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The 2025 All About The Jersey Top 25 Under 25: The First Five in From 25-21

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Happy weekend.

Today, we are coming to you with the first five who made it in our Top 25 Under 25, as we started with the Outsiders last weekend. There were four guys who came very close (each with a pure average vote placement between 25 and 27) to a Top 25 finish in Xavier Parent, Josh Filmon, Charlie Leddy, and Kasper Pikkarainen, but we will reveal today who beat them out.

25. Mason Moe (C) — Last Rank: N/A — Age: 18 — 2024-25 Team: Madison Capitols, US U18

Mason Moe was taken by the New Jersey Devils 90th overall in the 2025 NHL Draft after a strong season in the USHL, where he had 43 points in 51 games for the Madison Capitols along with six points in as many playoff games. Moe also had three goals in six games for the the United States National U18 Team. Being his first full season after leaving high school hockey behind, Moe had an impressive season that had him rated rather highly as a two-way center by Mitch Brown’s USHL tracking data, where he ranked in the 80th percentile in defensive tracking.

Moe will look to further his career at the University of Minnesota this season. Already 6’2” and 192 pounds, Moe projects to fit in well with NCAA hockey, where he will be able to work on his details and bulk up for the more physical style of play in the AHL and NHL. Since Moe only played one full season of junior hockey (putting up a solid year in the process) I am interested to see how well he makes another adjustment with the pace of play of the college game.

24. Nathan Legare (RW) — Last Rank: 37 — Age: 24 — 2024-25 Team: Utica Comets (69 games), New Jersey Devils (3 games)

In his final year of eligibility, Nathan Legare made a huge jump up the board. With a 17-goal, 25-point season for Utica in which he had over 100 penalty minutes, Legare made himself something of an emergency bottom six option for the New Jersey Devils. Legare is still a long-shot to make the NHL and stick around for more than a handful of games at a time, but if he can provide something in terms of chipping in some netfront goals while being a physical fourth-line presence, there could be a path for him yet. It helps to be a tough guy who has good enough hands to score.

The question is whether he can still do what he does in the AHL in the NHL. Per Natural Stat Trick, Legare only had a 32.61 CF% in his three games, but his expected goals percentage was above 50%, in large part thanks to his 0.37 individual expected goals (accounting for over half of the Devils’ chances in his ice time). In his debut against the Rangers, Legare also helped draw a penalty when Zac Jones sailed the puck over the glass to end an onslaught brought on by a chance for Legare in front. And, doing something I have never seen before, Legare was credited for 12 hits in his three games while not being tagged for a single hit taken by Natural Stat Trick. Even in small samples, players who throw hits tend to take hits back at some points, so that was a bit surprising. I would have Legare on my dark horse list for the 2025-26 roster due to his intensity, though it would probably take an injury or two to get him a real shot, even if he has a good camp.

23. Cole Brown (LW/RW) — Last Rank: 39 — Age: 20 — 2024-25 Team: Brantford Bulldogs

After a mediocre D+1 season had him near the bottom of last year’s rankings, a 33-goal, 70-point season for Brantford in 2024-25 has shot Cole Brown into the Top 25 for the first time since he was drafted in the sixth round of the 2023 NHL Draft. Brown, a 6’3” winger, is committed to the University of Notre Dame for the 2025-26 season. Like in Mason Moe’s case, playing NCAA hockey should ready Brown for the combination of speed, physicality, and skill in the AHL and NHL. In Amanda Stein’s interview with him during Development Camp, Brown said:

I think for me and my development, that extra strength, the extra practices, less games I think I’ll get a better chance at really focusing on my craft and focusing on what I want to do. That along with the school, as well, it’s a perfect spot for me.

If Brown can keep up his goal scoring ways while putting on about 15 or 20 pounds over the next two years at Notre Dame, he would set himself up really well to make the Devils roster sometime between 2027 and 2029. The team can always use big goal scoring forwards, and it’s going to be hard to move Brown out of the netfront area if he does exactly what he’s setting out to do in college.

22. Samu Salminen (C/LW) — Last Rank: 25 — Age: 22 — 2024-25 Team: University of Denver

Samu Salminen was once looked at by Devils fans as a potential draft steal after he was taken in the third round in 2021, as he had solid seasons in the Finnish U20 SM-Sarja junior league. However, Salminen seemed to slow in his development in his second season at the University of Connecticut, when he only matched his freshman year’s total production in eight more games played (despite his Michigan-style goal). After transferring to the University of Denver for the 2024-25 season, Salminen improved from 17 to 28 points in 44 games played. They are not spectacular numbers, but they gave fans enough hope to believe he may still be a bottom six goal scoring option in the future.

In his senior year with Denver, Salminen needs to have a big showing. He is now, obviously, on the older end for his league. If he does not show the ability to get up to a point-per game, or at least scoring 15 or 20 goals, I might be concerned about his ability to create offense at the professional level. He needs to show more of his ability to chip in pucks around the net, as he is still yet to match the goals-per-game mark that he set as a freshman in Connecticut. He made a little progress in 2024-25, but most of his rise in production came from setting his teammates up.

21. Daniil Orlov (D) — Last Rank: 23 — Age: 21 — 2024-25 Team: Spartak Moskva

In his second full season with Spartak Mosvka in the KHL, Daniil Orlov doubled his point production in eight fewer games played with five goals and 10 assists in 52 games. Per Spartak’s website, Orlov is averaging 18:38 a game on the second pairing through three games this season, while he played 17:33 per night last season and 19:19 in 12 playoff games, where he had four points and a +4 rating. It’s a far cry from when he was playing less than 10 minutes a night as a KHL rookie, and it is also a good sign that his club has trusted him to play a lot more at his age, and he has rewarded them with responsible defense and respectable offensive production.

Orlov might never be a flashy top pairing defenseman in the NHL, but he is already thriving in second-pairing minutes in the KHL. While it was a long-shot hope to see him sign a deal with the Devils after his original KHL contract was set to run out in 2026 (he has an extension through 2028), I would not mind seeing him turn into a top-pairing defenseman in the KHL before trying his hand in North America. The Devils have plenty of term on their blueline, so Orlov taking his time to develop in his home country seems like it should be in both parties’ best interests. Some may be worried about the blueline pipeline being too clogged, but having too many good players is never a problem in my book, and some of that depth may work its way away from the team by spring 2028.

The Rankings​


This is how everyone ranked the players here:

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As is to be expected, there was still a fair amount of variance in where each of these players were ranked by writers and the community alike. James, however, came pretty close to the ultimate combined placement of the prospects, even having them in the correct order of appearance, just slightly off from each of their total combined rankings. Also, this part of the rankings was much closer than last year’s first five, as the difference in average placement between Orlov and Moe was less than two in the combined vote, whereas the gap between the 23rd (Orlov) and 22nd prospect (Yegorov) last year was an average vote of 2.5.

As an update to last week’s Outsiders post, two players ranked there have had some positive developments. Kasper Pikkarainen, ranked 29th after a tough injured season, has reportedly been playing on the top line for TPS in the Liiga. Daniil Karpovich, ranked 30th, was called up to the KHL after a great first game in the VHL, and it would be nice for both players to keep up that sort of trust and playing time. If the players in this section, in addition to Orlov, continue to earn more playing time at higher levels, it would be a boon to the Devils’ middle-range of prospects.

Your Thoughts


What do you think of the five players ranked here? Where did you have them? Any surprises? What are you expecting from them this season? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/n...-top-25-under-25-the-first-five-in-from-25-21
 
Devils in the Details – 9/12/25: Hughes Boys Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


From Quinn on playing with his brothers:

Quinn Hughes met with our media group this morning here in Vegas. He was asked about his brother's comment. Said the Canucks captain:
“I mean, he's my brother. What's he supposed to say, first of all? `Like, I don't want to play with him, you know?' … I mean, we have contracts… https://t.co/iwHdTnAMiB

— Pierre LeBrun (@PierreVLeBrun) September 10, 2025

Jack Hughes appearance on 32 Thoughts here starting at about 37 minutes in: [Sportsnet]

“Quinn Hughes knew the question was coming, of course, and he didn’t flinch. The Vancouver Canucks captain had zero issue with his brother Jack saying what he did this week, putting out in the world what was already assumed: that the three Hughes brothers would love to all play together one day.” [The Athletic ($)]

Nico has apparently beefed up:

“I haven't seen him yet, but I know like if you looked him up last year on the NHL app, it had him at like 175 pounds. But Niko's like a big… He's like close to 200 pounds.”

Jack Hughes on Nico Hischier via 32 Thoughts.

Elliotte and Kyle say the #NJDevils captain looks…

— James Nichols (@JamesNicholsNHL) September 11, 2025

ICYMI: Here’s the Devils roster for the 2025 Prospects Challenge, which runs through Monday in Buffalo. [Devils NHL]

“Mikael Diotte, Nathan Lecompte, and Tag Bertuzzi each had three-point outings in the Devils’ opening game of the Prospects Challenge, leading New Jersey to a dominant 8-2 win against the Blue Jackets.” [Devils NHL]

Which prospects should we be keeping an eye on at the Prospects Challenge over the next few days? [Devils on the Rush ($)] [Infernal Access ($)]

Hockey Links​


Well this is notable:

Sources say #mnwild superstar Kirill Kaprizov’s camp turned down an extension offer believed to be 8-years, $128 million in a meeting on Tuesday in Minnesota that would have made him the highest-paid player in #NHL history in both AAV ($16 million) and total dollars.

— Frank Seravalli (@frank_seravalli) September 10, 2025

“The news breaking Tuesday that Kirill Kaprizov turned down an NHL-record eight-year, $128 million contract offer from the Minnesota Wild sent a shock through the hockey world — and especially fans in Minnesota.” [The Athletic ($)]

Michael McLeod, Cal Foote, Carter Hart, Dillon Dubé and Alex Formenton will be eligible to return to the NHL on Dec. 1:

The NHL has released a statement on the statuses of Michael McLeod, Cal Foote, Carter Hart, Dillon Dubé and Alex Formenton. pic.twitter.com/40sDTbzNBt

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) September 11, 2025
NHLPA statement on Dillon Dube, Cal Foote, Alex Formenton, Carter Hart and Michael McLeod: pic.twitter.com/XFZopyfrAs

— NHLPA (@NHLPA) September 11, 2025

“For the second straight season, we’ve separated 150 players into five groups: MVP cornerstones, franchise pillars, All-Star candidates, the true stars and elite support. Last year, we added a fifth tier and 25 slots and incorporated goaltenders for the first time, and we carried that template into 2025.” [The Athletic ($)]

“Jack Eichel doesn’t appear concerned about his future with the Vegas Golden Knights even though he’s entering the final season of an eight-year, $80 million contract (average annual value of $10 million).” [NHL.com]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ls-in-the-details-9-12-25-hughes-boys-edition
 
Devils in the Details – 9/15/25: Prospect Challenging Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


On Friday: “The Sabres were a group icing seven players who all played together last season in the American Hockey League with Rochester. Comparatively, the Devils had just one player, Jack Malone, who played regularly for the Utica Comets in 2024-25. For a group that has just one game of experience together, the night prior against Columbus, the Devils held their own against a group that had built in chemistry. That did not stop the Devils from continuing to build their own chemistry and taking the Sabres to task with a 4-2 victory.” [Devils NHL]

On Sunday: “Matyas Melovsky had two goals, and Jackson van de Leest and Nathan Lecompte each had one for New Jersey in the 6-4 loss to the Bruins, the Devils’ final game of the Prospects Challenge on Sunday afternoon.” [Devils NHL]

“The Devils still have a promising core in the brothers Hughes, Swedish playmaker Jesper Bratt, captain Nico Hischier, and a host of standout D-men. They just need to stay healthy, but then again, we said the same thing last offseason. Will bad luck continue to derail the Devils’ future, which looked so promising after 112 points and a series win in 2022-23?” [Daily Faceoff]

Odds are that (Lenni) Hämeenaho will play NHL games sooner rather than later, but how soon will it be? With training camp beginning this coming week, don’t sleep on the 20-year-old Finnish winger, because he could force the Devils into a decision for their opening-night roster. [Devils on the Rush]

Hockey Links​


Spencer Knight gets a three-year deal in Chicago:

KNIGHT TIME IN CHICAGO🌙⏰ pic.twitter.com/gaVJNNkS87

— Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) September 13, 2025

A trade:

🚨 Trade Alert 🚨

We've acquired 6'7" G Ivan Fedotov from the Flyers in exchange for a 2026 6th-round pick! pic.twitter.com/CGWIGgtWjQ

— Columbus Blue Jackets (@BlueJacketsNHL) September 14, 2025

A cool conclusion to Marc-Andre Fleury’s career:

Marc-Andre Fleury is headed back to Pittsburgh! 🐧

Flower will return to the ice and play parts of the @penguins' preseason game on September 27. pic.twitter.com/bvXQCYDC6r

— NHL (@NHL) September 12, 2025

When will the NHL finally get its first $20 million man, and who will it be? [The Athletic ($)]

Burning questions for each NHL team heading into training camps: [The Athletic ($)]

Capitals assistant coach Mitch Love is on leave:

Hearing that the NHL and two of the teams that were interested in hiring Love as a head coach this offseason received a letter that led to this investigation. The letters detail a situation that predates his tenure with the Capitals. https://t.co/xnRYG6K69P

— Greg Wyshynski (@wyshynski) September 14, 2025

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...-details-9-15-25-prospect-challenging-edition
 
New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: My Thoughts on the Prospect Challenge

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The Devils went 2-1 in the mini-tournament. In this post, we summarize who impressed the most.

Forwards​


Shane LaChance was one of the stars of the challenge, showing off his smooth hands around the net with two goals and an assist in two games. A third goal was waived off. LaChance has a glut of forwards to compete with for a full time job with the Devils. LaChance still needs to work on his skating, but it’s not hard to imagine him having a long career as a fourth line grinder and netmouth presence on the power play.

While mostly quiet in the first and third games, Winger Lenni Hameenaho had some big moments in the middle contest, including a dump and go with Shane Lachance that led to his first goal of the tournament. Matyas Melovsky had a similar tournament, waiting until the third game to shine with two goals, including one snipe after beating a couple of Bruins defenders. Other notable winger prospect Cam Squires chipped in a few assists and a fight in the three games and looks to have filled out a bit in his frame this year.

One of the biggest surprises of the tournament was undrafted winger Nathan Lecompte. The 18-year-old scored four times in three games, at least once in each, and had many other opportunities. Another surprise, Brian Carrabes had a great tournament as well, utilizing his speed to break to the net for a highlight reel goal. Carrabes is signed by the Thunder, but may earn some time with the Comets if his play continues. Similar situated, Tag Bertuzzi had a three assist game against Columbus.

Defenders​


Unsurprisingly, Seamus Casey was dynamic in the two games he played, pairing with Ethan Edwards, who also had a strong tournament, not only by adding a few assists, but playing steady, physical and well-positioned defense. Edwards particularly rose his profile with his play. Expect to see the pair earn more minutes together in Utica when Casey is not with the big club. Lastly, Mikael Diotte showed why he earned his contract with a two-goal, one assist effort early in the first contest. It was an encouraging sign as Diotte spent most of the last season injured.

Goalies​


Jakub Malek was a beast in net in the second game, stopping several breakaways and high danger chances in a tight game and only surrendering a thrice-screened goal and a deflection. In the first game, Tyler Brennan similarly played well, but was less tested in a 8-2 drubbing of Columbus. Lastly, newly drafted Tristan Bennett looked shaky, bobbling pucks and giving up a few goals that he would probably want back in the loss to the Bruins, but I would not make too much of this as this was Bennett’s first taste of action against higher level players. The giant goaltender will have a chance to grow in the NCAA at St. Lawrence.

Your Thoughts​


Post them below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/p...-update-my-thoughts-on-the-prospect-challenge
 
Is There A Path For Shane LaChance or Lenni Hämeenaho to Make the Devils?

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Training camp is upon us, and this is the time of year, theoretically, for competition. NHL jobs are on the line, players are competing against each other for those opportunities, and camp serves as a larger setting for “may the best man win the job”.

That’s not quite how reality works though.

Veteran players have guaranteed contracts (some of them with clauses protecting them from being moved) and almost all of them would require waivers in order to get sent down. Add in that there’s no hard or set rule mandating that a team HAS to carry 13 forwards versus 14. Teams are free to construct their rosters as they so choose, provided they don’t exceed the salary cap ceiling, and provided they don’t exceed the 23-man roster limit. As a result, this limits the actual number of spots that might be available for a younger player to make the roster.

The New Jersey Devils are coming off of a successful long weekend in the Buffalo area at the Prospects Challenge, and a big part of the reason for that success has been the play of their top line wingers in that competition in Shane LaChance and Lenni Hämeenaho. They’ve been the Devils best players in this format. Even keeping this in perspective by remembering that this is ultimately pre-preseason hockey against a bunch of players who aren’t ready for primetime and might never be NHL players when its all said and done, it’s tough to deny that they’ve looked good. They’ve looked good to the point where its reasonable to ask if either LaChance or Hämeenaho could actually make the Devils roster out of camp.

It’s not unprecedented for a younger player to come out of nowhere and essentially force his way onto the NHL roster by leaving no doubt in training camp. It’s something we’ve seen a few times in the last decade between Jesper Bratt prior to the 2017-18 season and Dawson Mercer prior to the 2021-22 season. But could we see it again this year?

What Do LaChance and Hämeenaho Bring to the Table?

LaChance, who was acquired by the Devils for their part in retaining salary cap space in the trade that send Trent Frederic from Boston to Edmonton earlier this year, brings a different dynamic than most of the Devils forwards.

For starters, LaChance is a big boy. Listed at 6’5” and 218 lbs., he would be the largest forward on the Devils roster aside from Kurtis MacDermid. There’s more to LaChance than just size (and all the things that come with added size like reach) though. There’s a willingness to go to the front of the net and make things happen. He has soft hands, but he also has the mindset of doing the dirty work to create something. He’s an energy player, through and through, but you can also see from his style of play why Boston University named him team captain. You can also see that he’s not going to allow the opposition to take liberties. A lot of aspects of his game are already being pretty close to being NHL-ready, with the one big “yeah, but” being his skating. I’m not going to wave that off as not being a concern. I’m just saying with this particular player, there’s a lot to like here and he’s bringing something to the table the Devils could, frankly, use a bit more of. Considering the Devils got him in exchange for retaining a portion of Frederic’s salary to go elsewhere, that’s some solid GM work by Fitzgerald to get a guy close to NHL ready who has a chance to be something.

As for Hämeenaho, he’s found the scoresheet less frequently than LaChance but you can see why the Devils would be excited when it comes to his potential. You can see the willingness to engage and battle along the boards. You can see the hockey IQ, playmaking ability, and skill on display. Obviously, there’s still an adjustment period for him to deal with as he’s playing his first games on North American ice, but we are talking about a young player who has played against men the last three seasons in Liiga. We are talking about a player who continued to improve year after year in that environment. Obviously, there’s a difference between doing what he did there and it translating to the NHL where the best players in the world play, but the earliest returns have indeed been promising.

I don’t know that I necessarily think that LaChance or Hämeenaho are ready to step in and contribute immediately at this level, and that is certainly something the Devils will be weighing. But I could see Hämeenaho being the type of winger with the type of skillset who eventually settles into a complimentary role somewhere in the Devils Top Six. I could see LaChance ultimately becoming a third line, energy, “makes things happen” winger that is the type of player every team wants in their bottom six. Maybe not now, but in my opinion, they’re going to be NHL players and their time is coming eventually.

The Devils Roster Situation at Forward

Assuming the Devils do not make a trade between now and the start of the season, I view them as having 11 forwards who are stone cold locks to be on the Opening Night roster.

Locks (in order of AAV from highest to lowest): Timo Meier, Jack Hughes, Jesper Bratt, Nico Hischier, Ondrej Palat, Dawson Mercer, Connor Brown, Stefan Noesen, Cody Glass, Evgenii Dadonov, and Paul Cotter.

In reality, I probably should have two additional forwards listed as locks, for very different reasons.

Outside of a disastrous training camp and preseason, I have a hard time believing that Arseny Gritsyuk isn’t going to make the Devils roster out of camp. Gritsyuk is older than Hämeenaho, has more pro experience in a better overseas league, and I’d be stunned if after finally convincing him to sign his ELC and make the jump to North America that the Devils would turn around and suggest that he rides the bus on the AHL circuit until a spot opens up. If anything, the Devils actions would suggest the opposite. Dadonov has embraced taking on the role of being the big brother to Gritsyuk’s little brother and helping him get acclimated to North America, and I think that matters. The Devils want Gritsyuk to make the 23-man roster, and for a team that could use a little more offensive punch anyways, which is the main thing Gritsyuk provides, I would expect him to make the 23 man roster.

The other, more controversial, player that I could see being a lock for a roster spot? You guessed it. Kurtis MacDermid.

I know that MacDermid is limited as a player, to put it kindly. I know that his contract is set up in a way where the Devils could just bury the cap hit if necessary. I also know that he’s the type of player where you can leave him on the bench for weeks at a time. He’s a finished product as a player. He does not need to be playing regularly, unlike some of the younger players we’ve discussed here. Frankly, he shouldn’t be playing regularly as he’s not a good hockey player.

But this was all true last year as well, and even with the Devils tight up against the salary cap, the one move they never made was to send MacDermid down to create flexibility. They also never sent him down to give a younger player a shot. With hindsight being 20/20, that probably says more about guys like Nolan Foote (who is no longer here) and Brian Halonen (who is still in the organization) that the Devils never gave them more of an opportunity than a handful of games here and there. But the larger point is that, at least for the 2024-25 season, MacDermid’s roster spot was ironclad. The Devils, for whatever reason, saw value in him being the next man up if they needed a face puncher on any given night. Is it the best use of a roster spot when they already had guys on the roster who could punch faces if needed? No, of course not. But it’s what they did.

When it comes to MacDermid, I’m going to take the mindset of “he’s on the team until he isn’t”. So I’m going to assume he will be on the roster as well. Him, along with Gritsyuk, would make 13 forwards.

Roster Configuration is Key

I know I just said what I said about MacDermid’s roster spot being seemingly ironclad. But I do think its worth considering the salary cap for a moment.

It’s tough to project what salary cap space, if any, the Devils might have seeing as they still haven’t agreed to a deal with Luke Hughes as of this writing. But it’s safe to say that the youngest Hughes will chew up most of, if not all of, the Devils remaining cap space for this season.

Yes, the Devils could create a little flexibility by burying MacDermid and maybe this is the scenario where his spot is no longer guaranteed. They could either replace him on the roster with someone making less, and save a couple hundred thousand dollars in the process. But what they also could do is simply not carry the maximum 23 players on the roster. It is something we’ve seen more of the last few years as teams right up against the salary cap ceiling try finding a way to squeeze every last dollar they can out of the roster. I’m not saying that Sheldon Keefe, the former head coach of the Maple Leafs, had a hand in how Toronto managed the salary cap, but he does come from an organization where sometimes, that is what they did in order to be cap compliant.

I don’t see any reason for the Devils to do anything but carry two goaltenders (Jacob Markstrom and Jake Allen). I also don’t see any reason for them to do anything but carry seven defensemen, with the understanding that Johnathan Kovacevic will begin the season on IR. So if those numbers are set in stone, there’s only so much finagling the Devils can do with how they decide to construct the roster. Any such finagling though would likely cost the kids a chance at breaking camp with the big club.

Competition For the Final Spot(s)

With the Devils seemingly at 13 forwards including MacDermid, 7 defensemen, and 2 goaltenders, that would leave one spot for a forward to make the roster. One.

Do the Devils use that spot on a center? Are they willing to have this player also be the type of player who they’re comfortable with not playing for weeks at a time potentially? Because if they are, Kevin Rooney and Luke Glendening are in camp on PTOs. If they’re not sold on Dawson Mercer being a center (or if they decide they need him on the wing), there’s a good chance one of Rooney or Glendening winds up making the roster and being the 4C, with Cody Glass being the 3C. Another player who could be in the mix for that specific role is Juho Lammikko, who is not on a PTO.

I’d consider LaChance and Hämeenaho to have a leg up on some of the other players likely slated to play for the Utica Comets this season. There’s always the possibility that somebody emerges out of nowhere and impresses the brass enough to put their name in the mix. But the purpose of this article was to simply point out whether or not a path exists in the first place for those two specific players in LaChance and Hämeenaho to make the 23 man roster.

I’d say that assuming the Devils don’t make a trade to free up a spot, and assuming that they continue to see something in MacDermid that nobody else is seeing, the answer to the question of whether a path exists is “probably not”. Not now, anyways.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...achance-or-lenni-hameenaho-to-make-the-devils
 
Devils in the Details – 9/17/25: Here We Go Edition

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Another campaign begins! Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


We’re ready to roll:

#NJDevils veterans report to training camp tomorrow.

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) September 16, 2025

Pierre LeBrun indicates that Luke Hughes is expected to sign a long-term deal with the Devils and questions the future of Dougie Hamilton in New Jersey: [TSN]

We’re waiting!

It's #NJDevils training camp week and team still needs to address its top offseason priority:

Luke Hughes' contract.

Talks appear to be progressing positively, but the 2 sides must cross the finish line by Wednesday. Don't let this be a distraction.https://t.co/41HtU3wIbX

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) September 15, 2025

On the rise of Shane Lachance: “He’s a great hockey player, and he’s going to play in the NHL for a long, long time, and he’s 10 times a better human. He’s the consummate leader.” [The Athletic ($)]

Hockey Links​


“As the Edmonton Oilers prepare to kick off another season with serious Stanley Cup aspirations, the waiting game continues with Connor McDavid. McDavid will not have a new contract extension in place before the team opens training camp with medical and fitness testing at Rogers Place on Wednesday morning, according to league sources.” [The Athletic ($)]

Rangers have a new captain:

The 29th captain in #NYR history: J.T. Miller.

Details: https://t.co/l7UuXpvIK7 pic.twitter.com/J4ccP1tJRJ

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) September 16, 2025

Carter Hart will be moving on from the Flyers:

Briere said that Carter Hart's agent has reached out to the Flyers and told them that Hart wants a fresh start. So that door appears shut.

— Charlie O'Connor (@charlieo_conn) September 16, 2025

Who stood out in prospect tournaments around the league? [The Athletic ($)]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ils-in-the-details-9-17-25-here-we-go-edition
 
When do the New Jersey Devils Get Luke Hughes Signed?

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On ice activity begins today at training camp for the New Jersey Devils and of course, there’s one name missing from their camp roster that was released to the public yesterday. Luke Hughes is still without a new contract as a restricted free agent, meaning he’s not going to be part of the team’s training cam, at least not yet. There’s been speculation all summer regarding contract length, monetary amount, and conspiracy theories about all three Hughes brothers trying to line up their deals. Regardless of whichever narrative you believe, the Devils enter camp at time of writing with only one of their Hughes brothers.

A restricted free agent being unsigned as training camp opens isn’t anything new in the NHL. Heck, it isn’t even new to the Devils. as Jesper Bratt held out for a brief period as an RFA in 2020-21 before joining the team slightly after the start of camp. At the same time, it isn’t ideal, as with no timeline on Hughes re-signing, he could miss some of preseason, all of preseason, or even beyond if a deal doesn’t get done soon. With the Devils already down Johnny Kovacevic to start the season, having a key defender of each handedness unavailable for the start of a second straight season would be awful for the Devils.

Now that doesn’t mean the Devils should acquiesce to all of Luke’s demands. The last thing they want to do is sign him to a deal that walks him to unrestricted free agency the same year Jack’s deal is up, mainly because that would feed right into the rumors and fears. At the same time, letting this drag on hurts the team both in the immediate future and beyond. In the immediate it hurts with the gap it leaves in the lineup; beyond it means less time for Luke to get his skating legs back under him and get adjusted and ready for games. Obviously he will get acclimated at some point, but hopefully it won’t lead to any early games with gaffes causing the Devils to lose points in the standings.

One other impediment? The salary cap and how much space the Devils have available. If Luke is looking for a long-term deal, the Devils seemingly don’t have enough cap space to sign him to an amount that makes sense for both parties. Differing deals and ways to free up space have been discussed at length, as lack of hockey news in the summer often leads to more focus and discussion of the few bigger pieces of news and narrative. Unless the Devils pull the trigger on a deal to open up space (and that takes a willing second party) they may have to go with a bridge deal sheerly out of necessity.

My hope? That as soon as I post this piece today that it becomes irrelevant and the team announces a new deal for Luke. Realistically? Camp opens today, the preseason starts Sunday, and games that count for real start on October 9th for the Devils. I think we see Luke signed before the end of next week for certain. I would prefer we see it get done sooner, at least in time for him to appear in the second or third preseason game, as there’s usually not too many regulars in the first preseason game anyway. Again though, the Devils need him in the lineup, so now’s the time to hammer out whatever is in the way and get a deal done. The Devils goal is to take another step forward this season, and having Luke in uniform would help make that a reality.

What are your thoughts on the Luke Hughes contract situation; anything new that you haven’t mentioned in one of the other discussions on this topic? Are you concerned that he’s still not signed? At what point, if any, would you be concerned if he’s still unsigned? Do you think the Devils are still trying to find someone to make a trade with to free up more cap for a long-term Hughes deal? Leave any and all comments below and thanks as always for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...-the-new-jersey-devils-get-luke-hughes-signed
 
Devils in the Details – 9/19/25: Part of the Process Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


A few updates:

#NEWS: During today’s second training camp on-ice session, the #NJDevils provided the following updates:

Jacob Markstrom is not participating today due to personal/family reasons.

Shane Lechance and Lenni Hämeenaho came back from the Prospects Challenge with injuries the team…

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) September 18, 2025
Tom Fitzgerald on Luke Hughes contract: "This is part of the process. We're grinding through this together. Respecting each others opinions. But this is part of the process. We're dissapointed he's not here, he's dissapointed he's not here."#NJDevils

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) September 18, 2025
Tom Fitzgerald says Johnny Kovacevic may not be back before January.

"We might not see him before the New Year."#NJDevils

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) September 18, 2025
Tom Fitzgerald says he's currently talking about extending Jacob Markstrom with #NJDevils

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) September 18, 2025

Tom Fitzgerald: “We will be signing him. The top priority is signing Luke Hughes to a long-term deal. That’s our goal and that hasn’t changed.” [Devils NHL]

Full press availability with Sheldon Keefe and Tom Fitzgerald:

“The preseason is the best time to experiment with new line combos, and head coach Sheldon Keefe will have options to tinker with if he isn’t intent on returning to some units he used last season. Here are six ideas he could consider as training camp gets underway.” [Devils on the Rush]

Hockey Links​


Anze Kopitar is heading toward retirement:

Anze Kopitar has announced that he will be retiring from the NHL after this season. 👑

✔️ The first player from Slovenia to play in the NHL
✔️ 2 Stanley Cups
✔️ 2 Frank J. Selke Trophies
✔️ 3 Lady Byng Memorial Trophies
✔️ 1 Mark Messier Leadership Award
✔️ 5 All-Star Game… pic.twitter.com/zR0zPmKWwG

— NHL (@NHL) September 18, 2025

Will this be it for Alex Ovechkin?

Alex Ovechkin said he doesn't know yet if this will be his final season in the NHL. Said he hasn't talked about it yet with GM Chris Patrick or owner Ted Leonsis, but there will be plenty of time to do that.

— Tom Gulitti (@TomGulittiNHL) September 18, 2025

“We surveyed dozens of players in attendance and asked everything from what teams would be on their trade-me-to lists to how much money they think Connor McDavid and Kirill Kaprizov will sign for to which player will be the next face of the NHL to what they think of 84-game seasons.” [The Athletic ($)]

Kirill Kaprizov: “You guys know I like Minny and everyone knows this. We have a lot of time [to sign]. It’s just 2025 and it’s one more year I have. I just want to play hockey and focus and win some games and go into [the Stanley Cup] Playoffs] and win there. Just focus on this now.” [NHL.com]

Notable storylines and burning questions for each NHL team heading into the season: [ESPN]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...e-details-9-19-25-part-of-the-process-edition
 
Here’s What The Rest Of The League Thinks Of The Devils’ Core

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Is the current core of the New Jersey Devils good enough to win a championship? That’s the biggest question we’ve been asking about this team for years now, with opinions ranging the spectrum from “Absolutely” to “No shot”. And who exactly constitutes this core? Jack Hughes, Nico Hischier, and Jesper Bratt seem like locks. Timo Meier is in that core to most Devils fans, but others think he doesn’t belong in the inner circle. Dougie Hamilton might be in the core, but he also might be on the way out of the organization altogether. And what do you do about young players like Luke Hughes, Simon Nemec, and Anton Silayev? High draft picks who all have varying degrees of star potential might not be in the core right now, but they could be soon.

No matter how you define the core, determining whether they are good enough to lift New Jersey to a title is crucial. And while the opinions and analysis of Devils fans are important considering how knowledgeable they are about this team, getting the opinion of outsiders can provide a good, unbiased look at the state of the franchise.

The Athletic is certainly not the be-all, end-all of hockey analysis (especially when “writing” about Scott Stevens), but they do some good work. And one of my absolute favorite things they do every year is their Player Tiers project. The parameters and shape of the project have changed over the years, but the general idea is exactly what it sounds like: Grouping the best players in the NHL into tiers, with the goal of seeing how the cream of the crop shakes out. What I love most about it is that it blends The Athletic’s own internal analytics model (developed by writer Dom Luszczyszyn) and opinion and analysis from, in their words, “more than 20 people inside the game — general managers, executives, coaches, scouts and data analysts, all in fairly equal amounts”. So there should be a little something for everyone, from those who prefer a more data-driven approach, and those who prefer old-school eye tests. Neither approach is perfect, which is why I appreciate the mix of both.

Last week, The Athletic published their 2025-26 version of their Player Tiers project. This year, they grouped a total of 150 players into five tiers (with sub-tiers within those). Several Devils made the list, as we would all hope. So today, I thought it would be a good exercise to go through this project and see just what the rest of the league thinks of the New Jersey Devils’ core. Let’s find out how this team is viewed across the NHL.

The Overview​


Before we go over where each Devils player ranked, here’s a breakdown of the tiers The Athletic used for the project and the brief descriptions that go along with them:

Tier 1 – MVP: “A top 10 player. Someone who is very likely to get serious trophy consideration at season’s end and whom championship-caliber teams are built around. The best player on almost any team in the league.”

Tier 2 – Franchise: “A top 30 player. Someone who is the best player on a contending team or second best on a championship-caliber team. An unquestionably elite player.”

Tier 3 – All-Star: “A top 60 player. Someone who wouldn’t be the best player on a contender, but would be an important part of any contending or championship core. A strong top-line forward, above average No. 1 defenseman, or borderline top five goalie.”

Tier 4 – Star: “A top 100 player. Someone who would be a strong piece within a contending or championship core, but not a go-to option. An average top line forward, below average number one defenseman, or top 10 goalie.”

Tier 5 – Support: “A top 150 player. Someone who would offer strong support to a contending or championship core, but who wouldn’t be an integral piece within it. A below average top-line forward, a strong No. 2 defenseman, or an above average starter.”

The Athletic also breaks each tier into three sub-tiers: A, B, and C. So for example while two players might be in Tier 3 together, a player listed in Tier 3A is considered better than a player in Tier 3B or 3C.

Now that we have that context, let’s find out where the Devils’ best players ranked:

Jack Hughes: Tier 2A​


Unsurprisingly, Hughes came in as the highest-ranked Devil in this project. He just barely missed out on the MVP tier, as the writers of The Athletic explain that he started out there, but after discussion amongst themselves and then with the outside panelists, the decision was made to bump him down to the highest non-MVP level. For context, here are the 10 players in the MVP Tier: Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, Nathan MacKinnon, Cale Makar, Aleksander Barkov, Nikita Kucherov, Quinn Hughes, Auston Matthews, Kirill Kaprizov, and David Pastrnak. Meanwhile Hughes shares the 2A level with Sidney Crosby, Rasmus Dahlin, Jack Eichel, Miro Heiskanen, Connor Hellebuyck, and Matthew Tkachuk.

It’s important to note that, aside from McDavid, the players are not ranked within their tiers and sub-tiers, they are simply listed alphabetically (they understandably made an exception for McDavid). So it’s unclear where the panel views Hughes within the 2A tier, but at the very least, he’s roughly on the same level as Crosby and Eichel as far as centers go, which is pretty good company to keep.

What bothers me about Hughes’ writeup is that most of it is spent on the negatives. When talking about his injuries over the past few seasons, one executive said “A 100-percent available Jack is a special player…but he’s only had one of those seasons in six”. Which is pretty unfair and objectively untrue considering this executive appears to be counting the first two seasons of his career, and the only reason Hughes didn’t get to 82 games played (or close to it) was because of the Covid-19 pandemic, not any injuries. One coach also brought up his performance at the recent Four Nations tournament, saying “When the game rose to that level, where you’re playing so many great players, he just wasn’t quite strong enough and his game wasn’t quite mature enough”. I for one think it’s pretty silly to use a handful of games from a random in-season tournament to make serious evaluations about a player, but what do I know, I’m just a blogger.

In any case, Hughes might not be in the top tier, but he’s knocking on the door. I think if he manages to put together a full season in 2025-26 and continues to play up to the standards he’s set since 2022-23, Hughes will be in the MVP tier this time next year. For now, he’ll have to settle for being right on the cusp.

Nico Hischier: Tier 2C​


New Jersey’s other #1 overall pick is also in Tier 2, though he’s down at the C-level of the tier. 2C also features Sebastian Aho, Evan Bouchard, Adam Fox, Josh Morrissey, William Nylander, Artemi Panarin, Sam Reinhart, Jaccob Slavin, and Andrei Vasilevskiy. That should give you context for how highly regarded Hischier is around the league, as those are some truly elite players.

We also see another case of The Athletic writers having a Devil ranked higher (“a tick higher” is the exact quote) before consulting with their panelists, who convinced them to bump Hischier down to 2C. The writeup lauds Hischier for taking on brutal matchups night in and night out while still managing to produce at a high level. The one quote they included for Hischier was from a coach: ““He does everything right…He’s a stud.”

Yes. Yes he is.

The concerns they mention are the fact that he’s not even the best center on his own team (the best second-best center in the league aside from Draisaitl according to this project), and his relatively unproven track record in the playoffs. Still, Hischier is viewed as a top-30 player in the league, a Franchise level talent. You could do much, much worse as your second-best player.

Jesper Bratt: Tier 3B​


He might not actually be The Best Player In The NHL, but Bratt is viewed as an All-Star caliber talent and an overall top-60 player in the league. Quite an accomplishment for a 6th round pick.

Bratt is joined in Tier 3B by Macklin Celebrini, Kyle Connor, Gustav Forsling, Clayton Keller, Dylan Larkin, Charlie McAvoy, Elias Pettersson, Moritz Seider, Ilya Sorokin, and Tage Thompson. That’s a healthy mix of star forwards and stud defensemen.

“It’s hard to separate Bratt from Jack Hughes, but by our stuff, he always rates out as one of the best wingers in the league,” was the analysis offered by an executive. I’m assuming that by “our stuff”, he means his organization’s internal analytics model. “I think he’s been underrated for a long time,” offered another analyst. He might never be The Man in New Jersey, but he’s viewed around the league as an integral part of a team with championship aspirations.

Dougie Hamilton: Tier 5A​


Once again, The Athletic staff had a Devil initially ranked higher, but was talked out of it once they received outside council. The writers say that Hamilton started off in Tier 4B, but upon further review, ended up here at the top of the Support Tier.

I don’t know if I have much passion to argue about Hamilton’s placement here. On the one hand I do think he’s a bit underrated being viewed merely as “Support”. But on the other hand, injuries and some defensive warts have become a bit of a problem for Hamilton in recent seasons. There’s also the fact that the description for this tier explicitly mentions that defensemen on this level are viewed as “a strong No. 2 defenseman”, which is still a very valuable piece of any contending team. The problem comes when that defenseman is the best you have, which Hamilton is for the Devils according to this project.

The other players in Tier 5A are Pavel Buchnevich, Thatcher Demko, Lukas Dostal, Pierre-Luc Dubois, Aaron Ekblad, Kevin Fiala, Nazem Kadri, Brad Marchand, Sean Monahan, Sam Montembeault, Travis Sanheim, Anthony Stolarz, and Dylan Strome. I suppose if we look at the other defensemen on this level, saying Hamilton is on par with folks like Ekblad and Sanheim isn’t terrible company to keep. Still, Hamilton (who has always been a polarizing player around the league) is not thought of as a top defenseman anymore.

Timo Meier: Tier 5A​


Ok, when I rattled off the other players in Tier 5A in the Hamilton section, there was one player I left out: fellow Devil Timo Meier. While I didn’t have too much of an argument with Hamilton’s placement in this tier, I do have an issue with Meier being this low.

Look, I get it. Meier was brought in to score a bunch of goals, and thus far in his Devils career he’s disappointed in that regard. It’s not like he completely fell off a cliff, as he’s scored 28 and 26 goals in his first two full seasons in the Garden State. But for $8.8m per year on a long-term deal, a team needs more than that. But even with that relatively light production, Meier’s underlying numbers have largely been phenomenal since coming to New Jersey. He looked amazing playing with Hischier this past season, and while you could make the case that Hischier elevated Meier, I would argue that they elevated each other. And keep in mind, Hischier goes up against brutal competition every game. Which means Meier, by proxy of being on Hischier’s line, has to absorb elite competition on a nightly basis as well. And he still put up 26 goals and sparkling play-driving numbers.

The only quote they included here was from an executive, and whoever it was clearly doesn’t think much of Meier: “His profile got raised through empty-calorie scoring on bad teams, and then he goes to Jersey, gets a big contract, and he kind of blends in…You never see him dominate a game.”

Again, I get that Meier has disappointed as far as his production goes. But as someone who watches every Devils game, I very much disagree with the notion that we never see him dominate a game. I might argue that Meier was the best Devil in their first round series against Carolina back in April. He put up numbers, he played that in-your-face power forward game that we all want to see (the man registered 21 hits in five games!), and he clearly got very deep under the Hurricanes’ skin. Believe me I do want more out of Meier as well, but it’s just flatly not true that he never dominates. Heck, I would even argue that he dominated in the first round against the Rangers in 2023, and the only reason he didn’t post the numbers he deserved was because Igor Shesterkin played out of his mind.

After his big 2022-23 season, The Athletic had Meier in Tier 3B. To be fair, I don’t know if I would bump him all the way up there with Bratt, but I think a placement in Tier 3C or 4A would be fair. This is the one ranking in this project I take the most issue with, but if Meier can finally put together a big regular season for New Jersey, we should see him shoot up this list a year from now.

Jacob Markstrom: Tier 5C​


Markstrom had an interesting first season in New Jersey. He started a tad slow, but then really turned it on and played at a high level until his injury in January. Upon returning in March, he played terribly, but eventually found his game again, and put together an overall terrific first round series against Carolina (second period meltdown in game five notwithstanding). He comes in at the very bottom of this project, in Tier 5C.

Markstrom is joined on this level by Mikey Anderson, Philip Broberg, Leo Carlsson, Vince Dunn, Adam Fantilli, Conor Garland, Dylan Holloway, Erik Karlsson, Jackson LaCombe, Artturi Lehkonen, Aliaksei Protas, Bryan Rust, Dylan Samberg, Chris Tanev, Logan Thompson, and Vincent Trocheck. Thompson is the only other goalie on this level if you want a point of reference, although the other goalies in Tier 5 as a whole are Demko, Dostal, Montembeault, Stolarz (all 5A), and Mackenzie Blackwood (5B), so those are all close comparisons as well.

I might have Markstrom as high as 4C, but I don’t think this is a totally unfair placement. The Athletic describes goalies in Tier 5 as “An above average starter”, which I think accurately describes Markstrom.

As mentioned, he did have his ups and downs in 2024-25. But when he was on his game, we saw just how dominant he can still be. If Markstrom can avoid injury and/or falling off a cliff with his performance this season, New Jersey should be in relatively good hands in the crease.

So…Is The Core Good Enough?​


That’s the million dollar question, isn’t it? After going through this project, according to the league at least, it seems to me that the current New Jersey Devils core is viewed as right on the edge of being good enough to win a championship, but not quite there yet. So while it might be disappointing to think they’re viewed as not good enough at the moment, even a small improvement can push them over the top.

In my eyes, there is one thing that absolutely NEEDS to happen in order for New Jersey to reach that no-doubt championship caliber status: They need one of their young defensemen to develop into a star.

I think the Devils have the forward talent to compete for a title. A fully healthy Jack Hughes is a Tier 1 player, Nico Hischier is an incredible second-best player, Jesper Bratt is an All-Star, and Timo Meier is an underrated star to me. That’s a forward core you can win with.

But New Jersey’s best defenseman coming in at Tier 5A simply isn’t good enough. Even if The Athletic did place Dougie Hamilton in Tier 4B like they originally wanted to, that’s still not enough for a team that wants to win a title. Go back and look at every recent Cup winner and you will see an unquestioned stud blueliner leading them. Victor Hedman, Cale Makar, Alex Pietrangelo (or Shea Theodore, take your pick), Gustav Forsling…all minute-munching, all-situations horses. Hamilton was once that player in his prime, but I don’t know if he has that in him anymore.

That’s why it’s so important for the Devils that one of Luke Hughes, Simon Nemec, or Anton Silayev reaches that level or close to it. Hughes is probably the one that has the best shot of the trio, but he’s not there yet. You will notice that Hughes did not receive placement on this list, which some of you may be surprised at. As much as we think Hughes is going to explode soon, the reality is he hasn’t proven that he can actually be a star defender yet, despite all the potential. The good news is that those around the league still think it will happen. In addition to this Player Tiers project, The Athletic has also started doing this same exercise for young players/prospects. In this separate piece, in which the younger players of the league are tiered out based on potential, Hughes was slotted into Tier 3A. Even that might be disappointing, but at least he’s in the All-Star tier. Meanwhile, Nemec was placed in Tier 4A while Silayev came in at Tier 4C.

In my opinion, that’s not quite enough. To become a championship contender, I feel as though Hughes needs to reach at least Tier 2C, and one of Nemec or Silayev needs to get to somewhere in Tier 3. It’s not an impossible ask, but it does require improvement over where these players are viewed right now.

So while I think the forward core is in good shape to compete for a title, the blueline needs to develop a stud. Even in a couple seasons when Hamilton is presumably gone, the Devils’ defense corps should still have strong support players in Jonas Siegenthaler, Brett Pesce, and Johnny Kovacevic. Mix Hughes, Nemec, and Silayev in, and assuming they can develop well, that should be good enough.

Or New Jersey can just, you know, acquire the Tier 1B Quinn Hughes. In which case, the Devils instantly become championship contenders.

Final Thoughts And Your Take​


As I mentioned earlier, it’s obviously important to listen to what Devils fans say about this team. Given how closely they follow the organization, they’re usually going to be the most knowledgeable about the state of the Devils. But listening to those outside the organization can provide a good perspective too, and based on The Athletic’s Player Tiers project, the outside view seems to be that New Jersey is very close to being a true Cup contender. Heck, they might already be one depending on how you interpret this project.

If my view is correct that the Devils are one stud blueliner away from no-doubt contender status, then all of a sudden the young blueliners really have become the most important players in this organization. To that end, I think Tom Fitzgerald’s hiring of Brad Shaw has the potential to be his single best offseason acquisition. Shaw comes with a sterling reputation for developing defensemen and implementing a strong defensive system. If he can stick around for a few seasons and help Hughes, Nemec, or Silayev blossom into a star, we may very well be planning a parade or two in the years to come.

Now that you’ve seen what The Athletic and their panel had to say about the Devils’ best players, what do you make of all this? Do you agree with the placements of each of these players? If not, how would you rank them differently? Are there other Devils that you think deserved to be on this list? Do you agree with my assessment that the biggest thing New Jersey needs to do to reach contender status is develop a true star defenseman? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...-rest-of-the-league-thinks-of-the-devils-core
 
The 2025 All About the Jersey Top 25 Under 25: The Middle of the Pack from 16-20

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Happy Saturday. Hey, something is supposed to start tomorrow, right?

We continue today with our Top 25 Under 25 as we get closer to the cream of the crop. Last weekend, we looked at the first five who made the top 25, and these prospects are largely in the “maybe, they can make it” sort of category. Today, we look at the next five, some of whom you may actually expect to crack an NHL roster and stick around at some point, though this group in particular skews rather young. First up:

20. Chase Cheslock (D) — Last Rank: 33 — Age: 20 — 2024-25 Team: University of St. Thomas (CCHA/NCAA)

A fifth-round pick in the 2023 NHL Entry Draft, Chase Cheslock has turned into a steady defensive presence in college hockey for St. Thomas. At 6’3” and 205 pounds, Cheslock, a right-handed defenseman, had rather importantly taken a step forward on both ends of the ice in 2024-25. When he left the Omaha Lancers, who had made Cheslock captain after just 15 games (he would go on to play 15 games as a team captain), Cheslock struggled to find the scoresheet with 3 points and a -3 rating in 19 games for St. Thomas in 2023-24. In 2024-25, that improved to 14 points and a +16 rating in 38 games. Impressively for his age and role, Cheslock does not get penalized much, with just 28 penalty minutes in 57 NCAA games.

Cheslock had good underlying tracking metrics when he was with the Omaha Lancers in the USHL, and it seems that he has been able to improve his game in college. As a bigger right-handed defenseman, Cheslock has a bit of instant value, playing a position that can be difficult for teams to find quality players to fill. According to his player page on St. Thomas’s website, Cheslock also racked up some honors this year for being a high academic achiever, with including an award as an AHCA All-American Scholar. On the ice, he is also noted for being relied upon in big moments, as St. Thomas notes he played a season-high 25:30 in their CCHA championship game.

19. Conrad Fondrk (C) — Last Rank: N/A — Age: 18 — 2024-25 Team: US National U18 Team (40 Games), USNTDP Juniors (15 games)

Conrad Fondrk was the first pick taken by the New Jersey Devils in the 2025 NHL Draft, taken in the second round at 50th overall. I was not initially impressed by the pick, but there are some reasons to hope that he may fare better as he gets older. With the National Development Program, Mitchell Brown tracked Fondrk as having solid transition ability and a lot of offensive push, but he received one of the lowest scores for his defensive play. If Fondrk can improve his defensive involvement without taking away from his offensive instincts, he may still be an intriguing center option down the line.

For the time being, his development is in the hands of Jay Pandolfo at Boston University, where Fondrk will also be playing with Mikhail Yegorov this season. That Boston University team is not playing around, so Fondrk will have to earn his ice time. By the count on Elite Prospects, Pandolfo has five pure centers who have been drafted by an NHL team, as well as one center-wing combo. Playing under Pandolfo should still impart a great deal of defensive responsibility and tough play onto Fondrk, so I have a great deal of hope there.

18. Topias Vilen — Last Rank: 16 — Age: 22 — 2024-25 Team: Utica Comets

Topias Vilen has been around already. He grew into a solid professional defenseman at just 18 years old in the Finnish Liiga for the Lahti Pelicans before flashing offensive promise on the first year of his ELC with the Devils, in 2022-23, when he was loaned back to the Pelicans. In that second Finnish professional season, at just 19 years old, Vilen had nine goals and eight assists in 41 games. The stage was set for Vilen to come to North America and push towards the NHL.

Vilen started in the ECHL with the Adirondack Thunder in his age-20 season. This turned out to be foolish, as he scored three goals and seven assists in six games before being called up to Utica. In 112 games with the Comets since then, Vilen has three goals and 50 assists. So it seems that the AHL has slowed Vilen down a bit, offensively, though he still has fared well enough defensively. Listed now at 6’1” and 195 pounds, Vilen has been working on getting stronger to handle AHL and NHL offenses, and he hopes to make an impression in the pre-season, beginning tomorrow. As the oldest player in this section, he may see NHL action in the nearest future.

17. Ben Kevan (RW) — Last Rank: N/A — Age: 18 — 2024-25 Teams: Des Moines Buccaneers (USHL — 51 games), US National U18 Team (13 games)

Though not as highly-touted a prospect going into the draft as Conrad Fondrk, Ben Kevan has shown a goal-scoring ability, with 37 goals and 63 assists in 110 USHL games, and he is likely to get plenty of playing time right off the bat in 2025-26, as he is committed to Arizona State University, where he is one of five skaters to be drafted to an NHL team. I was higher on Kevan when he was drafted in part due to the far better underlying tracking on top of his solid production. He had high-end transition volume and results, and he gets a ton of shots on goal.

If there is one thing I am always looking for from forwards, it’s the drive to get as many good shots on goal as possible. Kevan is not regarded as a poor passer by any means, but he is a shoot-first winger. With a high volume of tracked defensive plays as well, I do not worry so much about whether Kevan can make it at the next level. Kevan has plenty of speed and an attack mentality, as you might see in his highlights, so I think he would add a needed element to the wing if he ends up making the Devils in a few years.

16. Matyas Melovsky (C) — Last Rank: 29 — Age: 21 — 2024-25 Team: Baie-Comeau Drakkar

Personally, if there is one guy I would go back and rank higher, it would be Matyas Melovsky. I was impressed by the bits I saw of him in the prospect challenge, as my worry with him was whether his success in the QMJHL was due to him being one of the older players in that league. Melovsky turned 21 in May, just after finishing a season where he had 26 goals and 57 assists for Baie-Comeau, with a +40 rating (his second QMJHL season with such a rating or better). Of course, with the Czech U20 team at World Juniors in 2023-24, Melovsky also had 11 points (second on the team) for the bronze medalists.

🇨🇿Nahrávač Matyáš MELOVSKÝ🎩

Melovský zaznamenal na turnaji DESET asistencí (nejvíc ze všech), z toho hned SEDM bylo PRIMÁRNÍCH (po 🇺🇸Franku Nazarovi (8) druhý nejlepší). Bodoval ve všech zápasech kromě čtvrtfinále.

Za mě objev turnaje a možná i nejlepší český hráč, co myslíte? https://t.co/8QxMrpbNKj pic.twitter.com/Wwmlo5onal

— Jakub Hromada (@JakubHromadaCZ) January 6, 2024

But seeing Melovsky recently has me wondering. He seems to have the gift of above-average speed, and he has some size at 6’1” and 190 pounds. As a right-handed center, he could make life a lot easier for Sheldon Keefe if he went to camp and showed to be an equivalent or better option than Juho Lammikko, Luke Glendening, or Kevin Rooney, who are trying to make the Devils as fourth-line or press box centers. While Glendening is certainly the best faceoff man there, and Lammikko and Rooney are the biggest players, Melovsky is the only one who has expected offensive upside.

Melovsky would be a rare find as an overaged draft selection, as he was already 20 when taken in the 2024 NHL Draft in his third and final year of eligibility. But the Devils have had some success with overaged picks before, most notably Yegor Sharangovich, who nearly broke into the league as a center before transitioning to being a goal-scoring winger. Personally, I just wish that Melovsky was able to play in a better league than the QMJHL last season. I would feel much more comfortable about putting him in that camp battle if he was, say, coming off a season in the Czech Extraliga or the AHL, if he weren’t frustratingly still juniors-eligible.

Most likely, Melovsky will go an try to have a good first professional season for the Utica Comets, and there would be nothing wrong with that. In fact, a good start to the season might even make him a call-up option, and I would expect him to remain strong in our Top 25 rankings with a solid-or-better AHL season. Right now, I would expect him to be the second or third-line center behind Thomas Bordeleau, Angus Crookshank, and/or Ryan Schmelzer, though some of these guys may make the NHL or play wing at times in Utica. I think it would be nice for Melovsky’s development to play with a skilled guy like Bordeleau on his left, maybe with another up-and-comer like Cam Squires on his right. If Melovsky can take a situation like that and rack up assists with some of his expected strong physical play, he will set himself up for an NHL career in the not-too-distant future.

The Rankings​


Please see the rankings from today’s listing below.

Screenshot-2025-09-20-084618.png

Today, the community came closest to nailing this section, with four of the five identified in this 16-20 range. And, like last week, I will say a bit about how some prospects are doing: you should be encouraged about the developments going on in our team’s prospect pool. You will see more from James on Tuesday, but players up and down the rankings are having solid or great starts to their seasons, and I am personally feeling better and better about this mid-range of prospects. Everyone knew we had a good top-end, but this area seemed a bit murky to me over the summer. Now, it seems less so.

For these five, though, we have to wait a bit longer to see them play. Three are in college, and two will be in Utica or New Jersey to start the season, so they have yet to play sanctioned games. But, being a part of our Top 25, we will be keeping a close eye on them in the weeks and months to come.

Your Thoughts​


What do you think of these five? Do you think any are too high or too low? Do you think Topias Vilen or Matyas Melovsky will play any games for the Devils this season? Which of the three college kids do you think will have the best transition to professional hockey down the line? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Pre-season tomorrow.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/n...25-under-25-the-middle-of-the-pack-from-16-20
 
Pre-Season Game Preview #1: New Jersey Devils vs. New York Rangers

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Things are getting real again.

The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils versus the New York Rangers

The Time: 1:00 PM ET

The Broadcast: Local TV — MSGSN, Devils Hockey Radio

Camp Battles?


The biggest thing worth following in the preseason, other than hoping for good health, is determining which players on the team earn depth spots. The New Jersey Devils are playing this preseason with some question marks in their forward group. Discussed most commonly among fans, these games will help Sheldon Keefe pick his preferred fourth line center, as it seems the team currently plans on having Cody Glass play on the third line, while Dawson Mercer is at wing in the top six.

The #NJDevils group is different than the opening two days but the lines have stayed the same.

Here's what the first session looks like today.

Devils open the preseason tomorrow, we'll try and get some clarity from HC Keefe on how he plans to tackle that first game roster. pic.twitter.com/OqhePW24yw

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) September 20, 2025

Out of that first practice group, Marc McLaughlin is the candidate to make the roster as a depth center. In the AHL last season, McLaughlin had five goals and 15 assists in 50 games between the Providence Bruins (34 games) and the Utica Comets. In the NHL, he had two goals and an assist in 14 games between the Bruins (12 games) and Devils. McLaughlin has never been a big scorer, topping out at 30 points in Providence in 2022-23. Now 26 years old, McLaughlin has to prove that he is better than the guys on PTOs despite his limited offense.

Second #NJDevils group about to start practice. Would imagine this will likely be pretty close to the roster for the first preseason game tomorrow afternoon against the Rangers.

Potential first look at Arseny Gritsyuk: pic.twitter.com/9jufzjme9m

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) September 20, 2025

Group Two features the three other obvious candidates for fourth line center, though I would say there are two more on the wings who should get a shot. Juho Lammikko (the youngest, coming off the most playing time in Europe), Luke Glendening (the best faceoff man, and a righty), and Kevin Rooney (the former Devil, a bit younger than Glendening, and a good penalty killer) are vying for that fourth line role to start the season. Additionally, Angus Crookshank and Thomas Bordeleau have played center professionally before, so I would hope that the team considers them, as well, despite their more skilled and offensive games. Amanda Stein also said that Sheldon Keefe confirmed this second group is the closest practice group to the players you will see on the ice today. So, we are really getting right into it.

Defensively, things should be simpler. The Devils will have their starting six once Luke Hughes is signed. But who will be the seventh defenseman while Johnny Kovacevic is recovering from his long-term injury? Seamus Casey is certainly the most talented, but I am not sure whether the team would see it as the best idea to have him ride along in the press box on most nights rather than play 22 minutes a night in Utica. Out of Practice Group 1, you would have Topias Vilen and Mikael Diotte trying to show what they can do to earn a depth role. Out of Practice Group 2, excluding Casey, seventh defenseman candidates include Dennis Cholowski, Ethan Edwards, Colton White, and Calen Addison.

Last season, I was not impressed with Cholowski in a Devils uniform, though hopefully things will be different now that it is his second year with Sheldon Keefe. I have high hopes for Ethan Edwards, who seems to play a lot bigger than his frame, and with plenty of speed. However, Edwards may be in the same territory as Seamus Casey in terms of benefiting more from ice time in Utica rather than holding a press box role. I enjoy seeing Colton White on occasion, and I never feel like he embarrasses himself, so I think he would be a good option as a depth defenseman. And Calen Addison showed a lot of promise as a third-pairing, second power play option in Minnesota a few years ago, so he may be a good reclamation project for the team.

The Rangers Side


Like the Devils, Mike Sullivan will has said that he does not plan on icing many veterans in the game this afternoon. The Rangers just made cuts from their camp roster yesterday, so this game may very well help them determine who else can move on to their AHL camp. Vince Mercogliano also reports that Artemi Panarin has been out a couple days with a lower-body injury, so Sullivan has an extra reason to hold his veterans out of these pre-season games.

Rangers are scheduled to play their first preseason game at 1pm tomorrow in NJ, but I wouldn’t expect to see many (if any) established vets. Sullivan told us he’s looking to get three appearances for most of those guys. We should start seeing them at MSG on Tues and Thurs. #NYR

— Vince Z. Mercogliano (@vzmercogliano) September 20, 2025

The Rangers keeping their veterans healthy should be their top priority. Their core is one of the older ones in the league, and they are fighting this year to avoid a repeat offense of missing the playoffs. Depth-wise, they are looking for Juuso Parssinen to take a step forward, possibly as a third-line center. Parssinen had a nice run with five points in 11 games as a Ranger last year, but has 53 points in 137 career games, mostly with Nashville. Peter Baugh noted that Sullivan has marked Zibanejad for the wing this season, so Parssinen’s development is rather important to them.

Whoever lines up for the Rangers today, I hope that the Devils play fast hockey and light the lamp plenty of times. There are a lot of guys in the Devils’ expected lineup today who are fighting for jobs, and some (Rooney, Glendening) possibly fighting for the continuation of their NHL careers on their PTOs. And, if Nico Daws ends up in net, I hope he has an excellent game. He is very much an NHL backup-caliber goalie, at the very least, and he needs to play his way into whatever situation is best for him at this point as he enters what should be his athletic prime. If that means the Devils have to trade him before the season begins, so be it — I am simply unsure of whether someone like Daws could pass through waivers. Last season, he had a .939 save percentage in six games and four starts in the NHL, earning one shutout with a 3-1-0 record. If we see that Daws today, I would be thrilled.

Your Thoughts


What do you think of today’s game? Will you be watching? Who are you rooting for to make the team? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...eview-1-new-jersey-devils-vs-new-york-rangers
 
Arseni Gritsyuk Posts Two Points As New Jersey Devils Lose Preseason Opener, 5-3

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Happy Earth, Wind & Fire Day, and welcome back to New Jersey Devils hockey. On the 21st night afternoon of September, the Devils hosted the New York Rangers in the 2025-26 preseason opener at The Rock. In a game light on regulars, New Jersey fell to their Hudson River rivals by a final score of 5-3.

It’s hard to know just what to make of a game like today’s. As mentioned, there were few regulars in the lineup for New Jersey, so it’s not like we can dissect how the main guys looked on the ice. And even if we could, it’s hard to take preseason results seriously. Remember, this is the same franchise that put up a perfect preseason in 2023-24, only to embark on a listless regular season and miss the postseason altogether.

Still, there are some takeaways we can focus on. Number one to me was the play of Arseni Gritsyuk. After being drafted by the late Ray Shero all the way back in 2019, Gritsyuk has finally made his way to North America. He played on a line with Cody Glass and Paul Cotter this afternoon, the only regular forwards who dressed for this game (unless you want to count Kurtis MacDermid, who was on Matt Rempe duty today).

I thought Gritsyuk started out slowly, but really came on strong as the game progressed. He first got on the scoreboard with a beautiful assist on Paul Cotter’s goal:

It may only be September, but Cotter’s hands are in midseason form. pic.twitter.com/IVw0UnZf9B

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) September 21, 2025

It’s not captured in the above tweet, but Cotter actually made a pretty nice defensive play to get the puck moving back the other way. It was nice to see Gritsyuk and Cotter combine on a pretty goal like that.

Then in the dying minutes of the game, with the Devils on a 5-on-3 power play, Gritsyuk showed off what we have all been told is his best asset: his shot:

Grits serves it up on a platter. #NJDevils | @Mikes_Amazing pic.twitter.com/1wh5lQ1Bf0

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) September 21, 2025

By the way, New Jersey was on that two-man advantage thanks to Brennan Othmann doing his best Rempe impression by elbowing Calen Addison in the head. Addison’s status is worth monitoring as we go forward, at the time of this writing, I have not seen an update.

In any case, it was nice to see Gritsyuk finish with two points. He also registered six shots on goal, another great sign that he was able to generate offense for himself. And for good measure, he recorded four hits as well. It’s just one preseason game, but Gritsyuk’s debut was encouraging.

Cotter, Glass, and Jake Allen were the only other players who suited up today that are locks for the opening day roster. Allen only played the first period, allowing one goal on 10 shots, including a bundle of saves in a period-ending flurry by the Rangers. He looked solid. Cotter and Glass had up and down performances in my opinion, though I thought Cotter was a little more noticeable. He did have that goal after all.

Elsewhere, there were veterans playing on PTOs such as Kevin Rooney and Luke Glendening. There was other veteran depth such as Dennis Cholowski, Juho Lammikko, Brian Halonen, Mike Hardman, and Nathan Legere. There were younger players looking to establish themselves such as Thomas Bordeleau, Angus Crookshank, Ethan Edwards, and Addison. And there was also Nico Daws, who had a rough second period on the way to giving up four goals on 13 shots over two periods of play. It wasn’t the best outing for Daws, and the Devils need to figure out what to do with him considering he is no longer waiver ineligible. Your mileage may vary on how the rest of the roster performed, but again, it’s the first preseason game so it’s hard to take too much out of this contest.

But despite the loss, and despite a lack of familiar faces, it was nice to have New Jersey Devils hockey back. Here’s to the (unofficial) beginning of the 2025-26 season.

The Game Highlights: Courtesy of NHL.com

The Other Devils Debut​


Aside from the new players, today also marked the Devils debut for Don LaGreca. After a sudden and unceremonious end to the Bill Spaulding era of calling Devils games for MSG Networks, LeGreca is now the latest voice of the Devils. Broadcaster taste is largely subjective, but I thought LaGreca had reasonable chemistry with Ken Daneyko and Bryce Salvador in his debut game. I didn’t think he crushed it, and I didn’t think he was terrible. A perfectly reasonable performance.

Although someone needs to help me out here…did it sound to anyone else like he was pronouncing Arseni Gritsyuk’s last name with an “L”? As in, “GritsLik”? I swear it sounded like that to me at times.

Next Time Out​


The Devils continue their preseason slate on Tuesday when they host the New York Islanders at The Rock. Puck drop is scheduled for 7:00pm.

Your Take​


What did you make of today’s game? Were you encouraged by what you saw out of Gritsyuk? Who were some other standout performances to you? What did you think of Don LaGreca behind the mic? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...s-new-jersey-devils-lose-preseason-opener-5-3
 
New Jersey Devils Announce Theme Nights, Final Year of “Jersey” Jersey

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It’s the start of a brand new work week (hooray?), and the New Jersey Devils have given us some news. No, it’s not Luke Hughes, yet. But I had been wondering when the full promotional schedule would be released, and the Devils have finally released their theme nights and giveaways. Additionally, they have said that the 2025-26 season will be the final year of the black and white “Jersey” jersey. We will start off there.

End of the “Jersey” Jersey​


The Jersey Jersey has been controversial at best since it was first leaked in 2021. I would say, though, that the jersey has grown on people more than not since the initial, largely negative, reaction. Any time I go to the Prudential Center, I see no shortage of black-and-white Devils jerseys, but that may very well be the reason they are moving towards retiring the jersey. If thousands of people already have a regular home Jack Hughes jersey and a “Jersey” Jack Hughes jersey, Fanatics and the team are simply going to make more money by releasing a new jersey.

Personally, I am excited for the change. I am not a fan of the all-black look. Maybe it would be better if it had more red to it. But I also think the home jersey would be better with more black in it (as in, the classic bottom stripe on the dynasty-era jerseys). I know the team’s goaltenders are also probably pretty happy with having a change on the way, as the black socks on the black jerseys can make it odd to follow pucks through defensemen trying to block shots. However, they are unique, and I won’t take that away from them. They aren’t a boring black practice jersey masquerading as a game jersey.

Theme Nights​


Theme Nights, Community, and Group Nights at the Prudential Center in the 2025-26 season include:

  • 10/22 vs. Minnesota Wild — Pride Night
  • 11/10 vs. New York Islanders — Military Appreciation Night
  • 11/29 vs. Philadelphia Flyers — Hockey Fights Cancer presented by RWJBarnabas Health
  • 12/1 vs. Columbus Blue Jackets — People With Disabilities Night
  • 12/3 vs. Dallas Stars — Filipino Heritage Night
  • 12/11 vs. Tampa Bay Lightning — Jewish Community Night
  • 12/13 vs. Anaheim Ducks — Devils Youth Foundation Night
  • 12/21 vs. Buffalo Sabres — Ukrainian Heritage Night
  • 1/3 vs. Utah Mammoth — Mascot Madness
  • 1/14 vs. Seattle Kraken — Faith and Family Night
  • 1/27 vs. Winnipeg Jets — Italian Heritage Night
  • 1/29 vs. Nashville Predators — Swiss Heritage Night
  • 2/3 vs. Columbus Blue Jackets — American Sign Language Night
  • 2/5 vs. New York Islanders — Black History Month Celebration
  • 2/25 vs. Buffalo Sabres — Devils Down the Shore
  • 3/3 vs. Florida Panthers — Educators Night
  • 3/4 vs. Toronto Maple Leafs — Irish Heritage Night
  • 3/7 vs. New York Rangers and 3/8 vs. Detroit Red Wings — Youth Hockey Weekend presented by RWJBarnabas Health
  • 3/12 vs. Calgary Flames — Portuguese Heritage Night
  • 3/14 vs. Los Angeles Kings — Polish Heritage Night
  • 3/16 vs. Boston Bruins — Women in Sports Night
  • 3/29 vs. Chicago Blackhawks — Star Wars Night
  • 4/7 vs. Philadelphia Flyers — First Responders Night
  • 4/9 vs. Pittsburgh Penguins — Autism Acceptance Night
  • 4/12 vs. Ottawa Senators — Jersey Appreciation Night

In addition to these nights, the Devils say they will, at some point, have giveaways for, at the very least, a Jack in the Box, a Brett Pesce bobblehead, and an NJ Devil lunch box. I do not yet see these specifically on the schedule.

Looking at this spread of nights, it looks like the Devils decided to have no shortage of theme and cultural nights at The Rock this year, and I am happy to see it. If all of these nights bring people in to watch New Jersey Devils hockey, the nights are doing their job. Now, I hope that the Prudential Center puts the proper amount of effort into all of these promotions, but the important thing to me is that it really seems like there isn’t anyone left out of the schedule. In a literal sense: you are more likely to attend one of these nights than not if you pick a random New Jersey Devils game to attend this season.

Your Thoughts​


What do you think about the sunset for the Jersey jersey? Did you end up buying one of them? Did you like them or dislike them? Do you think you will buy one in their final season? Are there any theme nights you are looking forward to in particular? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/e...unce-theme-nights-final-year-of-jersey-jersey
 
Devils in the Details – 9/22/25: Debuts Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Arseny Gritsyuk had a goal and an assist in his preseason debut as the Devils fell, 5-3, to the Rangers on Sunday: [Devils NHL]

Any thoughts on the first game of the Don La Greca experience?

The Don La Greca era of @NJDevils hockey has officially begun! Catch #NYR vs #NJDevils preseason hockey on MSG and streaming on The Gotham Sports App! @DonLagreca | @KenDaneykoMSG pic.twitter.com/Qv68k5pZ3x

— Devils on MSG (@DevilsMSGN) September 21, 2025

Congrats to the Markstroms:

Welcome to the world, little goalie in training!

Congrats to the Markstroms on the birth of their baby boy, Cruz. pic.twitter.com/hP9tzrBUAR

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) September 20, 2025

Hockey Links​


How realistic is a Sidney Crosby trade for each team? Where could he end up if the Penguins decide to move him? [The Athletic ($)]

A look at some of the guys who will be pushing to make Olympic impressions early on this season: [ESPN]

A frightening story from Rasmus Dahlin:

A letter from Rasmus and Carolina. 💙

— Buffalo Sabres (@BuffaloSabres) September 19, 2025

“The Chicago Blackhawks have settled a second lawsuit brought by a former player who claimed they were negligent in dealing with sexual assault allegations leveled against then-video coach Brad Aldrich in 2010.” [ESPN]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d.../devils-in-the-details-9-22-25-debuts-edition
 
Pre-Season Game Preview #2: New Jersey Devils vs. New York Islanders

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils vs. New York Islanders

The Time: 7:00pm ET

The Broadcast: MSGSN, MSGSN2, Devils Hockey Radio

Last Devils Game​


New Jersey played their preseason opener on Sunday afternoon, losing a 5-3 decision to the New York Rangers at The Rock. The big story out of that game was Arseni Gritsyuk scoring a goal and adding an assist.

Last Islanders Game​


New York also opened up their exhibition slate on Sunday, falling 3-2 in a shootout to the Philadelphia Flyers.

A Promising Debut​


Take this with all the grains of salt in the world considering it’s the preseason, but Arseni Gritsyuk looked good in his North American debut. He broke onto the scoresheet with a pretty assist on Paul Cotter’s goal, and late in the game he added a power play goal off a blistering one-timer from the left flank. He also added six total shots on goal and four hits, so Gritsyuk made his presence felt all over the ice on Sunday.

It wasn’t a perfect debut, as I thought Gritsyuk looked a bit out of sorts at the beginning of the game. But as the contest wore on, he seemed to get more and more comfortable. Head coach Sheldon Keefe seemed to agree in his postgame press conference, and he also intimated that we will be seeing a lot of Gritsyuk in the preseason:

Keefe said Gritsyuk will play in many of the #NJDevils preseason games.

He needs the reps to find the rhythm in all areas of the game, especially away from the puck.

"The more touches he got in the second half of the game, I thought Grits started to come alive a bit."

Full: pic.twitter.com/7obZ5Yg7dq

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) September 21, 2025

I’m not sure that means we are guaranteed to see him again tonight, but even if we don’t, get used to seeing Gritsyuk in the lineup a lot in the runup to the regular season. Hopefully he shows Keefe the improvement he is looking for.

Emerging Patterns​


The Devils’ practice yesterday consisted of the players who did not suit up in the preseason opener on Sunday. Here’s how things shook out:

Here’s how the #NJDevils are skating today at practice. It’s the players who did not play yesterday.

Keefe staying very consistent in his lines and pairings through camp, so far. https://t.co/XnDCVGAYng pic.twitter.com/aX1i9EjtlR

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) September 22, 2025

Already we are seeing some lines and pairings start to come together. Hughes and Bratt have obviously been a set for a couple seasons at this point, but it was an open question who would join them on the other wing. For the time being the answer appears to be Evgenii Dadonov, who has practiced next to Hughes and Bratt for a few sessions now. Dadonov has a long history of playing at or near the top of a lineup with elite teammates, so this combination definitely intrigues me, even as Dadonov reaches the twilight of his career.

Elsewhere, Nico Hischier has been centering Timo Meier and Dawson Mercer all training camp. Given how much this trio played together last season, and also taking into account Stefan Noesen’s groin injury, this seems like close to a lock to be A Thing into the regular season as well. This also seems to confirm something I felt in the offseason: despite a lot of rumblings, Mercer will not be the third-line center for this team.

On the third line, Ondrej Palat and Connor Brown have skated a lot together, and the center here has been either Cody Glass or a fill-in. Since Glass played in the preseason opener, he got practice off yesterday, hence Marc McLaughlin’s placement here. This appears to be Keefe’s plan as the third line, so while we might not see Glass tonight, expect to see a lot of Palat-Glass-Brown at some point.

The fourth line is the one unit up front that is hard to comment on, as there hasn’t been much consistency here during training camp. Keefe still has some time to figure this one out, but hopefully we get some answers soon.

On defense, it seems Keefe is determined to roll pairings of Jonas Siegenthaler and Dougie Hamilton, and Brenden Dillon and Simon Nemec. These pairings have gotten a lot of time together during practices, and with Johnny Kovacevic expected to miss a lot of time to begin the campaign, Keefe has apparently seen it fit to reunite Siegenthaler and Hamilton. Let’s hope they can rekindle some of the magic they’ve shown in the past.

As for the last pairing, I believe this is the first time we’ve seen Seamus Casey line up on his offhand this preseason. He was paired with Brett Pesce, and I have to assume Casey is just a placeholder until Luke Hughes finally signs a contract and gets back onto the ice. Assuming this is correct, Hughes-Pesce would be the only pairing that will stay intact from last season’s go-to combos.

By the way, expect to see most, if not all, of this lineup tonight. Per Keefe:

Sheldon Keefe says that tomorrow’s preseason game will be quite close to this #NJDevils roster, with some tweaks.

Expectation is that Jacob Markstrom will start. Plan on how long he’ll play in the game is still TBD. https://t.co/bJ03CISCLu

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) September 22, 2025

It’ll also be nice to see Jacob Markstrom back in action for the first time this preseason as well, assuming he does suit up. And by the way, congratulations to the Markstrom’s on the birth of their son!

New York Islanders…Emphasis On “New”​


This past offseason brought some significant changes to Long Island’s hockey team. Old friend Lou Lamoriello was fired as general manager…or actually, excuse me….his contract was not renewed. Clearly different than being fired. In his place comes Mathieu Darche, a fresh-faced general manager who previously served as the AGM for the Tampa Bay Lightning for three seasons.

Darche got to work taking a big swing in the offseason trade market. Back in June, he traded franchise defenseman Noah Dobson to the Montreal Canadiens for Emil Heineman and two first round picks in this summer’s Entry Draft. Dobson had spent the first six seasons of his career with the Isles, but will now ply his trade in the hockey hotbed of Montreal.

Perhaps Darche felt comfortable dealing Dobson since New York won the draft lottery in the spring, and with it the right to draft defenseman Matthew Schaefer. A product of the Erie Otters of the OHL, Schaefer comes in with lofty expectations, as any top overall pick does. Whether he makes the opening night roster is still a bit of a question on Long Island, but I lean toward saying he does make the cut.

Schaefer made his professional debut on Sunday in New York’s preseason opener. He managed to find his way onto the scoresheet with an assist on Kyle Palmieri’s goal, and he also registered five shots on goal in a whopping 24:39 of ice time. He’s also getting Islanders fans excited by doing the little things right:

Just an absolutely insane defensive backcheck from Matthew Schaefer on Matvei Michkov 😱

In the first overall pick’s first NHL game too 😳

(via @OSulr81) pic.twitter.com/CqRBhSJOdg

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) September 22, 2025

Now that is some serious skating talent.

Whether Shaefer makes the team or not, Islanders management and fans alike have high, high hopes for the young defenseman’s future. I’m not sure if we will see him play again tonight, but if we do, keep an eye on him.

Your Take​


What do you make of tonight’s game? What do you most want to see out of the Devils? How do you feel about the line combinations and defense pairings that we are seeing early on? What is your take on the new-look Isles? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...iew-2-new-jersey-devils-vs-new-york-islanders
 
Veteran-Heavy Devils Handily Defeat Islanders in Preseason Action, 6-2

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No real surprises here. And really, nothing for Sheldon Keefe to complain about.

Dougie Hamilton and Dawson Mercer had a goal and an assist each, Timo Meier and Jack Hughes had two assists apiece, and a veteran-heavy Devils lineup routed the New York Islanders’ not quite ready for primetime players 6-2 in a preseason game Tuesday night at Prudential Center in Newark.

Many of the Devils regulars, including Hughes who missed the end of last season and had offseason shoulder surgery, were making their preseason debuts Tuesday night after sitting out Sunday afternoon’s 5-3 loss to the Rangers.

With the veterans dressed the Devils controlled play from the opening draw.

Hamilton opened the scoring 13 minutes, 52 seconds into the first period, by ripping a one timer over the blocker of Isles’ goalie Marcus Hogberg.

Hogburg, who split last season between AHL Bridgeport and the Isles, looked sharp early, stopping the first 13 shots he faced, including a nice kick stop on a short break from Nico Hischier, and fought off pucks on a couple of net front scrambles off the sticks of Arseny Gritsyuk and Brett Pesche.

But with a 5-on-3 power play just coming to an end, Jack Hughes found Hamilton at the top of the left circle, and Hamilton fired it home for his first of the preseason and a 1-0 Devils lead.

The lead was short-lived, however, because Jacob Markstrom continued a disturbing trend of allowing first-shot goals, allowing Emil Heineman’s turnaround shot from between the circles to hit his shoulder and roll down his back into the net, tying the game at 1-1 just 2:04 later.

Markstrom, scheduled to play the first period, finished with 2 shots on 3 saves and a .666 save percentage before being replaced by Georgi Romanov to start the second.

The Devils retook the lead less than a minute into the second when Nico Hischier netted his first of the preseason on the power play off a pass from Bratt at the bottom of the right circle.

Goals from newcomer Connor Brown and Dawson Mercer just 1:08 apart midway through the second put the Devils comfortably ahead 4-1.

Rookie defenseman Ethan Edwards and winger Evgenii Dadonov scored early in the third to push the lead to 6-1, before the Isles’ Calum Ritchie got a late goal to get it to 6-2. Edwards later took a shot to the leg on a Devils penalty kill and had to go down the tunnel for a bit, but he returned for one shift in the final few minutes.

The teams will meet again at 7 p.m., Friday at UBS Arena in Elmont, NY.

The Game Stats: The NHL.com Game Summary | The NHL.com Event Summary | The NHL.com Play by Play Log | The NHL.com Shot Summary | The Natural Stat Trick Game Stats

Highlights​

Your Thoughts​


Not a whole lot can be taken from these preseason games where it’s an NHL team vs. an AHL team with a few NHLers, but you have to be happy when everyone follows the game plan, escapes without injury, and picks up a win. Anyone else concerned about Markstrom’s tendency to give up first shot goals.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...dily-defeat-islanders-in-preseason-action-6-2
 
Early Takeaways From Two Preseason Games

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The preseason is officially underway, and through two games, there is definitely some things we can take away from a Devils perspective.

Keep in mind, I think this should all be looked at through the lens of “its preseason” and “the Devils have yet to face a lineup comprised of mostly NHL players”. And even if the Devils had faced lineups comprised of NHL players, different players have different approaches to the preseason. Some veteran players are content to simply get through the games healthy and get a sweat in, while players on the roster bubble might be more incentivized to show something and make an impression as they try to win an NHL job.

With those disclaimers out of the way, I wanted to highlight a few things that I have noticed through two contests.

There Might Be Something to the Palat-Brown combo in the Bottom Six

One of my biggest concerns with playing Ondrej Palat in the bottom six in the past had been the fact that when we saw it last year, he didn’t appear to have any chemistry with anybody. It’s not a coincidence that he looked better when he played in on a line with Nico Hischier or Jack Hughes. Players who know what to do with the puck on their stick and can even drag along players to success. The Devils didn’t have any of that last year in their bottom six.

So let’s just say that I was pleased that the pairing with newcomer Connor Brown showed promise. They had a chemistry that looked like they’ve played with each other for years even though they’ve only been together a handful of practices, and Palat’s tape-to-tape pass to Brown set up what was ultimately the game winning goal against the Islanders last night. I don’t know if Luke Glendening will stick centering them (more on him in a bit) but I can see the Palat-Brown combo sticking together for awhile.

One more aside on Palat, who has been a notorious punching bag of the Devils fanbase since he signed here. Obviously, he’s not worth his $6M AAV cap hit and I’m not going to suggest that he is. But last night was another example of his hockey smarts, and its another example of how the hate on Palat has shifted too far in that direction. Palat going to the front of the net and screening the goaltender helped lead to Evgenii Dadonov tapping in the PPG that made it 6-1. It’s the type of play that doesn’t show up on the scoresheet but helps create a goal that he’s made a career of. Again, stuff like that alone doesn’t make up for the fact his cap hit is too high or that that $6M could be better spent elsewhere, but you can see why he still has a role on this team and why he’s better than your run of the mill, AHL, flavor of the week option.

Luke Glendening Probably Has the Early Edge For 4C

I wrote last week about the roster crunch, and I’ll dive more into it next week when I write about the forwards in our series of season preview articles in greater depth, but my big takeaway from last week is that the Devils probably have, at best, one spot up for grabs amongst forwards.

Since I wrote that, Shane LaChance and Lenni Hameenaho have both dealt with some sort of nagging injury since the prospects challenge, and while I wouldn’t say that eliminates them from the conversation of breaking camp with the big club, it probably does put them behind the eight ball in terms of winning a job out of camp. So knowing that, I think its probably worth shifting our attention to the potential center options.

With the Devils playing Dawson Mercer at wing last night, as well as the PTO signings the Devils previously made with Kevin Rooney and Luke Glendening, this is probably as strong an indicator as any that the Devils plan on Cody Glass being the 3C and going with either one of the PTO options or Juho Lammikko as the 4C. And I think between the three of them, Glendening has probably made the strongest case for a contract thus far.

This is a situation where I think having a player who can fill a specific role the best matters. Whoever wins this job is going to be tasked with playing on the penalty kill. Whoever wins this job is probably going to be on the ice in late game, defense-first situations. Whoever wins this job will likely be tasked with getting a critical faceoff win, and while faceoffs by and large don’t matter, they can matter situationally. Having another good option in the dot aside from Nico Hischier doesn’t hurt. Even though all of these players can theoretically do that, this is where I think Glendening’s reputation and track record at the NHL level sets him apart from Rooney and Lammikko.

There’s a lot of preseason left so there’s still time for both Rooney and/or Lammikko to make their case. But if it were up to me and I had to make a decision today, I’d probably lean Glendening.

I’m Not Sure Where Gritsyuk Fits In At The Moment, But I Want to See More

The one drawback with the top nine wingers seemingly being set is I’m not sure how Arseni Gritsyuk fits into the equation.

I don’t see the Devils putting Gritsyuk with Jack Hughes and Jesper Bratt for now. The combination of Timo Meier, Nico Hischier, and Dawson Mercer seems like a line they’ll likely use a ton this season. And if the Palat-Connor Brown connection is indeed real, the last thing I want to do is mess with that. Which leaves being on the fourth line with whoever is left, likely Paul Cotter and either Cody Glass or whoever the 4C winds up being.

Now, some might frown upon Gritsyuk, with his offensive instincts, skating ability, and quick release being “wasted” in a 4th line role. But I do want to harken back to a theme from last year that I noted with this team on how this team didn’t have an identity in the bottom six. It was a mish-mosh of parts that didn’t fit together, which is why none of it worked.

It’s too early to say that the Devils identity in their bottom six this year is “what if we just build four lines that can skate, push the pace of play, and score” but it does seem like they have pieces up and down the lineup that could potentially do that. Dadonov, who is currently in a top six role, brings skill and hockey IQ to the table. Brown is a good two-way player who skates well and can play in all situations. Cotter skates hard, plays hard, and has to be accounted for in potential breakaway opportunities. Gritsyuk skates well and has more offensive skill than a typical bottom six winger. I don’t say this to be disrespectful of the players who are no longer here, but its a better mix than “last season in the NHL” Tomas Tatar, Nathan Bastian, Curtis Lazar, and Justin Dowling, among others.

As we all know, lines don’t stick together forever. There will be games where what the Devils are running out there doesn’t work, they’re trailing, and they pull out the line blender to try to create a spark. This is where I think having a guy like Gritsyuk who can theoretically move up into a more featured role on a scoring line with more talented players can play. This is where I think having better players overall give Keefe more options with which to work.

Either way, Gritsyuk has an intriguing toolkit at his disposal and I want to see more from him. I don’t think its the end of the world if he starts out in a fourth line role considering he is still adjusting to playing on North American ice, and if the Devils do suffer an injury somewhere in the Top Nine, he’ll be a natural candidate to move up the lineup to try to create offense.

Should Ethan Edwards Be the 7th Defenseman?

There wasn’t a lot of newsworthy stuff to come out of the Sheldon Keefe and Tom Fitzgerald season opening press conference last week, but the one thing that I did take note of was their praise for defenseman Ethan Edwards.

I don’t know if there’s anything about Edwards’ game that jumps out as above average or even elite. But he’s a good skater, plays with poise, is positionally sound, and after watching him in two preseason contests, I can see why the decision makers like him.

I don’t know if Edwards is necessarily NHL-ready right this second but I don’t know that he’s too far off either, which raises the question whether or not he might be best suited as the 7th defenseman for as long as Johnathan Kovacevic is on the shelf. He’s young enough that he probably should be playing regularly somewhere, but that would also have to be weighed against practicing against NHL-caliber players everyday, which is something he wouldn’t get if he were to start the season in Utica. At the very least, I’d like to see Edwards get the call if the Devils need a defenseman in a pinch rather than turning to the Dennis Cholowskis or Colton Whites of the world.

Edwards plays a solid “meat and potatoes” sort of game that works against AHL caliber lineups like what the Rangers and Islanders have dressed this past week. Let’s see if it plays against better competition.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/devils-games/61032/early-takeaways-from-two-preseason-games
 
2025 Preseason Gamethread #2: New Jersey Devils vs. New York Islanders

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The Time: 7:00 PM ET

The Broadcast: Local TV — MSGSN, MSGSN2, Radio — Devils Hockey Network, Out of Market: ESPN+

The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils vs. the New York Islanders

The Game Preview: Jackson previewed today’s game.

The Song of the Day: Since Sheldon Keefe reportedly plans on icing a lineup of mostly NHL players tonight, I have a rather simple choice for the song of the day. It’s Mama Said Knock You Out by LL Cool J. Tonight doesn’t mark any comeback, but this Devils group needs to pull all of their skill together and finally go on a run this season. There are no ifs, ands, or buts about it.

The Rules: If you have been a reader here, you already know the rules. But for the rest, a reminder: please do not swear in the comment section, and keep comments relevant to the hockey game going on. Beyond that, do not attack any other commenters, and do not ask for or pass along illegal streams on this board.

LGD!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ead-2-new-jersey-devils-vs-new-york-islanders
 
New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: Gustav Hillstrom and Daniil Orlov Boom Out of the Gate

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Gustav Hillstrom​


With nine points in his first three games, Gustav Hillstrom is lighting up the U20 Nationell.

The recently renamed U20 Nationell (formerly J20 SuperElit) is the top junior league in Sweden. The Devils have two prospects on the Brynas IF U20 team from their most recent draft class, center Gustav Hillstrom and defenseman Sigge Holmgren. While both have played well, with Sigge Holmgren earning his first point since his lost season from injury, Gustav Hillstrom has really shined, leading the league last week as of Thursday night with nine points in his first three games (four goals, five assists).

Although Hillstrom’s dominance has been at the junior level in his +1 year, the experience may be preferable at this stage of his development. Brynas IF is a stacked team, especially at center, featuring two former NHLers in Niklas Backstrom and Johan Larsson. Earning top minutes in juniors rather than riding the pine or playing limited time in a checking role in the SHL will probably be better for him longterm. At least, so far, the results are encouraging.

Daniil Orlov​


The Russian defender has been off to a hot start for Spartak Moskva with six points in seven games, a dizzying pace compared to his 15 points in 52 games last season. The 21-year-old is signed through 2027-28, so it will be awhile before Orlov may be brought over. With the glut of defensive prospects in the system, the Devils can afford to wait.

2022 4th rounder Daniil Orlov has his first goal of the KHL season.

and what a celly, lmao. pic.twitter.com/8MPhN2M3YU

— Devils Insiders (@DevilsInsiders) September 16, 2025

Around the Pool:​

  • Goaltender Trenten Bennett followed up a shaky prospect challenge with a stellar 45 save win in his OHL season opener for Owen Sound.
  • In other goaltender news, Veeti Louhivaara has been loaned to KeuPa HT of the Mestis and has started the season with a 1-1-1 record and 2.29 GAA to go along with a contradictory .848 SV%. Such is the bizarre world of small sample sizes.
  • After missing most of last season with injury, winger Kasper Pikkarainen has been playing on the top line for TPS in the Liiga and has his first point, an assist, for his efforts.
TPS tänään! 🖤🤍

Kokoonpanon tarjoaa AVIS. 🚘#HCTPS #Turku #Liiga pic.twitter.com/ktQxegAQk1

— HC TPS (@HCTPS) September 17, 2025

Your Take​


Post your comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/p...llstrom-and-daniil-orlov-boom-out-of-the-gate
 
Could Any of the New Jersey Devils PTOs Make the Team?

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Prior to the New Jersey Devils officially starting their 2025-26 training camp, the team announced that they had brought in four players on professional tryouts. Goaltenders Georgi Romanov and Adam Scheel along with forwards Luke Glendening and former Devil Kevin Rooney were signed on September 5th. Since that time, they have yet to trim the roster even once at this point, meaning all four still seemingly have a chance to obtain a roster spot. Maybe one or two wind up as an AHL signing rather than an NHL. But how realistic is it for these players to make the team?

Well, let’s be honest right from the outset: the chances of Romanov and/or Scheel making the team are slim, even at the AHL level. The Devils have Jacob Markstrom, Jake Allen, Jakub Malek, Nico Daws and Tyler Brennan seemingly ahead of them, as all five of those players are signed. That means that one of those five (most likely Brennan) starts the season as the fifth string goalie down in the ECHL. Jeremy Brodeur is also under contract to Utica (and possibly others signed to Adirondack), meaning there are plenty of bodies in net within the organization. Unless either goalie absolutely blows management/coaching away both in practices and in games, I don’t think either goalie finds a spot on New Jersey’s depth chart. At best, they’re showcasing their skills in case of injuries or other clubs who need a goalie somewhere in their organization.

On to the forwards in Rooney and Glendening. Rooney has already has a run with the team albeit not under Sheldon Keefe. The thing with Rooney to me is that every organization has players like him, and I don’t think he’s bringing anything to the table that the Devils don’t already have. Quite simply, he’s another veteran body to fill out the ranks while getting a glimpse of other players. Glendening, meanwhile, might have a bit more utility to him. While he’s older than Rooney and his offensive skill has dried up, he’s still a solid defender and can step in and win some draws. As a matter of fact, he’s already shown that he can do so through two preseason contests. While the Devils have some of those glue guys already spread through their lineup, Glendening might find himself sticking around longer if he continues to have strong showings.

The most important date for all of these guys? This upcoming Monday, the 29th. Why is that? Because it’s the day after the Devils have split squad games, with one group playing a home game against Washington and a second traveling to play Ottawa. The Devils have enough players in camp without the four PTOs, but with veterans needed and the possibility that some of the Devils regulars do not play in either game, all four of these players could be useful in one of these games. The next day of camp will probably be when we begin to see quite a few cuts made, since at that point there’s only about a week of preseason ad two preseason games left. If any of the four are still in camp at that point, that would mean they’re probably slated to play in at least one of those final two games. That could mean as well that they’re being considered for a spot.

As of right now? I think Glendening at least has a shot to stick, especially if he continues to win faceoffs. He wouldn’t cost the Devils more than league minimum, so it’s not as if he would be eating cap that needs to be used elsewhere. At the same time, Glendening has also been a black hole on offense for the last few seasons now, so the Devils might not be inclined to have someone in that spot when so many were chastised for being that type of players for the team last season. He’s looked at least passable in the two contests he’s appeared in so far, but I would like to see how he fares against better quality of competition. I think in the end it will really depend on if the Devils feel like his skills off the puck are worth having him on the roster. The other three players, as I somewhat alluded to before, I see all being cut before rosters are finalized.

Now I’d like to hear your thoughts on the Devils PTO players; do you see any of them making the NHL team? Are there any that you think get signed to try and bolster the Utica roster? Do you think any of them are strictly here as bodies for the split squad Sunday and will be gone after that point? Leave any and all comments below and thanks as always for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...y-of-the-new-jersey-devils-ptos-make-the-team
 
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