Two Days After Signing In KHL, Sokolov Traded For NHL Free Agent

Two days after signing with CSKA Moscow, Russian winger Egor Sokolov has been traded to Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod, the CSKA club announced on Thursday.

Sokolov, 25, was traded for the KHL rights to another 25-year-old Russian winger – Nikolai Kovalenko – who is currently a free agent. Kovalenko split last season between the Colorado Avalanche and San Jose Sharks.

Given the similar profile of the two players in this one-for-one deal, the reason the trade was made probably hinges on the possibility of each player playing in the KHL this season. Sokolov is signed while Kovalenko is not, and could possibly return to the NHL.

Kovalenko was born in Raleigh, N.C. while his father, Andrei Kovalenko, played for the Carolina Hurricanes. He grew up in Moscow and Yaroslavl, and played in 304 KHL regular-season and playoff games for Lokomotiv Yaroslavl, Ak Bars Kazan and Torpedo between 2017 and 2024, recording 157 points.

In 57 NHL regular-season games over the past two seasons, Kovalenko has 20 points and 16 penalty minutes. He also played in two playoff games for Colorado in 2024, recording no points.

On Tuesday, CSKA acquired Sokolov's KHL playing rights from Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg and then signed him to a one-year contract.

Utah Prospect, Ex-Sen Egor Sokolov Signs In KHLUtah Prospect, Ex-Sen Egor Sokolov Signs In KHL Russian winger Egor Sokolov, 25, has signed a one-year contract with CSKA Moscow, the KHL club announced on Tuesday. According to the announcement, CSKA had earlier worked out an agreement with Avtomobilist Yetaterinberg, who had previously held Sokolov’s KHL rights.

Originally from Yekaterinburg, a city in the foothills of the Ural Mountains on the Asian side, Sokolov went overseas at age 17 to play junior hockey for the Cape Breton Screaming Eagles of the QMJHL.

Sokolov was taken by the Ottawa Senators in the second round, 61st overall in the 2020 NHL Entry Draft. He then spent the next four seasons in the Ottawa organization, playing 13 NHL games for the Sens in which he recorded one goal, one assist and four penalty minutes.

Sokolov was traded last summer to Utah HC, now the Utah Mammoth, for Czech winger Jan Jeník. He spent the entire 2024-25 season in the AHL with the Tucson Roadrunners, where he recorded 44 points in 75 regular-season and playoff games.

Goalie Spencer Martin Signs In KHLGoalie Spencer Martin Signs In KHL Canadian goaltender Spencer Martin, 30, has signed a two-year contract with CSKA Moscow, the KHL club announced on Wednesday.

CSKA has been very busy over the past few days building its 2025-26 roster. In addition to the three transactions involving Sokolov, it has also signed goaltender Spencer Martin and acquired Denis Zernov from Metallurg Magnitogorsk in exchange for New York Islanders prospect Ruslan Iskhakov.

Last season, CSKA and Torpedo finished fifth and eighth, respectively, in the KHL’s Eastern Conference. Both teams were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs.

  Photo © Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images.

Islanders Prospect Moves In KHL TradeIslanders Prospect Moves In KHL Trade KHL clubs CSKA Moscow and Metallurg Magnitogorsk were involved in a one-for-one trade involving Russian forwards on Thursday, the latter club announced. Ruslan Iskhakov, 24, is headed to Magnitogorsk and 29-year-old Denis Zernov is headed west to the Russian capital.

Hurricanes Target Positional Depth In Opening Days of Free Agency

While the Carolina Hurricanes certainly made a splash on the opening day of free agency, it wasn't through the signing of a UFA. 

No, the Hurricanes' biggest move of the week came from a trade for defenseman K'Andre Miller from the New York Rangers (acquired for rookie defenseman Scott Morrow, a 2026 first and a 2026 second).

The Canes have had a couple of UFA signings, but all have been to address organizational depth rather than to improve the roster, but that's to be expected. 

The 2025 UFA class was already a pretty weak one and that was even before most players decided to go ahead and re-sign with their own teams.

Now, the only true top-six upgrade the Canes can pursue is Nikolaj Ehlers, who Carolina is reportedly the top contender for.

"We've had talks with his agent and he's taking his time to field offers," said Carolina general manager Eric Tulsky on Tuesday. "He's obviously a very popular person right now and we're waiting to see where that goes."

Top Pairing Defenseman and Beloved Teammate Brent Burns Finds New Home In ColoradoTop Pairing Defenseman and Beloved Teammate Brent Burns Finds New Home In ColoradoIt seems that former Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Brent Burns is indeed moving on to a new opportunity, as it was announced that the blueliner has signed a one-year deal with the Colorado Avalanche on Wednesday.

While they're waiting on Ehlers to make a decision, the Hurricanes have fortified their depth. 

The first thing the team did was improve their goaltending depth, trading for Montreal Canadiens goaltender Cayden Primeau (in exchange for a 2026 seventh) and signing KHL goaltender Amir Miftakhov.

Carolina had a clear lack of depth at the goaltender position heading into this offseason with Spencer Martin opting to pursue an opportunity in the KHL and Dustin Tokarski well beyond his years.

With no other goalie prospects in the system ready for that next step either, the Canes went out and added two options with potential upside.

"Spencer [Martin's] been really good for us these past couple of years, but he was ready to move on," Tulsky said. "He had another opportunity which he wanted to pursue, so we needed a new person to bring in to be that number three. Dustin [Tokarski] was also great for us in a number four role last year, but we were looking to get a little bit younger and so we brought in two players who we think are both capable of providing that depth and also have upside to grow into more than that and help give us opportunities to keep taking steps forward in the future."

Primeau, 25, has spent time between the NHL and AHL over the last six seasons, but has had very strong AHL numbers throughout.

The 6-foot-3 netminder has a 84-44-18 record and a 0.912 save percentage in 149 AHL games, but just a 0.884 save percentage in 55 NHL appearances.

“Cayden is just 25 and coming off his best AHL season," Tulsky said. "He adds seasoned depth to our organization at the goaltending position."

Miftakhov, 25, had a 13-11-3 record with Ak Bars Kazan last season with a 0.927 save percentage.

The Russian netminder was drafted in 2020 by the Tampa Bay Lightning and spent just one season in North America before returning to Russia.

Over the last three seasons, Miftakhov has had a 0.927 save percentage, 0.930 and a 0.917.

"Amir has put together a number of solid seasons in the KHL and is ready to return to professional hockey in North America," Tulsky said. "It’s important to have goaltending depth, and we look forward to having him in our organization.”

Both netminders are signed to one-year, $775,000 deals.

Carolina also signed defenseman Mike Reilly to a one-year, $1.1 million contract for a bit more defensive depth too.

Reilly, 31, is a journeyman, left-handed defenseman who has some pretty good offensive upside to his game.

He's a veteran of 418 games across 10 seasons and with six franchises and has had 18 goals and 124 points in those games.

 "This is another player who I think should look his best for us ," Tulsky said. "He skates really well, he's effective coming down the wall in the offensive zone and pinching and has the speed to get back and to cover. He can get up all over the ice and we want players taking away time and space through the neutral zone and into the d-zone and he can do that. He has skill with the puck and the ability to transport it and make plays. I think he's going to be really effective for us."

Reilly also had heart surgery last season when testing following a concussion in November, found an undetected heart defect that the veteran had been born with.

“It was picked up through the different echocardiograms that you do for different reasons that you go through with any post-concussion situation," said at-the-time general manager Lou Lamoriello. "It's probably a blessing in disguise of what transpired. They detected this, something that you're sometimes born with but never knew."

Reilly was cleared to return to the ice just two months later and the procedure isn't expected to have any additional impairment to his life or his ability to play.

Finally, the Canes brought back the well-liked Tyson Jost, a versatile forward who played in 39 games with the Hurricanes last season, on a one-year, two-way extension that will pay the forward $775,000 at the NHL level, $300,000 at the AHL and $600,000 guaranteed.

"Tyson was able to contribute to our organization in a number of different ways last year, and we’re happy to keep him here,” Tulsky said. “He’s extremely well-liked and hard-working and capable of playing a number of different roles in the lineup.”


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Mikael Granlund's Impact on the Ducks Roster

The Anaheim Ducks announced on the opening day of 2025 NHL free agency that they signed veteran forward Mikael Granlund to a three-year contract that carries an AAV of $7 million.

Granlund (33) is a versatile forward who can play either wing or center position, kill penalties, and create offensive looks for himself or teammates.

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Despite playing the majority of the last two seasons on the San Jose Sharks, the NHL’s back-to-back worst team in the standings, he eclipsed the 60-point mark (60 in 2023-24 and 66 in 2024-25) for the fourth and fifth times in his 13-year NHL career.

“He’s what I consider a hard worker,” Ducks general manager Pat Verbeek said after the acquisition. “He goes to the hard areas, something that we needed more of. He’s not afraid to be a net front presence guy. He’s a guy that hangs onto pucks in the corners for more puck possessions. He’s a very smart hockey player. I would say his skating is above average.”

The Ducks didn’t have many holes in their depth chart with the addition of Chris Kreider, and even with the departure of Trevor Zegras.

They were the worst faceoff team in the NHL, winning a mere 44.6% of their draws in 2024-25, and they needed a center who could provide a positive impact on both ends of the ice.

The analytics community has been critical of the signing since it was announced, stating his defensive metrics reflect one of the poorer profiles among all NHL forwards.

That leads some to question what his role will be with the current iteration of the Ducks’ depth chart and if he’s simply an older, more expensive version of Zegras.

“That’s the beauty of this player,” Verbeek continued.”I think that he gives us a lot of options. Jole and I go through the lineup, and it’s going to give us four balanced lines. So, injuries occur, there’s a lot of things that can happen. So that’s another reason we really liked him.”

Feb 13, 2025; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; [Imagn Images direct customers only] Team Finland forward Mikael Granlund (64) looks on in warm-up before the game against Team USA during a 4 Nations Face-Off ice hockey game at Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images

Digging into the game tape from his time with San Jose, where he was mostly deployed as a center, often between William Eklund and Fabian Zetterlund or Zetterlund and Barclay Goodrow, he was given the opponent’s toughest matchups on a nightly basis. Against the Colorado Avalanche, he was matched up against Nathan MacKinnon. Against the New Jersey Devils, he was matched against Jack Hughes. Against the Vegas Golden Knights, he was matched up against Jack Eichel, so on and so forth.

Photo Credit: JFresh Hockey-@JFreshHockeyPhoto Credit: AFP Analytics-@AFPAnalyticsPhoto Credit: Corey Sznajder-allthreezones.com-@ShutdownLine

In those matchups, with those linemates, and with defensemen like Cody Ceci, Jake Walman, and Henry Thrun absorbing tough matchups on the blueline along with him, it would come as no surprise to see Granlund’s underlying numbers near the bottom of the NHL. Granlund could have very well been a product of a poor defensive environment, historically one of the worst defensive environments in the NHL’s salary cap era.

However, on a shift-by-shift basis, Granlund demonstrates textbook defensive positioning, effective battle engagement, and above-average angling techniques.

In defensive zone coverage, he’s always in lanes, using his stick to disrupt, supporting pucks, and winning battles in small areas. He displays quality anticipation skills on the forecheck and in the neutral zone, providing early kills. He’s one of the best in the league when it comes to translating what makes him an impactful offensive player to the defensive side of the puck.

Granlund is a player where the eye test doesn’t match the underlying numbers. If the worst-case scenario plays out, it turns out he wasn’t a product of a poor environment, and he is a negative value on the defensive side of the puck, then a cerebral, detailed, playmaking forward with consistent 60-point potential isn’t a bad way to spend $7 million over three years in the modern environment of the NHL salary cap.

If the best-case scenario plays out, it turns out he was, in fact, a product of a poor environment, and he’s a positive value on both sides of the puck, then the Ducks got the middle-six center they needed, and he will single-handedly insulate the rest of the depth chart.

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Photo Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images