Poll: Who is the Anaheim Ducks' Number One Defenseman of the Future?

The Anaheim Ducks have one of the deepest and most potent young defensive cores in the NHL. A fully fleshed out and realized blueline is one of the most important ingredients (maybe the most important ingredient) to building a Stanley Cup championship roster.

A true number one defenseman to lead said blueline is necessary more often than not if a team has ambitions to hoist the greatest trophy in professional sports come June.

The 2023 Vegas Golden Knights had Alex Pietrangelo, the ’22 Colorado Avalanche had Cale Makar, the ’20 and ’21 Tampa Bay Lightning had Victor Hedman, the ‘19 St. Louis Blues also had Pietrangelo, etc. The exception in the last two seasons has been the back-to-back Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers, who did it more by committee on their blueline with the trio of Aaron Ekblad-Gustav Forsling-Brandon Montour in 2024 and the trio of Ekblad-Forsling-Seth Jones in 2025.

The definition of what a “number one” defenseman is varies person-to-person, but to me, I define it as the defenseman who plays the most (and that a team often first sends over the boards) in every scenario: 5v5, power play, penalty kill, up a goal late, down a goal, etc.

The Ducks are in a position where they are attempting to put the finishing touches on their elongated rebuild and return to the playoffs for the first time since the 2017-18 season, ending the third-longest playoff drought in the NHL.

The core pieces when the team is finally contending are all expected to already be within the organization, as they have potential depth and impact at every position from the crease out.

Poll: When Will the Anaheim Ducks Make the Playoffs?

Reports: Mason McTavish Prefers a Long-Term Contract while Pat Verbeek Prefers a Bridge, where Talks Stand

Ducks Captain Gudas Opts for Physical Therapy Over Surgery

The Ducks have assembled an impressive stable of young blueliners, including players projected to be on the NHL roster like Jackson LaCombe, Olen Zellweger, Pavel Mintyukov, and Drew Helleson, with Tristan Luneau on the bubble. Players like Stian Solberg, Tyson Hinds, Noah Warren, and Ian Moore are expected to have impact roles at the AHL level, while prospects like Lasse Boelius, Tarin Smith, and others wait in the wings.

Since the organization has been selecting near the top of the draft since 2019, they’ve spent most of their top picks on forwards, with Mintyukov representing the only top-ten pick on the blueline.

That leaves the question: when the Ducks are finally contending, who will be their top defenseman?

Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Jackson LaCombe

LaCombe (24) was the breakout player for the Ducks in 2024-25, after struggling through large portions of his rookie campaign (2023-24). He filled the role of “number-one defenseman” according to my previously stated definition, leading the team in TOI/G (22:18) and TOI on the power play (160:12), while finishing second in 5v5 TOI (1240:07) and TOI on the penalty kill (168:55).

He scored 43 points (14-29=43) in 75 games, and his 14 goals were the most by a Ducks’ defenseman since Lubomir Vishnovsky hit 18 in 2010-11.

In his sophomore NHL season, he was more polished in coverage and more difficult to play against in front of the net. He used his skating to close gaps and join rushes when he saw openings. He was still prone to the odd, dangerous turnover, but ultimately improved his puck management skills.

Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Pavel Mintyukov

As mentioned, Mintyukov (21) is the only defenseman on the Ducks roster or in the pipeline that the Ducks used a top-ten draft pick on (10th overall in 2022) and was the first draft pick made by Pat Verbeek as the general manager.

After a successful junior career in the OHL, where he won OHL Defenseman of the Year honors in 2023, Mintyukov made an immediate impact in the NHL during his rookie season for the Ducks in 2023-24. Though struggling with occasional coverage lapses, he was a neutral zone play-killer and seemed to have endless creativity and fearlessness in the offensive zone. He scored 28 points (4-24=28) in 63 games.

His capabilities were seemingly muted the following year in 2024-25, as he struggled to remain in the nightly lineup and opted for safer plays in attempts to do so. His impact was diminished as he worked to refine his defensive game, and his power play time was cut from 122:04 TOI in 2023-24 to just 60:52 TOI in 2024-25.

Mintyukov still has the capability and potential to become a dominant two-way force on both sides of the puck in the NHL, as he reads developing plays at a level beyond his years and can turn perfectly-timed defensive engagements into quick-strike offense.

Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Tristan Luneau

Luneau (21) is coming off an extremely impressive rookie season in the AHL, playing for the San Diego Gulls after battling through more injury adversity than most 21-year-old players.

He has every tool necessary to become a special two-way defenseman in the NHL and is becoming more polished with each passing game. He displays textbook engagement and angling skills defensively and is ever-active on the offensive end.

His most substantial attribute might be his competitive drive. He battled through an offseason knee surgery before his draft year, which caused his stock to slip into the second round (53rd in ’22) only to bounce back and win QMJHL Defenseman of the Year honors in 2022-23.

He barely played hockey in 2023-24 due to an infection in his knee that required surgery just before the 2024 World Junior Championship. He responded by scoring 52 points (9-43) in 59 games in his rookie AHL season, earning a spot on the AHL All-Rookie team.

Others in the Running

Stian Solberg (19) saw his role diminish in his first SHL Season in 2024-25 to the point where the Ducks decided to send him to the AHL to wrap up the season, where he scored five points (2-3=5) in ten games and will look to have an increased role in 2025-26. His trademark is his defensive prowess and physicality, but he may not have the offensive dynamism that others in the Ducks system have. However, he has flashed production at an impressive clip, especially at the 2025 World Championships.

Olen Zellweger (21) was an offensive dynamo in the CHL and was an AHL All-Star in 2023-24, totaling 37 points (12-25=37) in 44 games, before finishing his rookie campaign in the NHL with the Ducks. Like Mintyukov, his impact was diminished in 2024-25, opting for a simpler game to remain in the nightly lineup. His defensive game has come a long way, but he may be limited in that aspect, potentially keeping him from ever becoming a “number one” according to my subjective definition.

There’s always the potential for the Ducks to find their future number one defenseman from outside the organization. Free agency and the trade market aren’t typically places where teams find their top defensemen, but the Golden Knights were able to pluck Pietrangelo as a UFA, and Noah Dobson was recently traded from the New York Islanders to the Montreal Canadiens.

5 Ducks Games to Look Forward to in 2025-26

Poll: How Would You Grade the Job GM Pat Verbeek has Done so Far?

Poll: How Would You Grade the Anaheim Ducks Rebrand?

Poll: Who is the Anaheim Ducks' Number One Defenseman of the Future?

The Anaheim Ducks have one of the deepest and most potent young defensive cores in the NHL. A fully fleshed out and realized blueline is one of the most important ingredients (maybe the most important ingredient) to building a Stanley Cup championship roster.

A true number one defenseman to lead said blueline is necessary more often than not if a team has ambitions to hoist the greatest trophy in professional sports come June.

The 2023 Vegas Golden Knights had Alex Pietrangelo, the ’22 Colorado Avalanche had Cale Makar, the ’20 and ’21 Tampa Bay Lightning had Victor Hedman, the ‘19 St. Louis Blues also had Pietrangelo, etc. The exception in the last two seasons has been the back-to-back Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers, who did it more by committee on their blueline with the trio of Aaron Ekblad-Gustav Forsling-Brandon Montour in 2024 and the trio of Ekblad-Forsling-Seth Jones in 2025.

The definition of what a “number one” defenseman is varies person-to-person, but to me, I define it as the defenseman who plays the most (and that a team often first sends over the boards) in every scenario: 5v5, power play, penalty kill, up a goal late, down a goal, etc.

The Ducks are in a position where they are attempting to put the finishing touches on their elongated rebuild and return to the playoffs for the first time since the 2017-18 season, ending the third-longest playoff drought in the NHL.

The core pieces when the team is finally contending are all expected to already be within the organization, as they have potential depth and impact at every position from the crease out.

Poll: When Will the Anaheim Ducks Make the Playoffs?

Reports: Mason McTavish Prefers a Long-Term Contract while Pat Verbeek Prefers a Bridge, where Talks Stand

Ducks Captain Gudas Opts for Physical Therapy Over Surgery

The Ducks have assembled an impressive stable of young blueliners, including players projected to be on the NHL roster like Jackson LaCombe, Olen Zellweger, Pavel Mintyukov, and Drew Helleson, with Tristan Luneau on the bubble. Players like Stian Solberg, Tyson Hinds, Noah Warren, and Ian Moore are expected to have impact roles at the AHL level, while prospects like Lasse Boelius, Tarin Smith, and others wait in the wings.

Since the organization has been selecting near the top of the draft since 2019, they’ve spent most of their top picks on forwards, with Mintyukov representing the only top-ten pick on the blueline.

That leaves the question: when the Ducks are finally contending, who will be their top defenseman?

Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Jackson LaCombe

LaCombe (24) was the breakout player for the Ducks in 2024-25, after struggling through large portions of his rookie campaign (2023-24). He filled the role of “number-one defenseman” according to my previously stated definition, leading the team in TOI/G (22:18) and TOI on the power play (160:12), while finishing second in 5v5 TOI (1240:07) and TOI on the penalty kill (168:55).

He scored 43 points (14-29=43) in 75 games, and his 14 goals were the most by a Ducks’ defenseman since Lubomir Vishnovsky hit 18 in 2010-11.

In his sophomore NHL season, he was more polished in coverage and more difficult to play against in front of the net. He used his skating to close gaps and join rushes when he saw openings. He was still prone to the odd, dangerous turnover, but ultimately improved his puck management skills.

Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Pavel Mintyukov

As mentioned, Mintyukov (21) is the only defenseman on the Ducks roster or in the pipeline that the Ducks used a top-ten draft pick on (10th overall in 2022) and was the first draft pick made by Pat Verbeek as the general manager.

After a successful junior career in the OHL, where he won OHL Defenseman of the Year honors in 2023, Mintyukov made an immediate impact in the NHL during his rookie season for the Ducks in 2023-24. Though struggling with occasional coverage lapses, he was a neutral zone play-killer and seemed to have endless creativity and fearlessness in the offensive zone. He scored 28 points (4-24=28) in 63 games.

His capabilities were seemingly muted the following year in 2024-25, as he struggled to remain in the nightly lineup and opted for safer plays in attempts to do so. His impact was diminished as he worked to refine his defensive game, and his power play time was cut from 122:04 TOI in 2023-24 to just 60:52 TOI in 2024-25.

Mintyukov still has the capability and potential to become a dominant two-way force on both sides of the puck in the NHL, as he reads developing plays at a level beyond his years and can turn perfectly-timed defensive engagements into quick-strike offense.

Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Tristan Luneau

Luneau (21) is coming off an extremely impressive rookie season in the AHL, playing for the San Diego Gulls after battling through more injury adversity than most 21-year-old players.

He has every tool necessary to become a special two-way defenseman in the NHL and is becoming more polished with each passing game. He displays textbook engagement and angling skills defensively and is ever-active on the offensive end.

His most substantial attribute might be his competitive drive. He battled through an offseason knee surgery before his draft year, which caused his stock to slip into the second round (53rd in ’22) only to bounce back and win QMJHL Defenseman of the Year honors in 2022-23.

He barely played hockey in 2023-24 due to an infection in his knee that required surgery just before the 2024 World Junior Championship. He responded by scoring 52 points (9-43) in 59 games in his rookie AHL season, earning a spot on the AHL All-Rookie team.

Others in the Running

Stian Solberg (19) saw his role diminish in his first SHL Season in 2024-25 to the point where the Ducks decided to send him to the AHL to wrap up the season, where he scored five points (2-3=5) in ten games and will look to have an increased role in 2025-26. His trademark is his defensive prowess and physicality, but he may not have the offensive dynamism that others in the Ducks system have. However, he has flashed production at an impressive clip, especially at the 2025 World Championships.

Olen Zellweger (21) was an offensive dynamo in the CHL and was an AHL All-Star in 2023-24, totaling 37 points (12-25=37) in 44 games, before finishing his rookie campaign in the NHL with the Ducks. Like Mintyukov, his impact was diminished in 2024-25, opting for a simpler game to remain in the nightly lineup. His defensive game has come a long way, but he may be limited in that aspect, potentially keeping him from ever becoming a “number one” according to my subjective definition.

There’s always the potential for the Ducks to find their future number one defenseman from outside the organization. Free agency and the trade market aren’t typically places where teams find their top defensemen, but the Golden Knights were able to pluck Pietrangelo as a UFA, and Noah Dobson was recently traded from the New York Islanders to the Montreal Canadiens.

5 Ducks Games to Look Forward to in 2025-26

Poll: How Would You Grade the Job GM Pat Verbeek has Done so Far?

Poll: How Would You Grade the Anaheim Ducks Rebrand?

Panthers Defenseman Features On Top 20 Defenders List

Florida Panthers defenseman Gustav Forsling landed at No.12 on the NHL Network's top 20 defensemen list.

Forsling ranked sixth in the 2024 edition, dropping six spots in 2025. The 29-year-old finished the 2024-25 campaign with 11 goals and 31 points in 80 games. Forsling's offensive numbers dropped off a bit compared to his 37, 41 and 39 points from the years prior with Florida, but his ice time increased, and he faced tougher matchups each night due to the loss of depth.

Forsling received Norris Trophy votes in consecutive seasons, ranking ninth and 13th due to his stout defensive game. The Swedish defenseman might not produce points like Cale Makar, Quinn Hughes and others, but he is arguably the best defensive defenseman in the NHL.

"Since joining the Panthers four seasons ago, Forsling has been one of the best defensive defensemen while also blossoming on offense. He had 31 points (11 goals, 20 assists) in 80 games last season to go along with a plus-33 rating while averaging 22:57 of ice time per game, and has had at least 30 points in four straight seasons. His plus-149 rating is tied with Toews over that span for best in the League. The 29-year-old has won the Cup each of the past two seasons with the Panthers," said the NHL Network.

Gustav Forsling (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

Seth Jones and Aaron Ekblad were omitted from the list, but Jones was considered one of the first defenseman left just off the list. 

Ekblad was stellar defensively in the playoffs, but recorded just three goals and 33 points during the regular season. Jones' arrival was a major boost to the Panthers' blueline, racking up four goals and nine points in the playoffs while averaging 25:30 of ice time. 

Panthers' Sam Reinhart And Matthew Tkachuk Land On Exclusive Wingers ListPanthers' Sam Reinhart And Matthew Tkachuk Land On Exclusive Wingers ListFlorida Panthers forwards Matthew Tkachuk and Sam Reinhart landed on the NHL Network's top 20 wingers list.

Panthers Defenseman Features On Top 20 Defenders List

Florida Panthers defenseman Gustav Forsling landed at No.12 on the NHL Network's top 20 defensemen list.

Forsling ranked sixth in the 2024 edition, dropping six spots in 2025. The 29-year-old finished the 2024-25 campaign with 11 goals and 31 points in 80 games. Forsling's offensive numbers dropped off a bit compared to his 37, 41 and 39 points from the years prior with Florida, but his ice time increased, and he faced tougher matchups each night due to the loss of depth.

Forsling received Norris Trophy votes in consecutive seasons, ranking ninth and 13th due to his stout defensive game. The Swedish defenseman might not produce points like Cale Makar, Quinn Hughes and others, but he is arguably the best defensive defenseman in the NHL.

"Since joining the Panthers four seasons ago, Forsling has been one of the best defensive defensemen while also blossoming on offense. He had 31 points (11 goals, 20 assists) in 80 games last season to go along with a plus-33 rating while averaging 22:57 of ice time per game, and has had at least 30 points in four straight seasons. His plus-149 rating is tied with Toews over that span for best in the League. The 29-year-old has won the Cup each of the past two seasons with the Panthers," said the NHL Network.

Gustav Forsling (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

Seth Jones and Aaron Ekblad were omitted from the list, but Jones was considered one of the first defenseman left just off the list. 

Ekblad was stellar defensively in the playoffs, but recorded just three goals and 33 points during the regular season. Jones' arrival was a major boost to the Panthers' blueline, racking up four goals and nine points in the playoffs while averaging 25:30 of ice time. 

Panthers' Sam Reinhart And Matthew Tkachuk Land On Exclusive Wingers ListPanthers' Sam Reinhart And Matthew Tkachuk Land On Exclusive Wingers ListFlorida Panthers forwards Matthew Tkachuk and Sam Reinhart landed on the NHL Network's top 20 wingers list.

Sens Rewind: Ottawa's NHL Dream Began Over Dressing Room Pints After Pickup Hockey

This year marks the 35th anniversary of Ottawa being awarded an NHL franchise. In this 1990 issue, culled from The Hockey News Archive, Bob McKenzie wrote about Ottawa's successful bid and the humble beginnings of the franchise. What better place to start an NHL dream than an arena dressing room, shooting the s*** after the game, and enjoying a few pints?

How can you not be romantic about hockey? – SW


Dec 21, 1990/vol. 44, issue 15

A CAPITAL IDEA: SENATORS ELECTED TO SECOND TERM

BY BOB MCKENZIE

Bruce Firestone was the driving force behind Ottawa’s successful expansion bid. He’s described as a man of vision by friends and colleagues.

It was early on a Saturday morning back in the winter of 1988 when three pals were killing a little time after their weekly pickup game at Lyons Arena in Ottawa.

All the other players had left the dressing room and the three just sat there, quaffing a few beers and talking.

Randy Sexton remembers it well. So does Cyril Leeder. In fact, they’re not ever likely to forget what Bruce Firestone, their friend and employer, said to them that morning.

“We were just sitting there talking, like we always do,” said Sexton. “Bruce looked at us and said, ‘The NHL is going to expand soon. When it does, we should get a team for Ottawa. Think about it, it’s a natural.’

“I looked at Cyril. He looked at me. And you should know that Bruce isn’t the kind of guy who plays practical jokes. He was serious.”

Was he ever.

Firestone, the 38-year-old chairman and chief executive officer of Terrace Investments Ltd., dared to dream the impossible dream. And on Dec. 6, it all came true.

The NHL awarded a conditional NHL expansion franchise to the Terrace group for the city of Ottawa to begin play for the 1992-93 season.

“I was summoned for a 1 o’clock meeting,” Firestone said. “They brought us down the fire escape and through the kitchen. I had two speeches ready. One for concession, one for acceptance. I didn’t know what to expect.

“I looked down in front of me and there were two words on a piece of paper, Tampa and Ottawa, and frankly, I just burst into tears. I haven’t done that since I was a little boy.”

Firestone and his executive team of Leeder, the president, and Sexton, the vice president, overcame tremendous odds. First, it seemed the NHL wasn’t keen on expanding into Canada. Second, if it did, Hamilton’s bid was perceived by many as more attractive.

The NHL governors didn’t think so. They voted unanimously in favor of the Terrace bid.

Next NHL Expansion Fee May Be 40 Times More Than The Ottawa Senators PaidNext NHL Expansion Fee May Be 40 Times More Than The Ottawa Senators PaidNHL expansion fees have come a long way since the humble beginnings of the Ottawa Senators. When the Sens entered the league in the early '90s, the cost for an entire franchise was reported at the time as $50 million.

“I would have to thank the Canadian governors,” Firestone said. “They pushed hard for the league to take a Canadian team and if they hadn’t done that, we wouldn’t have got the franchise.”

“I don’t think there was any one thing that won it for us,” said Sexton, 31, a former NCAA hockey player at St. Lawrence University who has an MBA from Clarkson.

“We just worked hard. Our sincerity and commitment came to the surface. And we have a great market. And Bruce Firestone. He’s a very shrewd man, a very solid guy.”

Leeder, also 31, a chartered accountant and graduate of McMaster University in Hamilton, said none of it would have been possible if not for Firestone, known to his friends and colleagues as a visionary and “big idea man.” Now, he’s known to most as the man responsible for bringing the NHL back to Ottawa after a 57-year absence.

“How would I describe him?” Leeder said. “I would borrow a line I heard our mayor (Jim Durrell) use the other day: ‘Bruce Firestone is the smartest man I have ever met.’ That about sums it up.”

Firestone attended Ashbury College, a local private school, before graduating from McGill University with a masters degree in engineering. He earned his PhD in urban economics at the University of New South Wales in Australia.

In 1982, he took over the family business (Terrace), which his father, Jack, founded in 1956.

Firestone is married and has five children. He’s intense in a quiet, controlled manner.

There’s not much Terrace did wrong in its two-year campaign to woo the NHL. Firestone took a first-class approach in every way, paying incredible attention to every detail. No bid submitted by any group was as thorough or as professionally prepared.

Terrace was able to sell the NHL on an area few thought could support pro hockey.

“A lot of people don’t realize we have a big market,” Sexton said. “There are more than 900,000 people in Ottawa and, within a one-hour’s drive radius, there are 1.7 million.

“And it’s a rich market, too. You need a rich market for pro sports. We attended a game at the Chicago Stadium and sat right behind the players’ bench. The tickets were $39.50 each. Buy two tickets, park, eat and pay for the babysitter and you’re talking well over $100 for a night’s entertainment. Our demographics in that area are good.

“The corporate market in Ottawa is great, too. Our population is increasing at the same time civil service jobs are decreasing. That tells you more private sector business is here than ever before.”

Terrace owns 600 acres of land in the western suburb of Kanata. Almost 100 is targeted for the building of the 20,000-seat Palladium, although rezoning of the land from agriculture to commercial is hung up at the Ontario Municipal Board level.

Ottawa Senators Reach Agreement To Buy Land At LeBreton, Move Closer To New ArenaOttawa Senators Reach Agreement To Buy Land At LeBreton, Move Closer To New ArenaThe Ottawa Senators have taken another big step toward a new arena close to downtown.

NHL governors expressed some concern about the rezoning issue, but Firestone convinced them it is part of the normal procedure. Terrace also wants to rezone the other 500 acres and develop it for high-density commercial and residential use.

Skeptics insist the plan to court the NHL was little more than a device to get the entire area rezoned and developed. Sexton, however, said the arena will be built regardless of what happens with the other land and one development didn’t depend on the other.

Terrace said it will have majority interest in both the hockey club and the arena, although as much as 49 per cent of both may be held by minority investors. Terrace has declined to identify them, but the NHL was obviously satisfied.

The next order of business for Terrace is to hire a team president. Firestone and Leeder will be involved with the Senators, but their main function will be with the land development company. Sexton, however, may spend more time on hockey business matters.

“We’ve already interviewed some people for the president’s job,” Sexton said. “Our president will be a businessman who has some hockey experience. He will then hire his team, which would include a vice president/GM, vice president of marketing and so on.

“It’s funny. We’ve worked so hard on this whole project for almost two years. And, really, the job is just beginning.”

By Bob McKenzie
The Hockey News

More Sens Headlines:

Former Ottawa Senator Travis Hamonic Signs With Atlantic Division Rival
Brady Tkachuk Adds To His Father's Comments About The Future
Former Senator Mark Borowiecki Now 'Looks At Fighting From A Different Lens'
Next NHL Expansion Fee May Be 40 Times More Than The Ottawa Senators PaidIs The Senators' 2025-26 Lineup Is Already Set?

Ex-NHLers Spooner & Merkley Sign With Shanghai

Canadian former NHL forwards Ryan Spooner and Nick Merkley have signed one-year contracts to play for the Shanghai Dragons, the Chinese-based KHL club announced on Saturday.

Also signed on Saturday were goaltender goaltender Andrei Kareyev, defenseman Doyle Somberby and forward Nikita Popugayev.

“Ryan Spooner is no stranger to the KHL and his strengths are well known: elite skating, speed, hockey IQ and a team-first mentality,” said Dragons CEO Igor Varitsky. “He can ignite the offense and move the puck deep into the offensive zone, contributing both at even strength and on the power play.”

Spooner, 33, was chosen in the second round, 45th overall, by the Boston Bruins in the 2010 NHL Entry Draft. Between 2012 and 2019, he played 325 NHL regular season games for the Bruins, New York Rangers, Edmonton Oilers and Vancouver Canucks, recording 167 points and 63 penalty minutes. He also had two points in four playoff games for Boston in 2017.

Since 2019, he’s played in the KHL for all but two games for HC Lugano in Switzerland. He has 271 points in 336 KHL regular-season and playoff games for Dinamo Minsk and Avangard Omsk.

2015 first-rounder Nick Merkley signs with KHL’s Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg2015 first-rounder Nick Merkley signs with KHL’s Avtomobilist YekaterinburgCanadian forward Nick Merkley, 27, has signed a two-year contract with Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg, the KHL club recently announced. For the past two seasons, Merkley played for Dinamo Minsk, the KHL’s Belarusian-based club.

“As for Nick Merkley, he is a skilled right-handed forward with speed and a scorer’s touch,” said Varitsky.

Merkley, 28, was drafted 30th overall in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft by the Arizona Coyotes.

Between 2017 and 2022, Merkley recorded 15 points in 41 NHL games for the Coyotes, New Jersey Devils and San Jose Sharks. He also had 13 points in 19 games for Finnish Liiga club Ässät Pori early in the 2020-21 season before the NHL belatedly commenced its season amid Covid restrictions.

Over the past three KHL seasons for Dinamo Minsk and Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg, Merkley has 101 points in 209 regular-season and playoff games.

Jake Chelios Retires From Chinese KHL TeamJake Chelios Retires From Chinese KHL Team Defenseman Jake Chelios, 34, has announced his retirement via video on the Instagram page of the Chinese-based KHL club that he’s played for the past six seasons.

It’s been a busy week for the Chinese-based KHL club, which was previously known as Kunlun Red Star but is undergoing a major rebranding.

On Monday, defenseman Jake Chelios announced his retirement. On Wednesday, the club announced the signing of new head coach Gerard Gallant, and on Friday the club announced the signings of five other players, including Slovak Olympic bronze-medal-winning goaltender Patrik Rybar.

The Kunlun-Shanghai franchise has played its home games in suburban Moscow since early 2020 and will play in St. Petersburg this season, but plans to return to China in either 2026 or 2027.

Gerard Gallant Takes Over KHL’s Shanghai DragonsGerard Gallant Takes Over KHL’s Shanghai Dragons Gerard Gallant is the new head coach of the Shanghai Dragons, the KHL club announced on Wednesday.

Ex-NHLers Spooner & Merkley Sign With Shanghai

Canadian former NHL forwards Ryan Spooner and Nick Merkley have signed one-year contracts to play for the Shanghai Dragons, the Chinese-based KHL club announced on Saturday.

Also signed on Saturday were goaltender goaltender Andrei Kareyev, defenseman Doyle Somberby and forward Nikita Popugayev.

“Ryan Spooner is no stranger to the KHL and his strengths are well known: elite skating, speed, hockey IQ and a team-first mentality,” said Dragons CEO Igor Varitsky. “He can ignite the offense and move the puck deep into the offensive zone, contributing both at even strength and on the power play.”

Spooner, 33, was chosen in the second round, 45th overall, by the Boston Bruins in the 2010 NHL Entry Draft. Between 2012 and 2019, he played 325 NHL regular season games for the Bruins, New York Rangers, Edmonton Oilers and Vancouver Canucks, recording 167 points and 63 penalty minutes. He also had two points in four playoff games for Boston in 2017.

Since 2019, he’s played in the KHL for all but two games for HC Lugano in Switzerland. He has 271 points in 336 KHL regular-season and playoff games for Dinamo Minsk and Avangard Omsk.

2015 first-rounder Nick Merkley signs with KHL’s Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg2015 first-rounder Nick Merkley signs with KHL’s Avtomobilist YekaterinburgCanadian forward Nick Merkley, 27, has signed a two-year contract with Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg, the KHL club recently announced. For the past two seasons, Merkley played for Dinamo Minsk, the KHL’s Belarusian-based club.

“As for Nick Merkley, he is a skilled right-handed forward with speed and a scorer’s touch,” said Varitsky.

Merkley, 28, was drafted 30th overall in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft by the Arizona Coyotes.

Between 2017 and 2022, Merkley recorded 15 points in 41 NHL games for the Coyotes, New Jersey Devils and San Jose Sharks. He also had 13 points in 19 games for Finnish Liiga club Ässät Pori early in the 2020-21 season before the NHL belatedly commenced its season amid Covid restrictions.

Over the past three KHL seasons for Dinamo Minsk and Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg, Merkley has 101 points in 209 regular-season and playoff games.

Jake Chelios Retires From Chinese KHL TeamJake Chelios Retires From Chinese KHL Team Defenseman Jake Chelios, 34, has announced his retirement via video on the Instagram page of the Chinese-based KHL club that he’s played for the past six seasons.

It’s been a busy week for the Chinese-based KHL club, which was previously known as Kunlun Red Star but is undergoing a major rebranding.

On Monday, defenseman Jake Chelios announced his retirement. On Wednesday, the club announced the signing of new head coach Gerard Gallant, and on Friday the club announced the signings of five other players, including Slovak Olympic bronze-medal-winning goaltender Patrik Rybar.

The Kunlun-Shanghai franchise has played its home games in suburban Moscow since early 2020 and will play in St. Petersburg this season, but plans to return to China in either 2026 or 2027.

Gerard Gallant Takes Over KHL’s Shanghai DragonsGerard Gallant Takes Over KHL’s Shanghai Dragons Gerard Gallant is the new head coach of the Shanghai Dragons, the KHL club announced on Wednesday.