasons. But at the NHL level, his skating and defense have both been an issue. But few people would argue one thing: His slap shot and one-timer are both fierce. Unfortunately for the player, that hasn't translated to NHL success.
On Wednesday, the Senators announced that Kaliyev was one of five players signed to a two-way contract to help out Belleville and add some NHL depth in the event of injury. Along with rejoining Staios and Andlauer in Ottawa, Kaliyev might also be able to recreate some of the junior magic in Belleville with his former OHL teammate, Jan Jenik, who received a qualifying offer from the Senators but remains a restricted free agent.
Kaliyev last played in March against the Winnipeg Jets when he suffered a season-ending upper-body injury. To that point, he had four points in 14 games for the Rangers after being claimed off waivers by the Kings in January. Prior to being claimed, Kaliyev had missed the entire Kings' season to that point, reportedly fracturing his clavicle during Day 2 of training camp.
For Kaliyev, the move offers a fresh start among familiar faces who still believe in him and have seen firsthand what he's capable of. At this point in his career trajectory, there's probably no better landing spot for him than this organization. For the Sens, it really doesn't cost them anything to see if there's still an NHL player in there. At the very least, he'll help in Belleville.
Speaking of which...
Other Signings
In addition to Kaliyev, the Senators also signed forwards Hayden Hodgson, Wyatt Bongiovanni, Olle Lycksell, and goaltender Hunter Shepard to two-way deals.
Hunter Shepard joins the Senators after playing 39 games for the Hershey Bears (AHL) last season, finishing with a 23-11-4 record, a 2.80 goals-against average, and a .891 save percentage. Over 118 AHL games, Shepard has a crazy 78-26-12 record with a 2.22 GAA and .914 SV%. He also appeared in five NHL games for the Washington Capitals, posting a 2-2-1 record.
Wyatt Bongiovanni returns after a solid season in Belleville, where he scored 22 goals and 11 assists for 33 points in 54 games, tying for the team lead in goals. Originally acquired from the Winnipeg Jets in March 2024, Bongiovanni has 76 points (51 goals) in 161 career AHL games.
Olle Lycksell split his 2024–25 season between the Philadelphia Flyers and their AHL affiliate, the Lehigh Valley Phantoms. The 25-year-old had five assists in 19 NHL games, while posting 19 goals and 25 assists in 43 AHL games. Lycksell has 128 points in 134 career AHL games, along with 11 points in 45 NHL appearances.
Hayden Hodgson is a big body at 6-foot-two, 221 pounds, known for his forecheck and physical play. He played two games for Ottawa and 43 in Belleville, where he put up 11 points and 156 penalty minutes for the B-Sens.
By Steve Warne
The Hockey News - Ottawa
Sens Headlines:
Claude Giroux Reveals Why He Signed Back In Ottawa
Senators Bid Farewell To Six UFAs On Day One Of NHL Free Agency
Senators Sign Lars Eller, Offseason NHL Additions Are Now 'Most Likely' Complete
Senators Clarify Their Goaltending Picture for Next Season
Sens First-Rounder Says He Models His Game After Jake Sanderson
Senators Acquire Defenseman Jordan Spence From Los Angeles
Sens Nation Podcast: Breaking Down the Giroux and Spence Deals and the NHL Draft
Anaheim Ducks, San Diego Gulls Sign Four Players
To date, the biggest signing the Anaheim Ducks have made this offseason has been the addition of unrestricted free agent forward Mikael Granlund.
The Ducks have made some organizational depth moves in the last two days, however, inking four players to AHL contracts to play for the San Diego Gulls.
On July 1, the Gulls announced they’d signed forward Judd Caulfield and defenseman Will Francis to standard player contracts.
Anaheim Ducks Fill Assistant Coaching Vacancies at NHL, AHL Levels
Breaking: Anaheim Ducks Sign Mikael Granlund to Three-Year Contract
On July 2, they announced they’d added forward Matthew Phillips and defenseman Nikolas Brouillard, both on standard player contracts.
Of these four signings, the clear feel-good story is that of Will Francis. Five years and three battles against acute lymphoblastic leukemia, Francis is now officially living out his dream of playing hockey professionally.
“It was super special,” Francis said after signing his deal. “It’s something that I’ve worked toward ever since I was drafted into the organization. They’ve been first class to me, and it’s just a great feeling, and I got to celebrate it at home with my family.”
Francis (24) was drafted in the sixth round by Anaheim (163rd overall in 2019) six years ago from the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders in the USHL. He didn’t play any hockey during recovery in 2020-21 and, with two more diagnoses, only played a total of 39 games during his four-year NCAA career with the University of Minnesota-Duluth.
Francis made his AHL debut with the Gulls in April, playing three games at the end of the 2024-25 season on an amateur tryout.
“The biggest thing is just never stop believing in yourself,” Francis said. “To accomplish anything you want to accomplish in life, you've just got to start with that belief. I'd say that's something that's going to stick with me the rest of my life.”
Though four months younger than Francis, Caulfield (24) is an AHL veteran at this point in his career, having played 133 games for the Gulls over three seasons. He’s tallied 51 points (21-30=51) in that time, playing a versatile role up and down the lineup. Caulfield was a former fifth-round draft pick (145th in ’19) of the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Phillips (27) is a slight winger (5-foot-8, 161 pounds) who’s been productive at every level of hockey at which he’s played except the NHL. He’s a nine-year veteran of the AHL and has totaled 300 points (124-176=300) in 339 games. He’s a former sixth-round draft pick of the Calgary Flames (166th in ’16) and has scored five points (1-4=5) in 34 games at the NHL level.
Brouillard (30) will return to San Diego for his second stint in his career with the Gulls. He played 167 games over three seasons with the Gulls from 2020 to 2023. He spent the previous two seasons with the Hartford Wolfpack in 2023-24 and the Coachella Valley Firebirds in 2024-25.
These four players will look to provide a stable and nurturing environment for a young Gulls team in 2025-26 that will consist of budding talents like Nathan Gaucher, Stian Solberg, Yegor Sidorov, and Nico Myatovic, among others.
Eight Anaheim Ducks Players Receive Qualifying Offers, Three Do Not
2025 Anaheim Ducks Draft Grades, Analysis
Ducks GM Pat Verbeek on John Gibson Trade
Photo Credit: Patrick Present-The Hockey News
Hurricanes Off to a Busy Start After 2 Days Into Free Agency
Anaheim Ducks Fill Assistant Coaching Vacancies at NHL, AHL Levels
On July 1, the day free agency opened and following the announcement of the signing of veteran forward Mikael Granlund, the Anaheim Ducks announced they had filled out their coaching staffs at both the NHL and AHL levels.
As had been reported the week prior, Jay Woodcroft (48) was hired to run the forwards and power play. He entered the 2025 offseason as one of the NHL’s top head coaching candidates, even interviewing for the Ducks vacancy, but after a second consecutive summer missing out on the coaching carousel, he joined Joel Quenneville’s staff in Anaheim.
Breaking: Anaheim Ducks Sign Mikael Granlund to Three-Year Contract
Eight Anaheim Ducks Players Receive Qualifying Offers, Three Do Not
“Jay and I have a long history. He was in Detroit when I was there with the Detroit Red Wings, he was the video coach there,” Pat Verbeek said after the hiring announcements. “He’s really grown as a coach. He ran the power play when he was in San Jose, and had a top-ten power play when he was there.
“What I like is how he teaches progressions, whether it’s the breakouts, whether it’s the plays that get made in the zone to create chances. I really love that part about his coaching and his presentation.”
On the other side of Quenneville, opposite Woodcroft, will be Ryan McGill (56) to run the defensemen and penalty kill. McGill has been a head coach at both the CHL and AHL levels. He was an assistant with the Vegas Golden Knights from their inception in 2017 until 2022, whereafter he joined the New Jersey Devils, where he’d been an assistant for the past three seasons.
“Ryan’s going to run the defense,” Verbeek stated. “In New Jersey, I think this year, he was top-two in the league as far as the penalty kill. We went through the last three years with him, so his first year there, he was top-four, fell to top-ten, and then last year, second overall. If we get anywhere close to that, I’ll be ecstatic.”
McGill’s Devils had the second-best PK in the NHL in 2024-25 (82.7%), the tenth-best in 2023-24 (80.7%), and the fourth-best in 2022-23 (82.6%).
Both Woodcroft and McGill will be expected to flip one of the Ducks’ greatest areas of weakness, special teams, into an area of strength. In 2024-25, they had the 29th-ranked PK, killing at a 74.2% clip, and the 32nd-ranked PP, converting at a horrendous 11.8% clip. With the talent on both sides of the puck on the roster, those numbers were clearly viewed as unacceptable. Merely raising both units to league average will contribute to an improvement in the league standings in 2025-26.
The Ducks also added Andrew Brewer (39) to the coaching staff. Brewer was Hockey Canada’s video coach from 2011-2014, the Detroit Red Wings video coach in 2014-15, and the Florida Panthers video coach from 2020-2022. He has experience as an NHL assistant, coaching the Toronto Maple Leafs from 2016 to 2020. It’s unclear what his day-to-day responsibilities will look like.
“We just really focused in on quality quality coaching,” Verbeek continued. “I feel very, very fortunate that we got the guys we got. Mixed in with Joel, I think we’ve got an outstanding staff.”
The NHL club wasn’t the only team in the organization to round out its coaching staff on July 1. The San Diego Gulls hired Dave Manson and Michael Babcock to be assistants to head coach Matt McIlvane.
Manson (58), father of eight-year Ducks defenseman Josh Manson, most notably coached alongside Woodcroft both with the Bakersfield Condors in the AHL from 2018 to 2021 and the Edmonton Oilers of the NHL from 2021 to 2023. He was let go when Woodcroft was, just six games into the 2023-24 season.
Manson played for 16 years and 1103 games in the NHL from 1986 to 2002 for the Chicago Blackhawks, Dallas Stars, Edmonton Oilers, and Phoenix Coyotes/Winnipeg Jets.
It is presumed Manson will run the defensemen and penalty kill for the Gulls.
Michael Babcock (30), son of longtime NHL coach and former Ducks head coach Mike Babcock, joins the Gulls after spending the last two seasons in the St. Louis Blues organization as a skills coach.
As a player, Babcock played prep school hockey in Michigan, for the Fargo Force of the USHL, and Merrimack College for four seasons in the NCAA, before playing a season overseas in France’s top professional division.
Babcock will presumably run the forwards and power play in San Diego.
2025 Anaheim Ducks Draft Grades, Analysis
Ducks GM Pat Verbeek on John Gibson Trade
Photo Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images