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Why The Avalanche Should Retain Samuel Girard

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There has been constant speculation for years that defenseman Samuel Girard could emerge as a trade candidate for the Colorado Avalanche. But most of the proposals don’t make much sense.

The calls for the Avalanche to part ways with Girard have grown more pronounced over the past year. Yet, according to a June 10 poll conducted by Mile High Hockey’s Adrian Hernandez, a clear majority of fans remain opposed to trading the defenseman. That has not, however, deterred others from continuing to spin out hypothetical trade scenarios.

Do you think the Avalanche should trade Sam Girard?

If you answer yes, comment on how you'd replace him!

#GoAvsGo | @MileHighHockey | @MHH_LAB

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) June 10, 2025

One proposal that’s garnering some attention calls for the Avalanche to trade Girard to the Detroit Red Wings for 24-year-old left handed defenseman Albert Johansson. Who has played one season in the NHL with a grand total of nine points.

While Detroit remains in need of a left-handed defenseman, GM Steve Yzerman is unlikely to pursue Girard for several reasons. First, Johansson secured a two-year contract extension on June 30, carrying a $1.125 million AAV, signaling the organization’s intent to retain him for a while. Additionally, the Red Wings’ blue line struggled with physicality and aggressiveness last season—a deficiency Yzerman has actively sought to address. The acquisitions of Travis Hamonic and Jacob Bernard-Docker add grit and strength to the defensive corps, while enhancements to the penalty kill through the signings of Mason Appleton and James van Riemsdyk further underscore Detroit’s commitment to building a more robust, well-rounded roster.

Yzerman is the type of general manager who typically favors veterans and established NHL players, particularly those who bring a physical dimension to the lineup. While Girard is undoubtedly a skilled defenseman, he is relatively undersized for the position, standing 5-foot-10 and listed at weighing roughly 170 pounds—well below the league average for NHL blueliners.

Johansson, by contrast, has demonstrated both physicality and defensive responsibility. Last season, he recorded 70 body checks and 83 blocked shots over 61 games, and he was on the ice for four short-handed goals in a category where the team has historically struggled. Detroit’s coaching staff clearly believes in Johansson’s potential; he is projected to average 18 to 20 minutes of ice time per night in his second NHL season, leaving ample room for continued development and impact.

While the Avalanche could use an extra left-handed defenseman with improved positioning and hockey IQ, the Red Wings are very unlikely to ship Johansson and are unlikely to have any interest in Girard at this point. Plus, what the Avalanche actually need is another left handed defenseman in addition to Girard.

Girard often flies under the radar despite his importance to the Avalanche. While he will never possess the bone-crunching physicality of a Scott Stevens, Colorado’s system is built on speed, precision, and dynamic puck movement—an environment in which Girard thrives. His skating, vision, and decision-making make him a pivotal component in transitioning the puck and sustaining offensive pressure. Colorado should keep him a part of this organization for as long as they can.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...why-the-avalanche-should-retain-samuel-girard
 
Avalanche stay perfect in preseason with 4-1 win over Stars

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DENVER — It was far from flawless, but the Colorado Avalanche dispatched the Dallas Stars 4–1 on Saturday night at Ball Arena, preserving undefeated preseason record.

How It Transpired

Gavin Brindley broke the deadlock midway through the second period, striking at 10:30 after slipping undetected into the slot. Ivan Ivan delivered a deft backhand feed, and Brindley wasted no time in burying it past the goaltender. The sequence left Dallas defenseman Kyle Capobianco completely flat-footed; as the puck hit the net, Capobianco froze with his stick raised, glancing around in bewilderment as if to ask, “What just happened?”

From that point forward, the game settled into more of a defensive struggle, with Colorado’s blue line rising to the occasion. The Avalanche defensemen, disciplined in their positioning and crisp in their clears, managed to smother a Dallas attack that is ordinarily among the league’s more dynamic. At one stage in the second period, the Stars were limited to just three shots on goal—a statistic that underscored the effectiveness of Colorado’s structure. Yet in the waning seconds of the frame, Dallas finally broke through. Antonio Stranges found space in the left circle and rifled a wrist shot past Scott Wedgewood on a rebound created by Nathan MacKinnon’s left-circle wrist shot.

As has been noted throughout the offseason, one of Zakhar Bardakov’s defining qualities is his ability to remain a step ahead of the play. He enters the defensive zone with the quiet precision of a stealth aircraft—poised to emerge suddenly, strike with efficiency, and then transition seamlessly to the next assignment. That instinct was on full display at 7:28 of the third period, when he slipped into position and converted Artturi Lehkonen’s feed with a slick backhand, doubling Colorado’s lead.

Tristen Nielsen, who had quietly flown under the radar for much of training camp partly due to being a AHL contracted player, sealed the deal with an empty-net tally at 1:37 of regulation, extinguishing any faint hope of a Dallas rally.

Takeaways

A win is a win, though the performance left no shortage of areas for refinement. Colorado’s penalty kill proved flawless, neutralizing both Dallas opportunities. Yet the power play, a major source of criticism during the playoffs last year, remains a concern. The Avalanche squandered all seven chances with the man advantage, including an extended four-minute double minor assessed to Lian Bichsel after he held Jack Ahcan and compounded the infraction by attempting to rip off his helmet.

It’s the first preseason game, so there’s nothing to worry about right now. Dave Hakstol was hired as the new assistant coach for the Avalanche in the offseason and his system may take some tied to get accustomed to. Plus the fact that the only Avalanche regulars in this lineup were Ross Colton, Nathan MacKinnon, Artturi Lehkonen and Brent Burns. Trust the process, everyone.

What’s Next?

The Colorado Avalanche open a home and away set with the Vegas Golden Knights on Tuesday, with puck drop slated for 6 p.m. MT on TNT. It will be the club’s fourth preseason contest, marking the start of televised broadcasts. Both rosters are expected to feature a number of stars, giving fans their first taste of what the regular season should offer.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...-perfect-in-preseason-with-4-1-win-over-stars
 
Avalanche place 5 on waivers, plus more cuts from camp

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With preseason exactly half over, the Colorado Avalanche have been making a series of moves, including placing five players on waivers, which has trimmed their roster to 35 as it currently stands.

First, four forwards were waived on Saturday, they subsequently cleared waivers and were reassigned as they expected to report to Colorado Eagles training camp. All of Alex-Barre Boulet, Tye Felhaber, Jason Polin and TJ Tynan are AHL veterans so no big surprise, although Tynan got a longer run with the Avalanche last season in camp.

Note: Alex Barre-Boulet, Tye Felhaber, Jason Polin and T.J. Tynan cleared waivers today and will report to the Eagles' camp.

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) September 28, 2025

Following the 4-1 win over Dallas on Saturday night four more players who do not require waivers were also sent down to Eagles camp. Prospects Sean Behrens and Ivan Ivan depart after each had a good showing at camp and in preseason. A duo of AHL contracted forwards in Tristen Nielsen and Eagles captain Jayson Megna depart. Nielsen made a particularly good impression and could get upgraded to a NHL contract at any time if the Avalanche want to utilize him.

Avs reassign the following players:

Sean Behrens, D
Ivan Ivan, C
Jayson Megna, C
Tristen Nielsen, LW

They will report to Colorado Eagles camp which opens Monday.

— Meghan Angley (@megangley) September 28, 2025

Finally, after practice on Sunday the Avalanche placed one more player on waivers, this time defenseman Ronnie Attard. They also cut four more waiver exempt players and sent them to Eagles camp in forwards Chase Bradley and Cooper Gay, defenseman Alex Gagne and AHL contracted goalie Kyle Keyser.

The following players were placed on waivers with the intention of being reassigned to the Colorado Eagles American Hockey League training camp:

Ronnie Attard, D

Additionally, the following players have been reassigned to the Eagles’ camp outright:

Chase Bradley, LW
Alex… pic.twitter.com/p4Q8ErxIJ2

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) September 28, 2025

At this point the players who remain are worth noting though there are still several who are still on the roster due to injury at this point. Those who are healthy and seemingly in the running for a spot on the opening night roster or at least first call up status are forwards Zakhar Bardakov, Gavin Brindley, Danil Gushchin and Matt Stienburg, plus defensemen Jack Ahcan and Wyatt Aamodt. Interesting to note that 19-year-old invite goaltender from the QMJHL Mathis Langevin remains, though the thin goaltender depth and injuries are likely the reason but still it’s been a good showing by the young goalie.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...e-place-5-on-waivers-plus-more-cuts-from-camp
 
Colorado makes first wave of cuts

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With less than two weeks to go until the 2025-26 NHL regular season opening night on October 7th, the Colorado Avalanche needed to start making transactions to eventually get down to their roster of 23 (or fewer) players.

On an off-day following the two split-squad games against Utah, the organization did just that assigning a trio of junior players back to their respective clubs. Unfortunately, both Max Curran and Linus Funck were injured during the rookie tournament and did not participate in training camp. Christian Humphreys had a good showing at his first camp and played in the game at Magness Arena but it’s time for him to join the OHL season already in progress.

We have announced the following transactions:

One player was reassigned to his junior club:
Christian Humphreys, C (Kitchener – OHL)

Two players have reported to their respective junior clubs for rehab:
Max Curran, C (Edmonton – WHL)
Linus Funck, D (London – OHL) pic.twitter.com/Zfh8LlgXXA

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) September 22, 2025

After a week of several days off and light skates the Avalanche continued with another small cut ahead of tonight’s third preseason game. A trio of defensemen in Saige Weinstein, Hank Kempf and Connor Kelley were reassigned to the Colorado Eagles camp which will begin next week.

We have received Saige Weinstein, Hank Kempf, and Connor Kelley from the Colorado Avalanche.#HockeyHighway pic.twitter.com/Y3Xdfzcse0

— Colorado Eagles (@ColoradoEagles) September 26, 2025

With the six cuts the roster now stands at 48 players with several on the shelf due to injury as some more cuts are sure to follow in the coming week as we get closer to opening night.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...erage/58116/avalanche-make-first-wave-of-cuts
 
Recap: Colorado still prefect in preseason with 4-2 win over Vegas

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The Colorado Avalanche remain undefeated in preseason with a 4-2 win over the Vegas Golden Nights. The Ross Colton-Jack Drury connection was a highlight on a pair of goals.

Despite the game broadcast on national television, both the Colorado Avalanche and Vegas Golden Knights put out a lineup of extras for this contest. In fact Colorado called up Jason Polin, TJ Tynan, Tye Felhaber, Ronnie Attard and Alex Gagne just to participate in this game, The hope is tomorrow’s rematch in Vegas holds more NHL relevance.


The Game

To kick off the game, Vegas spent much of the first period in the Avalanche defensive zone but it was the home team who cashed in first on a great play between the two NHL players in this game as Ross Colton fed Jack Drury on a two-on-one, which the latter buried. Shots were pretty even 9-8 Colorado after one period of play.

At the start of the second period Vegas got a quick score to even the game from Tanner Laczynski as he took advantage of the Avalanche failing to clear the defensive zone. Before the second period concluded Vegas built on their lead when Joe Flemming danced around Sam Malinski and put the puck behind Trent Miner. Despite receiving a power play at the end of the period, Colorado’s AHL lineup couldn’t convert.

However, Colorado made things interesting to open the third period as they evened the score on a goal from Jason Polin. The five-man-unit was getting good pressure and then a Keaton Middleton shot found its way to the net from a point shot. Danil Gushchin fumbled the puck on a rebound but that allowed Polin to swat the puck in the net. Just a couple minutes later the Colton-Drury connection showed up again as Drury returned the favor to Colton on a cross-ice pass which saw him bury the team’s third goal of the evening. Joel Kiviranta sealed the deal with an empty net goal in this 4-2 victory.

Takeaways

Keeping the inferior lineup in mind it was no surprise this game featured many penalties. And despite each team earning three power plays each, none of them converted on the opportunity. The penalty kill is usually a strength early but those hoping to see evidence of some power play fireworks under Dave Hakstol’s guidance will have to keep waiting.

It was a mixed bag night for Sam Malinski who clearly did not look comfortable on the left side. He picked up an assist and as expected was still good rushing the puck but clears and defending were an issue. The quality of teammates didn’t help out the 27-year-old but the jury is still out on if the Avalanche will look for alternate solutions on the left side.

Both Gavin Brindley and Zakhar Bardakov were good on the forecheck and kept themselves in good standing as they try to make the opening night roster. However neither hit the scoresheet and didn’t do as much individually with the puck so it will depend what the coaching staff expects out of this duo of forwards.

Upcoming

The rematch tomorrow night, October the first, in Vegas with hopefully a lineup more resembling the Colorado Avalanche. Puck drop is at 7 p.m. MT on NHL Network.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...-prefect-in-preseason-with-4-2-win-over-vegas
 
Recap: Golden Knights Snap Colorado’s Perfect Preseason Record

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Colorado played their second-to-last preseason game against the Vegas Golden Knights tonight, and their perfect record in the preseason came to a close as they dropped this game 2-1 to the Golden Knights.

The Game​


The Colorado Avalanche would kick off the scoring in this game, with Gabe Landeskog getting on the board first in the first period, off of a feed from Valeri Nichushkin to make it 1-0 in the Avs’ favor. The goal felt inevitable as there was good pressure from the visitors to start the game.

After that, both these teams would exchange chances in a bit of a run-and-gun style of hockey, as preseason games typically go, before the Golden Knights would eventually find the equalizer, as Brett Howden buried a goal for Vegas to make it 1-1. Once again the power play came up short for the Avalanche and after a second failed attempt in the second period, Vegas started taking over the game limiting Colorado to five shots in the period.

Late in the third period, the Golden Knights would find the go-ahead goal, as William Karlsson would make it 2-1 in favor of the Golden Knights on a really hard-working play, and that would end up being the final score for this preseason game.

Takeaways​


Keeping in mind once again that this is a preseason game, although the lineup was similar to what we will see on opening night it was their first game together and this was a perfectly fine game for Colorado. Unlike last night, they did not take a ton of penalties, as Colorado only took two minor ones in this game as opposed to the four that they took last night. Gavin Brindley was increibly noticable to me, and in a very good way. He was really strong on the forecheck, and just a really hardworking player all thorughout the game tonight. It’s not hard at all to see why the coahing staff likes him and why he’s survived the rounds of reassignments up till this point in the preseason, and why he’s potentially vying for a bottom-six spot on opening night.

Upcoming​


Colorado cloases out the preseason on Saturday, October 4, as they take on the Dallas Stars. Puck drop will be at 4:00 p.m. MT on NHL Network.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...ights-snap-colorados-perfect-preseason-record
 
Final Avalanche roster taking shape

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The roster for the 25-26 Colorado Avalanche is coming into focus.

To begin the week the Colorado Avalanche made a small transaction in preparation for their final trio of preseason games. They sent the previously injured Taylor Makar and goaltender Isak Posch to Colorado Eagles camp to trim the roster to 33 players.

Taylor Makar and Isak Posch have been sent to the Colorado Eagles. #GoAvsGo

— Colleen Flynn (@CHNFlynn) September 29, 2025

Then there was a recall of seven players to round out the roster for the 4-2 win against Vegas. Six of the seven in Tye Felhaber, Jason Polin, Alex Gagne, TJ Tynan, Jayson Megna and Tristen Nielsen were subsequently sent down after the game. Ronnie Attard suffered an injury in the game so remains on the NHL roster for now.

We have reassigned Tye Felhaber, Jason Polin, Alex Gagne, Jayson Megna, Tristen Nielsen, and T.J. Tynan to the Colorado Eagles. pic.twitter.com/wirpPrzbFe

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) October 1, 2025

Finally, in advance of the game in Vegas the Avalanche made five more moves to bring the current roster to 29. QMJHL try-out goalie Mathis Langevin was returned to Rinouski. Forwards Maros Jedlicka and Mark Senden were sent to Colorado Eagles camp. Danil Gushchin and Wyatt Aamodt will join them in Loveland after clearing waivers.

We have announced the following transactions:

One player was reassigned to his junior club:
Mathis Langevin, G (Rimouski – QMJHL)

The following players were placed on waivers with the intention of being reassigned to the Colorado Eagles’ (AHL) training camp:
Wyatt Aamodt, D… pic.twitter.com/VyV5x3aXks

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) October 1, 2025

Presumably the known injured players (Nikita Prishchepov, Logan O’Connor, Jacob MacDonald, Ronnie Attard, Samuel Girard and Mackenzie Blackwood) will either get sent down or placed on IR, then theoretically no more cuts need to be made to get the roster to 23 before opening night should the Avalanche choose to carry that number of players. Girard is reportedly close to a return so that likely would remove defenseman Jack Ahcan. For Zakhar Bardakov, Gavin Brindley and Matt Stienburg it just depends on how many extra forwards stay on the roster as there’s only room for one regular in the lineup. Trent Miner is the backup goalie until either Blackwood returns or another goalie is acquired.

The Avalanche have one more preseason game on Saturday, October 4th and then need to make their roster cap compliant by Monday October 6th at 5 p.m. ET with anyone needing waivers to get placed on them the day prior. Only just a couple transactions remain until the puck drops for real on the 2025-26 season!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...ons/58277/final-avalanche-roster-taking-shape
 
How many players will make their NHL debut for Colorado this season?

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As an annual tradition leading up to the fresh NHL season, we try to predict how many players will receive their NHL debut in a Colorado Avalanche sweater in the 2025-26 campaign. Undoubtedly it is a momentous occasion to witness a player, either an inexperienced prospect, free agent from Europe or journeyman minor leaguer, achieve their dreams and play in their first game in the NHL. There’s usually some easy calls but also big surprises when the debuts are revealed. Now we’ll both tally the previous year and predict the upcoming season.

Last Year’s Results

In an epic year which saw the Avalanche dress 50 players in the 2024-25 season, we were way off on the consensus prediction of three as instead there there was a bonanza of nine NHL debuts. From the expected Calum Ritchie, Jere Inala and Trent Miner to a complete cast of unsuspecting Colorado Eagles call-ups from the likes of Ivan Ivan and Nikita Prishchepov plus older AHLer debuts from Wyatt Aamodt, Chase Bradley and Matt Stienburg. Even Tye Felhaber had an AHL contract turned into an Entry Level Contract and he made his NHL debut as well. Defenseman Sean Behrens’ season ending injury prevented him from making his debut or else he, too, would likely have been on the list.

This Year’s Candidates

An abbreviated list is expected for the forthcoming season but nobody saw last year’s barrage coming either, so perhaps we should keep that in mind. Still, until new faces are added we can only work with who currently has a contract with the Avalanche and has yet to make their NHL debut. Remember, this exercise doesn’t count players new to the organization who already have a NHL game to their name, so those players such as Gavin Brindley and Danil Gushchin do not count.

First up on the back end, the long awaited NHL debut for Sean Behrens should come to fruition if he has a healthy and productive year. There’s a wide range of opinions on how serious the organization takes the left handed defenseman as a real option for the Avalanche but as one of their few prospects at the position of defense, Behrens should at least get in a couple games. Newly signed NCAA free agent defenseman Alex Gagne might get on the radar with a strong start in Loveland, too.

The forward group is more a mixed bag of older players who should see an opportunity to play at the highest level due to their age and more organizational urgency on shorter contracts. Everyone is awaiting power forward Taylor Makar to play in a game with his brother Cale, which would be very meaningful to the Makar family. Cooper Gay is another recent NCAA signing with his age as 23-years-old and size at six-foot-five to get a quick look in the NHL as well.

Perhaps the most likely to don an Avalanche sweater is Zakhar Bardakov who was acquired from New Jersey a year ago but has recently signed his ELC. He too brings age (24) and size along with five years experience in the KHL. The Russian center has practiced almost exclusively with the NHL group in training camp and is primed for a spot in the opening night lineup.

Then there’s arguably Colorado’s top prospect who has signed his Entry Level Contract but isn’t starting the year in North America. That of course is goaltender Ilya Nabokov who will play in the KHL for Metallurg Magnitogorsk one more season but when his season is over next spring he’s free to join the Avalanche — and perhaps then make his NHL debut. Any new NCAA free agent signings at that time could be eligible at that time as well or anyone acquired or signed between now and then. So many possibilities!

How many players do you predict will make their NHL debut this season with the Avalanche?

— Mile High Hockey (@MileHighHockey) October 2, 2025

What are your predictions, let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...alanche-will-make-their-nhl-debut-this-season
 
Avalanche claim defenseman Ilya Solovyov from Calgary

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On a sleepy Friday afternoon after a night of promoting the LA Rams, the Colorado Avalanche found the time to put in a waiver claim and were awarded Belarusian left handed defenseman Ilya Solovyov.

Details ⬇️ https://t.co/jgpzs2FxVM

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) October 3, 2025

Sovolov is a former 2020 seventh round pick of the Calgary Flames. He was drafted as a double overager and began his pro career right away. First in a season with Dynamo Minsk in the KHL and then he joined the Flames organization for four seasons primarily in the AHL. The 6-foot-3, 209 pound defenseman got in 15 NHL games with the Flames over the last two season registering four assists. The size makes him a physical shutdown first defenseman but he’s worked to add offense and a good first pass to his game.

At 25 years old Solovyov is not considered a prospect but he was still on an upward trajectory having hit 28 points in 59 games with the Calgary Wranglers. He is on a one-way contract making $775K this year before likely becoming a Group IV Unrestricted Free Agent next summer.

This move doesn’t come as much of a surprise as the roster always felt incomplete after the summer and GM Chris MacFarland isn’t shy about rebuilding a roster in-season. The need was enhanced due to Sam Girard’s injury and although he’s expected back soon, the fact that Sam Malinski did not look comfortable on the left side in the recent pair of preseason games against Vegas with no other realistic option for the left side probably was another factor.

When Girard returns this transaction sets up an interesting question if the Avalanche are going to carry eight defenseman or risk Keaton Middleton on waivers for the purpose of sending him down to the AHL. Solovyov can go back on waivers at anytime but he needs to be on the Avalanche roster for 30 days if they want to get him down to their AHL assuming he goes unclaimed by the Flames. Considering Solovyov was still an asset for Calgary that might be unlikely. But first, his trial with the Avalanche now begins.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...e-claim-defenseman-ilya-solovyov-from-calgary
 
Erik Johnson Announces Retirement

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The Condor is waving goodbye.

The legendary Colorado Avalanche defenseman and fan favorite Erik Johnson has officially announced his retirement from the NHL, concluding a distinguished 17-season professional career.

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The first overall pick in the 2006 NHL Draft, the right shot defenseman leaves the game after playing in 1023 regular-season games across four teams—the St. Louis Blues, Colorado Avalanche, Buffalo Sabres, and Philadelphia Flyers. Over his career, he tallied 95 goals and 253 assists for 348 points. Johnson also competed in 57 career playoff games, recording five goals and eight assists, including participating in all 20 postseason contests during Colorado’s 2022 memorable Stanley Cup-winning run.

Johnson first arrived in Colorado on January 19, 2011 in a blockbuster deal which included Chris Stewart, Jay McClement and Kevin Shattenkirk. He brought sky-high potential to a blueline that needed help and ended up becoming one of the longest tenured Avalanche players. His 731 games is sixth all-time for the Colorado Avalanche franchise.

You could say Johnson was one of Colorado’s true OGs. He witnessed every high and low of the franchise’s journey — from his 48-point campaign in 2016–17 to reaching the mountain top as a Stanley Cup champion.

Enough to make a grown man cry 🥲 pic.twitter.com/P9fijP91di

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) October 1, 2025

After brief stints in Buffalo and Philadelphia, once again Colorado traded for their beloved defenseman on March 7, 2025. This time just a minor league player Givani Smith was the return but it allowed Johnson to play 16 more games, including two playoff contests, to finish his career in an Avalanche sweater.

Though never celebrated for prolific offensive production, Johnson’s prodigious reach, hence The Condor, rendered him an indispensable defensive presence. His wingspan enabled him to intercept passes, deflect shots, and maintain impeccable positioning against even the most agile forwards. Equally esteemed for his physicality, leadership, and keen hockey intellect, Johnson became a linchpin of the Avalanche’s blue line, playing a pivotal role in returning the franchise to playoff contention after a prolonged period of underperformance. In the twilight of his career, he was revered not only as a seasoned mentor but also as a still-formidable competitor capable of shaping the game at both ends of the ice.

Full release ⬇️ https://t.co/jLyo48n3d1

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) October 1, 2025

“After 18 incredible years in the NHL, I am retiring with a heart full of gratitude,” Johnson said. “To the St. Louis Blues, Buffalo Sabres, Philadelphia Flyers, and most of all the Colorado Avalanche: thank you for the opportunities and memories, especially the 2022 Stanley Cup. To my teammates, coaches, and staff: your support, camaraderie, and dedication shaped my career. To the fans: your passion made every moment unforgettable. To my family and friends: your unconditional love and support carried me through. Hockey has been my life, and I’m grateful for every second. I’m excited for what’s next and will always cherish this journey.”

Through a career defined by resilience, leadership, and unwavering dedication, Erik Johnson leaves a lasting legacy in the NHL and a profound impact on his teammates, fans, and the sport itself. The image of Johnson embracing Nathan MacKinnon moments after they captured the Stanley Cup will forever live in Avalanche lore.

While Colorado will certainly feel his absence on the ice, there is much to be grateful for. Johnson reportedly had multiple PTO offers from other organizations, yet his unwavering devotion to this team and its fans made it clear he could not imagine concluding his career elsewhere. If that alone does not speak volumes about his loyalty, nothing else need be said. EJ will forever be one of us, and we eagerly anticipate hopefully seeing him continue to share his insights on Altitude TV.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/general/58328/erik-johnson-announces-retirement
 
Opinion: Kaprizov breaks the bank & Martin Necas just got more expensive

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The news broke this morning that Kirill Kaprizov has indeed earned the largest contract in NHL history, inking a deal for a whopping $17 million AAV over 8 seasons with the Minnesota Wild. The news comes just about a month after reports of Kaprizov turning down what would have also been the largest contract in NHL history at $16 million AAV.

Wild leadership followed through on their rumblings of doing whatever it took to retain Kaprizov’s services, but will Colorado do the same as it pertains to Martin Necas, or will he be dealt just like Mikko Rantanen was?

8 MORE YEARS OF THE THRILL

🗞️ Full details » https://t.co/M3RiI5ylvM pic.twitter.com/uezQzj3ntX

— Minnesota Wild (@mnwild) September 30, 2025

This market-busting deal sheds new light on those yet to be extended, and smack dab in the middle of that list is Avalanche winger Martin Necas. It goes without saying that top-end hockey players have just become more expensive, but how will this market adjustment affect Necas and the Colorado Avalanche?

Toodle-oo Team Friendly

I think anyone assuming that any player will take a “team-friendly” deal over the next five seasons is a bit naive. Martin Necas has nothing but leverage as we inch closer to the regular season, and any success he realizes with Colorado will only bolster his claim to elite status and subsequently drive up his cost. The same is true for any other pending free agents, and that crop currently includes Connor McDavid.

I think this season and the subsequent summer after will prove to be the most scene-shaking timeframe in the modern era of hockey. I do believe we see a number of the games’ most proven and prosperous talent playing for teams that we wouldn’t have ever expected. With all of that volatility on the table, I bet agents advise players differently than before in the sense that they will be far more willing to hit the open market. That will leave teams to choose whether to let them walk or deal said talent elsewhere.

The Price is Wrong

The Martin Necas debacle is just the Mikko Rantanen saga all over again, but I suppose that’s another article. I say that because in that situation, Colorado chose to deal Mikko for several reasons, but ultimately because they weren’t willing to pay him the reported $14 million that he asked for. The same is likely true for Colorado and Martin Necas, whose representation should advise him to ask for $11-12 million, especially now that Kaprizov would still be making $6 million more than that.

The why:

Rantanen wanted $14M+

The Avs simply couldn’t do that. MacKinnon already makes $12.5M and Makar will be making north of that in the near future

They tried getting his number down and Rantanen wouldn’t budge.

Rather than one last run with him the Avs & GM MacFarland…

— Drew Livingstone (@ProducerDrew_) January 25, 2025

If the Avalanche disagrees with the price, they have already demonstrated their willingness to move on. They can’t possibly have more loyalty and respect for Martin Necas than they did for Mikko Rantanen, so don’t be surprised if they once again procrastinate by way of trade.

Pay Up

All of this is to say that I think the Avs should swallow their pride and pay Necas his asking price in real time. Even if they think it’s inflated, they can lean on cap percentage logic and remind themselves that his price will go up every day that goes by. They can’t just keep kicking the can down the road because every time it’s kicked, actually picking it up gets more expensive — even if the can is now far less appealing.

With these cap growth assumptions, 8x$17M averages out to the same cap % that $12.7M had in the 2024-25 season,

— JFresh (@JFreshHockey) September 30, 2025

Using Nathan MacKinnon’s AAV as the benchmark is no longer a responsible or applicable tactic; therefore, let’s remove it from our consideration. The cost of retaining top-end talent continues to increase over time, and the Avs need to accept that fact and start paying up.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...the-bank-martin-necas-just-got-more-expensive
 
Colorado Avalanche rally but fall to Dallas in preseason finale

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Preseason contests are often dismissed as inconsequential, yet the Colorado Avalanche and Dallas Stars delivered a riveting spectacle at American Airlines Center, transforming the typically perfunctory finale of the exhibition slate into a genuine thriller.

For much of the night, the Stars dictated play, asserting their rhythm and tempo. The Avalanche, however, gradually found their footing in the second period and mounted a determined push. Victor Olofsson’s late third-period tally knotted the score at two, momentarily tilting the momentum. Dallas wasted little time in issuing a response—Colin Blackwell restored the lead shortly thereafter, sealing a 3–2 victory that punctuated the Stars’ impressive 5–1 preseason campaign, their lone setback having come against Colorado on September 27. The Avalanche, meanwhile, concluded their exhibition slate with a respectable 4–2 mark.

Tristen Nielsen and Olofsson paced the Avalanche offensively, each recording two points. Olofsson provided the dramatic late equalizer in the third period, while Nielsen played a key role as the primary setup man on that tally. Gavin Brindley and T.J. Tynan also contributed with an assist apiece, rounding out a well-distributed offensive performance.

Scott Wedgewood got the start in goal for Colorado, turning aside 11 of 13 shots before giving way to Trent Miner after the second period. Miner held steady in relief, stopping all 12 shots he faced to close out the night.

Dallas was paced by Jason Robertson, who recorded a goal and an assist, while Wyatt Johnston contributed two assists of his own. Arttu Hyry and Colin Blackwell each found the back of the net, and Jake Oettinger turned aside 21 of 23 shots to secure the victory in net.

What Happened

Dallas burst out of the gate with palpable energy, looking every bit the fresher, sharper team in the early going playing a mostly NHL lineup against Avalanche minor leaguers. The Stars capitalized at 6:15 of the opening frame when Arttu Hyry deftly redirected Adam Erne’s wraparound wrist shot from the bottom of the left circle, staking Dallas to an early 1–0 advantage.

Despite posting a strong preseason record, the Avalanche have consistently been hampered by their inability to stay out of the penalty box—a troubling trend that has persisted over the last six games. Saturday night proved no different.

Not long after Dallas opened the scoring, Zakhar Bardakov was sent off for hooking, followed in short order by a tripping call on Tristen Nielsen—a penalty that, to put it diplomatically, was debatable. Questionable or not, the sequence underscored a recurring issue for Colorado: discipline, or the lack thereof.

Early in the second period, Bardakov found himself in the box once again, this time for cross-checking Tyler Seguin. The penalty kill, buoyed by strong work from Wedgewood, weathered the storm through the first two infractions. On the third, however, the dam finally broke. At 3:59, Robertson slipped behind the defense and beat Wedgewood cleanly, extending Dallas’s lead to 2–0 and made Colorado pay for their mistakes.

FIGHT FIGHT FIGHT

Roughly four minutes later, tempers began to flare even further After a whistle, Parker Kelly gave Robertson a shove, prompting Robertson to respond with a right hand to the face. The officials quickly assessed matching minors, setting the stage for a stretch of 4-on-4 hockey.

The physicality only escalated from there. A few minutes later, Lian Bichsel cross-checked Matt Stienburg into the boards, and Stienburg immediately retaliated with a cross-check of his own before the two dropped the gloves. Bichsel opened the bout with a sharp right hand followed by a quick rabbit punch, asserting control early. Stienburg managed to land a wide, sweeping right, but the size disparity was evident—Bichsel tossed him around with ease.

Because both players initiated cross-checks prior to the fight, each received seven minutes in penalties: five for fighting and two for cross-checking.

Robertson found himself back in the penalty box later in the second period after tripping Joel Kiviranta, and this time Colorado made him pay. On the ensuing power play, Tristen Nielsen crashed the slot and buried a rebound off an Olofsson shot, cutting the deficit and injecting new life into the contest.

Down The Stretch

Following two frenetic periods, the third saw both teams largely return to a more measured, disciplined approach. After all, it is only preseason hockey, and risking an injury in an exhibition game would be silly.

As the clock wound down, Colorado gradually intensified its pressure, ratcheting up the pace with urgency. With just over five minutes remaining, the Avalanche struck a pivotal blow. Nielsen deftly evaded a check and threaded a precise pass to Olofsson, who promptly snapped a wrist shot past Oettinger to knot the score at 2–2. Nielsen’s evasive maneuver was critical—without it, the tying goal simply would not have materialized.

Yet the respite was short-lived. Barely 86 seconds later, Dallas regained the lead when Blackwell—who had famously netted the overtime winner against Colorado in Game 2 of last year’s First Round—buried a rebound off a Robertson shot. That strike proved decisive, securing a 3–2 victory for the Stars and capping off an exciting, high-octane affair.

Takeaways

These were mostly AHL guys and the Avalanche only had a small handful of regular starters but nonetheless, it was impressive to see the fight from this team. Dallas looked incredible at the start and Wedgewood was making great save after great save to keep them in the game. Having a great penalty kill is good, but again, penalties have been an issue on the AHL side for most of the preseason, but it’s a process.

Aside from his penalties, Bardakov was skating very well and he put himself in position to capitalize offensively. Even if he didn’t show up on the stat sheet, the effort was there. Bardakov always seems to find a way to be involved in the play, and that’s what we want to see from the 4C.

Defenseman Samuel Girard, who has been dealing with lower-body injury for the past month, made his preseason debut in this game. He delivered a steady performance, showing no hesitation to engage in board battles, which is a good sign. In recent practices, Girard had been eased back into action at a measured pace, suggesting that the cautious approach was precautionary rather than indicative of a lingering injury.

Behrens Hurt?

Concerns linger over Sean Behrens, who may be facing another setback. The defenseman, sidelined for the entirety of last season with a devastating knee injury, did not take a single shift in either the second or third period. His current status remains uncertain, and another significant injury could have serious implications for his development. We are hoping for the best, but updates will follow if information becomes available.

What’s Next

The Avalanche will open their regular season campaign against the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday, October 7. The contest, part of a TNT triple-header, is scheduled for an 8:30 p.m. MT start and will be broadcast nationally.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...-rally-but-fall-to-dallas-in-preseason-finale
 
MHH Roundtable: Bold Predictions for the 2025-26 season

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With the NHL season set to kick off in a matter of hours, we are ready to put some thoughts on paper including some of our boldest predictions!

Taking the whole season into account, other than Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar who will have the greatest offensive impact this season?

Adrian:
My vote is on Val Nichushkin. I do believe he will get a long, hard look on the top line alongside Nathan MacKinnon and Martin Necas. His net-front presence and driving ability should bode well when accompanied by MacKinnon and Necas’ speed. I expect a ton of rebound and open net tallies for Big Val.

Jackie: I feel like Martin Necas is the easy answer here but is he going to be around the full season? Even if he makes it to just the trade deadline it still might be Necas. He has the task to fill those Mikko Rantanen sized shoes so for the Avalanche to continue to have a successful regular season Necas really needs to contribute a sizable portion of the offense.

Jess: For me, I think Ross Colton certainly has the potential to have a massive offensive impact this upcmoning season. It’s not exactly a secret that he’s been injured the past couple of seasons, but when he’s been healthy, he’s shown to be a great fit in this offense, and I expect him to have a massive impact offensively this year.

How many in-season trades will Chris MacFarland make?

Adrian:
One really big one…

Jackie: Does five sound conservative at this point? Including the trade deadline, five seems realistic so that’s what I’ll go with.

Jess: Three is my lucky/favorite number, so that’s what I’ll rock with. On top of that, it also just feels like a plausible number in my opinion.

Ryan: One big trade followed by a smaller trade.

Predict where the Colorado Avalanche will finish in the regular season standings and the number of points?

Adrian
: I think the Avs finish 2nd in the Central with 106 points. This will be the year of one-score victories as well.

Jess: I think they’ll finish 2nd in the Central but with 110 points, that’s just a nice, round number to predict.

Jackie: Each year over the last five seasons Colorado’s points percentage has declined. I expect that dip to continue but barring catastrophic injury I think this team can still get to 100 points and make the playoffs.

Ryan: I expect Colorado to finish 1st in the Central Division. However, there’s no guarantees in the playoffs.

Name one surprise team to both miss and make the NHL playoffs?

Adrian
: Surprise team: Minnesota Wild. Tons of people forget that the Wild were among the hottest and most successful squads early in the 2024-25 campaign, and now that Kirill Kaprizov is healthy and extended, I think they follow up on that with another explosive start. If Kaprizov can stay healthy, they may have a shot at winning the Central.

Jackie: I’ll pick the Buffalo Sabres to finally do the thing and make the playoffs, it has to happen at some point and they actually have been close. I’ll add a bonus I’m getting the feeling the young Anaheim Ducks could have a miracle year. To miss the playoffs, the Washington Capitals are a team I like on the rise but growth isn’t always linear so sadly I’ll predict them to take a step back this season.

Jess: I’m going to agree with Jackie and go with the Sabres to finally make the playoffs. They were my dad’s childhood team, and I’d love to see them have success finally. To miss, I’ll go with the Blues. Maybe I’m just a hater, but I don’t think they’ll be as good as they were last year and go on the tear that they did. Furthermore, I could see the another team like the Mammoth doing better than them and taking that wild card spot that St. Louis had last year.

Ryan: Red Wings make the playoffs and the Blues miss. Detroit had one of the worst penalty kills in the history of the NHL last year, but they’ve done enough improvements over the offseason to put a band aid over it temporarily. Their offense will do most of the work and having John Gibson between the pipes doesn’t hurt, either.

State your boldest predictions for the season here!

Adrian
: The Avalanche and Martin Necas will come to a stalemate due to market volitility and Necas along with a depth defender will be packaged for…

Jess: For a Colorado prediction, the Avs will get Necas signed, maybe I’m too optimistic (and I probably am), but I think everyone involved wants to get something done and understands the importance of getting it done. For a bold wider NHL prediction, I’ll say that the Edmonton Oilers will, for the third year in a row, fail to win the Stanley Cup, whether that means they make it to the finals or get knocked out before then. As long as their goaltending is an issue, I don’t see them getting it done.

Jackie: For the Avs, Sam Malinski will get traded by the deadline. Finland wins gold at the Olympics. Carolina finally wins the Stanley Cup.

Ryan: Sam Malinski gets dealt at the deadline and Marty Necas gets signed. If the Oilers decline this year, maybe they trade Connor McDavid…to the Red Wings…

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/mhh-...table-bold-predictions-for-the-2025-26-season
 
Preview: The puck drops on a new season in Los Angeles

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The Colorado Avalanche are back! Tonight, we will get our first glimpse at the new look Colorado Avalanche squad, which will feature two rookies on the fourth line, as Gavin Brindley and Zahkar Bardakov are poised to make their Avalanche debut on the first night of the 2025-26 NHL season. It starts with a showdown with the Los Angeles Kings on national television.

Colorado Avalanche: 0-0-0​


The Opponent: Los Angeles Kings 0-0-0

Time: 8:30 p.m. MT

Watch: ESPN

Listen: Altitude Sports Radio, 92.5 FM

ESPN's Mike Farrell produced and directed this amazing piece for our ESPN Triple Header tonight. A brilliant idea and flawless execution. There is nothing like hockey. Find a quiet spot and watch this. Stay present. Stay grateful. Keep doing hard things. Game 1 is here. 🫶🏻❤️ pic.twitter.com/WmsMFJWWkQ

— BucciOT.Com (@Buccigross) October 7, 2025

Colorado Avalanche​


This year’s Avalanche squad has lofty goals and expectations, which should come as no surprise considering they are still employing Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar—two bona fide superstars. It will be the first puck drop featuring a healthy Gabe Landeskog since the 2022 regular season, and the Avalanche have added another veteran presence in Brent Burns on the back-end.

The proof will be in the pudding for Martin Necas, who was acquired via trading Mikko Rantanen, and the same is true for Colorado’s new set-and-forget second-line center, Brock Nelson, who represents another installment in Colorado’s attempts to fill the shoes of Nazem Kadri.

Speaking of proving yourself, Jack Drury will get his look at 3C, which Avalanche head coach Jared Bednar has made abundantly clear throughout camp, and with Logan O’Connor still on the mend, some young guns will get an honest look at NHL action.

Avalanche netminder MacKenzie Blackwood is still healing from an offseason injury, so I’d bet we get Scott Wedgewood tonight, but don’t fret, Avs fans. Wedgewood looked great in camp!

Projected Lineup:​


Artturi Lehkonen — Nathan MacKinnon — Martin Necas
Gabe Landeskog — Brock Nelson — Valeri Nichushkin
Ross Colton — Jack Drury — Viktor Olofsson
Parker Kelly — Zakhar Bardakov — Gavin Brindley

Devon Toews — Cale Makar
Sam Girard — Brent Burns
Sam Malinski — Josh Manson

Scott Wedgewood
Trent Miner

Los Angeles Kings​


The Kings have started a Get One for the Gipper campaign with Anze Kopitar announcing that this will be his final season in the NHL after a lengthy and successful career. Quinton Byfield may have gotten off to a slow start in his NHL career, but 2024 and 2025 were great years for the young man, and he has emerged as a bona fide top-six forward and should be a staple of the Kings’ core for years to come.

Drew Doughty will bring his beard and experience to the Kings’ back end for yet another season with his partner Mikey Anderson, and that pair will have their hands full. In all honesty, the Kings are one of the older and less speedy squads on paper, so hopefully the Avalanche can take advantage of that.

You will see a familiar face in net for the Kings as Darcy Keumper will get the nod for LA. Kuemper logged 31 victories in 50 starts last season and will look to halt his former teammates.

Projected Lineup:​


Andrei Kuzmenko — Anze Kopitar — Adrian Kempe
Kevin Fiala — Quinton Byfield — Alex Laferrier
Warren Foegele — Phillip Danault — Trevor Moore
Jeff Malott — Alex Turcotte — Joel Armia

Mikey Anderson — Drew Doughty
Joel Edmunson — Brandt Clarke
Brain Duoulin — Cody Ceci

Darcy Kuemper
Anton Forsberg

Puck drop on the 2025-26 season is here!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...the-puck-drops-on-a-new-season-in-los-angeles
 
How the Avalanche can keep Martin Nečas and avoid a Mikko Rantanen repeat

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Avalanche fans, here we are once more—facing that familiar, nagging dilemma.

Kirill Kaprizov signed the most lucrative contract in NHL history last week when he inked an eight-year, $136 million contract that runs through the 2033-34 season.

The consensus around the league is that this move could fundamentally alter the free-agent landscape. However, the Colorado Avalanche may be uniquely positioned to capitalize on the very upheaval that unsettles other organizations—particularly with regard to retaining future unrestricted free agent Martin Nečas.

The Nečas Situation

Nečas is, without question, entering the very heart of his prime. Now in the final year of the two-year, $13 million contract he first signed with the Carolina Hurricanes in 2024, his career trajectory has taken on new intrigue. That deal, once a straightforward extension, became a pivotal piece of one of the league’s most stunning trades: Nečas, packaged with Jack Drury, was sent to the Avalanche in exchange for superstar winger Mikko Rantanen.

Despite being a highly skilled winger, Nečas only managed to eclipse the point-per-game threshold for the first time in his six NHL seasons during 2024-25. In the years leading up to it, his numbers consistently fell short of that pace The sudden surge naturally raises a pressing question: was last season a true breakout, or merely an exception to the rule?

In truth, the answer is no. Nečas is not defined by a heavy or punishing forecheck, yet he has emerged as one of the NHL’s most improved players precisely because he now operates within a system that accentuates his strengths. His game is unapologetically offensive, driven first and foremost by his elite skating, which remains his most potent asset. Rather than wearing opponents down physically along the boards, he applies pressure through speed, angles, intelligent stick work, and sound positioning, routinely forcing defenders into rushed or poor decisions with the puck. Add to that a dangerous shot, and it’s clear why he has become such a weapon. Entering his first full season with the Avalanche—and with the benefit of playing alongside Nathan MacKinnon—Nečas is poised to build on the chemistry the two began to develop last year, offering yet another layer of growth to his already upward trajectory.

This isn’t just about money; it’s about being on a team that gives you the best chance of winning a championship. And quite frankly, Colorado needs Nečas as much as he needs them.

The Edmonton Oilers gave Leon Draisaitl an eight-year, $112 million contract. And he’s been paired with Connor McDavid for the last decade, two of the most offensively explosive players the NHL has seen in recent years and not only have they not won the Stanley Cup, but they’ve come up short two years in a row against a team with arguably less superstars, but with incredible depth from top to bottom.

Handing Kaprizov a record-breaking contract does not, in itself, guarantee the Minnesota Wild a legitimate path to the Stanley Cup. Time and again, history has demonstrated that championships are won through collective depth and balance, not the brilliance of a single star. The lone exception, of course, comes not on the ice but on the console—when someone boots up NHL 26 on rookie mode with the sliders tilted beyond recognition. But that, needless to say, doesn’t count.

All jokes aside, it remains astonishing that Kaprizov secured a $17 million deal given that he has only reached the 100-point threshold once in his career. By comparison, Nathan MacKinnon has eclipsed that mark in three consecutive seasons while earning $12.5 million annually. The discrepancy can be traced to several factors. Most notably, the Wild publicly declared that they would do whatever it took to keep Kaprizov in Minnesota—a stance that immediately weakened their negotiating position. Kaprizov’s camp seized on that leverage, pressed their advantage, and, in effect, said: “Show us the money.” A second factor lies in the evolving dynamics of the NHL’s salary landscape. The league’s salary cap has risen from $88 million to $95 million this season, with further increases projected to $104 million in 2026‑27 and $113.5 million in 2027‑28. In this context, it becomes increasingly likely that similarly lucrative contracts will be awarded to the league’s elite talent.

Nečas Will Have A Breakout Campaign

The Avalanche must do everything within reason to retain Nečas within reason. If his camp demands something in the $16 million range, take a hike. That won’t happen. Currently, Nečas is an exceptionally talented player, just shy of entering the league’s elite echelon, yet he appears poised to make that leap. Last season, he established a career high with 83 points, comprising 27 goals and 56 assists. Considering his consistent year-over-year progression and the fact that 2024‑25 marked his apex to date, it is entirely plausible to anticipate Nečas producing between 92 and 111 points in the upcoming season.

That said, securing Nečas on a deal in the $11 to $12 million range would represent a clear victory for the Avalanche. Let’s say Nečas starts hitting 125-130 points by the third or fourth year of a hypothetical contract extension with Colorado. That’s a win for everyone Nevertheless, it is crucial that the organization navigates this negotiation wisely and avoids repeating the missteps made in the Mikko Rantanen situation.

Patience Is A Virtue

The Avalanche appear inclined to exercise greater patience with Nečas, and for several reasons. Foremost, his talent is undeniable; yet what truly distinguishes his position is his low-maintenance demeanor. He arrived punctually for training camp, he didn’t hold out, and he’s been present, professional, and sharp. Teams don’t forget holdouts. They take note, they build grudges, they lose their patience. Just ask Sergei Fedorov.

Should Nečas decide to pursue the maximum payday and test unrestricted free agency, that path remains entirely possible. Still, there is little question that Colorado’s system offers the environment most conducive to maximizing his talent and career trajectory. Hopefully both sides come to a deal that will keep him in Colorado for the considerable future.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/gene...artin-necas-and-avoid-a-mikko-rantanen-repeat
 
Recap: Nečas Scores Twice as Avalanche Dominate Kings in Season Opener

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The 2025-26 season is officially here, and the Colorado Avalanche kicked it off with a Marty Party.

Marty Nečas netted a pair of goals, while Cale Makar and Nathan MacKinnon each registered two assists, propelling the Colorado Avalanche to a commanding 4–1 victory over the Los Angeles Kings in their season opener Tuesday night at Crypto.com Arena. Scott Wedgewood turned aside 24 shots to anchor the win. Artturi Lehkonen contributed a goal and an assist and Sam Malinski also scored for Colorado.

The game opened with a bruising, hard-nosed first period, as the Kings leaned heavily on their physicality to dictate the early tempo. The Avalanche, however, weathered the storm with composure and responded emphatically in the second period, netting three of their four goals to seize control. The third period brought its share of drama, with a flurry of penalties and heated skirmishes adding intrigue, but from the middle frame onward, Colorado’s superiority was unmistakable.

Kevin Fiala scored the lone goal for Los Angeles and Darcy Kuemper made 19 saves.

First Period

Within the opening three minutes, Nečas was leveled by a sharp, well-timed check from Trevor Moore — a play that set an immediate physical tone for the evening.Moments later, Quinton Byfield delivered a solid hit on Josh Manson, asserting Los Angeles’ commitment to pressure along the boards.Ross Colton also absorbed a heavy shoulder check and was slow to get up, underscoring the intensity of the early exchanges.At the other end, Wedgewood stood tall, turning aside Anže Kopitar’s quick-release wrist shot off a defensive turnover.

The Avalanche nearly capitalized on transition moments of their own, as rookie Gavin Brindley broke free for a clean breakaway, only to be denied by Kuemper’s poised blocker save.

Late in the period, Manson delivered a textbook shoulder check on Warren Foegele along the bench, a clean and forceful play that drew an immediate response from Jeff Malott. Leaping over the boards to defend his teammate, Malott engaged Manson in a spirited bout — landing a few right hands before Manson wrestled him to the ice to end the altercation. Both players received five-minute majors for fighting, though Malott’s decision to leave the bench earned him an additional unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, granting Colorado a power play in the aftermath. However, they failed to score on the opportunity and the period ended in a 0-0 tie.

Second Period

The Avalanche overwhelmed the Kings with their speed in a one-sided second frame.

Just 48 seconds into the period, Nečas broke the deadlock with a blistering wrist shot that beat Kuemper cleanly, giving Colorado a 1–0 lead. The play began with Devon Toews orchestrating the breakout, feeding Lehkonen, who in turn left the puck for MacKinnon at center ice. MacKinnon carried it deep into the Kings’ zone, circled behind the net, and threaded a perfect pass to Nečas, left unchecked in the slot — where he wasted no time firing the puck past Kuemper.

Colorado extended its lead roughly six minutes later when Sam Malinski corralled the puck at the blue line and threaded a wrist shot through heavy traffic, beating Kuemper cleanly.

With just under five minutes remaining in the period, Lehkonen made it 3–0, pouncing on a loose puck after Kuemper failed to control a Makar shot. Despite being shoved from behind by Cody Ceci as he released the puck, the Finnish winger stayed with the play and buried the chance while tumbling to the ice—a gritty finish emblematic of his relentless style.

As the second period wound down, the Kings nearly found their equalizer in the final minute. Alex Turcotte corralled a loose puck in the neutral zone and sliced through Colorado’s defense to create a prime scoring opportunity. Bearing down on Wedgewood, Turcotte tried to slip a quick shot low to the blocker side, but Wedgewood read the play brilliantly — extending his right pad in a timely, composed save to preserve both the shutout and the Avalanche’s momentum.

Third Period

The third period devolved into more of a parade to the penalty box than a display of structured hockey. Colorado ultimately edged Los Angeles in infractions, committing four to the Kings’ three. The fourth penalty of the frame proved particularly eventful. After Colton absorbed a hit from behind and struggled to regain his balance, Fiala inexplicably delivered a swipe to Colton’s face—earning one of the silliest penalties you’ll ever see in an NHL game.

To the dismay of the Crypto.com Arena faithful, Colorado promptly capitalized on the ensuing power play. With 9:17 left in regulation, Nečas uncorked another blistering wrist shot from the right circle, beating Kuemper cleanly to extend the Avalanche lead to 4–0. The sequence began with Brock Nelson winning a rare offensive zone faceoff, after which Makar deftly slid the puck to Nečas, stationed up high. Nečas glided into the lane with purpose before ripping his second goal of the night, punctuating Colorado’s dominance.

But the shenanigans were far from over. MacKinnon was whistled for interference after colliding with Brandt Clarke, a call he immediately contested. His frustration stemmed from what he believed was a missed infraction moments earlier—replay showed Clarke cross-checking Lehkonen from behind, sending him crashing hard into the boards.

Manson took exception and retaliated against Clarke, earning an additional penalty that gave Los Angeles a 5-on-3 power play. The Kings capitalized with 4:53 remaining, as Fiala finally broke through to spoil Wedgewood’s shutout bid. Clarke would later return to the box with just a few minutes left in regulation after cross-checking Lehkonen a second time.

And with that, the curtain closed on a thrilling and entertaining season opener for the Avalanche in this 4-1 victory.

Takeaways

It was a statement night for Nečas, who is set to become an unrestricted free agent at season’s end. Simply put: pay the man. He’s made it clear he wants to remain in Colorado, and performances like this only strengthen the case for keeping him in burgundy and blue.

From start to finish, it was a composed and convincing effort. The Kings opened with a barrage of heavy hits, but the Avalanche stayed poised, weathered the storm, and took control in the second period—dominating the pace before chaos erupted in the third. A strong, decisive win. Now, it’s time to head home and keep the momentum rolling.

What’s Next?

The Avalanche (1-0) take on the Utah Mammoth (0-0) Thursday night at Ball Arena. Puck drop is at 7 p.m. local time.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...-as-avalanche-dominate-kings-in-season-opener
 
Open Thread: Colorado Avalanche vs. Utah Mammoth (7 p.m.)

The Avalanche are undefeated after thwarting the LA Kings in their own barn, and now it’s time for the home opener at Ball Arena. The Utah Mammoth and their new brand hope to spoil Colorado’s home debut in the first game of their regular season. Will the Mammoth survive the storm of a frenzied crowd and seemingly loaded Avalanche team? The hype is real, and the thunder rolls.

Colorado Avalanche: 1-0-0​


The Opponent: Utah Mammoth 0-0-0

Time: 7 p.m. MT

Watch: Altitude, Altitude+

Listen: Altitude Sports Radio, 92.5 FM

Colorado Avalanche​


We got our first glimpse of Bednar’s vision for the forward group on Tuesday, which featured a young Gavin Brindley but surprisingly no Zakhar Bardakov, who appeared to be a shoo-in after camp. Bardakov may get the young guy spot tonight, but things went so well against LA that you almost wonder if Bednar lets it ride.

When I say the things went well for Colorado on Tuesday, that’s almost putting it lightly. The Kings aren’t presenting as a perennial powerhouse, but what impressed me was the defensive accomplishment Colorado stunted in the second period, all starting with Josh Manson’s thunderous hit on Warren Foegele. They were quick to loose pucks and excellent at forcing turnovers in the neutral zone. Colorado’s reputation as a gritty and stingy defensive team would, in my opinion, further validate Stanley Cup aspirations.

On top of that, we saw a two-goal performance from Martin Necas, a vintage Lehky goal off the magic of Makar, and Nathan MacKinnon distributing the puck like Nikola Jokic does the basketball, all on national television.

Coach Bednar had this to say regarding Cale Makar’s move on the blue line, “Whoa.”

I said it during the game that one thing is for sure —this team is fun.

Jared Bednar talking about Cale Makar via @AltitudeSR:

"How did he get through that seam so quickly?"

Mentioned he's already looked around at his fellow coaches and said "whoa" in response to Makar doing his thing on the blue line multiple times this season.#GoAvsGo

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) October 8, 2025

I think Wedgewood would have gotten a shutout in the first game if not for Brandt Clarke’s third-period antics. MacKinnon took a penalty, sticking up for Lehkonen, who Clarke cross-checked dangerously. Shortly after, Manson went off for the same reason, and LA cashed in on the 5-on-3. Otherwise, Scott was brilliant and proved plenty capable of manning the helm while MacKenzie Blackwood gets squared away. He should get the start again tonight.

Projected Lineup:​


Artturi Lehkonen — Nathan MacKinnon — Martin Necas
Gabe Landeskog — Brock Nelson — Valeri Nichushkin
Ross Colton — Jack Drury — Viktor Olofsson
Joel Kiviranta — Parker Kelly — Gavin Brindley

Devon Toews — Cale Makar
Sam Girard — Josh Manson
Sam Malinski — Brent Burns

Scott Wedgewood
Trent Miner

Utah Mammoth​


The UHC will forever be known as the Utah Mammoth as of this season, and the Avalanche will be throwing them a bizarre welcome party. So glad you could make it! Over here, we have the world’s most electrifying forward for you to keep track of. If you’d like to enjoy a dose of Norris Calliber defending, please see Cale Makar. If you’re looking for exemplary leadership and character, Gabe Landeskog is the one to watch. Don’t like any of that? Too bad!

A new Ice Age dawns. Introducing Utah Mammoth. #TusksUp pic.twitter.com/B2yuoflDRt

— Utah Mammoth (@utahmammoth) May 7, 2025

All jokes aside, the Mammoth have made blips on some pundits’ radar as a potential dark-horse playoff team.

They have the bones of the Arizona Coyotes squad from a few years ago, but have since added some young and promising talent. That talent has raised expectations in Utah, who will have to do their best to stay in the hunt while playing in arguably the league’s most competitive division.

The Mammoth may have found their netminder in Karel Vejmelka, who has been in the Coyotes/Utah system since 2021 after playing Czech hockey for five years. Last season was by far his most successful in North America, in which he posted a 2.58 GAA and 9.04 SV%.

Playing the Avalanche will prove to be a litmus test for the Mammoth and could pose a real opportunity for springboarding their season early on. Will they send the rest of the Central an early statement?

Projected Lineup:​


Dylan GuentherLogan CooleyJJ Peterka
Clayton KellerJack McBainNick Schmaltz
Lawson CrousBarrett HaytonKailer Yamamoto
Brandon TanevKevin StenlundMichael Carcone

Mikhail SergachevJohn Marino
Nate SchmidtSean Durzi
Ian ColeDmitri Simashev

Karel Vejmelka
Vitek Vanecek

Barrett Hayton and Kevin Stenlund both have a “game-time decision” status.

Opening night at Ball Arena is finally here!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/open...read-colorado-avalanche-vs-utah-mammoth-7-p-m
 
Avs remain undefeated with 2-1 win despite shaky performance

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DENVER — Scott Wedgewood saved the night.

An ugly win is still a win.

Ross Colton electrified the crowd with a dazzling early goal, and Nathan MacKinnon broke the deadlock early in the third to lift the Colorado Avalanche to a gritty 2–1 win over the Utah Mammoth on Thursday night at Ball Arena. But the true hero was Wedgewood. Despite a slew of defensive miscues throughout the night, Wedgewood stood tall, delivering one brilliant save after another to keep Colorado’s perfect start to the season intact.

“Stone Cold Wedgewood”

Colorado opened the scoring 10:57 into the first period with a beautifully executed sequence that showcased their precision and pace. Samuel Girard hit Victor Olofsson with a glorious stretch pass who then carried the puck through the neutral zone with speed, gaining the offensive zone before lofting a deft saucer pass to Jack Drury at the left faceoff dot. In one fluid motion, Drury redirected the puck across the slot to Ross Colton, who hammered a one-timer top shelf for the finish. The crisp, three-man passing play ignited the crowd and set the tone for the night. Colorado finished the first period holding onto that 1-0 lead.

In the second period it was crucial that Wedgewood delivered a commanding performance between the pipes turning aside a barrage of chances with poise and precision. Locked in from the opening puck drop, he appeared untouchable—calm, composed, and utterly dialed in. The only puck to elude him came on a sharp power-play strike from Dylan Guenther. After Utah won the draw, Clayton Keller immediately fed Guenther a one-timer and he destroyed it from just inside the blue line to tie the game at one. And that is how the first 40 minutes of play ended.

While things may have been tense early in the third period, MacKinnon scored a power play goal 2:53 into the third to give the Avalanche the lead and ultimately the 2-1 victory. Utah pulled their goaltender late for the extra attacker but it didn’t change the score.

Time and again, Wedgewood challenged shooters aggressively, stepping out to the top of the crease on multiple breakaways to shrink shooting lanes and dictate the play. He finished the night with a stellar .969 save percentage and stopped 31 of 32 shots in a virtuoso goaltending display. Just before Guenther scored, a turnover from Colorado allowed the streaky winger to go on a breakaway, only to be turned away by Wedgewood. Guenther had a team-high seven shots on goal for the Mammoth. Despite improving to 2-0 on the season, it was a sloppy game from Colorado as they got outshot 33-27.

Takeaways

The second period was a dismal stretch for the Avalanche, marked by a lack of offensive execution and costly mistakes. Colorado managed just four shots on goal over the entire frame—despite earning two power-play opportunities that failed to produce any results. Sloppy puck management compounded the issue, as a string of turnovers repeatedly left Wedgewood to bail the team out in difficult situations. Realistically, this could have been a 5–2 defeat if not for a few timely saves. A win is still a win, but the performance underscored plenty of areas that will demand immediate attention moving forward.

Upcoming

A big early season showdown when the Dallas Stars come to town at 7:00 p.m. back at Ball Arena on Saturday, October 11th.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...feated-with-2-1-win-despite-shaky-performance
 
Meet the “New” Voice of Mile High Hockey: Matthew Edwards

Mile High Hockey Logo


The start of a new hockey season almost feels like the start of a new school year: you reunite with a bunch of friends, talk about the new class schedule, wonder who that new teacher was that got hired, and reflect on how last year turned out before turning your focus to what’s on the horizon.

You’d spot some faces you may not recognize right away. This could be their first year attending your school, or making a return after a year or two studying abroad.

After spending the last several years away, I am the student coming back to his old stomping grounds: My name is Matthew Edwards, and today marks my return to Mile High Hockey.

I’ve followed the Avalanche since their first championship run in 1996, and have been an Avalanche season ticket holder for the past decade. I’ve experienced highs, such the Avs unbeaten streak in January 2022, and bemoaned a few lows over the years, none more trying than the nightmarish 2016-2017 season.

That disastrous forty-eight point season never diminished my love for the Avs. In fact, it only made me want to see their eventual resurgence all the more. Watching them win their third Stanley Cup five years later, then see Gabe Landeskog skate the Stanley Cup on Ball Arena ice at the start of the 2022-2023 season, made that journey all the more worth it.

I first joined Mile High Hockey community back in the early 2010s, and even posted a few articles back then. I lived and died with many Avs fans as Joe Sakic rode off into retirement and Peter Forsberg’s ankle betrayed his final NHL comeback, only to see the likes of Matt Duchene, Ryan O’Reilly, Paul Stastny, and Milan Hejduk usher in the #WhyNotUs era (which also met an unfortunately dismal end).

I joined several MHH veterans to launch Burgundy Review, formerly Burgundy Rainbow (site OGs know this long-standing MHH meme well) in 2017. This was my first real crack at voicing my opinions on the Avs out into the world as part of a website staff writer. To this day, I still hold BR’s site record for most viewed article on the Avalanche’s Adidas jersey refresh that took place before the start of the 2017-2018 season. I’m quite proud of that accomplishment and even now, it remains one of my favorite articles I’ve ever written.

I’m now the caretaker of Burgundy Review, which had expanded my role from providing live coverage of Avalanche home and road games (and the occasional Colorado Eagles or D.U. Pioneer games) to production and host duties for BR’s Burgundy Radio podcast. It’s a challenge which has been daunting, but much like the Avs journey from bottom-feeders to respected champions, it has been a memorable journey.

My journey has now come full circle, and much like the start of a new school year, I’m excited for what’s to come.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/general/58438/meet-the-new-voice-of-mile-high-hockey-matthew-edwards
 
Preview: The Mammoth roll in for opening night at Ball Arena

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The Avalanche are undefeated after thwarting the LA Kings in their own barn, and now it’s time for the home opener at Ball Arena. The Utah Mammoth and their new brand hope to spoil Colorado’s home debut in the first game of their regular season. Will the Mammoth survive the storm of a frenzied crowd and seemingly loaded Avalanche team? The hype is real, and the thunder rolls.

HAPPY HOME OPENER, AVS FAITHFUL! pic.twitter.com/FWmt13JsXv

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) October 9, 2025

Colorado Avalanche: 1-0-0​


The Opponent: Utah Mammoth 0-0-0

Time: 7 p.m. MT

Watch: Altitude, Altitude+

Listen: Altitude Sports Radio, 92.5 FM

Colorado Avalanche​


We got our first glimpse of Bednar’s vision for the forward group on Tuesday, which featured a young Gavin Brindley but surprisingly no Zakhar Bardakov, who appeared to be a shoo-in after camp. Bardakov may get the young guy spot tonight, but things went so well against LA that you almost wonder if Bednar lets it ride.

When I say the things went well for Colorado on Tuesday, that’s almost putting it lightly. The Kings aren’t presenting as a perennial powerhouse, but what impressed me was the defensive accomplishment Colorado stunted in the second period, all starting with Josh Manson’s thunderous hit on Warren Foegele. They were quick to loose pucks and excellent at forcing turnovers in the neutral zone. Colorado’s reputation as a gritty and stingy defensive team would, in my opinion, further validate Stanley Cup aspirations.

On top of that, we saw a two-goal performance from Martin Necas, a vintage Lehky goal off the magic of Makar, and Nathan MacKinnon distributing the puck like Nikola Jokic does the basketball, all on national television.

Coach Bednar had this to say regarding Cale Makar’s move on the blue line, “Whoa.”

I said it during the game that one thing is for sure —this team is fun.

Jared Bednar talking about Cale Makar via @AltitudeSR:

"How did he get through that seam so quickly?"

Mentioned he's already looked around at his fellow coaches and said "whoa" in response to Makar doing his thing on the blue line multiple times this season.#GoAvsGo

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) October 8, 2025

I think Wedgewood would have gotten a shutout in the first game if not for Brandt Clarke’s third-period antics. MacKinnon took a penalty, sticking up for Lehkonen, who Clarke cross-checked dangerously. Shortly after, Manson went off for the same reason, and LA cashed in on the 5-on-3. Otherwise, Scott was brilliant and proved plenty capable of manning the helm while MacKenzie Blackwood gets squared away. He should get the start again tonight.

Projected Lineup:​


Artturi Lehkonen — Nathan MacKinnon — Martin Necas
Gabe Landeskog — Brock Nelson — Valeri Nichushkin
Ross Colton — Jack Drury — Viktor Olofsson
Joel Kiviranta — Parker Kelly — Gavin Brindley

Devon Toews — Cale Makar
Sam Girard — Josh Manson
Sam Malinski — Brent Burns

Scott Wedgewood
Trent Miner

Utah Mammoth​


The UHC will forever be known as the Utah Mammoth as of this season, and the Avalanche will be throwing them a bizarre welcome party. So glad you could make it! Over here, we have the world’s most electrifying forward for you to keep track of. If you’d like to enjoy a dose of Norris Calliber defending, please see Cale Makar. If you’re looking for exemplary leadership and character, Gabe Landeskog is the one to watch. Don’t like any of that? Too bad!

A new Ice Age dawns. Introducing Utah Mammoth. #TusksUp pic.twitter.com/B2yuoflDRt

— Utah Mammoth (@utahmammoth) May 7, 2025

All jokes aside, the Mammoth have made blips on some pundits’ radar as a potential dark-horse playoff team.

They have the bones of the Arizona Coyotes squad from a few years ago, but have since added some young and promising talent. That talent has raised expectations in Utah, who will have to do their best to stay in the hunt while playing in arguably the league’s most competitive division.

The Mammoth may have found their netminder in Karel Vejmelka, who has been in the Coyotes/Utah system since 2021 after playing Czech hockey for five years. Last season was by far his most successful in North America, in which he posted a 2.58 GAA and 9.04 SV%.

Playing the Avalanche will prove to be a litmus test for the Mammoth and could pose a real opportunity for springboarding their season early on. Will they send the rest of the Central an early statement?

Projected Lineup:​


Dylan GuentherLogan CooleyJJ Peterka
Clayton KellerJack McBainNick Schmaltz
Lawson CrousBarrett HaytonKailer Yamamoto
Brandon TanevKevin StenlundMichael Carcone

Mikhail SergachevJohn Marino
Nate SchmidtSean Durzi
Ian ColeDmitri Simashev

Karel Vejmelka
Vitek Vanecek

Barrett Hayton and Kevin Stenlund both have a “game-time decision” status.

The home opener is finally here!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...mmoth-roll-in-for-opening-night-at-ball-arena
 
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