Jeremy Brodeur Carving His Own Path in Pro Hockey – While Carrying a Legendary Name

The son of New Jersey Devils legend Martin Brodeur is forging his own path in professional hockey, and he's doing it close to home.

Jeremy Brodeur, a 28-year-old goaltender, is entering his ninth season of pro hockey. Currently, he plays for the Devils’ AHL affiliate, the Utica Comets, following in the footsteps of his Hall of Fame father.

Last season, Brodeur split time between the Utica Comets and the ECHL’s Adirondack Thunder. Across both teams during the 2024–25 campaign, he appeared in 29 games, posting a .923 save percentage in the AHL and a .905 in the ECHL.

Over the past nine seasons, Brodeur has competed in multiple leagues, including the OHL, SPHL, ECHL, and even spent time overseas with Hungary’s Erste Liga in Budapest.

Though he bears one of the most iconic names in Devils history, Jeremy is carving out a career of his own. His father, Martin Brodeur, spent 21 of his 22 NHL seasons with New Jersey, winning all three of the franchise’s Stanley Cups and five Eastern Conference titles. He holds NHL records for most career wins and games played by a goaltender. His No. 30 jersey was retired by the Devils in 2016, and he remains with the organization as an advisor on hockey operations.

Naturally, Jeremy grew up as a fan of the team his father helped define.

“I am, by default, a Devils fan,” Jeremy told NHL.com. “Doing the training camps and things like that in Jersey is always cool, looking up and seeing his name up in the rafters. And since he still works in the organization, that’s pretty awesome. It is really fun, and a true honor to be able to play for the Devils organization. I'm excited for this next year.”

Jeremy was on the Devils’ 2024 training camp roster and is expected to be back this fall, still chasing his NHL dream.

“I feel that my game is on the incline,” he said. “I feel that I have been getting better and better every year, and that is positive. It keeps me motivated. I’ll be in the same spot for a third year, so I am excited for that.”

As the 2025 season approaches, Brodeur is focused on growing his game for a chance at the big leagues. In the meantime, he's keeping sharp by competing in the 3ICE league, a fast-paced 3-on-3 summer hockey tournament. His team is awaiting final results to see if they’ve qualified for the playoff round, with games taking place at the Florida Panthers' training facility.

While the Brodeur name looms large, Jeremy is determined to make a name for himself in the crease, one save at a time.


Photo Credit: © Ed Mulholland-Imagn Images

Kings' Emerging Core of the Future Taking Shape

Credit © Jonathan Hui-Imagn Images

EL SEGUNDO, CA – The Los Angeles Kings of old were defined by stalwart veterans and Cup-winning experience. The team had homegrown their championship centerpieces in the form of Anze Kopitar, Drew Doughty, Dustin Brown, and Jonathan Quick, carving out a golden era in Kings hockey. Under their vigil, they delivered championships while forging an identity of defensive grit and clutch goaltending. 

While some of that grit and defensive legacy remains, the championship element remains an enigma. The team has been operating in a challenging environment, marked by limited playoff success, as it balances the integration of new core elements with its legacy components.

What should have been an outright transitional period, the Kings find themselves in an underlying and quiet transition of power. With the most recent signing, three names have emerged as the centerpiece of a new foundational young core: forward Quinton Byfield (22), winger Alex Laferriere (23), and defenseman Brandt Clarke (22). All three represent more than just draft-day wins or developmental checkboxes. They symbolize the organization's shifting identity, moving from the days of old towards one relying on a crop of homegrown, youthful players ready to take the baton.

Quinton Byfield: The Evolution of a Two-Way Force

Selected second overall in the 2020 NHL Draft, Byfield entered the league carrying heavy expectations. Comparisons to elite power forwards came quickly, but his path has been less about flashy dominance and more about steady refinement. After a developmental start to his career, which was also plagued by injury and illness, Byfield has increasingly shown he can impact games beyond the scoresheet.

At 6-foot-5 with exceptional skating ability, Byfield has grown into a viable shutdown centerman. His length and awareness make him a versatile asset in all zones, capable of absorbing top-line matchups and providing critical penalty-kill minutes. Offensively, his playmaking is blossoming, as it was his standout trait in the Ontario Hockey League. While he hasn't fully unlocked his scoring ceiling yet, given that his most regular linemates last season weren't high-end offensive weapons, his hockey IQ and vision create optimism that he will produce at a high clip.

If Kopitar represents the Kings' past at center, Byfield represents its stylistically evolved future: one rooted in responsible two-way play, modern mobility, and an expanding offensive toolkit. Byfield almost matched his complete output from a season prior in the most recent NHL session, but this time, while dedicated to a full year at center. This was enough for Team Canada to extend an invitation to him to attend Canada's Olympic camp for 2026.

Alex Laferriere: The Motor on the Wing

Laferriere may not have been a top draft pick, but he has quickly become a critical piece in the Kings' youth movement. Drafted in the third round in 2020, the Harvard product plays a relentless, high-energy game that has translated well to the NHL level. While still adjusting to the rigors of the pro schedule, Laferriere's motor, forechecking intensity, and scoring upside made him an easy choice to be re-signed recently to a three-year extension.

He may never be a 40-goal scorer, or even a 30-goal scorer, but his consistency, attitude, and offensive instincts have made him a viable top-six option. More importantly, he brings a contagious competitiveness that aligns with the Kings' long-term vision. Laferriere looks to be a key complementary piece that elevates the play of his linemates and can be trusted in tight playoff-style games. However, the young Ivy League product has yet to really make his presence felt in the playoffs, having only one goal in 11 games played. 

As he continues to develop, he will likely remain a reliable defensive forward with some offensive upside, especially if he gets more minutes in April and beyond. Three years might not shout out 'long term core piece', but his age and alignment towards the team's pursuit signals otherwise.

Brandt Clarke: The X-Factor on the Blue Line

Few prospects have drawn more buzz in Los Angeles than Clarke. A dynamic, offensively inclined defenseman with elite puck-moving capabilities, Clarke represents a stylistic departure from the stay-at-home defenders of the Kings' past and present situation. In a defensive corps that contains defense-first or defense-only players like Mikey Anderson, Joel Edmundson, Brian Dumoulin, Cody Ceci, and, of late, Drew Doughty, Clarke practically represents the team's sole source of offensive output on the backend.

His brief play in the AHL and last season's NHL showcase with Doughty out most of the season showcased his ability to quarterback a power play, transition the puck with authority, and jump into the rush when given a loose leash.

However, Clarke's challenge lies in defensive consistency. His ceiling is undeniable, but the team has exercised caution in his deployment, opting for growth through sheltered minutes and controlled environments. Warning: This same treatment and the emergence of Clarke would eventually lead to the departure of Jordan Spence, who had previously been included in this list of future core homegrown players.

Still, at the end of the day, if Clarke is appropriately developed, he has all the makings of a modern top-pairing offensively leaning defenseman. While not likely ever going to be an 'Evan Bouchard-Quinn Hughes-Cale Makar' output type of defenseman, he should easily replace the offensive void that will emerge when Doughty eventually retires. It's almost a certainty that the defensive gap between Clarke and Doughty will stay extensive for the entirety of Clarke's career.

The Goaltending Question: No Successor in Sight

Where the Kings' future core begins to blur is in the crease. For over a decade, Quick was an absolute rock, a fortress behind the Kings' defensive structure. But since his departure, the team has rotated through options like Joonas Korpisalo, Cam Talbot, and now Darcy Kuemper. While Kuemper's resurgence has been critical, as he was the first Kings Vezina finalist since Quick himself, he is 34, and the team lacks a clear and succession plan.

Erik Portillo, 24 years old, remains the most promising internal option, having performed well at the AHL level. But he is still viewed as a work-in-progress, not yet ready for the responsibilities of an NHL backup, let alone a starter. This potentially exposes the Kings should Kuemper falter or have his age/past demons in Washington catch up.

Unlike Byfield, Laferriere, or Clarke, there's no blue-chip netminding prospect clearly on the trajectory to become the next franchise goaltender. The Kings have long been able to lean on dependable goaltending, but that cushion is vanishing, raising serious long-term concerns.

The Pipeline: Once Towering, Now Tapered

Just a few seasons ago, the Kings were heralded as having the league's deepest prospect pipeline. Names like Gabriel Vilardi, Arthur Kaliyev, Rasmus Kupari, Alex Turcotte, and Tobias Bjornfot gave the fanbase hope for a prolonged window. Yet, only a few of those names have blossomed, remained with the team, or developed into prospective core contributors.

In some cases, such as Kupari and Bjornfot, trades and free agency pickups have stunted growth and blocked roster spots. Kaliyev, while one of the more intriguing prospects the Kings have drafted in this century with his pure and lethal scoring ability, struggled with consistency while suffocated in the bottom six. Turcotte, once a top-tier prospect, has battled injuries and stagnation. 

The result? A once-sprawling farm system has been trimmed to a few emerging stars and hopefuls.

More recently, there's Liam Greentree, the team's 2024 first-round pick, who could change that narrative. A big-bodied, skilled winger with scoring instincts, Greentree has the potential to complement Byfield or Laferriere in future top-six roles. But he's still years away and shouldn't be viewed as an immediate fix. It's also a clear-cut need for him to expedite his breakout sooner rather than later, playing above his expected threshold for the team to be viewed as a serious contender down the road, something of an anemic trait of these Los Angeles Kings prospects.

League Comparison: Where Does LA Stand?

In comparison to rebuilding or retooling teams, the Kings' emerging core is promising, but perhaps not elite. The Anaheim Ducks boast names like Mason McTavish, Leo Carlsson, and Olen Zellweger. Buffalo has built a core around Owen Power, Rasmus Dahlin, and Tage Thompson. Detroit is brimming with upside through Lucas Raymond and Moritz Seider.

Anaheim and Buffalo were cellar dwellers and could be again. Detroit made a surprising run for the playoffs last year with former Kings bench boss Todd McLellan, but they aren't necessarily in the same category as the Kings.

The Kings aren't relatable to these teams in their up-and-coming cores simply because they are neither rebuilding nor retooling. They are rolling the dice on championship legacy while balancing out the next generation. Their closest comparable is the Pittsburgh Penguins, who chose to stand behind an aging trio of Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang, and the ageless Sidney Crosby. That didn't fare well.

The Kings have a blend of NHL-ready youth and established elite veterans. That mix can be potent if managed correctly, but when matched up against clubs with their core talent in their primes, there's a dilemma. The challenge has been and continues to be threading the needle between competing now with aging stars like Kopitar and Doughty, and nurturing players like Byfield and Clarke without rushing them.

With the window narrowing on their Cup-winning veterans, the Kings must decide to invest in short-term competitiveness through trades and veteran additions, or double down on development and ride the wave of their emerging stars. Either approach carries risk, but also the potential to extend LA's relevance or irrelevance (see player-option UFA's/free agents/other players wanting to come to LA) into the next era.

Conclusion: The Foundation Is There

The Kings aren't short on talent; they're short on time. Byfield, Laferriere, and Clarke are legitimate pieces to build around, Greentree offers a promising addition to that future, and there's talent in the goaltending pipeline, but an unknown timeframe for readiness. Without an apparent goaltending heir and with a diminished pipeline, the pressure on this trio to succeed in the short term, surrounded by Rob Blake's legacy moves and now Ken Holland's vision, is immense.

If handled correctly, they could usher in a new era of Kings hockey—one that trades grit for glide, and age for athleticism. But if their development falters or injuries strike, the team may find itself in a more daunting next five years than expected.

For now, the future looks bright, but fragile. Los Angeles has its next core. Now they must make it count.

Former Minnesota Wild Forward Signs Two-Year Contract With The Pittsburgh Penguins

Apr 20, 2025; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Minnesota Wild right wing Justin Brazeau (15) warms up before game one of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images.

The Minnesota Wild traded forwards Marat Khusnutdinov and Jakub Lauko, along with a 2026 sixth round pick, to the Boston Bruins for forward Justin Brazeau at the traded deadline. 

Lauko played in 18 games with the Bruins after the trade and just signed a three-year deal in the Czech Extraliga League. Khusnutdinov re-signed on a two-year deal with the Bruins after the trade. 

Brazeau, 27, played in 19 games for the Wild following the trade. He had one goal, one assist and 34 hits. He played in all six playoff games for the Wild on the fourth line with Marco Rossi and Yakov Trenin.

The 6-foot-5 forward had two assists and 22 hits in six playoff games. Trenin and Brazeau combined for 56 hits in the playoffs. 

Minnesota elected not to re-sign Brazeau so he entered free agency and signed a two-year contract worth an average annual value of $1.5 million with the Pittsburgh Penguins. He is reunited with Penguins General Manager Kyle Dubas, who signed him in 2019 with the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Other Wild News

Former Minnesota Wild Forward Signs Multi-Year Contract In Czech Extraliga LeagueFormer Minnesota Wild Forward Signs Multi-Year Contract In Czech Extraliga LeagueAfter just 139 games in the NHL, the former Minnesota Wild forward Jakub Lauko is heading to Europe to play for Dynamo Pardubice, in the Czech Extraliga League.  Wild's Marco Rossi Training With Hall Of Famer Joe Thornton Wild's Marco Rossi Training With Hall Of Famer Joe Thornton The offseason is in full swing and players have begun to start training with training camp and preseason just under two months from now.  Who's In Charge? Wild's Power Play Has Three CommandersWho's In Charge? Wild's Power Play Has Three CommandersST. PAUL, Minn - The Minnesota Wild enter the 2025-26 season with a good problem on its hands. Who runs the top power play? In previous years, the Wild never really had a sure-fire number one type of defenseman who could run the top unit. 

From The Archive: NHL Team Valuations, Nashville Predators

Jun 28, 2023; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and Nashville Predators general manager David Poile during the 2023 NHL Draft at Bridgestone Arena. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

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Dec 26, 2022/vol. 76, issue 08

HERB FRITCH

BY DAVID BOCLAIR

THE CURRENT SEASON marks the start of a notable transition in Nashville. Chairman Herb Fritch has sold a percentage of his majority stake in the franchise to former Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam. The deal, which the team referred to as a “multi-phased purchase transaction,” will eventually leave Haslam as majority owner. The transition reportedly will be complete ahead of the 2025-26 season.

When the local ownership group bought the team from Craig Leipold in 2007, Fritch took on a 36.7-percent share. He’d later add more shares to become majority owner. In 2019, in a long-planned and peaceful switch, he replaced Tom Cigarran as chairman.

Fritch set out to make this latest move equally easy on all involved. He personally identified “three or four” people he believed had the interest, resources and local ties to take his spot and ensure the club’s long-term success. Eventually, he settled on Haslam, whose personal fortune Forbes placed at $2.6 billion.

Fritch, a season-ticket holder dating all the way back to the Preds’ 1998-99 inaugural season, has kept a low profile throughout his ownership tenure. In fact, he and his wife, Barb, spend the majority of their time at games in their traditional seats rather than the owner’s suite. He has never conducted annual press conferences to offer his thoughts on the state of affairs on the ice. Likewise, while he signed off on coaching changes, he is not the one who spoke publicly about them when they were made.

Fritch made his fortune in the healthcare industry and uses his wealth to indulge his appreciation for wildlife. For more than two decades, he has been licensed to own exotic animals, and his suburban Nashville farm has been home to giraffes, bison, elk, wallabies and some next-level aquariums.

His eventual sale of the Preds will stuff his coffers further. His group bought the franchise for $175 million, and a recent report said the deal with Haslam is based on a current $775-million valuation.

Haslam – whose brother Jimmy owns the NFL’s Cleveland Browns – is deeply ingrained in the culture in the state of Tennessee. Bill Haslam served two terms as Tennessee governor – assuming office in 2011 and serving until 2019. His term in the governorship came after he served two terms as mayor of Knoxville, Tenn.

NHL VALUATIONS

$810M

FORBES

$775M

SPORTICO

$800M

ROUSTAN

TOP BUSINESS EXECUTIVE

SEAN HENRY

SEAN HENRY APPLIED TO become the Predators’ CEO in 2009 when the local ownership group sought someone with experience to direct the franchise’s business operations and Bridgestone Arena (then-Sommet Center).

Ultimately, he accepted an offer to be president-COO. He then laid out a plan to make annual improvements and upgrades to the arena. He also reinforced and re-energized the team’s connection to its fan base and increased the club’s focus on community involvement.

On Dec. 1, 2015, he succeeded Jeff Cogen as CEO. Henry has brought a blue-collar, everyman approach to the role – which plays well with the fan base.

More importantly, following the 2018-19 season, Henry’s business plan for the team led to a new 30-year lease with Nashville, which will keep the Predators in Bridgestone Arena until 2049. The deal relieved the city of any financial obligation toward arena maintenance and effectively made the Predators self-sufficient.

GOVERNOR AND ALTERNATE GOVERNORS

HERB FRITCH

ALTERNATE GOVERNORS: Tom Cigarran, Sean Henry, Joey Jacobs, David Poile

TOP HOCKEY EXECUTIVE

DAVID POILE

ALREADY THIS SEASON, DAVID Poile became the first GM in NHL history with 3,000 regular-season games to his credit. A short time later, he became the first to win 1,500 games in that role.

Yet there is no getting around what he has not done. Poile has never won a Stanley Cup. The closest he came was when, in 2017, the Predators lost to the Pittsburgh Penguins in six games in the Stanley Cup final.

Consistency is the hallmark of Poile’s career. He is a steady hand willing to make big trades, but he also avoids knee-jerk reactions. As the only GM in Predators history, having been hired July 9, 1997, he has had just three coaches head the bench during his tenure. And Poile has made just one in-season coaching change.

All but his last Washington Capitals team (1996-97) reached the playoffs, and Nashville has been to the post-season 15 of the past 18 years. Yet no Stanley Cup.

COMMUNITY INITIATIVE

THE PREDATORS’ MOST substantial community initiative is the 365 Pediatric Cancer Fund, which gets players, staff and fans involved to fund research and provides escapes for families dealing with pediatric cancer. Initially, D-man Shea Weber and goalie Pekka Rinne served as the fund’s faces, and “365” was an amalgamation of the numbers they wore in Nashville and a nod to the everyday quest to find a cure.

Created more than a decade ago – under the name Nashville Predators Pediatric Cancer Research Fund – it has donated more than $3.6 million to the Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt. This season’s fundraising push kicked off in November as part of the greater Hockey Fights Cancer initiative, which means that number will rise by the end of the 2022-23 season.

The franchise also has been involved with the YWCA of Nashville to create Amend Together, a five-year, $500,000 partnership designed to create educational initiatives and support programs dedicated to ending violence against women and girls. The program seeks to create and foster “healthy masculinity” so that men and boys are part of the solution.

Predators CEO Sean Henry serves as an Amend ambassador, which puts him on the front lines of the effort’s planning, fundraising and outreach.

However, franchise leadership demands that community involvement goes beyond simply raising money and distributing grants through the Nashville Predators Foundation or generating goodwill through players’ initiatives. All staff members get paid for 40 hours (or more) of work annually to be involved in service projects outside of the office. Among them are annual staff outings for playground construction and holiday initiatives, but employees are free to choose their own causes to support with their time and energy.

Maple Leafs' Surplus Of Forward Depth Likely To Result In Trades

The Toronto Maple Leafs are about to embark on Season 1 of the post-Mitch-Marner Era. But while Maple Leafs GM Brad Treliving tried valiantly to fill Marner’s spot in the top-six group of forwards, he’s done particularly great work changing up Toronto’s bottom-six forward group. 

Toronto’s high-end players – Auston Matthews, William Nylander, John Tavares and Matthew Knies – need to step up with big seasons next year, but if the Leafs are to improve on getting to the second round of the Stanley Cup playoffs, there’s going to need to be some incredible competition in the Buds’ bottom-two forward lines.

For starters, you can rest assured that new Leafs center Nicolas Roy – acquired in the sign-and-trade deal sending Marner to the Vegas Golden Knights – is going to be a lock to start the season as Toronto’s third-line center. Roy was not acquired to be shunted to the wing on the fourth line. He’s there to play solid two-way hockey and make Toronto a tougher team to play against. 

Meanwhile, on the Maple Leafs’ fourth-line, there’s also a sense that the center role is already taken – in this instance, by veteran Scott Laughton. The former Philadelphia Flyers center took a while to find his stride as a Leaf, but by the time Toronto’s second-round series against the Florida Panthers was over, Laughton was one of the Leafs’ most dogged competitors. And he’s under a great contract situation, accounting for just $1.5-million against the salary cap

So, the real questions about the Leafs next season are essentially the wingers on Toronto’s bottom two lines. You’ve got wingers who probably are going to be in the lineup in Game 1 of the Buds’ 2025-26 regular-season – guys like veteran Bobby McMann and Calle Jarnkrok. Then, you’ve got the Maple Leafs’ most recent acquisition, former Vancouver Canucks winger Dakota Joshua. He’s not going to be a healthy scratch anytime soon. 

Finally, you’ve got a trio of forwards, only one of which will be Toronto’s other fourth-line winger. From our perspective, that will be youngster Steven Lorentz, who was an admirable soldier for coach Craig Berube last year. Then, there’s forward David Kampf, who is a natural center but who can slide over to the wing if need be. In addition, former Montreal Canadiens winger Michael Pezzetta joined the team, and he may force Berube’s hand and stick with the NHL club. And the guy more people should be talking about, Leafs prospect Easton Cowan, also intends to make Toronto’s opening-night roster.

From our calculations, there’s no room for Robertson, Pezzetta and Kampf right now – and that’s even if Cowan plays for the American League’s Toronto Marlies next season. And that’s why people are wondering if Kampf, Jarnkrok and Robertson are going to be on the trade block, if they’re not already there. Toronto has some relatively highly-paid veterans, and Treliving needs to peel off at least one or two of them to give himself cap flexibility during the season.

The Toronto Maple Leafs celebrate a goal scored by Bobby McMann during the first period against the Edmonton Oilers. (Perry Nelson-Imagn Images)

So, between now and training camp, don’t be shocked to see the Maple Leafs make a couple more roster moves. They’re under the cap ceiling right now, with $1.9 million in cap space. But they’ll need to accrue more cap space to be a mover-and-shaker at the trade deadline, and that’s what Berube and Treliving will want as they chart a course without Marner. 

Ultimately, while not having Marner around will hurt, Toronto now has one of the better bottom-six groups of forwards in the league. And the competition for jobs on the third and fourth lines will only help the Maple Leafs improve from the bottom up.

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'Nobody Expects Them Not To Do Things Before Puck Drops': Could Maple Leafs Still Move Nick Robertson After Contract Signing?

Although the Toronto Maple Leafs and Nick Robertson settled on a one-year, $1.825 million contract on Saturday, could the young forward still be on his way out?

It’s been a year since the 23-year-old requested a trade out of Toronto, and after a career year when it comes to goalscoring (15 goals in 69 games), Robertson will still have a difficult time cracking the lineup consistently with all of the Maple Leafs’ moves this summer.

Toronto added Nicolas Roy via a sign-and-trade with the Vegas Golden Knights for Mitch Marner right before free agency opened. The club also acquired Matias Maccelli and Dakota Joshua through trade.

According to Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman on 32 Thoughts, there’s been chatter about Robertson potentially ending up with the Pittsburgh Penguins.

“I had a couple of people ask me about the possibility of Nick Robertson in Pittsburgh, just because obviously Kyle Dubas knows him,” said Friedman. 

“They got the arbitration settled on Saturday, $1.825 million. The Maple Leafs have to clear some bodies there, they’ve got a lot of them. I had one Columbus fan ask me if [Yegor] Chinakhov or Robertson made sense. I don’t know, I think Toronto would have to do more to get that done. 

“I definitely think that the Maple Leafs have work to do here, and I don’t know what their timeline is, but nobody expects them not to do things before puck drops, that’s for sure.”

Former Maple Leafs Forward Nazem Kadri Reacts To Being Snubbed From Team Canada’s 2026 Olympic Orientation CampFormer Maple Leafs Forward Nazem Kadri Reacts To Being Snubbed From Team Canada’s 2026 Olympic Orientation CampDespite a career-high of 35 goals, Calgary Flames forward and former Toronto Maple Leafs star Nazem Kadri was left off Hockey Canada’s Olympic Orientation Camp Roster. The camp is set to take place later in August.

Robertson was drafted by the Maple Leafs in the second round (53rd overall) in the 2019 NHL Draft and has often had challenges securing a full-time lineup spot with Toronto. He dealt with numerous injuries during his first couple of years in pro hockey, however, over time, the forward has put together a string of healthy seasons.

Robertson played 56 games in 2023-24, scoring 27 points (14 goals and 13 assists), before reaching a career-high in games-played this past season, with 22 points in 69 appearances. Although he did play more games in 2024-25, Robertson began this year’s playoffs in the lineup, but fell out of the group after two games in round one against the Ottawa Senators.

Maple Leafs' Ben Danford Praises Fellow Toronto Pick Victor Johansson On Growth Over Last YearMaple Leafs' Ben Danford Praises Fellow Toronto Pick Victor Johansson On Growth Over Last YearVictor Johansson got the upper hand on fellow Toronto Maple Leafs draft pick Ben Danford at the World Junior Summer Showcase this week.

He finished the postseason with three games — two against Ottawa and one against the Florida Panthers in the second round — and two points (one goal and one assist). In 156 career NHL games, Robertson has put together 32 goals and 24 assists for 56 points.

This article originally appeared on The Hockey News: 'Nobody Expects Them Not To Do Things Before Puck Drops': Could Maple Leafs Still Move Nick Robertson After Contract Signing?

(Top photo of Robertson: Kim Klement Neitzel / Imagn Images)