Tag Archives: Hockey

K'Andre Miller's Future, The Oilers' Messy Situation, And More NHL News

Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

1. If I'm Chris Drury, I'd trade K'Andre Miller even up for the Kings' Vladislav Gavrikov and figure that I won the deal.

2.  If I'm Leafs' boss Brad Treliving I'd tell John Tavares, "Nice, knowing you, Pal, but get yourself a deal somewhere else."

3. Somewhere in Florida, my friend Paul Maurice is musing, "Lundell, Luostainen, Marchand –  what an Everything Line that is – 57 points in the playoffs."

4. A Figure Filbert in Edmonton is still wondering what this means: "Connor McDavid: Four even-strength points in the Cup Final and minus-7."

5. I know what it means: As superhuman as McD, Inc. happens to be, hockey's greatest player can be reduced to human over a six-game series.

6. Apart from questionable goaltending, Oilers GM Stan Bowman had better wake up to the fact that Darnell Nurse and Evan Bouchard are as overrated in the DEFENSE department as any D-Pair between here and Lower Slobbovia.

7. Or as pal Glenn (Chico) Resch notes re Bouchard, "Does he have defensive hockey sense, awareness and really understand the danger of many of the dangerous defensive moves he puts himself into? No."

8. As we speak, it would not surprise me if McDavid was seriously exploring his options to leave Edmonton.

9. I wonder when Mike Sullivan will decide to pick a captain. Maven Round Table Member Harvey (Hutch) Cohen already has fingered Adam Fox.

10. "The captaincy," Hutch explains, "would give Fox the incentive to concentrate on his defensive play, and his PP quarterbacking. Sort of a Do-as-I-Do setup. I'd give the A's to Vin Trocheck and Will Cuylle."

11. Not that it matters that much – except to The Maven – but I'm still waiting for the Peter Laviolette farewell media schmooze. It would have been intriguing to get Lavvy's take on the toosh-kicking Drury did to him.

How A Rangers Fan And Others Should Handle The Avalanche Of RumorsHow A Rangers Fan And Others Should Handle The Avalanche Of RumorsWith the annual NHL Entry Draft just around the corner and free agent frenzy not far beyond, the rumor machine is going absolutely nuts. 

12. My theory was that the Panthers would fall victim to ATTRITION in 2024-25 but the Cats were so resilient that they destroyed my maxim. 

13. How astonishing are The Champs? They've played more than 300 games in the past three years and already are tabbed to win another Cup next spring.

14. That's why you should pay attention to Aleksander Barkov when he warns the civilized world: "I don't see us slowing down!"

15. Up For Debate Department: "We're a Dynasty now," Matthew Tkachuk. To  that – with  the four-Cup Islanders in mind – I suggest to Matty; That's Your Weakness Now."

NHL Rumor Roundup: An Offer Sheet For Bouchard? Tomas Hertl To The Hurricanes?

Signing Evan Bouchard to a new contract is among this summer's priorities for the Edmonton Oilers. The 25-year-old puck-moving defenseman is an RFA with arbitration rights coming off a two-year contract with an average annual value of $3.9 million. 

Bouchard is in line for a significant raise that could reach $10 million annually. The Edmonton Journal's David Staples cited NHL insider Brian Lawton suggesting Bouchard could receive an offer sheet if the Oilers fail to sign him quickly.

An offer sheet for Bouchard is possible if he's open to signing one. That seems unlikely given his recent comments about staying in Edmonton to win the Stanley Cup. 

Assuming the Bouchard camp seeks $10 million annually, it would likely take an offer sheet of $12 million per season to tempt him. However, most teams with the cap space and the four first-round picks that could afford to pitch that offer aren't anywhere close to Stanley Cup contention. They include the San Jose Sharks, Columbus Blue Jackets and Anaheim Ducks

Lawton made his comments before the Oilers traded Evander Kane and his $5.125 million for next season to the Vancouver Canucks. With Kane gone, they now have over $17 million in cap space, which should be enough to sign Bouchard to a big raise while leaving enough for other roster needs. Meanwhile, The Athletic's Pierre LeBrun reports Viktor Arvidsson and his $4.4 million AAV could be next on the trade block. 

Evan Bouchard (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Meanwhile, the rumor mill was buzzing on Tuesday over the possibility of a major trade involving the Vegas Golden Knights. The Hockey News’ Julian Gaudio cited Cam Robinson of Elite Prospects reporting “some smoke out there,” claiming the Carolina Hurricanes were preparing to acquire Golden Knights' center Tomas Hertl.

Trading Hertl would clear the Golden Knights' share ($6.75 million) of his $8.125 million average annual value through 2029-30. He has a full no-movement clause until July 1, when it becomes a three-team trade list.  It would stoke recent conjecture suggesting they're the favorites to sign Mitch Marner when the Toronto Maple Leafs right winger becomes a UFA on July 1. 

However, Robinson later reported the Hurricanes didn't have any deals in place and weren't closing in on anything at present. Since then, the Golden Knights' cap space has shrunk by $2 million with their recent signing of Reilly Smith, and could drop by another $2 million once Brandon Saad is re-signed.

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City of Sunrise holds pop-up drone show to honor Panthers' Stanley Cup victory

The Florida Panthers have called Sunrise their home since opening Amerant Bank Arena in 1998.

On Wednesday night, the city held a pop-up event to honor the Panthers’ second straight Stanley Cup championship.

Hovering over the Sunrise City Hall campus was a drone show that featured the leaping Panthers logo and, of course, the Stanley Cup.

There were more than 600 drones used in the event.

Several families of Panthers fans were there to witness the spectacle. 

You can check out the show in the video below, posted by the city of Sunrise on Facebook:

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Photo caption: Jun 17, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; The Florida Panthers pose for a photo with the Stanley Cup after winning game six of the 2025 Stanley Cup Final against the Edmonton Oilers at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Q&A With Isaiah Mustafa: NHL Awards Host Talks Panthers Vs. Oilers, Learning Hockey, Kings And More

If you’ve been exposed to pop culture over the past decade, it's hard to miss Isaiah Mustafa, the Old Spice Man in one of the company's most iconic ad campaigns. But the football player-turned-actor is also a massive hockey fan. 

He hosted the NHL’s award show this year during the Stanley Cup final. Last week, Mustafa spoke with Avry Lewis-McDougall about the NHL Awards, the final between the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers, his fandom of the Los Angeles Kings, his idea to get more people to watch the NHL and more.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Avry Lewis-McDougall: Isaiah, the NHL season is done. What are your thoughts on the Cup final? What are your impressions? What do you think of Florida repeating?

Isaiah Mustafa: Man, this is what I'll say, in hindsight, you can see how amazing that team was, but in the thick of it, as it was going, I still thought Edmonton had an opportunity to come in and do some damage. But apparently, just going off of what Connor McDavid said in his interview, they knew how good the team was the whole time. Which is interesting, but I've been watching some playbacks, and they just did not give McDavid or (Leon) Draisaitl any room whatsoever to operate. They closed off all those lanes. They were, I mean, clogging up the neutral zone, like unbelievably. So, looking back on it, you can definitely see that. 

If you can, if you look back at the series and watch, you'll see all those 13 goals in the first period that Florida had. You'll see all that stuff. But going into the series, it really looked like Edmonton had a 50-50 shot.

AL: You're a former athlete. You played in the NFL (signing with multiple teams and playing for NFL Europe’s Barcelona Dragons in 1998). You know what it's like to go through injuries. What are your thoughts on hearing all the injuries now? Matthew Tkachuk said he had a hernia – he had a torn adductor. What are your thoughts on hockey players playing through nearly everything for a Stanley Cup?

IM: It just goes to show you how great the game is and how how what that means to each player. I'm not saying that a Super Bowl, an NBA championship, a World Series championship doesn't mean anything to those players. I'm sure it does. I'm sure that's all that they, you know, that they they grew up thinking about and playing for, but there's something that surrounds a Stanley Cup. There's some sort of a mystique, some sort of reverence that surrounds that trophy. Players are willing to do whatever it takes, take a lighter paycheck, play through injury, play through broken bones, play through missing teeth, play through stitches, whatever it may be. They'll do it in order to attain that goal.

AL: Of course, and you mentioned Connor McDavid. I know you're a Kings ticket holder. What was it like seeing Connor McDavid up close for yourself? And what does it mean to see Florida shut him down? Because you know, I'm someone from Edmonton. Shutting Connor McDavid down, for me, it seems impossible. But Florida found a way to neutralize him in so many ways, Isaiah. 

IM: I mean, Paul Maurice is an amazing coach. He's got some, I mean, (assistant coach) Jamie Kompon, he's an amazing coach also. Like, he just got some really amazing coaches with him. Guys that know systems.

Darryl Sutter used to say, “Finish your checks,” you know, to the L.A. Kings when they had those two amazing Cup runs. And that's what they did. And so, you knew when you played the Kings, that's what you were going to get. You were going to go up against a hard-hitting team that wasn't going to let you breathe. And I think Florida is this generation's version of that with, I mean, just as much skill and savvy, because those guys, they play hard, they forecheck, they backcheck, they do everything you need to do in a game. They don't take shifts off. And I think that's the most important thing. 

To a man, every single player on that team is playing to their highest ability and getting into those lanes, those passing lanes, those shooting lanes, blocking shots, stopping passes, picking passes off. They're doing everything they can possibly do to stop. I mean, that's what you can do, when you play Edmonton, because you know that team can come back lightning fast.

Isaiah Mustafa (Eric Charbonneau, Palm Springs Desert Sun via Imagn Content Services, LLC)

AL: For yourself, being a Kings fan, of course, the Oilers beat the Kings four years in a row, so I got to ask you, seeing Florida beat Edmonton, are you thinking to yourself, ‘Ah, finally someone took them down again?’

IM: I don't like to see my team lose, you know, you definitely… you know the enemy of your enemy is your friend, type thing. But you don't like seeing anyone who puts so much effort and so much respect into their training, into their skills as McDavid, Draisaitl and all the rest of the guys, and you don't want to see, those players feeling the way they're feeling after a loss like that. So I can't say that. I'm not going to pile on those guys, because they were right there until the end. So, but don't get me wrong, I would if the Kings beat them, then I would be a lot more like, “Yeah, good. Take that.” You know what I mean? But you know, I won't be happy until the Kings beat them in the playoffs.

AL: Fair enough. We know your involvement in the NHL, of course, you hosted the NHL Awards. And the NHL Awards have been around literally for over 40 years, and it's had so many celebrities involved. What does it mean for yourself to be able to host the NHL Awards?

IM: Since 2012, when I first got my season tickets for the Kings and actually saw the NHL Awards live in Vegas, I looked at that and I said, “Now that's something that I want to do,” like I would love to host this award show, because it looks so fun and everything. 

So that was something that I thought about back in 2012. I didn't know how to go about it, but I do remember trying to reach out to the NHL. I'm sure I was reaching the wrong person or wrong people and just trying to ask them, like, “Hey, do you guys need a host?” I didn't have too many contacts there, and I was trying to go through people who may have known people and just go throw my name in the ring.

It worked out this year with Steve Mayer. He and I had worked together previously about more than a dozen years ago, and thankfully, he liked what I did on that project, so he had me in mind for the NHL Awards. 

And I had an amazing time. It was awesome. It was an amazing time. Had so much fun doing that, because it was just to me, it was something that I was just like, “Oh, man,” this is when it's something that you want to do, or you look forward to doing, or you think like, “Man, I'd love to do that, and you get the opportunity.” It ceases to be work. It just becomes fun. And if you know how much I love the game and love the NHL and my passion for hockey, it just for me, it was one of those things, like I'll pay to do this, it's such an amazing time.

AL: This year, the awards were pre-recorded. Now, usually they're a live event. It was a little bit different this year.

IM: Yeah, it was a lot of fun. I actually loved that format. It was really fun to do, and it was fun watching all the reactions of the players. I can't speak for any players personally, but I think the idea of an award show, you know, there's only one trophy those guys really, really want. 

They're such humble guys. I don't know how much that plays with each one of them. I don't know how much they actually want that. But when it's something like this, where their families can get involved, their friends can get involved. They can have these kinds of surprises, and like, the community can get involved in giving them something. You know, it really does kind of show you the true nature of these athletes and how humble and how respectful they are as people. And so I think this format was something that really was able to show, like, how great hockey players, how great NHL players are, what kind of people they are.

"Players are willing to do whatever it takes, take a lighter paycheck, play through injury, play through broken bones, play through missing teeth, play through stitches, whatever it may be. They'll do it in order to attain that goal."
- Isaiah Mustafa on the Stanley Cup playoffs

AL: We know about your Kings fandom, but what was it like for you to get into the game more and more? 

IM: For me, being a former athlete and a football player… I'll use football as an example. Most average, most fans, can explain football to you. They can explain plays, they can explain defense, they can explain kickoff, special teams, whatever it is. 

Not many people can explain systems in hockey to you. They can't. Some people don't even get icing. A lot of times, they don't get that. They don't get an odd-man rush. They don't understand, well, why is it a power play? The 1-3-1 of the Kings used to use last season, you know, like those systems that they play, they're hard to explain. Cycling the puck, it's hard to explain to a casual viewer, you know? 

So for me, what I needed to do was I needed to get involved in the coaching aspect of the game. So I talked to coaches. I talked to youth coaches, like, how do you teach systems? How do you prepare these kids to grow up in and work in different systems? What are the things you do? Talk to college coaches. I haven't talked to any pro coaches. I don't know anyone, but I will talk to pro coaches. I have talked to presidents of clubs and GMs and ask them, “Hey, explain to me the inner workings of the game as a player.” That way, I can understand the game better, and I can watch it better. 

AL: So what you're telling me is, if next year, an ESPN or TNT said, “Hey, we want you on the panel next year.” You're good to go for next season?

IM: I'm not afraid to be on the TNT panel. I'm not afraid to step up and analyze some game tape, because I have confidence in that I know how much I love the game. I know how much I've watched the game. I know how much I've watched, recorded games, rewound games. Watch different things happen. I study the game like a student.

AL: You know one thing, too, about the L.A. Kings that we've seen so often, there's been Black players and Black fans, of course. Well, the biggest Black player on the team right now is Quinton Byfield, and I met and profiled Quinton last season. One thing that Quinton said to me is he loves seeing more Black kids coming up through the game. He sees a Black kid in Southern California. What’s it meant to see the influence of more Black players and Black fans get involved in hockey and going to Kings games now, Isaiah?

IM: That's a big thing for the game. Diversity in the game is just something that can help it expand more, you know? You want people to learn how special the game is and keep that special aspect of the game, so growing it is just something that I think is inevitable, and it's just something that the game is definitely open to and welcomes having more Black kids in L.A. play.

I feel like I have, just me personally, because I live in Los Angeles or live in the L.A. area of Southern California, I feel like it's part my responsibility to get the word out. If I love hockey as much as I do, then I need to translate that to a younger generation of Black players so they can understand how much this game is for them.

"To a man, every single player on that team is playing to their highest ability and getting into those lanes, those passing lanes, those shooting lanes, blocking shots, stopping passes, picking passes off."
- Isaiah Mustafa on the Florida Panthers

AL: I'll ask you here on the spot, Isaiah,  Give me three players who would kill an Old Spice ad. 

IM: (Drew) Doughty, first and foremost. He'd kill it in his sleep. He'd be awesome. Matthew Tkachuk right off the bat. No problem. Let me think who else is out there. Auston Matthews could do it, too.

Now I want to, I want to say something to you, yeah, because I want to get this out there, and I want to get people talking about this, OK? Because I think this could help. And I don't want any credit. All I want to see is that this happened. 

I think one of the reasons why the NHL has not expanded as far as, say, the MLB, NBA or the NFL: camera angles. 

I think what is happening is, you take anybody, and you bring them to a hockey game, they are immediately a fan. It is the best live sport that you could you can watch. There's nothing that compares to it, nothing. You see the speed. You see the physicality. You see it all. 

But when you watch it on TV, something is lost in that. Something is lost in viewership. So what needs to happen? What I think is you need to see the speed you know, like when the Olympics, when the 100 meter is about to be run, and you see the camera go at the same speed as the sprinters, and you can see the operation, and you can see how fast these guys are going. And you go, yeah. Like, look at this. Literally, you see it. 

The same thing needs to happen in hockey. And what you do is you develop a camera that you can put inside the boards, just underneath the rail, just underneath that has a plexiglass so it's clear all the way around, or at least as far as you can get it around. You put several of them, say, six, in the corners, and then by the benches.

What you do is you have that camera straight on the player, and you see how fast that player is skating. Then you can see how fast the game is. If people could experience that, you would, you'd see viewership just like, explode.

AL: That is a really cool idea. I know you're involved with the CBS series Cross. And Alex Cross has been a character, a Black character. What has it been like to be involved in a series that has a Black protagonist that's been around for decades? 

IM: It's like, not only is Alex Cross a Black character, but he's unapologetically Black. Like he is of, you know, the DC metro area. He's a badass; he's a forensic psychologist. And to be able to portray his partner on screen, it is real. 

I mean, I have a great lead in the show, Aldis Hodge. He's an amazing actor and an amazing partner to work with, so I'm blessed in that respect. But yeah, it is probably, without a doubt, one of my favorite things I've ever worked on. It is so fun to get into that character and work with him and work with Aldis. That is, I just can't say enough. 

Being an athlete harkens back to team, teammates and teamwork. When you get on a good team, you gel, and you get that vibe and, you know, you're like, Oh, we're gelling right now, you know? I mean, let's not mess this up. And that's how I feel when I work with Aldis.

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Hurricanes Sign Depth Forward to Two-Year Extension

The Carolina Hurricanes have signed upcoming UFA Juha Jaaska to a two-year contract extension.

In 2025-26, the deal will pay the Finnish forward $775,000 at the NHL or $250,000 at the AHL level, with a guarantee of at least $425,000.

In 2026-27, the deal turns into a one-way contract at a value of $775,000.

“Juha had a strong season making the transition to hockey in North America and proved he could be an effective player on the NHL level,” said Carolina general manager Eric Tulsky in a press release.

Jaaska, 27, had a strong first season in North America after having spent the prior nine seasons in Liiga.

The versatile forward played 53 games with the Chicago Wolves in the AHL, posting 12 goals and 33 points as an integral part of their offense.

The Finn also made the most of his opportunity too, not only getting to make his NHL debut, but also playing in 18 games with the Canes when they started dealing with injury issues. 

He will now continue providing crucial depth for the team.


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