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Reasons To Be Optimistic About the Devils in 2025-26

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As someone who has covered the New Jersey Devils for several years now and followed the team for far longer, and as someone who reads a lot of comments on social media, I’d like to think that I have my finger on the pulse of the fanbase most of the time. That doesn’t necessarily mean that I agree with the fanbase on every particular topic or story that pops up over the course of a season, but more often than not, I’d like to think that I’m on the same page with what most people who watch the team on a regular basis are thinking when it comes to the Devils.

My takeaway from reading such comments this summer is that the Devils offseason has been somewhere between a disaster and disappointing. The reasoning behind this is because the Devils “failed to dump Ondrej Palat”, “failed to land a star player”, and Luke Hughes is still unsigned. I think there’s also a perceived canyon-sized gap between the Devils and, say, the two-time Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers and the belief that if these two teams met in the playoffs, it would go similarly to how most playoff series have gone for Florida the last few years….with the Panthers bullying and emasculating their opponents en route to a series win.

Putting Florida aside for a moment, I can somewhat understand the trepidation going into this season. I also understand that negativity sells and the most vocal parts of any fanbase are the ones who are criticizing. Add in the Devils having a 4 month stretch of mediocre at best hockey post-Christmas through elimination that still needs to be explained and the only notable changes up front are the additions of Connor Brown, Evgenii Dadonov, and Arseni Gritsyuk, and I get it. Unless one thinks Gritsyuk is going to step in immediately be Kirill Kaprizov, which I would caution against levying those expectations on him, I don’t blame someone for thinking there’s not a difference maker there.

Still, I don’t necessarily buy into the doom-and-gloom prognostications when it comes to the Devils entering 2025-26. According to DraftKings, the Devils are -350 to make the playoffs, have the fourth best odds to win the Eastern Conference, and eighth best odds to win the Stanley Cup. I’m not saying that the Devils will do any of those things as presently constructed, but I think as more and more season preview thinkpieces come out, and considering opinions that include traditional hockey media, analytics-based media, and sportsbooks, the consensus opinion is that the Devils are definitely a playoff team. It’s just that they’re probably on that next tier behind teams like Florida. I think that is a fair and reasonable assessment until the Devils prove otherwise.

Whether or not the Devils can take any steps beyond being just a playoff team remains to be seen, but I think there are at least several reasons to be optimistic about where the Devils stand in the greater NHL landscape entering this upcoming season.

The Devils Young Players Probably Have Another Step or Two to Take in Their Development

I think the biggest mistake that people who are critical on how far the Devils can go is the assumption that what certain young players are right now is what they’re going to be for the rest of their careers.

It’s easy to forget that Jack Hughes is only 24 years old. That Nico Hischier is 26. That Jesper Bratt is 27. Luke Hughes and Seamus Casey haven’t even turned 22 yet. Simon Nemec is 21 years old.

We’ve seen players like Bratt and Hischier, who are veteran players at this point, continue to add new wrinkles and elements to their respective games as they get stronger, smarter, and more experienced playing in the hardest hockey league in the world. These players aren’t the same players they were three years ago. They’re certainly not the same players they were five years ago. Or eight years ago, when they were rookies during Taylor Hall’s Hart Trophy campaign. They’re significantly better players now than they were then. Bratt continues to raise the bar in terms of point production every season. Hischier found the back of the net more this past season while literally doing everything for the Devils in terms of two-way, all-situations play. Even last year, we saw players like Jack Hughes buy into Sheldon Keefe’s system, round out his defensive play, and earn time on the penalty kill. This is good, as the Devils best players need to be their best players for them to get where they want to go. We continue to see them make strides year after year.

No, not all Devils players have continued to show those signs of growth. Yes, it is concerning that Dawson Mercer has seemingly plateaued at 23 years old with two so-so seasons in a row. Mercer is at the age where, if he has those levels to gain as a player, he should be taking those steps. But its also probably too early to write him off as “this is what he’s always going to be”. He is young enough where there is still time for him to flip the script.

I’m not suggesting that Luke Hughes is going to turn into what Quinn Hughes is right now this season, or that someone like Seamus Casey will do enough to stick as a full-time NHL player this season. But I do think we’ve seen enough growth from some of these players already to suggest that there could be another step taken forward in 2025-26. We’ve seen the Hughes brothers continue to improve each season. We’ve seen Nemec have a strong postseason to end an otherwise disappointing 24-25 campaign on a high note.

I don’t know how much runway players like Hischier or Bratt have in terms of developing and continuing to get better, but I do think there’s more to improvement than sheer point production. It’s also about rounding out the other areas of your game where you can be relied upon in certain situations. We’ve seen Hischier become one of the best two-way players in the league, and Bratt plays in all situations as well. The more experience one has, the less likely one is to panic and the more likely they are to make the right hockey play.

Second Year In Sheldon Keefe’s System

My general rule of thumb when it comes to evaluating head coaches is that unless they’re egregiously terrible at their job, I tend to give them a pass in their first full year on the job.

Why? Because I do believe there is a learning curve when it comes to learning a new system, particularly one that is different than the previous one. Add that on top of the natural learning curve that comes with roster turnover and new teammates learning to play with each other and I do think this is a process that can take some time. And while it may sound like excuse making, I don’t think the Devils opening last season in Czechia and playing as condensed a schedule as they did in the early portion of last season helped matters even though they got off to a solid start.

Keefe took over for Mike Babcock early in the 2019-20 season, which was ultimately shortened by COVID. Toronto was successful in the 56-game “All Canada” season that they played, going 35-14-7, but I think its easy to chalk that season up in general as “stuff happens” between the realignment, lack of fans, and COVID restrictions. But in Toronto’s first full 82 game season under Keefe, they went 54-21-7. Second in the Atlantic division, second in goals scored, and comfortably in a playoff spot.

A lot of that offense came from Auston Matthews, who scored 60 goals himself and went on to win the Hart Trophy and Rocket Richard, and Toronto’s Big 4 forwards did what you’d expect from them. But they also got contributions down the lineup. 63 points from Michael Bunting out of nowhere. 51 points from Alex Kerfoot. Ilya Mikheyev with 32 points in 53 games. Ondrej Kase with 27 points in 50 games.

Is some of that smoke and mirrors? Perhaps. Someone has to play with Matthews or Tavares and someone will be the beneficiary in picking up those points. But my point is that the Devils core players, like Toronto’s, are familiar with what Keefe is demanding from them the longer they play under his tutelage. I’m not saying that the Devils have a 60 goal scorer on their roster (although I wouldn’t rule out Jack Hughes doing that if he plays all 82 games and goes nuclear one year), but there is room for growth. Heck, we’ve already talked about Bratt and Hischier taking another step last year, and that was in Year 1 under Keefe. Why can’t some of the other holdovers be more comfortable this season?

I also think its worth mentioning that unlike those Toronto teams, there’s a better baseline off of which to build. I think the Devils have a better blueline and better goaltending than what Keefe had for most of his Toronto tenure. I thought that last year and my opinion hasn’t changed. The Devils appear to be bringing back their entire blueline and their goaltending duo. They’re bringing back their Top Six forwards. Yes, they’ve revamped their bottom six, but it was a bottom six that frankly wasn’t very good to begin with. More importantly, the Devils have that continuity in key areas in their lineup. I think this continuity goes hand in hand with what I just wrote about the younger players having another step or two to take in their respective development as players.

The Devils Are Due For Better Injury Luck

The Devils had an uphill battle going into the playoff series last year versus Carolina, a team that is more experienced than them and has had their number.

What didn’t help matters were injuries.

It didn’t help matters that a team starved for offense lost Luke Hughes in Game 1 of the series. It didn’t help that veteran defensemen Brenden Dillon and Johnathan Kovacevic were knocked out relatively early in that series as well. It certainly didn’t help matters that Cody Glass got knocked out of a game due to friendly fire by Jacob Markstrom, who was taking a swing at someone on Carolina only to catch his own teammate instead.

And it definitely didn’t help matters that Jack Hughes’ season ended roughly six weeks earlier after sustaining another shoulder injury in Vegas.

Obviously, every team has to deal with injuries. Hockey is a physical game. And I don’t point out the Devils missing their best offensive player and half their blueline in a playoff series to make excuses for why they lost (never mind them barely getting Dougie Hamilton and Jonas Siegenthaler back in time because they both were injured late in the regular season). Rather, I point it out because of the timing, and how unfortunate it is. I think its silly to take the stance of “The Devils can’t win in the playoffs with Jack Hughes” when the only time we’ve seen him in the playoffs, he had 11 points in 12 games and was one of the Devils best forwards. But I can definitively say that the Devils can’t win without him. Not as presently constructed.

Is it blind faith that I’m just hoping that players like Jack will stay healthy for a playoff run? Or that Dougie won’t have a fourth season interrupted by injury? Or that the starting goaltender doesn’t miss six weeks like he did this past season? Perhaps. But what alternative do we have as Devils fans?

Some teams are luckier with injuries than others, both in terms of severity and timing. It’s not really the thing that a team can plan for in the offseason when building a roster. Acquiring players with a history of playing 81 or 82 games every year doesn’t mean they’re going to stay healthy. Conversely, players who are labeled as “injury prone” aren’t going to necessarily remain that way forever.

The Devils have certainly had more than their share of injuries the last few years. One would hope that over time, that sort of thing balances out.

The Rest of the Metropolitan Division Didn’t Do Enough To Concern Me That the Devils Playoff Spot is at Risk

I could be wrong in how I view the Metropolitan Division, but to me, Carolina is clearly the class of the division. And as you’re surely familiar with the old Ric Flair quote, “To be the man, you’ve got to beat the man.”

Carolina is the man right now and they probably had the best offseason of any team in the Metropolitan. I don’t know how much Nikolaj Ehlers will help them in terms of winning playoff games, but they have enough other playoff-style players on their roster where they can afford to take that risk. They also did a good job locking up key young players Jackson Blake and Logan Stankoven on long-term deals. But more importantly from a Devils perspective, the framework of what makes Carolina so tough to play against is still intact. There will come a time where this Devils group is defined by whether or not they slay that Carolina dragon, but there is still time for them to change the narrative there.

Other than that though, I’m not sure what team or teams in the Metropolitan I’m supposed to feel threatened by.

Washington will be in the mix, for sure. They’re well coached and probably have the next best roster in the division. But they were also a team that rode unsustainable shooting benders and the vibes that came with Alexander Ovechkin chasing the goals record to 111 points. Everything went right for them (until they ran into Carolina in the playoffs). They were already one of the oldest teams in the league. I’m not going to say that they’re going to drop out of the playoffs entirely, but it goes noted that they barely have lower odds than the Rangers to win the Metropolitan division again. Washington is currently +500 on DraftKings, trailing Carolina at +130 and the Devils at +280.

I do think pundits expect the Rangers to bounce back and reclaim a playoff spot. They’re a year removed from winning the President’s Trophy, they have a new coach in Mike Sullivan, they have a recent history of getting a “new coach bump” in the first year under said new coach, last year was a year where everything went wrong for them, and they have a goalie capable of throwing up a .930 save percentage in any given season. All of this is true. I personally don’t love their blueline though, despite the addition of Vladislav Gavrikov, and one of the Rangers biggest issues last year was that they couldn’t defend. They might have a good pairing in Gavrikov and Adam Fox, but the jury is out whether or not they have a good defense, one to six.

So who does that leave in the Metro that I’m supposed to be intimidated by? A Penguins team that is clearly looking to tear down and sell the few quality assets they have remaining? A Flyers team that, in my opinion, downgraded at coach and is counting on Dan Vladar in net? An Islanders team that is heading in the right direction after moving on from Lou Lamoriello but still has to clean up the mess he left that roster in? Columbus is probably the most interesting of the also-rans in that they have young players capable of exploding and the team taking the next step as a result. They also have the cap space and draft capital to make pretty much any move they see fit, assuming they can convince players to go to Columbus.

That’s not to say that these teams didn’t make some worthwhile adds or had good summers themselves. Blue Jackets fans will say they expect Adam Fantilli to make the leap in Year 3, just as Flyers fans will say the same for Matvei Michkov in Year 2. Rangers fans will say everything went against them last year much like Devils fans said the same thing the year before. Nobody is necessarily wrong to believe that. But if we’re going to assume everyone else’s young players get better, why can’t the Devils say the same for their players. As I mentioned earlier, why can’t Luke Hughes and Simon Nemec take another big step forward?

The last thing I’ll add is that even though we didn’t see a lot of teams sell off players in the past calendar year, I think that mindset will change. Not everybody is going to be a contender in 2025-26. Coaches are going to get fired. General managers are going to get fired. And with a so-called generational talent in Gavin McKenna likely to be the 1st overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft, I think its more likely than not that some of the teams cluttering up the mushy middle take a step back, sell off players at the deadline, and position themselves for more lottery ball combinations.

If I had to make a prediction right now, I’d take Florida, Toronto, and Tampa in the Top 3 in the Atlantic (not necessarily in that order) and Carolina, New Jersey, and Washington in the Metro (again, not necessarily in that order). I’d probably lean Ottawa and the Rangers getting the two Wild Card spots but I don’t feel too attached to either of those teams getting in.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/general/60436/reasons-to-be-optimistic-about-the-devils-in-2025-26
 
Playing With Forward Lines

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How will Keefe build out his new lineup?

Hi-Dilly-Ho Devils sickos.

Grits is in country (continent?), all my quarter zips and fleece vests are clean and pressed, and we have a few more sleeps until the season starts. The only impending dread I have is the obligatory apple picking session, which is still in negotiations (where we stand: I am driving, taking pictures, and am allowed to check my fantasy football team twice).

Are you excited? Am I? Yes, I am actively choosing to be optimistic about the Devils.

I thought it would be fun to play around with some lines. With some question marks and a variety pack of versatile new guys, we will probably see Keefe pull out the ole’ osterizer enough that it would make Lindy blush. While he tinkers trying to find good combos, we gotta start somewhere, so all of these options may see the light of day. Or none of them. That’s what makes it fun, because what else are we gonna do?

I think there are a few philosophical approaches to how we start out.

Based on morning skate lines it looks like Jack is in tonight, skating on his regular line.

Seamus Casey skating as an extra D.

Dowling is the odd-man out.

Here’s how the #NJDevils are lining up ahead of facing the Dallas Stars: pic.twitter.com/2xPKwH2w8y

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) February 22, 2025

Old Reliable Top 6/New Look Bottom 6


Noesen – Nico – Timo

Palat – Jack – Bratt

Gritsyuk – Mercer – Dadonov

Cotter – Glass – Brown

Lammikko

MacDermid

Running it back up top. Nothing is particularly jazz hands about this, but familiarity certainly is a thing. This seems realistic based on history and where the new guys have historically played. Looking at Natural Stat Trick, Nico-Timo-Noesen only outscored opponents 12-11 at 5v5 in 323 minutes, but their fancy numbers are pretty encouraging and seem like they got a touch unlucky (57% xGF, 60% HDCF). Jack – Bratt – Palat, for all the ink spilled maligning what could be, outscored opponents 30-22 in 520 5v5 minutes at 53% xGF, 56% of scoring chances 52% high danger scoring chances.

That 4th line could be one of the best in the league (source: vibes) and the 3rd line could pop or be a total disaster (source: vibes).

New Year / New You​


Dadonov – Jack – Timo

Noesen – Nico – Bratt

Gritsyuk – Mercer – Brown

Palat – Glass – Cotter

Lammikko

MacDermid

There is a prevailing narrative that Jack-Timo doesn’t work. That isn’t necessarily true. What I think didn’t work was Bratt-Jack-Timo, based on the “there’s only one puck” theory. In 154 5v5 minutes together Timo and Jack outscored their opponents 11-4 and had an xGF of 62%. With Bratt, the trio was basically break even across shots, chances and goals (4-3). I think you balance them out a bit better with Dadonov as the perfect complimentary guy and loan Bratt to Nico and this could cook. Bratt and Nico are incredibly dynamic together as well and with Noesen they had 90 5v5 minutes and controlled shot generation at 57% CF, 53% xGF and a massive 67% high danger chances advantage at 5v5.

Kinda sucks putting $6MM on the 4th line, but once puck drops it doesn’t matter what guys make, and not sure Cotter has the hockey IQ to switch sides but that can be mitigated with deployment. Also gives the Mercer/Grits a good responsible wing in Brown.

Shut Down 3rd Line / Press Box Grits


Mercer – Nico – Timo

Dadonov – Jack – Bratt

Palat – Glass – Brown

Cotter – Lammikko – Noesen

Gritsyuk

MacDermid

The glaring problem becomes basically writing Gritsytuk’s ticket back to the KHL and it exposes our center depth after Jack and Nico. Also, still not convinced Lammikko is a potential thing or what the intention is there.

This was built from the 3rd line out, and part of me sometimes thinks that how a 3rd line is deployed really can dictate how the rest of the lineup is constructed. Jackson wrote about this philosophy and how Glass can be an elite shut down 3C . Pair him with Brown, who also has good defensive metrics and we hide Palat in plain sight and give him one job. The thought behind this is the Carolina model with Staal / Colorado with Drury / Dallas with Steel – This allows Nico to attack more and not get Atlas-esque minutes every night. See above about Dadonov being a great complimentary piece, and we put Mercer back up top with Nico where historically he has thrived. In 264 5v5 minutes, Nico-Timo-Mercer outscored opponents 9-4 at a 51% xGF clip with 53% of the scoring chances and 53% of the high danger scoring chances.

Now Let’s have some fun:

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Pair Up and and Hit the Dance Floor


Noesen – Nico – Gritsyuk

Palat – Jack – Bratt

Dadonov – Mercer – Timo

Cotter – Glass – Brown

Lammikko

MacDermid

This is based on something that kind of worked when Keefe was trying to find the best home for Timo, he and Mercer put together some good minutes. They outscored other teams 24-9 at 517 5v5 minutes, with strong shot and chance controlling metrics. Grits get some protection with two strong two-way players, and we run out that best 4th line in the league™. Do I like this? I think I might.

Top Line Gas / Jack Island


Bratt – Nico – Timo

Dadonov – Jack – Gritsyuk

Palat – Mercer – Noesen

Cotter – Glass – Brown

Lammikko

MacDermind

OK, so I’ve talked myself into his 4th line as I’ve been writing. The 3rd line is the “just don’t get buried in your minutes line” and I LOVE the idea of a pure gasoline line with Nico/Bratt/Timo that has some strong underlying numbers in limited minutes, although they got outscored 5-2. This also creates a potentially fun line with Jack and the Russians, Dadonov is a good distributor and Grits as a shooter.

I could make a million more of these as we sit and wait for the season to start. Like any of these? Hate them? Any fun ideas you have?

Let me know what you think!

LGD

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/devils-issues-views-and-ge/60427/playing-with-forward-lines
 
Devils in the Details – 8/29/25: Coaching Staff Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


The coaching staff is set:

Just got off the phone with #NJDevils HC Sheldon Keefe. His coaching staff for the 2025-26 season is set.

Brad Shaw replaces Ryan McGill, working with defense & PK. Sergei Brylin will be on the bench, filling Chris Taylor's role. Jeremy Colliton & Dave Rogalski are returning.

— Kristy Flannery (@InStilettos_NHL) August 27, 2025

The Devils will be featured in 13 exclusive nationally broadcasted games this season. Those games listed here: [Devils NHL]

Jack and Luke Hughes on the NHL Network’s list of the top 25 players born this century: [Devils NHL]

"[Luke Hughes] can do everything… I think this is an awesome number one defenseman for a franchise." – @Rupper17 @TonyLuftman | @patmaroon | @NJDevils | #NHLTonight https://t.co/E3G2l05JLA pic.twitter.com/bM2ZCGhMJI

— NHL Network (@NHLNetwork) August 28, 2025

Jack and Luke doing some Team USA media:

Hockey Links​


Connor McDavid on re-signing in Edmonton: “I have every intention to win in Edmonton. It’s my only focus, maybe next to winning the (Olympic) gold medal with Canada. But it is my intention to win there.” [The Athletic ($)] [NHL.com] [Sportsnet]

It has been … a slow offseason:

There hasn't been any trades in the NHL since July 25th. There were 8 trades during August of last year, plus the Dylan Holloway/Philip Broberg offer sheets.

— NHL Rosters (@NHL_Rosters) August 28, 2025

Mitch Marner on leaving Toronto: “The market’s very passionate. They love the team. I mean, I know it. I was born and raised there. I’ve been a part of the Leafs Nation for a long time. But, yeah, when your family’s safety comes into question, especially having a new son, I don’t think it’s acceptable.” [TSN]

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...in-the-details-8-29-25-coaching-staff-edition
 
On Luke Hughes, Extensions, and Internal Caps

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The Luke Hughes contract extension discussion seems to have heated up over the past week, with Tom Fitzgerald speaking to RG.org about the issue. This came after Ryan Novozinsky postulated that Luke Hughes was taking long to sign because his camp must want his contract to align with his brother’s, meaning he would be seeking a five-year deal. To me, it seems a bit more like conjecture (i.e. it is taking a long time so it must be for this reason) than a specifically-sourced report, but that is where we are. In his interview with RG.org, Fitzgerald did not talk about term, but only about what makes sense with the cap and comparative contracts. Specifically, James Murphy quoted Fitzgerald responding to a question about players not wanting to get locked into lower cap hits down the line with a fast-rising cap ceiling:

Well, yeah, I’m sure that’s the case, but as a team, you can’t ignore the present. The future is laid out for us via the league and what the cap is going to be. And again, you’re just trying to find common ground today that may work down the road for both parties, too, but you need to live in the present, and this is no different. They’re just looking out for Luke’s best interest, but the reality is you still have to stay in the present time and look at, in my opinion, the comps that are there.

To me, that sounds more like the issue is that Pat Brisson, Luke’s agent, is more concerned about his guy only making $7 or 8 million eight years from now, when comparable defenders will probably be making closer to $13, 14, or 15 million. As the NHL has projected the salary cap to be making large jumps over the next three seasons, a “fair deal” under a $95.5 million cap ceiling will quickly turn into a team-friendly deal by 2027-28, when the cap rises to $113.5 million. The NHL has not seen such large-scale cap ceiling increases since the cap was brought into being in 2004. Since 2020-21, the cap had only risen $7.5 million by the 2024-25 season. So, many of the league’s megadeals have not really matured into something more cap-friendly since the pandemic. Say what you will about the certainty or uncertainty of world economics, but professional sports seems to chug along just fine. At the very least, they have gone full steam ahead with these cap increases, and that changes the game a bit. The cap is going to increase more from 2025-26 to 2026-27 than it did from 2020-21 to 2024-25.

What I don’t get about Tom Fitzgerald’s answers is his affirmation of teams having internal caps. As Fitzgerald said, “There’s only one Montreal Canadiens and New York Rangers, and Toronto, and then everybody else tries to make money differently.” You might be put off by Fitzgerald saying that, as if it indicates the Devils are currently being cheap, but they are going to be against the cap ceiling when Luke Hughes signs a contract, however long it is. They are about $7 million below the cap right now if you exclude Seamus Casey, who will likely be the corresponding move on the 23-man roster for Hughes. Currently, there are 12 teams within about $2 million of the cap ceiling, including some bad teams like Philadelphia and some mediocre likely non-playoff teams like Boston, Montreal, and the New York Islanders. It will be 13 teams when the Devils re-sign Hughes, and it could be even more if remaining free agents like Jack Roslovic and Matt Grzelcyk sign with teams with between $3 and $6 million remaining in cap space (seven teams). There are eight teams with $10 million or more in cap space, as well, and only one of them (Carolina) is a certain playoff team, though they have signed multiple players to deferred contracts, which means they will be paying more cash to Seth Jarvis and Jackson Blake several years from now that won’t affect their cap situations when said money is paid.

I think that rebuilding teams, like Chicago, San Jose, and Anaheim, are much more certain to have an internal cap than a playoff team. I imagine the Devils had an internal cap about five years ago, when they were in a much poorer state of affairs than they are now. But do I think the New Jersey Devils presently have an internal cap? Going by the fact that they’re going to be a cap-ceiling team this year, and they are, if anything, questioned for having too many people in the front office, it’s a bit of a stretch, and probably more blind fear than anything based in reality. Their front office features Fitzgerald, Brodeur, two AGMs in MacKinnon and Madigan, a senior advisor in Chuck Fletcher, and another advisor in Andy Greene. They also have an eight-person analytics department and a 23-person scouting department. So, they have two fewer people in their scouting department than the New York Rangers and three more scouts than the Boston Bruins. The Rangers also list one person in analytics, while the Bruins have five. The Rangers have one AGM and one hockey operations advisor. The Bruins, like the Devils, have two AGMs, but only one operations advisor. If I were trying to sniff out a bare bones operation, I would expect significant disparities in hiring. The Chicago Blackhawks, for example, only have 14 people in their scouting department.

But I will play along to some extent: maybe the Devils have made some cuts from a financial standpoint. I would not be the first to say that their in-game experience is a bit low-effort, and that their social media presence is a bit weak. My point would be, though: it does not seem to hold the Devils back from running a full hockey operation, or from spending to the cap ceiling. Before I judge them and the league too harshly, I want to know what they do in two years when the cap is $18 million higher than it is this year. Will they still be spending to the cap? Will other teams be spending to the cap? If teams are hesitant to actually go through with raising their expenditures as the league believes it is making enough money to support those cap increases, then I wouldn’t blame any fanbase for calling for their ownerships to sell.

Should the Devils have to worry about that? Harris and Blitzer have their hands in many cookie jars, from the Washington Commanders to the Philadelphia 76ers to the upcoming Philadelphia WNBA team to the Cleveland Guardians. They’ve also invested in MLS teams and European soccer teams — and even in the return of niche sports such as SlamBall. At this point, the Devils are just a speck in the HBSE books. I am sure they want a return on investment to some extent, but the way a competitive team maximizes their revenue in the NHL is by getting to the Stanley Cup Finals and selling merchandise. The Devils already have one of the top-selling jerseys in the league by having Jack Hughes on the roster, so signing Luke Hughes is basically revenue protection, at the very least. His development also happens to be essential to their Stanley Cup hopes.

In terms of what Ryan Novozinsky wrote, though, I would be a bit annoyed if I were Tom Fitzgerald and Pat Brisson was asking for a five-year deal for Luke Hughes. It is uniquely the sort of contract that makes no sense for the team to give out, even if Luke Hughes and Jack Hughes were entirely unrelated. It takes away exactly zero of Luke’s UFA years (since it would take him through his seventh season), putting him in free agency with no protection for the Devils. However, I still think the five-year thing is more conjecture than a sourced report.

From a team perspective, the balance of team protection and more or less aligning the brothers’ contracts would be six years. If the Devils’ front office failed so thoroughly that the brothers wanted to go to a different team by that point, they would lose Jack Hughes for nothing in free agency, but still be able to trade his younger brother. Otherwise, a three-year deal would still leave the team with RFA protection, but Luke would be able to sign a seven-year max extension under a more appropriate cap hit after the cap has risen and he has gotten closer to unrestricted free agency.

If we are then considering Quinn Hughes, though, there is more complication. If Jack and Luke were signed for five years from now (a situation that I do not even expect to play out) and the Devils acquired Quinn in one or two seasons, would he really turn down a long-term deal to stay aligned with his younger brothers? Quinn would be turning 28 in the 2027-28 season, after his current contract expires, so that would really be the prime time for him to sign a seven-year megadeal. With how volatile the game of hockey is, as well, it is not usually considered an amazing idea for a guy to turn down a megadeal when they can get it.

A lot to think about, perhaps. I wouldn’t hate seeing a three-year bridge for Luke Hughes, personally, though I have advocated using deferred salary to give him a long-term extension in the past. A three-year bridge would probably leave them enough cap space to sign Jack Roslovic, who I think would really help the Devils’ third or fourth-line take the next step to being championship-worthy depth. And considering that the Devils would have the opportunity to sign Quinn Hughes in two years, a three-year bridge would not instill very much fear in me, as the NHL GMs repeatedly show that they are bigger talkers than anything in terms of sending offer sheets.

Your Thoughts​


What do you think of the latest on the Luke Hughes contract talks? Are the rumors hot air, or do you think there’s something to them? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/2...2/on-luke-hughes-extensions-and-internal-caps
 
Devils in the Details – 9/1/25: Hughes Talk Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Tom Fitzgerald talks about negotiations on a new contract for Luke Hughes: “Eventually, this will get done. The 11th hour is training camp. Right? A lot of times, a lot of the stuff doesn’t get done until the 11th hour. We’re hoping we can get something done here in quick fashion, and both sides are working hard at it; that’s for sure.” [RG]

More Luke Hughes talk:

Here's the latest I've got on the #NJDevils-Luke Hughes talks.https://t.co/Glh74GKn1q

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) August 29, 2025

“While there is still a month and a half to clear the necessary cap space to A) fit in Luke Hughes’ extension and B) maybe acquire another top-nine forward, the pressure will only ratchet up once rookies begin reporting for camp on Sept. 10. General manager Tom Fitzgerald could punt a cap-clearing move until later in the regular season, but that’s probably not in everyone’s best interest.” [Devils on the Rush]

Congrats to Dougie:

Hockey Player ✅
Admin ✅
Professor ✅
Mascot ✅
HUSBAND ✅

Congrats to Dougie and Bree! pic.twitter.com/9DDsKuqkA7

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) August 30, 2025

Hockey Links​


Looks like Carey Price’s contract will be on the move:

Carey Price's contract should be traded this upcoming week, with sources suggesting San Jose, Chicago or Pittsburgh as destinations.

The Canadiens are trading Price's contract to open themselves to the possibility of another trade.

Timing on that is TBD. https://t.co/xr4Pjy0YyW

— Marco D'Amico (@mndamico) August 31, 2025

“(Patrick) Kane, who didn’t make the roster for the 4 Nations Face-Off earlier this year, wasn’t here to be a charity legacy inclusion or mentor to the younger players. He knows the competition will be furious, but plans to do whatever he can to have a great start this season to convince USA Hockey management to select him for his third Olympics and fourth best-on-best tournament.” [The Athletic ($)]

“Now that NBA player Jeremy Lin has retired. Which NHL player had the best ‘Linsanity’ run?” [r/hockey]

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-9-1-25-hughes-talk-edition
 
Working On Labor Day; The New Jersey Devils And The Value Of Working On Your Craft

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Happy Labor Day to you and yours. I hope the unofficial end of summer treats you well, and the day off from work (for some of you, anyway) has been spent having fun.

Labor Day is a holiday meant to celebrate the working American, the average Joe and Jane who puts in a hard day’s work to provide for themselves and their loved ones. Even though the majority of the New Jersey Devils’ roster is not American, we can still appreciate the labor they’ve put in to become better hockey players and (hopefully) help this team compete for a championship.

On this Labor Day, let us celebrate the work Devils players have put in recently. Last season, each player on the Devils showed improvement or development in one aspect of their game or another. Not including the new players, here are some of the most notable examples of hard work leading to improvement for every key player on the roster:

Nico Hischier: Sharpshooting

The Devils’ captain scored a career-high 35 goals in 2024-25. Don’t look now, but Hischier is slowly becoming one of the league’s premier sharpshooters. Through the first six seasons of his career, Hischier’s shooting percentage sat at 11.9%. In year seven, 2023-24, Hischier shot 14.8%, and last year was his best work yet, shooting the lights out at 18.7%. This was good for 24th in the league, one slot ahead of the greatest goal-scorer of all time, Alex Ovechkin. Perhaps Hischier won’t shoot close to 19% again, but he’s shown clear improvement in this area of his game not just last year, but over the past two seasons.

Jack Hughes: Shutdown Ability

Hughes has been an elite offensive player for some time now. And while his defensive game was never abysmal, there was clearly room for growth in this area. This past season, he grew up big time. Thanks to Sheldon Keefe, Hughes took a quantum leap forward in his defensive ability. Evolving Hockey measures his defensive impacts as almost literally off the charts:

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Meanwhile, Hockey Stat Cards had Hughes in roughly the 84th percentile in defensive value in 2024-25. And according to Natural Stat Trick, Hughes posted the second-lowest 5-on-5 Expected Goals Against per 60 of his career, behind only the funky 2021 Covid-shortened season. If Hughes’ newfound defensive ability is here to stay, then I feel comfortable putting him on Hart Trophy watch.

Jesper Bratt: Laying The Smackdown

Everyone knows the hallmarks of Bratt’s game: Elite skating ability (specifically his otherworldly edgework), terrific playmaking instincts, and wonderful puck skills. But last offseason, apparently he worked hard on becoming a much angrier human. Bratt set a career-high in hits with 96, shattering his previous career-high of 66 that he set the year before. Over the last two seasons, Bratt has been playing with much more of an edge, and while no one will confuse him for Brendan Shanahan, he’s proving that he knows what it takes to play the physical brand of hockey a lot of people love.

Timo Meier: Shooting Analytics

Meier was brought in to be an elite goal-scorer. Thus far in his Devils career, he’s filled the net well (54 goals in his two full seasons in New Jersey), but not to the level he was expected to. After a 2023-24 that saw him battle a few different injuries, we did see some of his shooting metrics tick back up even if his raw goal total went slightly down. According to NHL Edge, in 2023-24, Meier was in the 89th percentile in shots on goal and the 65th percentile in top shot speed. Last season, he upped those numbers to 96th and 81st respectively. I know we keep waiting for the Meier breakout and it keeps not happening, but if he can maintain these gains, I think we finally see the 40-goal season we all want from Meier.

Dawson Mercer: Sacrificing The Body

There are some players for which this exercise is easy, and some for which this is hard. Mercer is firmly in the latter camp, as he once again failed to reach the heights of his sophomore season. With two years of stagnant development, I’m certainly not counting Mercer out, but the dream of him becoming a strong top-line player is fading. Even still, he’s a useful player as is, and one area that Mercer put work in this past season was blocking shots. According to Natural Stat Trick, Mercer registered a Shots Blocked/60 rate of 2.16, the highest of his career. It feels to me like Mercer should be a much stronger defensive player than he is, but while he looks the part, he’s never had strong defensive impacts. But if he continues to work hard to keep pucks away from his own net, that would be a step in the right direction.

Ondrej Palat: The Need For Speed

Speaking of players for which this exercise is harder than others, say hello to Mr. Palat. He’s a hard-worker and a leader, but clearly his best playing days are well behind him and most Devils fans want him gone. Still, even for someone like Palat we can find improvement in certain areas. Believe it or not, one of them is skating ability. Per NHL Edge, In 2023-24, Palat was near the bottom quarter of the league in top skating speed. NHL Edge does not list the specific percentile for any number below 50% (probably to not embarrass the players), so I can’t give you a precise percentile for this. But using the eye test, Palat appears very close to the 25th percentile, a poor number. Last season, Palat actually took a big leap in this category. Granted, he’s still listed as “Below 50th” in percentile, but looking at the table, he appears very close to average, probably around the 47th or 48th percentile. It’s still not great, but hey it’s a notable improvement for the hard-working Palat.

Stefan Noesen: Pucks On Net!

It was a banner year for Noesen in the goal-scoring department. He set a new career-high with 22 goals, eight more than his previous career high that he set in 2023-24 with Carolina. Was this accomplished through a fluky run of good shooting luck? Not really. While his 13.3% shooting percentage was a career-best, it was not notably higher than in 2023-24 when he shot 12.6%. What made the big difference was Noesen also posting a career-high in shots on goal with 165. Noesen will never be a premier offensive player or a shot machine. But it is encouraging that he found another level as far as getting pucks on net in 2024-25.

Cody Glass: Faceoffs

Cody Glass has the potential to be an elite shutdown center. His defensive impacts are magnificent, even if he doesn’t usually take on the opposition’s best players. But while he’s a strong defender, one part of his game that he’s struggled with is faceoffs. Obviously faceoffs are a small part of the game, but we all know there are certain draws over the course of any game that are more important than others. The first faceoff during a penalty kill, the defensive zone draw while defending a one-goal lead in the final minute of regulation…you get the idea. Prior to 2024-25, Glass had never been above breakeven on faceoffs in any season of his career, averaging 46.5% at the dot. But last year, Glass finally got his head above water, winning 51.2% of his faceoffs. Sadly the Devils didn’t benefit from this improvement though, as while Glass won draws at a 52.7% clip with the Penguins, he fell to 47.4% after coming over to New Jersey. Still, the season as a whole was a step forward. If Glass can continue to work on his faceoff craft, he could become a real weapon on draws.

Paul Cotter: Defense, Defense, Defense

Call it the Sheldon Keefe effect, call it a change of scenery, call it sheltered deployment. Call it what you will, but Cotter had the best defensive season of his career in 2024-25. Per Natural Stat Trick, Cotter set career-best marks in Corsi Against per 60, Shots Against per 60, Scoring Chances Against per 60, and Expected Goals Against per 60. Most of these are career-bests by a lot, too. Over the course of the season, we grew to learn Cotter’s abilities and limitations, and while I certainly wouldn’t call him a defensive ace, he put the work in to become a much better defensive player than he was in Vegas.

Dougie Hamilton: Penalties

Hamilton is another player that is hard to find improvement for. I cut Hamilton more slack than players like Palat and Mercer though, as he was returning from a major injury in the season prior. But it’s not impossible to find areas in which Hamilton worked hard to improve, and one of them is actually pretty significant: Penalties drawn and taken. For all he does well, Hamilton unfortunately takes a lot of penalties. In 2024-25, however, Hamilton only logged 30 penalties in minutes in 64 games. In his last full season before that, 2022-23, Hamilton sat for 50 PIMs, which is more than the 82-game pace Hamilton posted this past season. And if that wasn’t enough, Hamilton actually did a really good job drawing penalties too. According to Natural Stat Trick, Hamilton registered a Penalties Drawn per 60 rate of 0.42, by FAR his best as a Devil, and third-best in his career behind 2014-15 and 2018-19. Hamilton is still an elite power play quarterback, so if he can continue to stay out of the box himself and put opposing players in the box more, that would go a long way toward setting his team up for success.

Jonas Siegenthaler: Returning to Form

This isn’t so much an improvement as it is a bounce back, but after a down 2023-24, Siegenthaler worked hard to regain his status as an elite shutdown defenseman. Hockey Stat Cards had him in the 99th percentile in defensive impact last season. Yes, 99th. Unfortunately it was another year in which Siegenthaler could not play a full schedule due to injury, but over his 55 games played, almost nobody shut down opponents better than Siegenthaler. If he can manage to stay healthy this season, the Devils will have the luxury of deploying one of the game’s premier stoppers in 2025-26.

Luke Hughes: Spreading The Wealth

Putting aside his – at the time of this writing, anyway – contract standoff with the Devils’ front office, I think it’s safe to say Devils fans are excited to see what the youngest Hughes can do in his third full season. He’s not a star defenseman yet, but the skillset and potential are there. So long as he keeps working hard to develop, he should get there eventually. One notable part of his game we did see improvement in was his ability to generate assists. In 2023-24, Hughes posted 38 assists in 82 games. Last year, he played in 11 fewer contests, but only registered one fewer assist, 37 total. According to Natural Stat Trick, Hughes upped his Assists per 60 rate from 0.57 in 23-24 to 0.89 in 24-25. And perhaps more importantly, his Primary Assists per 60 more than doubled from 0.22 to 0.56. Again, Hughes still has things to work on to reach true stardom, and while I think most of us are focusing on his defense as an area that he has improved a lot and should continue to improve, his ability to generate offense is another part of his game that Hughes has not reached his full potential in. If he continues to grow in this regard, it’s over for everybody.

Brett Pesce: Proving He Doesn’t Need A System

This is perhaps a bit of a random one, but hear me out. 2024-25 was not only Pesce’s first season in New Jersey, it was also his first season outside of Carolina. While he did play a couple years prior to Rod Brind’Amour’s arrival to coach the team, Pesce spent the majority of his career in the Hurricanes’ vaunted system. For years, Pesce looked like a high-quality top-four defenseman playing under Brind’Amour, but the question for any player exiting a team like that is if they really are that good, or if the system was hiding their weaknesses and propping them up. While I’m not saying Pesce was a Norris Trophy candidate in his first season with the Devils, he showed he wasn’t just a product of the system. He teamed with Luke Hughes to form a terrific pairing, one where Pesce served as the defensive conscience while Hughes had a little more room to roam offensively. Again, Pesce wasn’t an elite defender, and his pairing with Hughes had a few issues, but it was great to see Pesce work hard to prove he wasn’t just a product of Brind’Amour’s system in Carolina.

Johnny Kovacevic: The Big Breakout

This one is difficult and easy all at once. It’s difficult in the sense that it’s hard to pinpoint one specific thing Kovacevic improved on the most. But it’s easy in that…he improved in just about EVERY aspect, enjoying a true breakout campaign. Of all the players on New Jersey’s roster last season, I would argue that Kovacevic was the biggest surprise. The only player I can see challenging him for that title is Noesen, but I would still give the nod to Kovacevic. Coming over in an afterthought of a trade with Montreal in the summer of 2024, Kovacevic was penciled in as the seventh (or lower) defenseman in the organization. But offseason injuries to Pesce and Hughes opened the door to playing time, and Kovacevic never looked back. He teamed with Siegenthaler to form arguably the best shutdown pairing in the entire league. According to Moneypuck, among defense pairings with at least 500 minutes together, Kovacevic and Siegenthaler had the lowest xGA/60 of any pair, smothering opponents to the tune of 1.82 xGA/60. Yes a lot of that is because of Siegenthaler, but Kovacevic deserves plenty of credit too. If he can prove last year’s breakout wasn’t a fluke, Tom Fitzgerald can be proud that he unearthed another gem.

Brenden Dillon: Establishing a Culture

Maybe you think I’m reaching with this one, and it’s true that Dillon did not have the best year on the ice for New Jersey, so it’s difficult to find improvements. But from everything we hear about the man, Dillon is a locker room leader and an overall good dude. I know we can say the same thing about Palat and we all want him gone, but Dillon’s contract isn’t nearly as egregious so we can give him a little bit of a pass. In any case, establishing yourself as a leader and inspiring your teammates to follow you is hard to do for anybody, let alone someone in their first season with a new club. Dillon quickly helped establish a culture of hard work and playing “the right way”. Even though I personally am a big believer in analytics, and Dillon’s analytical profile left a lot to be desired in 2024-25, I appreciate what he seemingly did for the team off the ice. Heck, even on the ice he was known for playing extremely hard and serving as an intimidating presence, so it’s not like it was all doom and gloom when the games were actually played either. Dillon worked hard to help his teammates buy into a hard-working, team-first culture. Salute to him for that.

Simon Nemec: Overcoming Adversity

We’ve talked about Nemec’s 2024-25 season to death in these parts, so I won’t belabor the point. I’ll just say that through all the trials and tribulations, through all the injuries and on-ice struggles and crises of confidence, Nemec overcame all of that in the end and finished the year with his best work yet. His overtime goal in game three against Carolina was arguably the best part of the entire New Jersey Devils season. Even beyond that goal, Nemec stepped into the lineup after the raft of injuries to the blueline and not only survived, he thrived. It was a grind of a season for Nemec, but he worked hard to regain his form. Here’s hoping the end of his campaign is indicative of what his 2025-26 will bring.

Seamus Casey: American Sniper

Like Hischier, Casey also enjoyed a terrific season shooting the puck. Granted, Casey only played in 14 games, but his 33.3% shooting percentage was out of this world. Yes I know, it was fluky and unsustainable. But Casey clearly has a good shot, even if he’s not going to turn into the modern day Paul Coffey. If he continues to work hard on his shot, he could still develop into an offensive weapon from the blue line.

Jacob Markstrom: Giving His Team A Chance To Win

After years and years of poor goalie play outside of 2022-23, Markstrom helped stabilize the crease for New Jersey last season. He started very strong, but then suffered an injury in January and upon his return in March, he struggled for a while before regaining his form toward the end of the regular season and into the playoffs. But even with that poor stretch beginning in March, Markstrom usually gave his team a chance to win. Hockey Reference has a goalie stat called Quality Starts. Sort of like the baseball equivalent of the stat, it measures how often a goalie puts up, well, a quality start, at least in the way Hockey Reference defines “quality”. According to the website, the league average goalie has a Quality Start rate of 53%. Markstrom came in at 59.2%, well above average. This was an improvement over his past two seasons in Calgary as well, so Markstrom took a step forward in this regard. He’s getting up there in years, but hopefully Markstrom has at least one more quality season to provide.

Jake Allen: …Everything

Much like Kovacevic, Allen just gave us a season in which he improved in just about every facet of his game. He was everything New Jersey could have asked for in a backup goalie, posting a .906 save percentage and recording four shutouts in 31 games played, a terrific rate. According to Natural Stat Trick, Allen’s 5.10 Goals Saved Above Expected was the 24th-highest in the league. Markstrom was the starter, but Allen was a terrific 1B for the Devils in 2024-25. Now that he’s signed long-term, hopefully we can look forward to more quality goalie play from Allen for years to come.

Your Take​


This was a fun exercise to do. As I mentioned in a couple sections up top, some of these players made it easy, and some made it difficult. But as you can see, we can find areas where hard work led to improvement for every player on the roster. Hopefully next year brings another wave of improvements for the Devils as well.

What do you make of these improvements? Did any of these surprise you? Can you think of other areas of improvement for any player? What do you want to see improved on the most from certain players? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...devils-and-the-value-of-working-on-your-craft
 
New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: Now or Never Edition

This week the prospect update looks at three players in the system who need to show something more this season.

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Tyler Brennan​


Entering his third and final season on his ELC, goaltender Tyler Brennan has struggled to gain traction playing exclusively for the Adirondack Thunder since his signing despite a few emergency call-ups as a back up with no game action.

The struggles began almost immediately for Brennan in a injury-riddled first professional season that saw the netminder suit up for only 13 games. The 6’4” goaltender never fully regained his form last season, finishing the year 9-16-3 with a 3.48 GAA and .878 SV% in 29 appearances. Although earning more starts, platooning goaltender Jeremy Brodeur outshined Brennan in net with a 11-11-1 record, 2.89 GAA and .905 SV% earning him a one-way contract to Utica for this upcoming season.

The Utica net may be overcrowded this season with the arrival of Jakub Malek, depending on whether or not Nico Daws clears waivers. So, opportunities for Tyler Brennan may be few and far between. One thing is for certain. If the 21-year-old netminder wants to stay in the Devils system after his ELC expires, then he must first impress in net for the Thunder. This upcoming season will be a big test for him.

Josh Filmon​


Josh Filmon has been an intriguing prospect for so long, it is hard to remember the winger is only 21-years-old. Filmon rocketed up the depth chart after a 47 goal season for Swift Current in 2023-24. Concerns crept in soon after as Filmon followed up that magical year with a 27 goal effort for the same WHL team, though improved playmaking increased his assists from 28 to 40, making up some of the point deficit.

Last season Josh Filmon made the permanent leap to professional hockey and struggled for much of the season, earning a demotion to Adirondack after 12 pointless games. After some initial setbacks for the Thunder, Filmon found his game mid season, leading the team as the Thunder’s only 20 goal scorer. Coaches even praised Filmon’s growth throughout the year.

So, all is not lost for Josh Filmon. A bounce back is certainly likely, but how far Filmon rises may depend on how much muscle the young winger can pack onto his wiry frame. For this upcoming season, establishing himself as a Utica regular, who contributes offensively would be an important step in his development.

Samu Salminen​


Entering his senior year for the University of Denver, Samu Salminen’s future with the franchise will be decided one way or another by the end of next summer. After two 17 point seasons for the University of Connecticut, Salminen improved to 10 goals and 28 points after a transfer last year, playing mostly center. It was a big step.

The Devils could use more center prospects on the Comets and Salminen would seem to fit that bill, but has not signed yet. Wherever Salminen ends up after this upcoming season, this will be a pivotal year for the center hoping to earn an ELC. The prospect update wishes him the best of luck.

Your Take​


Post your comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/p...y-devils-prospect-update-now-or-never-edition
 
Can Brad Shaw Take the Devils To Another Level Defensively?

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Earlier this offseason, the New Jersey Devils announced the hiring of Brad Shaw as an assistant coach, taking over defensive responsibilities from Ryan McGill.

It’s an interesting hire for a variety of reasons, but perhaps one of the biggest reasons is that the 2024-25 Devils already made big strides defensively as a team without Shaw. In the first year of the Sheldon Keefe era, the Devils went from allowing 281 goals as a team in 2023-24 to 220 last season, shaving 61 goals off of that total. That mark was good for 5th best in the league last season. The Devils also took a leap with their penalty kill going from the 10th ranked unit to the 2nd ranked unit. In short, defense was one of the strengths of last year’s team.

Part of the credit for that turnaround can simply go to having better goaltending than the year before, as Jacob Markstrom and Jake Allen combined for 21.8 goals saved above expected. Part of the credit also goes towards having a better blueline overall than the previous season. I think it would also be appropriate to credit the players for buying into Sheldon Keefe’s system right off the bat in Year 1 and playing a more defensively responsible brand of hockey than what we saw under the previous regime. But I can also understand Tom Fitzgerald and Sheldon Keefe taking a step back after last season and while being pleased with said improvements, wanting to see if they could take this to another level.

It’s not a coincidence that the perennial playoff teams in this league are the ones that consistently keep the puck out of their own net. Now, there are different ways to achieve the same goal. Winnipeg is a team that employs the best goaltender on the planet, at least until the playoff games start. Teams like Vegas, Florida, and Tampa Bay have built perennial playoff teams off of a foundation of strong defensive play. A team like Carolina might not have the best goaltending but they make up for it with their forecheck and their dedication to playing their system. The Devils might have made the playoffs in two of the last three seasons, but they’re still in the process of building the framework of having that level of consistency year in and year out.

Enter Brad Shaw and in terms of assistant coaches, he has one of the more impressive resumes out there. A John Tortorella disciple, Shaw has built a reputation for turning promising young defensemen into great players and making notoriously criticized defensemen like Rasmus Ristolainen passable. From Alex Pietrangelo and Colton Parayko in St. Louis, to Zach Werenski and Seth Jones in Columbus, to Quinn Hughes for a year in Vancouver and to Travis Sanheim in Philadelphia, Shaw has had a direct hand in helping these players develop and reach their potential.

It’s fortunate timing that Shaw was available after the Flyers passed him over for their head coaching vacancy, going with a more experienced head coach in Rick Tocchet. I say fortunate because the Devils currently have two former high lottery picks on their NHL blueline in Luke Hughes and Simon Nemec. They’ll likely have another lottery pick joining them in the next year or so if and when Anton Silayev comes over from the KHL. Add in an interesting mix with two defensive defensemen who already have good reputations in that aspect of their game in Brett Pesce and Jonas Siegenthaler, another young defenseman trying to establish himself as an NHL regular in Seamus Casey, and experienced veterans like Dougie Hamilton, Brenden Dillon, and Johnathan Kovacevic, and it’ll be interesting to see what Shaw can do with this group as a collective whole.

Critics might be quick to point to the Flyers and their lack of ability to keep the puck out of the net the last few years despite Tortorella and Shaw’s tutelage. But I think its important to remember that this is a Flyers team that has been very open about the fact they’ve been in a rebuild the last few years. They’re a team that has worked in a variety of younger players as they’ve turned over their roster, to varying results. This is also a Flyers team that hasn’t had any quality goaltending the last few years aside from what Carter Hart provided when he was in Philadelphia, and he is no longer on the team. I won’t go as far as to say recent results don’t matter, just maybe take them with a grain of salt. And even then, the Flyers went from surrendering 294 goals the year before Shaw arrived to 276, 231, and 283 the three years he was there. The one year the Flyers managed to keep the puck out of the net was the year they managed to stick around in the playoff race for the majority of the 2023-24 season until they fell out of the race in the final weeks of the season. While Tortorella deserves credit for squeezing every point he can out of a flawed Flyers roster that, frankly, might have 1/3 of the talent the Devils have had, it should be mentioned that Shaw had a hand in that ‘success’, for lack of a better term, as well.

Still, there’s more to being good defensively than having good individual players. Florida is an example of a team that plays great team defense, regardless of personnel on the ice. But that does get lost in the shuffle a little bit because being good defensively doesn’t quite pop visually like Florida’s overwhelming physicality and forecheck might.

I’m not going to pretend to be an expert in X’s and O’s and what Shaw will specifically bring to the table in terms of positioning, stick work, shutting down passing lanes, and using the body to make plays defensively. But I do think there’s a difference between being a good defensive team and being a championship-caliber defensive team, and while the Devils made improvements, they’re not quite on that Panthers level of playing elite-level team defense. I think that’s that next step that Fitzgerald and Keefe are trying to get out of this group and part of the reason why they made the change from McGill to Shaw.

Last year’s Devils showed flashes of brilliant defensive play. They had a stretch last December where they were dominant defensively and picked up wins over the Kings, Rangers, Blackhawks, and Penguins. They were still good defensively even when everything else regressed after the Christmas break, but I’d be hard pressed to say the Devils reached the levels of what they showed during that pre-Christmas stretch. I think if one were to ask Keefe, he’d want to see more consistency in that area.

But like I just said, there’s a difference between that and being smothering defensively in the most important games. There’s a difference between that and being relentless to win those 50/50 puck battles. There’s a difference between that and outskating the other team to spots on the ice.

Shaw’s defenses in St. Louis were excellent, but the Blues also didn’t breakthrough and win a championship until after he left to join Tortorella in Columbus. I don’t know how much I should blame Shaw, an assistant coach, for St. Louis’s inability to break through against the Blackhawks and Kings in the early 2010s when those teams were winning championships, but its not like Shaw has had zero success either. The Blues did win some playoff series under his watch. Shaw was a part of Columbus pulling off one of the greatest upsets in playoff history with a first round sweep of the Lightning in 2019. The Blue Jackets did beat the Toronto Maple Leafs in the bubble. I know its easy to dunk on the Maple Leafs for losing a series, given their track record, but it did happen.

Let’s not get things twisted. Shaw’s top priority should be to find a way to help Luke Hughes and Simon Nemec gain additional levels to their game, given their importance to the franchise long-term. But at some point, the Devils are going to get into a best-of-seven playoff series and they’re going to have to raise their game defensively to keep the opposition off of the scoreboard and give the Devils a chance to win. Time will tell whether or not Shaw will be able to get the team, collectively, to achieve that. Given his history elsewhere and his ability to work with all sorts of defensemen with varying skill sets, I think an argument could be made that he was the most important addition the Devils made this offseason.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/2...-take-the-devils-to-another-level-defensively
 
Could There be Some Shuffling of the New Jersey Devils Defense Pairs?

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Improvement is the name of the game for the New Jersey Devils in 2025-26. For a team that has its window of competitiveness open, finishing third in the Metropolitan Division, seventh in the Eastern Conference and 16th in the league (with a Western Conference team that missed the playoffs ahead of them in points) is a failure of a season. Fading out in five games in the first round only adds to the narrative that 2024-25 was unsuccessful. While the forward group has been adjusted and augmented (with some work to still to be done in training camp), the defense remains pretty much untouched.

Sure, maybe there’s argument to be had among fans as to whether Simon Nemec or Seamus Casey should be playing in the last every night spot with Johnny Kovacevic likely to start the season on injured reserve. There could even be some discussion as to who should be the seventh defender. For the most part however, once the team gets Luke Hughes re-signed to a new deal, the Devils defense of 2025-26 won’t be radically different from the defense of 2024-25. But could the team change up how they deploy the players involved?

Since both Hughes and Brett Pesce returned to action from injury in October of last year, the team’s pairings have been mostly consistent aside from when half of them went down injured in the latter parts of the campaign. Typically Hughes and Pesce were together, as were Dougie Hamilton and Brenden Dillon while Jonas Siegenthaler and Kovacevic also spent a large chunk of minutes together. Hughes and Pesce were the clear cut first pair by season’s end, with each logging over a minute more per game than any other defender. While most would probably see Hamilton and Dillon as the second pair based on Dougie’s past role, they were really more of the third, as Dillon, even with penalty kill time, averaged a full minute less ice per game than Siegs, Dougie and Kovacevic.

The defense wasn’t a problem per se, but maybe a shuffle could maximize their usage and help to propel the team even further. I’m not a big proponent of plus/minus, as it only paints part of a picture rather than a full one, but Hughes and Pesce were the two regulars (Nemec and Brian Dumoulin are not counted as regulars, as both appeared in less than 30 games) who were minuses overall for the regular season. While the players who are frequently on the ice (especially in late game/empty net situations) are more likely to see goals against them, you really want your first pair to be pushing play nightly rather than breaking even, which is essentially what Hughes/Pesce did. So what can be done to get said maximizing?

Well, without Kovacevic, it’s not easy to say. If we were to go off of last season, we’d probably be looking at Hughes/Pesce, Dillon/Hamilton and Siegenthaler/Nemec to start things off. Bumping Dougie back up top to play with Luke would lead to an offensive focused top pair, but I’m not sure everyone is ready for the defensive adventures that could result from it. Additionally, I think that Dillon/Pesce wouldn’t be a great solution either, as they could probably move the puck in the right direction, but offense could become a struggle. Pesce isn’t bad offensively, but it’ not what he’s known for and anytime Dillon puts up points, it’s just an added bonus at this stage.

If the Devils wanted to try something new, (and don’t want to just rearrange pairings as I suggested previously) I could see this being an attempted rollout:

Siegenthaler – Hamilton

Hughes – Pesce

Dillon – Nemec

While this leaves one pair intact, it bumps them down in terms of responsibility, and could free them up for some more advantageous matchups. Hamilton is no stranger to big minutes, and Siegs was such an integral piece on the back last season that he wound up playing big minutes right away coming back from an injury even though part of it was out of necessity. Dougie isn’t completely inept in his own end (despite how some see it) and with Jonas as the solidifying force, this could be a change that keeps the Devils moving forward and scoring more. Dillon has lost a step from his prime, but in a reduced role with Nemec, it could be beneficial for both. Nemec needs a more defensive focused partner right now even if the goal/hope is he grows into a strong two way defender. If Dillon falls off more, the team might have to swing a trade or hope that one of the three young lefty prospects (Topias Vilen, Jeremy Hanzel or Ethan Edwards) are ready enough that they can step in with Dillon getting demoted to press box/fill in duty. Before anyone asks, no Nemec/Casey should not be an option.

The Devils will be doing all they can this season to try and replicate the regular season of 2022-23 rather than 2023-24 or 2024-25 with the goal being to go further in the playoffs than they have in over a decade. While the forward depth will be responsible for putting in more points than last year, the defense also bears some responsibility to supplement the stars. I do believe the Devils have a group that can accomplish this. But it all will depend on how they are paired and how they are used throughout the season.

What are your thoughts on the Devils defense situation; do you believe they need to shuffle up who is on which pair? Are you more of the mindset that adjusting the order as I discussed roughly two months ago is the better solution? Do you think we see a young defender make the roster as a regular over a player like Dillon? Or do you think Sheldon Keefe stays status quo with his defense minus Kovacevic? Leave any and all comments down below and thanks as always for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/2...ffling-of-the-new-jersey-devils-defense-pairs
 
Devils in the Details – 9/4/25: CBA Nuggets Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


What’s going on with the Luke Hughes deal? “A trade must happen. However, over the last calendar month, and then some, there has yet to be a transaction of significance across the entire NHL. Suffice to say, this will get done. It’s a matter of when, not if. There are just a few dominos that are going to have to fall first. Whereas the holdup on an agreement appears to be term, it’s more likely that Hughes and Brisson are trying to maximize the payout on a three or eight-year contract.” [New Jersey Hockey Now]

It’s starting to get real:

#NJDevils Arseni Gritsyuk just met with fellow Russian Evgenii Dadonov for the first time.

(📸: Gritsyuk / Telegram) pic.twitter.com/63tanpbCbK

— Daniel Amoia (@daniel_amoia) September 3, 2025

An interview with Nico Hischier (and summary of said interview) on the recent European player media tour: [r/Devils]

Hockey Links​


Some interesting CBA nuggets:

Sources: The #NHL and #NHLPA have agreed to a rolling implementation schedule for CBA changes.

Among them: the new playoff salary cap system will come into effect *this season* for the 2026 Stanley Cup playoffs.

— Frank Seravalli (@frank_seravalli) September 2, 2025
Players will have until Sept. 15, 2026 to sign deals with current structure (term, signing bonus, variability). All deals signed after Sept. 16, 2026 will be subject to new CBA.

Also: Changes to player dress code and players' ability to endorse wine/spirits begins immediately.

— Frank Seravalli (@frank_seravalli) September 2, 2025

Quinn Hughes: “One thing I’m really good at — or have gotten good at — is I’m very present. I can’t even sign for another year, so there’s nothing I can do. As far as the noise (about his future), I can handle the noise. That’s why I’m the captain of the team, because I can handle these things and I can play at an elite level and it doesn’t matter what’s going on around me.” [Sportsnet]

Oilers GM Stan Bowman on Connor McDavid negotiations: “You have to approach Connor differently than anyone else because he is different than anyone else. He’s the best player in the world and, as a result, has earned the right to handle this the way he feels right to handle it.” [The Athletic ($)]

A ranking of the top 50 forwards in the NHL: [Daily Faceoff]

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-9-4-25-cba-nuggets-edition
 
Devils in the Details – 9/6/25: PTO Jump Scare Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


“Part of the path to winning a Stanley Cup is having a relatively clean salary cap sheet. For the most part, the Devils have done that. Their best players are signed to some of the best contracts in the NHL, and with the salary cap rising, their value should only continue to increase.” Which Devils have the best contracts? [Devils on the Rush ($)]

Two former Devils are headed to the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame:

Jersey raised them right.

Congrats to Zach Parise and Scott Gomez on their induction into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame.

📰: https://t.co/gTMtrmafp6 pic.twitter.com/Bo2W71yEFG

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) September 3, 2025

PTO jump scare:

#NEWS: We’ve signed Kevin Rooney, Luke Glendening, Adam Scheel and Georgi Romanov to PTOs.

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) September 5, 2025

A rundown of the four guys who have been signed to PTO contracts: [New Jersey Hockey Now]

Hockey Links​


Kirill Kaprizov is getting a big deal:

Kirill Kaprizov sounds like he’s about ready to cash out BIG time 🤑

(via @JoeSmithNHL, @friedgehnic) pic.twitter.com/2cOYFE7PJJ

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) September 5, 2025

Carey Price’s contract is on the move:

End of an era for Carey Price as a Montreal Canadien. pic.twitter.com/e3vl8S4JWx

— TSN (@TSN_Sports) September 5, 2025
Carey Price’s career with the Canadiens was nothing short of legendary ✨ pic.twitter.com/A8rvfFziuv

— Sportsnet (@Sportsnet) September 6, 2025

Connor Zary gets a three-year deal:

The Calgary #Flames have signed Connor Zary to a three year contract with an AAV of $3.775M per @EricFrancis pic.twitter.com/KWI6Addsid

— FlamesNation (@FlamesNation) September 5, 2025

“Today, I rank the rebuilding NHL teams with one question in mind: Who do I think is likeliest to win the Stanley Cup sometime within the next 10 years?” [The Athletic ($)]

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...-in-the-details-9-6-25-pto-jump-scare-edition
 
The 2025 All About the Jersey Top 25 Under 25 — The Outsiders from 41st to 26th

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Xavier Parent just missed out on the Top 25 in his first and only year of eligibility. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images

At long last, it is time to reveal the results of our big offseason community effort: the Top 25 Under 25. Six of our writing staff and 106 wider community members voted in this year’s rankings, and I am happy to begin announcing the final tally here. This year, we had 41 players to rank, and I think both writers and community commenters agreed that the rankings could get a bit murky after the first 15 or 20 players. The Devils’ under-25 cohort is rather top-heavy at the moment, a consequence of returning to playoff contention and having to send out prospects to make deals over the past few seasons. On top of that, we do not have specific criteria for how to rank these players. Everyone judges the group a bit differently. Maybe some voters value professional experience over long-term hope and promise. Maybe some voters are more preferential towards certain leagues than others. Some voters prefer more traditional NHL builds, while some look more to the scoresheet or even advanced tracking where they can find it.

With that, let’s get on to the rankings. This season, we had 16 outsiders, and this post covers each of them.

The Outsiders​


41. Tyler Brennan (G) — Last Rank: 27 — Age: 21 — 2024-25 Team: Adirondack Thunder (ECHL)

Needless to say, the Devils and their fans likely had higher hopes for Tyler Brennan when he was drafted in the fourth round in 2022 after having an .899 save percentage alongside a 3.58 goals against average for the Prince George Cougars in the WHL. Many goalies with those kinds of numbers turn out better once they have a more solid defense in front of them, but Brennan has not yet bested his draft year performance. In his D+1 season, his save percentage dropped to .898, but his goals against average was only 2.86, meaning he faced far fewer shots but did not improve. After signing with the Devils, Brennan played just 13 ECHL games in 2023-24, where he had an .896 save percentage and 3.16 goals against average for the Thunder, while Isaac Poulter and Jeremy Brodeur got the majority of games. In the past season, it was even worse for Brennan, as his save percentage dropped to .878 with a 3.48 goals against average in 29 ECHL games. He has yet to crack the AHL.

Fortunately, Brennan is still 21 years old, but I might not expect the Devils to keep him beyond this season if he does not show a big step forward. However, with Nico Daws (if he can clear waivers and does not get traded) and Jakub Malek slated to play in Utica, Brennan will have to beat out Jeremy Brodeur (who has a .921 SV% in 10 AHL games and .909 SV% in his ECHL career) and play his way out of Glens Falls. At this point, it seems the deck is rather stacked against him in this organization.

40. Viktor Hurtig (D) — Last Rank: 38 — Age: 23 — 2024-25 Team: Michigan Tech (NCAA)

The Devils took a reasonable swing on Viktor Hurtig in the sixth round of the 2021 Draft after he had no trouble finding the back of the net as a defenseman in the Swedish J20 league after moving from forward to defense at 16 years old, along with three points in seven HockeyEttan (third-tier Swedish hockey) loan games. Hurtig, a 6’6” right-handed defenseman, seems to have stagnated since then. He had only 17 points in 47 J20 games in his D+1 season before committing to Michigan State University, where he only had seven points across 43 games between 2022 and 2024 before transferring to Michigan Tech, where he had five points in 35 games last season. While his Elite Prospects page says he is going to play with Karlskrona HK of the HockeyEttan this season, the Devils’ prospect profile for him says that he will continue playing at Michigan Tech, which is backed up by their interview of him in the article. Hopefully, he stays at Michigan Tech and rediscovers a bit of the offense he has lost as a defenseman.

39. Jeremy Hanzel (D) — Last Rank: N/A — Age: 22 — 2024-25 Team: Atlanta Gladiators (ECHL)

Coming to the Devils as part of the return in the Erik Haula trade this June, Jeremy Hanzel is far down the defensive depth chart after playing 61 games with 22 points and a -24 plus/minus in the ECHL last season. I am not really sure why Hanzel was brought over to the Devils, as they are not exactly starving for left-handed defensemen in the system. He will have to beat out a few of Dennis Cholowski, Colton White, Topias Vilen, Ethan Edwards, Jackson van de Leest, and Ryan Wheeler for playing time in Utica. Hanzel did show some offensive promise with the Seattle Thunderbirds in the WHL, but he is still figuring out professional hockey.

38. David Rozsíval (RW) — Last Rank: N/A — Age: 18 — 2024-25 Team: Bílí Tygři Liberec U20
(Czech U20)

Son of retired Czech professional Patrik Rozsíval and nephew of retired NHLer Michal Rozsíval, David may be jumping from Czech juniors, where he put up over a point per game, to the USHL, where he will play for the Green Bay Gamblers. At least, that is what Elite Prospects thinks he’s doing. The Devils’ prospect profile on him says he will return to Czechia to attempt making the men’s club at Bílí Tygři Liberec, where he played five games last season. A left-handed shooting right-wing, Rozsíval is reputed for his puck carrying ability and has generally been a goal scorer in his juniors career, and I rather liked him as a sixth-round grab in this year’s Draft. Either of those moves would likely be an improvement for Rozsíval, who could either use an advancement to professional play or a transition to North American juniors.

37. Artyom Barabosha (D) — Last Rank: 36 — Age: 21 — 2024-25 Teams: Zvezda Moskva (VHL) & CSKA Mosvka (KHL)

Artyom Barabosha will not be moving to North America anytime soon. The Devils will have to trust that CSKA Mosvka will develop him well, though it’s been a bit downhill since 2o23-24, when he scored a goal and three assists in 21 KHL games. After that season, Barabosha signed a KHL deal through the 2026-27 season, though he has only played 12 KHL games since signing, largely relegated to Zvezda Mosvka in the VHL. Of course, former NHLers such as Nikita Nesterov and former Devils such as Nikita Okhotiuk, Christian Jaros, and Fredrik Claesson took up many defensive minutes for CSKA last season, alongside KHL veteran Nikita Sedov. I would hope that Barabosha might make the KHL team at some point this year, as Jaros, Claesson, and Sedov are no longer with the club. He would still be on a team full of former NHLers, as CSKA signed Spencer Martin and Daniel Sprong to push them towards contention. Thankfully, they have not stacked the blueline as much this year.

36. Sigge Holmgren (D) — Last Rank: N/A — Age: 18 — 2024-25 Team: DNP, Brynäs IF J20 (J20 Nationell)

Sigge Holmgren is simply a question mark. The Devils nabbed him in the Draft despite not playing a single game in the 2024-25 season, as they worried he might be a higher-round overage target for teams once he got back onto the ice for Brynäs IF. Per the Devils’ prospect profile, he missed the year due to shoulder surgery. There is not really any video to go off of for judging Holmgren, though he had a good year in the J18 Nationell, with six goals and 10 assists in 18 games, during the 2023-24 season. Hopefully he still scores like that in a full year of U20 competition this year, though I doubt he has much of a chance to make a professional team like his clubmate, Gustav Hillstrom.

35. Dylan Wendt (RW/C) — Last Rank: 30 — Age: 24 — 2024-25 Team: Adirondack Thunder (ECHL)

Dylan Wendt was acquired as an undrafted free agent in April 2024 after doubling his point production and nearly tripling his goal scoring at Western Michigan University. Since then, Wendt has five points in 17 AHL games and 28 points in 43 ECHL games. At 24 years old, he will have to make a quick jump — like the ones he made at Western Michigan, where he went from three to 22 to 44 points over his three seasons there — to have a hope of making the NHL. Still, the fact that he made those kinds of jumps before gives him some hope of rising the ranks.

34. Trenten Bennett (G) — Last Rank: N/A — Age: 19 — 2024-25 Teams: Kemptville 73’s (CCHL) & Owen Sound Attack (OHL)

Trenten Bennett is certainly a raw goalie, having played most of last season in the Central Canada Hockey League before being picked up by the Owen Sound Attack of the OHL. But at 6’8”, he is a rather intriguing one. He had a .912 save percentage in the CCHL before putting up a shutout and a .923 save percentage in six OHL games last season, and he has stated his intention to return to Owen Sound for the 2025-26 season, while he is committed to St. Lawrence University for the year after. A good season in the OHL should have Bennett skyrocketing up the rankings next year.

33. Veeti Louhivaara (G) — Last Rank: 35 — Age: 19 — 2024-25 Team: JYP U20 (U20 SM-sarja)

Veeti Louhivaara hopes to make a jump out of Finnish juniors this season after going 4-11-0 with a .902 save percentage for JYP’s U20 team in the 2024-25 season, up from an .890 save percentage the year prior. Whether this jump will come from a loan to a Mestis (second-tier Finnish professional league) team or by making the JYP club remains to be seen, but Louhivaara is apparently solidly below 19-year old undrafted goalie Otto Hannikainen on their depth chart, though the Finnish veteran Oskari Salminen had a poor season for JYP (.887 SV% in 42 games) after being acquired from SaiPa during the year. Perhaps JYP will roll with their youngest goaltenders, knowing that they have not made the playoffs since the 2018-19 season. If Louhivaara makes the club this year, he will be playing with former Devil Sami Vatanen, who returned to Finland after a down year in the Swiss National League. If Louhivaara does not make the team, he should hope for a loan to the Mestis league.

32. Mikael Diotte (D) — Last Rank: 32 — Age: 22 — 2024-25 Teams: Utica Comets (AHL, 5 GP) & Adirondack Thunder (ECHL, 2 GP)

Mikael Diotte, who was signed as an undrafted free agent after a solid final season in the QMJHL (42 points and a +55 rating for the Drummondville Voltigeurs), has been struck by the injury bug with the New Jersey Devils. Diotte had a rough few games for Utica, while he put up two points in two games for the Thunder. So, if it comes to him playing his way out of the ECHL, he probably should not have too much trouble, though staying there would be a problem for his long-term outlook. A 6’3” right-handed defenseman, Diotte has above-average size and will be an intriguing prospect if he can crack Utica’s starting lineup.

31. Gustav Hillstrom (C) — Last Rank: N/A — Age: 18 — 2024-25 Teams: Brynäs IF J20 (J20 Nationell, 43 GP) & Brynäs IF (SHL, 18 GP)

Starting his career ranked 31st on our list, Hillstrom is in a good position to make a big jump up the board over the next year. Hillstrom may play part of the season or more in the Swedish Hockey League, as long as he shows an ability to get on the scoresheet. However, Brynäs IF features several former NHLers, including Nicklas Backstrom, who has come back from his NHL career-ending injuries to play with their club. In two games for Brynäs in the Champions Hockey League (an ongoing pre-season tournament), he has only tallied 8:34 of total ice time. A fourth round pick in this year’s draft, Hillstrom will have to show more ability to get to the middle of the ice and to get shots on goal in order to get more ice time in Sweden’s top professional league. His two-way game is not really that in question, but he needs to continue developing a better underlying process so his juniors scoring can translate to higher levels. Devils fans should hope that if Hillstrom does not crack his club’s lineup this year, perhaps he could be loaned to a second tier (HockeyAllsvenskan) team, which would serve him well as a bridge to the SHL’s high level of competition. Coming off 38 points in 43 junior games last season, Hillstrom could use more of a challenge, but playing four minutes a night for Brynäs would not be much help.

30. Daniil Karpovich (D) — Last Rank: 26 — Age: 20 — 2024-25 Team: Gornyak-UGMK (VHL)

After being drafted out of the MHL in 2023, Daniil Karpovich played one year in the top Belarusian league before signing with the Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg of the KHL, under which he largely played for Gornyak-UGMK of the VHL in the 2024-25 season. In the hills west of Siberia, Karpovich had a solid partial season in the VHL, though I would have liked to see him play more games. So far, Karpovich has a +3 rating through his first VHL game of this season, and I hope it is not too long before Yekaterinburg gives him more of a chance with the KHL club. Like Diotte, Karpovich is a 6’3” defenseman over 200 pounds, though he shoots left-handed and is reputed for his physicality more than his scoring.

29. Kasper Pikkarainen (RW) — Last Rank: 24 — Age: 19 — 2024-25 Teams: Red Deer Rebels (WHL, 1 GP) & TPS U20 (U20 SM-sarja, 2 GP)

Falling out of the Top 25 after an injury-riddled season, Kasper Pikkarainen hopes to re-establish himself as a prospect in the Finnish Liiga with TPS this season. Kasper, son of Ilkka, who played only with the Albany River Rats, Lowell Devils, and New Jersey Devils in North America, was a third-round pick in 2024. Like his father, Kasper is a right-shooting physical winger, standing just a bit taller at 6’3”. He projects as someone who, if he can make the NHL, would add a little bit of edge to the bottom six (he had 39 PIMs in his two Finnish U20 games last season) along with a mindset to get the puck to the middle of the ice, whether he’s shooting from there or setting someone up in the slot.

28. Charlie Leddy (D) — Last Rank: 34 — Age: 21 — 2024-25 Teams: Quinnipiac University (NCAA)

About to be a senior at Quinnipiac, Charlie Leddy has developed into a very steady defensive presence in the NCAA. From his first to second year at Boston College, Leddy reduced his PIMs from 47 to 12, and he has yet to have a negative plus/minus in his three NCAA seasons. In his interview with Sam Kasan at development camp, Leddy attributed his +17 rating to having “blind faith” in his teammates, especially as it relates to getting the puck out of the defensive zone and into the offensive end. Hopefully, Leddy sees a bit of an offensive boost in his final college season, and he should be able to join Utica as a 22-year old after leading Quinnipiac as one of their five NHL-drafted skaters in the 2025-26 season.

27. Josh Filmon (LW) — Last Rank: 14 — Age: 21 — 2024-25 Teams: Adirondack Thunder (ECHL, 65 GP) & Utica Comets (AHL, 12 GP)

Many Devils fans had high hopes for Josh Filmon after he scored 47 goals in the 2022-23 WHL season, which was his D+1 season after being taken by New Jersey in the sixth round in 2022. However, a drop to 27 goals the following season was overlooked, and Filmon actually rose in the rankings from 15 to 14 last year before his poor first full professional season dropped him from the Top 25 this year. In those rankings last year, James wrote,

The drop in goal-scoring should not be a major concern for Devils fans. According to a recent interview with Amanda Stein, Filmon’s focus last season in Swift Current was developing his 200 foot defensive game and even learning to penalty kill. Filmon claims he made big strides applying his offensive skill into a more defensive-structured game later in the season, something his rising PPG totals throughout the year seems to confirm.

It does not seem this altered approach has served Filmon well as a professional. He was unable to crack the scoresheet in 12 AHL games while putting up 20 goals and 16 assists in 65 ECHL games. There is a danger in trying to round out a player’s weaknesses at the risk of weakening the strengths that make them an intriguing prospect, and I think Filmon’s approach may have been missing the forest for the trees. Rather than worry about his defensive game, Swift Current should have worried more about helping him bulk up to help his game translate professionally. At 6’3”, Filmon was bumped up to 170 pounds in his Utica weigh-in after being listed at 161 pounds in the WHL. This, more than his defensive game, is why I worry about his ability to have success at the AHL level, which will be a prerequisite for him being able to survive the NHL, if he hopes to make it here.

26. Xavier Parent (LW/C) — Last Rank: N/A — Age: 24 — 2024-25 Team: Utica Comets (AHL)

Xavier Parent shows that there is hope for those who go through the ECHL — but they have to score there. As an undrafted free agent out of the QMJHL, where he largely fell through the cracks during the COVID-19 pandemic before exploding for 51 goals and 106 points in his final juniors year, Parent signed a deal with the Utica Comets in 2022. Parent first largely played with the Adirondack Thunder, where he had 51 points in 50 games before playing a short stint in Utica, where he had six points in 14 appearances that year. Parent has since had two decent seasons with Utica, though he has yet to rise to that point-per-game level that he showed in the QMJHL and ECHL. At just 5’8” and 170 pounds, shooting left-handed, Parent is short but solid, and he will give it to opponents as much as they give it to him. Since signing with Utica in 2022, Parent has 121 PIMs in 146 AHL games and 46 PIMs in 50 ECHL games. This ability to compete in the professional game while largely keeping his scoring ways intact is why the Devils signed him to a one-year ELC back in March, which he is playing on this season. I am all for an underdog story, and it seems like Parent has the scoring knack to make an impression. This year, I hope that he challenges players like Thomas Bordeleau for the right to be first called up to the NHL in case of injury.

The Rankings​


As always, here is how everyone ranked the players in this post. The community had 106 valid responses (just a few were unchanged alphabetical “rankings,” which I removed from the count), which meant that I did not count the community for more than their usual one combined vote. Unfortunately, with so many players in the depth realm of the Devils’ prospect system, it does not seem like many people feel comfortable ranking the players compared to past seasons. Once the community got out of the Top 10, rankings began to largely cluster. In numerical terms, the average placement of the community’s 10th-ranked player was 10.132, while the 11th-ranked player averaged 14.623. Sigge Holmgren, the 35th-ranked community skater, still had an average community rank under 30, at 29.585. The ranks were considerably less clustered when averaging the writer and community votes, but you can still see below that four players who barely missed out on a top 25 ranking. Parent just missed out on a Top-25 finish by a difference of 0.4286 in the average.

2025-AATJ-Outsiders.png

Of course, there were some ties. Artyom Barabosha and David Rozsival were tied in the average, and they are not the only ones in the full ranking who fell on a tie. Thankfully, I was able to just defer to James and the community for breaking those ties. Everyone also had a few outsiders who they ranked in the Top 25.

  • I had two in Charlie Leddy and Xavier Parent.
  • James had two in Parent and Daniil Karpovich.
  • Jared had three in Trenten Bennett, Karpovich, and Kasper Pikkarainen.
  • Jackson had five in Dylan Wendt, Pikkarainen, Jeremy Hanzel, Gustav Hillstrom, and Josh Filmon.
  • Tim had two in Veeti Louhivaara and Parent.
  • Matt had six in Louhivaara, Parent, Wendt, Leddy, Mikael Diotte and Filmon.
  • The community had three in Parent, Tyler Brennan, and Parent.

On that, I thought it was very surprising to see Tyler Brennan ranked so high by the community. I am not sure if the last-ranked player has ever had a Top 25 vote before. But, everyone has their own philosophy on these rankings, and I know that I changed my ballot a fair few times before landing on a list that I thought looked best. Some guys started in the 20s and ended up in the 30s, and vice versa. For example, I was rather intrigued by Mikael Diotte last season when he was signed off as an undrafted free agent off a solid season in the QMJHL, but he barely played for the Comets due to injury. Those situations suck, but they are rather hard to judge, and I defaulted to a drop in ranking.

Your Thoughts​


What do you think of the outsiders this year? Any surprises? Who did you have here that you voted in the Top 25? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/n...p-25-under-25-the-outsiders-from-41st-to-26th
 
Making The Case For a Luke Hughes Bridge Deal

As the Luke Hughes contract standoff rages on, we take a look at the benefits of a potential short-term deal


Yes, it’s yet another article about Luke Hughes. I get it, we’re all sick and tired of reading, writing, and worrying about Hughes’ future in the Garden State. But the fact remains, Hughes – currently a restricted free agent – has not officially put pen to paper on a new contract. Until that happens, we must continue to focus on the drama.

Since the end of the playoffs, plenty of rumors have swirled around what Hughes and his camp are looking for. At one point, the hot rumor was that Luke was looking for a five-year deal so he could reach free agency at the same time as his older brother Jack. Last week, James Nichols of NJ Hockey Now speculated that Hughes’ agent, Pat Brisson, is simply trying to squeeze every penny out of Luke’s next contract, regardless of length. He also reported that the Devils are looking to sign the youngest Hughes to either a three-year bridge deal, or a max-term, eight-year extension. Nothing in between.

Before I go any further, I want to make it clear right now: I absolutely want a max-term deal for Luke Hughes. He’s a critical piece of the Devils’ present and future, and an eight-year contract helps keep him in New Jersey for most (if not all) of his best seasons. And I know I’m not alone, as it seems like every other Devils fan in existence wants a long-term deal for the youngest Hughes brother as well.

But while I might want an eight-year contract for Hughes, we have to acknowledge that it’s at least possible general manager Tom Fitzgerald shifts to a short-term bridge deal instead. According to AFP Analytics, they project Hughes would get about $5.75m on a three-year deal and about $8.4m on an eight-year deal. If Brisson gets his way, those numbers could tick up, say to $7m on a bridge deal and $10m on a max-term pact. So while I don’t exactly like it, it might be good to prepare for a potential bridge contract for Hughes.

Is there a case to be made that New Jersey could benefit more from a three-year deal for Hughes over an eight-year deal? Well by god we can sure try. Let’s get into it:

Salary Cap Flexibility​


This is of course one of the big benefits of going for a shorter contract for any player. By not committing yourself to a max-term extension, not only do you give yourself an out if the player doesn’t perform well, but bridge deals almost always end up coming in at a lower cap hit than a long-term contract. And in this case, it could mean the difference between dishing out $5.75m-$7m for Hughes or $8.5m-$10m. That’s a big difference, especially for a team like New Jersey who figures to be a cap ceiling team for the foreseeable future.

We’ve talked at length around these parts about moving Ondrej Palat’s contract. We talk about it with Dougie Hamilton to some extent. We talked about it with Erik Haula until he actually got moved. And on the flip side of the coin, we talk about how nice it is to have players like Nico Hischier, Jesper Bratt, and (especially) Jack Hughes on team friendly contracts. The reason we make a big deal out of all these contracts is because every dollar matters in a salary cap league. If a bridge deal for Luke Hughes opens up $3m-$4m more on the books, that’s a big deal that should be appreciated as such.

The Timelines​


What timelines? That would be the Hughes boys’ various timelines. Even if there’s truth to the rumor that Brisson and the Hughes camp are looking for a five-year deal to walk both Jack and Luke to unrestricted free agency at the same time, it is WILDLY unlikely that Fitzgerald actually gives in to that demand. It’s something Chris touched on recently, and I agree that there’s just no way Fitzgerald lets it happen.

So if we work under the assumption that Hughes is getting either a three- or eight-year contract, then none of the Hughes brothers will hit free agency at the same time. This is important considering all the talk of the Devils luring Quinn to New Jersey to play with his brothers, perhaps sooner rather than later. We’ve talked about that situation over and over again around here too, so I’ll spare you another rundown. Suffice to say, there’s enough smoke there to be taken seriously, and it bodes well for the Devils that this situation will get some finality soon.

Quinn is set to become a free agent in 2027. Under a three-year contract for Luke, he would get to (restricted) free agency in 2028. And Jack isn’t set to hit the market until 2030. You will notice that none of those years are the same as each other. We all fear Luke and Jack hitting the market at the same time because we’re scared of them leaving and going to another team together. Personally I find it hard to believe that a team would be good enough AND have enough cap space to lure both of them at the same time, but I can at least understand the concern. So a three-year deal would stagger the end of each contract nicely, and assuming Fitzgerald keeps the Devils’ books relatively clean, he can potentially sign each brother to a new contract once they hit the market.

And one more thing about a three-year deal: If New Jersey does, in fact, sign Quinn long-term when his current contract is up, they would then be in a great position to ink Luke to a long-term pact in 2028 when his bridge deal is up. And if both Quinn and Luke are locked in for the long haul by then, it would give Jack every incentive to stick around in New Jersey past 2030 too.

I understand you can stagger the end of each contract with a long-term deal for Luke as well. But in this scenario, the Devils have more cap space and flexibility to play with, making it even more likely they can make a move for Quinn. Again, every dollar matters for a cap ceiling team.

Playing The Long Game​


I know it sounds contradictory that going short-term with Hughes’ next contract is playing the long game, but hear me out.

If the Devils are able to sign Hughes to a max-term contract, that would take him through his age-29 season, meaning his next deal would start with his age-30 season. I have to assume that Hughes will not only want another long-term contract at that point, he will also be in a position to receive one, assuming he lives up to his potential. That next contract might be one Fitzgerald and the Devils feel obligated to sign Hughes to, not because of his brothers, but because of his performance and what he would mean to the organization at that point. And as we all know, long-term extensions to players in their 30’s don’t exactly age well. Hughes at 30 would probably be fine. But Hughes at 34, 35, or 36? That’s a different story.

We’re already seeing this play out with Dougie Hamilton, who was a bonafide star in this league at the time of his signing. Fast forward to the present, and a lot of Devils fans want him gone due to how he’s aged. Even if you think Hamilton still has plenty to give (which personally I still do), it’s fair to say he might not be worth his $9m cap hit anymore, and it’s highly unlikely he improves as he gets deeper into his 30’s.

So with Hughes, going bridge THEN long-term might be the move. By signing him to a three-year deal, followed by a seven-year deal (because by the time Hughes would next be eligible for a contract, the new max-term for contract length will be seven), you are getting arguably the best 10 years of his career. He would then hit free agency at 32 instead of 30, which might not sound like a big difference, but it is. At that point, Hughes would probably be open to a slightly shorter term deal, and if he does start to show signs of serious decline, New Jersey might be able to sign him again for far less than if he was coming off his age-29 season. Not to mention the salary cap will presumably have gone up in those two extra years, leaving the Devils with more room to bring Hughes back.

Again, two years might not sound like a big difference. But it could potentially benefit New Jersey a lot if things break right.

What If Hughes Stagnates?​


Here is the angle none of us want to think about, but must confront anyway.

Hughes has played two full seasons in the NHL now. His rookie year was quite promising, especially considering how much was foisted upon him thanks to several key injuries that season. He followed that up with a sophomore campaign that, while good, was not superstar stuff. But that’s ok, because he’s still young and no one expects him to be a superstar this quickly!

Except…

While his counting stats are there, and a lot of his advanced numbers look pretty good, there’s one thing that should be a concern about Hughes’ results the past two seasons: He’s been consistently outscored during 5-on-5 play. According to Natural Stat Trick, Hughes was outscored 51-55 in 2023-24, and he was outscored 43-48 this past season. Two things about those figures: First, even taken at face value, those still aren’t awful numbers, so he’s not getting totally caved in. And second, it’s worth noting that his PDO was .988 and .981 in 2023-24 and 2024-25 respectively. This indicates that Hughes’ 5-on-5 goal results are more bad luck than bad play.

But is it bad luck, or is it something else? His other metrics look good (but not great) per NST, so maybe there isn’t that much cause for concern. Then again, if Hughes really is close to exploding into a superstar, shouldn’t his on-ice results reflect that?

Over the summer, old pal CJ Turtoro has been cautioning Devils fans to lower their expectations for Hughes. And while he is far from the gospel on hockey analysis, he does bring up some reasonable points. Namely, a roundup of how various analytics sites measure his value, comparing Luke to his brothers, and how Hughes looks at his age next to other defensemen who went on to become stars. Even CJ isn’t saying Hughes is a bum though, just that we might be overrating him a tad.

So I come back to the question again: What if Hughes stagnates? What if, instead of blossoming into a superstar, he becomes merely a solid top-four blueliner? Well if that’s the case, a bridge deal would absolutely be the best move. Instead of locking Hughes in for a high cap hit that he won’t live up to right out of the gate for eight years, signing him short term at a lower number, then circling back in three years and potentially signing him to a lower AAV than what he might get this season (due to less than superstar production) is in the best interest of the New Jersey Devils.

Hughes failing to reach his potential would obviously not be ideal, but in the event that happens, a bridge contract would help the Devils avoid another problem contract on their books.

Final Thoughts And Your Take​


I once again feel compelled to state that I do not want Tom Fitzgerald to sign Luke Hughes to a bridge deal. I would much rather a max-term contract, as I think almost all of us would.

My goal today was not to pound the table for a short-term pact for Hughes. Rather it was to explore some potential benefits to going down this road if it comes down to it. So you can think of this piece as just one big cope session in the event of a bridge deal for Hughes. I don’t even fully agree with the arguments I laid out here, but I do think they are factors that are worth considering at the very least.

Now that I’ve run through the case for a bridge deal for Luke Hughes, what do you think of all this? I’m going to assume the vast majority of you reading this would prefer a long-term deal, but even if you do, which of these arguments do you find the most compelling? Are you concerned with Hughes’ long-term potential at all? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...making-the-case-for-a-luke-hughes-bridge-deal
 
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