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Devils in the Details – 12/12/25: Team Meeting Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Another brutal outing for Jacob Markstrom on Thursday night. He got pulled after giving up three goals to the Lightning on seven shots, and the Devils went on to lose by an 8-4 score. [Devils NHL]

FWIW:

Jesper Bratt shared that the #NJDevils had a team meeting after tonight’s game and called it a “vocal” and “honest conversation.”

Said the details will remain in the room.

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) December 12, 2025
"We can’t just flush this. We got our ass kicked today. We were outworked, outcompeted, outclassed in lots of ways. This is one not to push past. There's some real lessons in this one." – #NJDevils HC Sheldon Keefe after the 8-4 loss to Tampa.

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) December 12, 2025

All the best to Timo and his family:

#NEWS: Timo Meier has taken a personal leave of absence from the team as he tends to a family health matter.

The entire organization supports Timo and his family and appreciates everyone respecting their privacy at this time.https://t.co/0qpBXTFDHp

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) December 11, 2025

Some intel here on a Quinn Hughes trade and the business the Devils are trying to do: “On the Devils: they are legitimately trying to get business done, but to add, they have to subtract. If the team they are trading with isn’t willing to take back salary, they must find other options — which they are trying to do.” [Sportsnet]

Who are the most successful undrafted Devils in franchise history? [New Jersey Hockey Now]

Hockey Links​


Which teams could be in on the Quinn Hughes sweepstakes? [Daily Faceoff]

Welcome back, Charlie McAvoy:

Charlie McAvoy is BACK in the lineup less than a month after breaking his jaw. 😱😤 https://t.co/VsMQtH6nmJ pic.twitter.com/BY3AROHrEO

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) December 12, 2025

Which GMs have had the worst long stint with their teams? “But now and then, for a variety of reasons, a team sticks with a guy well past the point that results would dictate. Those are the guys we’re interested in today, as we count down the 10 worst GMs to get at least five years with the same team.” [The Athletic ($)]

An impressive run:

HISTORY FOR BRANDON BUSSI! 🚌 pic.twitter.com/d8OrFo4pwl

— NHL (@NHL) December 12, 2025

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...-in-the-details-12-12-25-team-meeting-edition
 
Well Wishes to Timo Meier — and Devils Injury News

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Yesterday morning, the New Jersey Devils announced that Timo Meier had to step away from the team for a personal leave of absence to attend to a family health matter. Given the nature of the leave, of course, we do not know exactly why Timo Meier has had to step away from the team. But while the team will miss Timo on the ice, I think it is very important to keep him in our thoughts.

On the ice, Timo Meier is a model of hard work and grit. Off the ice, Timo always seems to have a positive attitude in his public appearances as one of the most apparently affable members of the New Jersey Devils. Both on the ice and off of it, Timo is a model for everyone to follow. But hockey is just one thing, and family is another. I hope that, regardless of what is going on, Timo spends as much time with his family as he needs to.

So, again, please remember to keep Timo and his family in your thoughts. When he does come back to the team, I hope that the crowd at the Rock gives him a big hand.

(Unexpected) Devils Injury News — Arseny Gritsyuk Out​


This morning, Devils writers noted that three Devils — Arseny Gritsyuk, Cody Glass, and Stefan Noesen — were missing from practice. While Cody Glass and Stefan Noesen have dealt with injuries over the last few months, and a maintenance day was not too out of the ordinary for players in their situations, Gritsyuk had not yet missed a game this season.

Unfortunately, that’s about to change. Team writers reported that Sheldon Keefe told the media that Gritsyuk has recently been battling through a lingering issue and is out for the weekend back-to-back. Per the Devils’ website on NHL.com:

“(Gritsyuk is) going to need some time,” head coach Sheldon Keefe said. “He was dealing with it in the game yesterday and it hasn’t gotten better.”

The young winger has 16 points in 31 games in a largely third-line role with second-unit power play usage, but he clearly has another gear to his game that he can reach. Gritsyuk has been marked as one of the best players in the entire NHL at tilting the ice, with the Devils enjoying some of the best shot rates in the league at five-on-five during his minutes, regardless of his linemates. How does he do this? Between impeccable forechecking reads, great skating, and silky hands, Gritsyuk is a complete forward.

Hopefully, Gritsyuk is only out for the weekend. The Devils can hardly afford to sustain more injuries (or losses), and he figures to be an integral part of the solution to this team’s issues. For now, though, the healthy Devils need to pick themselves and their teammates up.

Your Thoughts​


What do you think of Gritsyuk’s injury? Do you think it’s related to his minor ankle injury earlier this season? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/devils-news/64250/well-wishes-to-timo-meier-and-devils-injury-news
 
2025-26 Gamethread #32: New Jersey Devils vs. Anaheim Ducks

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The Matchup: New Jersey Devils (17-13-1) at Anaheim Ducks (19-11-1)

The Time: 12:30pm EST

The Broadcast: MSG, Devils Hockey Radio

The Game Preview: Matt had the preview today.

The Song of the Day: California Dreamin’ by The Mamas & The Papas captures the mood at the moment.

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

LGD!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ethread-32-new-jersey-devils-vs-anaheim-ducks
 
Game Preview #32: Anaheim Ducks @ New Jersey Devils

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Jesper Bratt gets plenty of good looks, but it would be nice to see him shoot on plays like this. | Photo by Rich Graessle/NHL via Getty Images

  • The Matchup: Anaheim Ducks (19-11-1) @ New Jersey Devils (17-13-1)
  • The Time: 12:30pm EST
  • The Broadcast: MSG, Devils Hockey Radio

Last Devils Game​


In case you missed it, or wisely chose to do something else with your night, the Devils lost 8-4 against Tampa Bay on Thursday night. In the latest episode of Markstrom doing Markstrom things, he let up 2 goals less than 1 minute apart, less than 4 minutes into the game. Exactly what you need from your “starter.” Luke “I am on pace for 5 goals this season” Hughes gave the fans some hope by scoring his 2nd goal of the season at the 7:00 min mark. However, Markstrom wasn’t having any of that, and let up his 3rd goal against 56 seconds later (his 3rd GA on 7 shots). Surprisingly (yes, I’m being serious here) Keefe had seen enough and actually pulled Markstrom for Jake Allen at this point. Allen was not about to be outdone by the starter. In showing that he too can be the number one goalie for the Devils, he went on to let up 5 goals on 28 shots.

On the “bright side”, Jesper “it’s ok to shoot” Bratt scored his 1st goal since 11/6. Another way to look at it is that he also scored his 2nd goal since 10/22. Do with this information what you will. Paul Cotter, Stefan Noesen, and Cody Glass got on the board. Maybe they finally realized they have to do something. Maybe not. Angus Crookshank scored his 1st goal of the season. So we have that going for us. Which is nice. The Devils also let up 2 power play goals, oh wait. That’s not actually good news. The Devils did score a power play goal (Bratt), which would be good, if it wasn’t cancelled out by the 2 goals against by Tampa on their PP.

Last Ducks Game​


On Thursday, the Ducks lost to the Islanders by a score of 5-2. The Islanders scored 3 unanswered goals in the 1st period, including 2 power plays goals in a row by Anders Lee. Anaheim scored once in the 2nd and once in the 3rd period to make it 3-2 at one point. However, NY scored 2 more goals later in the 3rd period to win the game 5-2. The game was their first loss after winning their previous 3 games in a row.

One bit of information that I found interesting is that Ville Husso started in goal on Thursday for the Ducks. That is not particularly interesting on its own. What IS interesting (at least to me), is that he has now started the last (checks notes…) 8 games in a row for the Ducks. In 2025, that’s something that is pretty crazy to see. I’m going to guess he starts today against the Devils, but we shall see.

Injuries, Roster for Tonight, Yada, Yada, Yada.​


The latest victim of the injury bug this season is now Arseny Gritsyuk. Per Sheldon Keefe yesterday after practice, Gritsyuk will miss both games this weekend.

Gritsyuk out for both games this weekend for #NJDevils, it’s an injury he had before the game last night and tried to play through.

Glass and Noesen, who also missed today’s practice, will be good to go tomorrow. https://t.co/G9VylTuAf4

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) December 12, 2025

The other 2 remaining question marks for today are probably “will Timo be back?” and “who will start in net?” My response is pretty much, “does it matter at this point?” Realistically, I don’t expect Timo to be back today or this weekend.

Trust me, I’m as tired of saying it as you are of reading it. But Markstrom is awful (73rd in the league in GAA-3.66, 70th with a SV% of .875). Allen did not inspire confidence last night either. However at least he’s had more good games than bad this season and his stats (33rd in GAA 2.70 and 35th SV% .903) don’t resemble someone that belongs in the ECHL at this point (hint – it’s Markstom. I’m talking about Markstrom).

Grimace’s Prediction and 2025-2026 Record Tracker​


The Devils are going to lose today. Kreider will score a goal on the PP. Sincerely, Grimace.

Grimace’s 2025-2026 Season Prediction record currently stands at 9-8-0.

Your Take​


What else is there to say about this team at this point? I only wish Fitz could play today against Anaheim. Maybe then Jacob Trouba could throw one of his big hits on Fitz and put him out for the season. Feel free to leave your thoughts and comments below and thanks for reading!

In a shameless bit of non hockey related self promotion (approved by Chris – thanks Chris), I wanted to plug my brand new podcast on here, if any of you are interested in listening. We have a light hearted, fun discussion about any movies, music or video games mostly from the 1980s and 1990s. Please feel free to listen to us on any of the formats below and any feedback is welcome (positive and negative). Also, please follow us and subscribe, even if you think we stink. 🙂

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Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...me-preview-32-anaheim-ducks-new-jersey-devils
 
Five Things I Liked in the Devils’ 4-1 Win Over Anaheim

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Yesterday afternoon, the New Jersey Devils took on the Anaheim Ducks. Things started about how you would expect. The Devils, as the east coast host in this early afternoon matchup, had the jump on the Ducks. But then, something very predictable happened: Troy Terry snuck behind Brenden Dillon and Luke Hughes and cherrypicked a breakaway goal in the second half of the first period. At the time, the Ducks only had a few shots on goal. After the Devils had given up eight to the Tampa Bay Lightning, I started to worry that I was about to witness an impending collapse. Now without Simon Nemec, who was hurt in practice, I also wondered if the team was just becoming too fractured.

Given the circumstances of the weekend, a bad loss would have been devastating. The Devils were out of a playoff spot, and they lost out on the trade market, but they could still have a good enough weekend for the season by winning on the ice. So, here are five things I liked in yesterday’s game:

Number One: Juho Lammikko and the Third Line​


The Devils’ jump came from someone I have not enjoyed watching much all season: Juho Lammikko. Lammikko, who has not seemed to be moving very quickly on the ice in his 15 games, went from the far blueline all the way behind the Ducks’ net to set up Stefan Noesen for a game-tying goal, just minutes after Terry scored. Per NHL EDGE, this burst of speed from Lammikko was clocked at 22.53 miles per hour, breaking his previous career high of 22.52 MPH set in the 2021-22 season. This did not get him onto the top-10 Devils leaderboard this season (Paul Cotter had the 10th-fastest burst at 22.58 MPH), but it is certainly among the top few bursts of speed actually leading to a goal, both for the Devils and in the NHL this season.

Beyond that first goal, Juho Lammikko played a solid all-around game. His line later scored another goal (from Paul Cotter), and they controlled the scoring chance battle throughout the game. Lammikko was right in the mix in the slot when the teams battled for the puck that got knocked down from Colton White’s point shot, and now the Devils have a glimmer of hope that they could have a functional third line despite using Dawson Mercer as a winger again.

For chipping at that puck, Lammikko had his second point of the night, finally breaking through after 15 scoreless appearances. But here’s the simplicity of this line working at its best: Lammikko and Cotter should use their considerable speed, while Noesen and Lammikko should make goalies’ lives difficult around the net. That double screen made fighting that puck almost impossible for Dostal, who was unable to track how quickly it went from being knocked down in the slot to being on Paul Cotter’s stick right on his glove side.

There was one moment in the late first where Paul Cotter used his speed to gain the zone, had Noesen as an option in front of the net, and decided to skate the puck around the net and all the way to the blueline instead. While Cotter shows how dangerous of a skater he can be, and his goal-scoring ways seem to be coming back, he is still struggling to be a playmaker. Even if he didn’t make a direct pass to Noesen, as Lammikko did, a shot on goal for a rebound is perfectly fine for someone of Noesen’s skillset. When this line simplifies their offense, it feeds into their abilities, so I would like to see Cotter follow their lead and make more of the simple plays. Shoot low and hard from afar, get rebounds, and get traffic in front.

Number Two: Netfront Defense


One thing the Devils have struggled with all season is their defense around the net. For a team with Brenden Dillon, Jonas Siegenthaler, and Dougie Hamilton in the lineup, though, this really should not be such a problem. Their usual starters have the size to make an impact in the dirty areas, and it has been surprising to see a Brad Shaw-coached defense lose their heads as often as this group has. But yesterday, it seemed like they made a point to change the approach. Especially in the first two periods, you could see that the Devils were doing a better job than usual of boxing out the low slot and around the crease, with the Ducks only getting six high-danger scoring chances in the first two periods to the Devils’ 18 chances.

Did the Devils give up a lot of shots in the third period? Yes. But even then, most of Anaheim’s chances were forced to the outside, and everyone — including forwards — made a point of getting to the net when the Devils were in danger. Just look at Ondrej Palat crash down on this chance here, when Anaheim first pulled Dostal with over four minutes to play:

Is Troy Terry a guy who should have been open that long? Probably not, no. But Palat, who has used his speed a lot on the forecheck, reminded everyone what it could look like if he used his full intensity in the defensive zone. And making that type of play while not driving Terry into Allen or running his own goalie was just a cherry on top for Palat, as Terry would have almost certainly scored if Palat broke for the net just a half-second later.

Number Three: Cody Glass Continues to Shoot​


In the late second period, Ondrej Palat also set up the crucial insurance goal. The Devils had been dominating the game by that point, and the one-goal lead at that time was not even reflective of how much better they were creating offense than Anaheim. After a long flip from Jonas Siegenthaler, Ondrej Palat chased the bouncing puck towards the goal line, sealing Owen Zellweger from the puck long enough for the Devils to keep possession. Connor Brown came in to assist, and Colton White chipped the puck back down to Palat. Palat waited for Radko Gudas to (foolishly) go down onto the ice to block a low pass to an already-covered Connor Brown, leaving a wide-open lane to the slot for Cody Glass. Glass drifted down, trailing Brown, and ripped a shot to the glove side, going against the grain of the pass, and that goal allowed the Devils to into protect mode.

Glass now has six goals and eight points in 21 games this season, which is great production for someone playing just 12:51 per game with very limited power play usage. Playing at a 23-goal, 31-point pace per 82 games, Glass is giving his lines a real finishing option, and it’s not an accident. He is doing a better job of getting to the dangerous scoring areas, and his shot is quick enough to beat goalies. This season, Glass is averaging 9.18 shots per 60 minutes at five-on-five, and his previous career high was 7.57 per 60 with Nashville in 2023-24. Hockey is a game that rewards the properly aggressive, and Cody Glass suddenly looks like a legitimate goal scorer.

Number Four: No Penalties in the Third​


The New Jersey Devils have not necessarily been their most disciplined of late, with even guys like Nico Hischier taking more penalties than usual. Yesterday, they only took two stick penalties, with their final penalty kill coming from an unforced too many men where nobody was even trying to get back to the bench in the latter half of the second period. But the penalty kill was perfect, and even Colton White finally got 1:34 of penalty killing usage in the game. What happened in that time? Anaheim had zero shot attempts. Maybe he should get more run there.

That aside, it would have been extremely disappointing if the Devils let Anaheim get back into the game by taking penalties in the final frame. By avoiding such a pitfall, and playing more disciplined defense, they let Jake Allen do his job and mostly just challenged the Ducks to beat Allen from distance. It can be rather tiring to defend penalty after penalty, and getting out of yesterday’s game in a simpler manner should have kept them fresh for today’s game against the Canucks. We’ll see, but they did a good job of not dragging out the affair against the Ducks.

Number Five: Effort From All


Over the past month, the Devils have looked like they are only getting effort from some of the team far too often. Maybe the closed-door meeting on Thursday really made a difference, because all 18 skaters and Jake Allen looked locked in. The top three lines did a good job of controlling play, especially in the first two frames, though I put a grain of salt on the full-game possession and expected stats with how much the team sat back in the third. The fourth line could have been better, but I think Parent and Crookshank have brought great elements to that line with their speed and willingness to take anyone on around the net and boards.

Most of all, it’s great that the team did not fold. They practically stopped playing once Markstrom gave up his third goal against on Thursday, but they came right back when Troy Terry cherry picked his goal in the first period. It was like they took it personally. Between that goal and Glass’s insurance goal, the Devils were playing with an obvious purpose. Losing was unacceptable, and it looked like they considered winning mandatory. When the effort is there, it shows.

The Highlights​


Enjoy the full highlights from the win.

Your Thoughts​


What did you think of the win yesterday? Were you surprised by their effort after the early goal against? Were you able to watch? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...gs-i-liked-in-the-devils-3-1-win-over-anaheim
 
Injuries And Inaction; Two Things Can Be True At Once

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There has been a lot of Tom Fitzgerald discourse lately, and rightfully so. Between the New Jersey Devils’ slide down the standings, the general inaction from the front office in addressing this slide, and perhaps most importantly, the blockbuster Quinn Hughes trade to the Minnesota Wild over the weekend, the fanbase has been given a lot of ammo to fire at their general manager in recent times. Criticism of Fitzgerald has been going on for years of course, but it really does seem to have reached a crescendo over the past month or so. Even I, a certified Fitz defender for a long time, find myself rapidly losing hope that Fitzgerald is the man that can guide the Devils back to the promised land.

At this point, many of you are probably sick of talking about Fitzgerald, just like many of you were probably sick of speculating about trading for Quinn Hughes until Saturday (we’ll still have to do that down the road, but unless Hughes pulls a Rantanen, discussion on Hughes’ future can subside until the summer). But I do feel as though it’s important to discuss how, in my opinion, one part of the Devils’ failings this season is absolutely not Fitzgerald’s fault, while another part absolutely is. I don’t want to just complain about Fitzgerald and the front office without trying to be rational and fair about it. So let’s talk about injuries and inaction, the two defining traits of the 2025-26 New Jersey Devils.

Impossible to Overcome​


According to NHL Injury Viz, through December 12, the New Jersey Devils have the third-highest CHIP (Cap Hit of Injured Players) in the league this season. If you’re not familiar with CHIP, it’s basically a way of measuring the impact of injuries a team faces by looking at the cap hits of players lost. After all, raw injury totals don’t exactly tell the whole story because losing someone like Marc McLaughlin is not as impactful as losing someone like Jack Hughes. It’s not a perfect science, as lots of players have bloated AAV’s that they don’t come close to living up to, and plenty of young studs on ELC’s or cheap bridge deals produce at well beyond their cap hit. But it’s a decent method of measuring how impacted by injuries a team is.

All that being said, we do have at least one source that backs up what all our eye tests are telling us: the Devils have been decimated by injuries this season. Comparing New Jersey’s Opening Day lineup (which itself was not at full strength) to the Devils’ lineup from one of their games over the weekend tells the story:

This is the Devils opening night lineup

A red line means the player is currently out. A yellow line means the player was injured at some point

Considering it’s early December this is insane.. pic.twitter.com/JO7ly0vnST

— Devils Red Alert (@DevilsRedAlert) December 13, 2025

I’m sorry, but you cannot blame Tom Fitzgerald for that.

A season ago, a lack of forward depth proved to be a fatal flaw of this team, which you definitely could blame on Fitzgerald. To his credit, he went out and made what I thought were solid depth additions in the offseason. Connor Brown and Evgenii Dadonov were, on paper, the infusion of speed and skill the Devils sorely needed. Convincing Arseni Gritsyuk to finally make the jump to North America has helped this team immensely. Retaining Cody Glass on a reasonable contract was a shrewd piece of business (even if it took a last-minute pivot to get it done). Yes, the Devils still badly needed a true 3C, but considering how reluctant teams have been since the offseason to make trades, I can’t blame Fitzgerald too much for this.

The problem is that everything Fitzgerald has touched has turned into an IR designation. Every single one of those players I just mentioned either spent time on the shelf earlier this season, or is currently out. Not to mention injuries/absences from irreplaceable players like Jack Hughes and Timo Meier. Heck, perhaps we have to include Brett Pesce and Johnny Kovacevic in that irreplaceable category considering how their usual partners, Luke Hughes and Jonas Siegenthaler respectively, have seen their games take big steps back without them (which might be a story for another day). Fitzgerald could have done a better job building depth, but at full strength, this team should be good enough. Add a 3C and a scoring winger at the deadline, and you should have a legit Stanley Cup contender, particularly in a wide open Eastern Conference.

In the end, I have a hard time pinning all the Devils’ struggles this season on Fitzgerald. The injuries this team has suffered would be hilarious if they weren’t so infuriating. The mantras of “injuries aren’t an excuse” and “next man up” are ingrained in every sports fan’s brain, I understand that. But come on, injuries of this magnitude actually are a reasonable excuse. You can’t win games, let alone championships, when half your starting lineup (including most of the top of your roster) is missing significant time. And that’s not Fitzgerald’s fault.

…But The Injury Excuse Only Goes So Far​


However, for as bad as things are in New Jersey, you might have noticed that they were only third in CHIP according to NHL Injury Viz. There are two places where things are worse: Vegas and Florida. Yes, the two most recent Stanley Cup Champions have suffered through an absurd amount of injuries themselves. So for as bad as the Devils’ injuries are, the raft of man games lost has not put them in true outlier territory as of yet.

In fact, injuries appear to be up around the league this season. Back in November, James Mirtle of The Athletic touched on this in the publication’s NHL newsletter, including referencing the very site we used here today as the source for CHIP. Injuries in the NHL are up a lot this season, and while it would be logical to blame the condensed schedule brought about by the Olympic break in Feburary, Mirtle points out that we have not seen a similar spike in injuries in previous Olympic years. The unsatisfying conclusion that Mirtle and NHL Injury Viz come to is that it’s just plain old bad luck that is causing so many injuries across the NHL.

It’s true that the Devils are still near the very top of the league in injuries. But the fact that they aren’t at the very top, coupled with the fact that just about every other team out there is enduring an abnormal amount of injuries, should tell us that the injury excuse only goes so far.

I do want to be fair about this though and point out that it’s not like Vegas and Florida are killing it despite the injuries. Yes, Vegas is currently atop the Pacific Division, but that’s mostly due to an NHL-leading nine loser points. Their 16-6-9 record means they’ve only won one more game than they’ve lost, which is about as middling as you can get. Meanwhile in Florida, the Panthers enter the week out of a playoff spot with a 16-13-2 record. It’s actually kind of funny to think that both the Golden Knights and Panthers are exactly the same with 16 wins in 31 games, more or less on pace with New Jersey’s 18 wins in 33 contests.

The difference, of course, is that those teams have pelts on the wall. The Panthers are back-to-back champs and have won 11 of their last 12 postseason series. The one series they didn’t win in that stretch? That would be the Stanley Cup Final to, you guessed it, the Vegas Golden Knights in June of 2023. So while this season might be disappointing thus far for those teams, they can at least cry themselves to sleep every night while checking out their reflections in their shiny Stanley Cup rings.

But that’s actually a great segue into the part of the Devils’ struggles that you can blame on Fitzgerald. You know what a major factor was in building Stanley Cup winners in Vegas and Florida? Bold roster construction. The same could be said about the Tampa Bay Lightning’s back-to-back Cup winners coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic. Heck, even the Colorado Avalanche, winners in 2021-22, exhibited incredibly savvy roster-building maneuvers even if they weren’t quite as creative as the other Cup winners this decade.

Because I have an obsession with steel-manning the other side of an argument in an effort to be fair, I should point out that a LOT of luck was involved there too, as it is with every champion in every sport. I am convinced that the Panthers do not win a second Cup if they didn’t get the perfect combo of a long-term injury to Matt Tkachuk and a PED suspension to Aaron Ekblad that helped wipe a ton of cap hit off their books. That allowed them to acquire Brad Marchand and Seth Jones and team them up with Tkachuk and Ekblad, who returned right as the playoffs began, effectively allowing Florida to ice a lineup about $15m above the salary cap. Vegas and Tampa Bay had similar situations where they were able to turn bad injury luck (wink wink) during the regular season into good injury luck (even harder wink wink) when the postseason began. Yes there was obviously salary cap circumvention going on there, but for as fake as we all think the cap is, those maneuvers are impossible to pull off without at least some semblance of actual injuries taking place.

But in addition to that, the Cup winners since the pandemic have absolutely shown a willingness to be bold that Fitzgerald (and frankly, most GM’s) hasn’t. Tampa Bay trading for Blake Coleman and Barclay Goodrow. Colorado trading for Nazem Kadri. Vegas manipulating the cap in a million different ways and trading for/signing a superstar every year of their existence. Florida trading two core pieces in Mackenzie Weegar and Johnathan Huberdeau for Tkachuk. There are many, many more bold moves by those clubs I could mention, but they are so numerous that I’d rather not bog down this section forever. But that’s the point: These front offices have no issue cutting against the grain, while Fitzgerald seems stuck in conventional hockey thinking.

Losing The Quinn Hughes Auction​


As mentioned, Quinn Hughes is now a member of the Minnesota Wild (and has now scored more goals with his new team than Luke Glendening and Juho Lammikko have with the Devils combined). Bill Guerin has seemingly decided that enough is enough, pushing all his chips into the middle, and not just with the Hughes trade. Back in 2021, he decided to take his medicine and buy out both Zach Parise and Ryan Suter, whose dead cap hits were absolutely enormous for a couple seasons. But Guerin apparently thought that desperate times called for desperate measures, so he took the bold step to say goodbye to a pair of franchise staples. Then this past offseason, he signed star winger Kirill Kaprizov to the biggest contract in NHL history. You could absolutely argue that this wasn’t him being bold, it was him being stupid and overpaying. I would argue that it was, in fact, bold though. Guerin took bold action with Kaprizov and got his man regardless of the cost. And finally, he traded a bevy of young players and a premium pick to bring an elite defenseman to his team. Guerin might not have built a Stanley Cup champion yet, but in my opinion, he’s running circles around Fitzgerald as far as GM skill goes.

It’s true that New Jersey just didn’t have the assets to compete with what the Wild sent Vancouver, but that’s also part of the problem. While issues with drafting and developing aren’t the focus of today’s piece, it is obviously a huge part of a general manager’s job. Fitzgerald did not set his organization up to acquire a player of Quinn Hughes’ caliber, which might not be indicative of an unwillingness to take bold action, but it’s indicative of another problem.

But at the same time, I can’t help but feel that Fitzgerald still could have made this work. Sure the Devils didn’t have the center that the Canucks coveted (and no, they absolutely should not trade Nico Hischier under any circumstances), but they still could have offered an enticing package. Between Simon Nemec, Anton Silayev, Seamus Casey, and Ethan Edwards, New Jersey has an armada of young blue chip defense prospects that I think Vancouver would’ve been interested in. At forward, basically anyone not named Hischier, Hughes, Bratt, and Meier should’ve been on the table. Yes, that includes Dawson Mercer and Arseni Gritsyuk. That also includes a prospect like Lenni Hämeenaho. Multiple first round picks should have also been on the table. I understand there is still a good chance Hughes signs in New Jersey in two seasons anyway to play with his brothers. But at that point, he will be two years older, is going to have a MUCH higher cap hit, and at that point you’ve wasted another two seasons of the current core’s Cup window. Quinn Hughes is a player you move heaven and earth to acquire. Guerin understood that. Fitzgerald somehow didn’t.

Then there’s the issue of Fitzgerald handing out no-movement clauses like candy:

Tom Fitzgerald’s biggest flaw was on display in his failed pursuit of Quinn Hughes — and I have the numbers to back it up.

Sportsnet reported yesterday that the #NJDevils couldn’t clear the space needed for a Quinn trade because the clauses that Fitzgerald handed out “prevented…

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) December 14, 2025

As you can see from Novozinsky’s tweet (and in his article if you have an NJ.com subscription), Fitzgerald is like Santa Clause Claus when it comes time to sign a contract. To be fair, I don’t know if I’d categorize this as Fitzgerald not being bold enough, but I sure would categorize it as a massive issue on his part. If the Devils could not acquire Hughes in part because Fitzgerald just really needed to give some form of no-movement clauses to players like Johnny Kovacevic and Ondrej Palat, then that is a catastrophic failure and maybe even grounds for job termination. I don’t understand why he feels the need to continue doing this, but regardless of his reasons, it’s come back to haunt him in a big way. Maybe if Fitzgerald was a little more bold in negotiations, he could have convinced these middle-tier players to sign without significant no-move protections. But hey, what do I know?

Final Thoughts​


Whether you agree or disagree with any of the points I’ve made today, I want you to know that I’m trying my very best to be fair here. The vultures are circling around Fitzgerald, with his job security seemingly in the balance more than ever before. I wanted to take a look at a couple of major reasons why this team is struggling lately, and why I think it’s unfair to blame Fitzgerald for one of them, but completely fair to blame him for the other.

In my opinion, the biggest flaw Fitzgerald has as a general manager right now is his unwillingness to think outside the box and/or take bold action. Risk-taking has been rewarded time and again since the pandemic, though as mentioned, it also takes a fair bit of luck. Fitzgerald really, REALLY needs to start going against the crowd and make some moves that most wouldn’t. That of course does not mean he should make moves just for the sake of making moves, they need to be transactions that he truly believes will help the team. And he also really needs to avoid overcorrecting and doing things like, for example, trading three first round picks and Simon Nemec for Steven Stamkos. But I really don’t think it’s too much to ask for Fitzgerald to be smart about this.

At the end of the day, I am willing to give Fitzgerald more time. He’s made some genuinely great moves in his time running the show here, and as I said earlier, I do think he had a strong offseason. But the clock is ticking. To Tom Fitzgerald, I would say please be bolder. And to Devils ownership, I would say please bring someone in who is willing to be bold and creative if Fitzgerald can’t cut it.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...s-and-inaction-two-things-can-be-true-at-once
 
Devils in the Details – 12/15/25: Some Noise Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Plenty of Quinn Hughes-adjacent news to digest:

Breaking: Quinn Hughes has been traded to the Minnesota Wild, sources told @emilymkaplan.

The Canucks will receive Zeev Buium, Marco Rossi, Liam Ohgren and a first-round pick. pic.twitter.com/QOX71ni8qd

— ESPN (@espn) December 13, 2025
The Canucks have known for a while Hughes wasn’t going to extend. Van believed their leverage was highest in Dec-Jan. NJD were given a chance. Other teams in east had a chance. A week ago Guerin engaged and closed the deal.

— Darren Dreger (@DarrenDreger) December 13, 2025
Brisson said he spoke to teams interested in acquiring Hughes.

“The one thing I made certain about, under no circumstances could we guarantee a contract extension with anyone.”

— Iain MacIntyre (@imacSportsnet) December 13, 2025

It’s not ideal!

Tom Fitzgerald’s biggest flaw was on display in his failed pursuit of Quinn Hughes — and I have the numbers to back it up.

Sportsnet reported yesterday that the #NJDevils couldn’t clear the space needed for a Quinn trade because the clauses that Fitzgerald handed out “prevented…

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) December 14, 2025

“Some noise around Tom Fitzgerald last couple days”:

And the #NJDevils, who posted a much, much needed win over Anaheim by playing hard and as a group:

— Despite the W and the prospect of an actual win streak today vs. VAN, hearing some noise around Tom Fitzgerald last couple days. No duh, you might say, team is flailing and they…

— Arthur Staple (@StapeNHL) December 14, 2025

In a Canucks-Devils game with a little less juice on Sunday, Luke Hughes scored for New Jersey but Vancouver held on to claim a 2-1 win. [Devils NHL]

On Saturday, the Devils snapped the home losing streak with a 4-1 win over the Ducks. [Devils NHL]

“Jacob Markstrom’s season has been an unmitigated disaster. There is no other way to put it. The 35-year-old has struggled mightily from the word go, seemingly unable to find any sort of rhythm between the pipes. Consistency wouldn’t be the right word because he is consistent. Consistently bad.” [Infernal Access ($)]

“General manager Tom Fitzgerald has done some good things in his tenure, but from multiple missed draft picks to offseason moves (or lack thereof), the Devils have gone from what should be a perennial contender to a fringe playoff team. As such, Fitzgerald should be feeling the heat. The team’s struggles on the ice are not a result of just one or two recent failures, and he hasn’t shown an ability to fix them.” [Devils on the Rush]

This isn’t fun:

Hockey Links​


“The hockey world is still buzzing after the Minnesota Wild and Vancouver Canucks made one of the biggest blockbusters of the decade in the NHL. Guerin, the Wild’s president of hockey operations and general manager, will never be accused of lacking confidence.” [The Athletic ($)]

A trade:

BIG TRADE ‼️

The @penguins have traded Tristan Jarry and Sam Poulin to the @EdmontonOilers for Stuart Skinner, Brett Kulak, and a 2029 second-round pick!

Powered by @SAP pic.twitter.com/PxbaMbWdOa

— NHL (@NHL) December 12, 2025

“After a tough start to the 2025-26 season, Nashville Predators forward Steven Stamkos is starting to bounce back.” [The Hockey News]

“The NHL is about to get more colorful. The league’s board of governors is eager to have more games in which both home and road teams wear solid-colored jerseys, a trend that has captured the attention of fans and broadcasters this season.” [ESPN]

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ls-in-the-details-12-15-25-some-noise-edition
 
Devils Hold Canucks to 15 Shots, But Lose 2-1 as Offense Cannot Solve Demko

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Sometimes, goalies win the games.

Per Natural Stat Trick, Jacob Markstrom only faced 1.49 expected goals, while Thatcher Demko faced 2.75. Markstrom allowed two, and Demko allowed one. Breaking it down even further, Jacob Markstrom made three saves on four high-danger shots, only facing two medium-danger shots. The goal by Buium, off of Brenden Dillon’s skate, was counted as a low-danger shot. Demko, by comparison, stopped all five high-danger shots on goal by the Devils, while he stopped seven of eight medium-danger shots. Also from Natural Stat Trick, this is the heat map from the game. Look at how weak the Vancouver offense was at even generating shots:

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You cannot make it up, and you cannot make excuses for it. The goaltender is paid to do exactly one thing: stop the puck from going into the net. Jake Allen held up his end of the bargain yesterday, stopping 30 of 31. Markstrom finally had another game where he allowed fewer than three goals, but he did so on an afternoon where he only faced 15 shots. Out of 16 starts, this was just the second time Markstrom allowed under three goals, and he still managed to lower his season save percentage.

Issue One: Rebound Control — Does Rogalski Teach It?​


Let’s take a look at the firs t goal, allowed by Markstrom at the end of the first minute of the game. This goal, scored by Jake DeBrusk, came after Conor Garland called a slashing penalty on Dougie Hamilton. Hamilton came down hard on his stick, yes, but Garland simply raised one arm, stopped playing the puck, and then dropped his stick entirely when he thought the officials were not going to call a penalty. The Devils had touched it two or three times before the arm even went up. I get it when the officials miss a dangerous hitting penalty, like boarding, but rewarding what could have easily been called an embellishment to start the game was rather annoying. That aside, here is the goal against:

I will say that the defensive coverage from Brenden Dillon needs to be a lot better here. Despite being right in the passing lane, Garland is able to beat Dillon easily to set DeBrusk up at the net. DeBrusk turns to the net, bouncing one shot right off of Markstrom and back to himself. But while Thatcher Demko dealt with similar chances on the other end, staying sealed to the post, Markstrom gave up his entire glove side after the initial shot, sliding his left skate ENTIRELY away from the post.

This is not a washed-up, no reaction time type of misplay. This is a Jacob Markstrom currently has zero positioning skills as a goaltender kind of misplay. Look below at where Markstrom starts this goal against, and where he ends up.

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Credit: MSG Networks

Just like it was deflating for Markstrom to give up three poor goals to the Tampa Bay Lightning on Thursday, his first period performance clearly zapped the Devils from even engaging in offensive play until they went on the power play at the end of the period. With a chance to beat up on the worst team in the league, Markstrom could not even stay glued to his post, with Luke Hughes already at the side of the net, ready if DeBrusk tried to take it to his stick side. So, as Markstrom unnecessarily flops around, DeBrusk gets an easy net.

Issue Two: Special Teams​


The second goal against for Markstrom falls more into the unfortunate category, but it is still maddening to watch him let what should be non-threatening shot attempts past him. This is not even a shot by Zeev Buium: it’s a centering pass, that was about to miss its mark and go several feet wide of goal and into the corner. Brenden Dillon CANNOT touch this with his stick, as this might be the worst own goal by a New Jersey Devil (yes, including every one by Damon Severson) that I have seen in the last ten years.

I mean, what is Dillon even thinking, sticking his right arm out like that at the puck? There is nobody behind him. If that puck goes to the boards, Dillon could have been first to the puck along the wall, anyway. And even if he wasn’t first to the puck, anything is better than deflecting the puck from wide back at the net in the defensive zone.

This goal against put the Devils to 0-for-2 on the penalty kill at this point of the game, despite Vancouver having just traded Quinn Hughes, who, as I mentioned this morning, had assisted on half of the Canucks’ power play goals and had points on 12 of 20 team goals this season. It would almost be forgivable if the Devils showed any indication that they were capable of scoring on the power play. They had an extended five-on-three chance in the first period, getting just under three minutes of consecutive power play time. Even in the five-on-three, the Canucks were able to get the puck out of their defensive zone multiple times.

Did I mention that the Canucks had the fourth-worst penalty kill in hockey coming into this game? The Devils had some incredibly weak power plays today, and it feels like Sheldon Keefe and Jeremy Colliton should have to answer why Nico Hischier, Jesper Bratt, Stefan Noesen, Dawson Mercer, Dougie Hamilton, and Luke Hughes are not enough personnel to run a threatening top unit. These are power plays. You do not need an Alex Ovechkin to be effective. Are shots getting through to the net? Is there traffic in front? Can they get to rebounds?

For all of the time the Devils waste passing the puck back to each other at the point, and for all the time they waste in transition dropping passes 30, 40, or 50 feet back, they just give opposing goalies as easy of a two minutes as they can dream of. Everyone knows it. Nico Hischier knows it, just like Brenden Dillon knows the penalty kill is a serious problem right now.

Hischier did not let the PP off the hook either:

"And on the flip side, the power play also got to give us one, at least one or two goals tonight and we maybe win the game.”#NJDevils https://t.co/PBrFuWoUri

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) December 14, 2025

Issue Three: Lots of Control at 5v5, Little Finish​


The top line really controlled play for the New Jersey Devils today at even strength. In 13:58 together, the Bratt-Hischier-Mercer line generated 21 shot attempts and nine shots on goal, while only allowing four attempts and two shots on goal against. Hischier, Mercer, and Bratt finished with team-leading expected goals rates at five-on-five, with Nico at 87.22% and Bratt and 88.24%. Together, they generated 12 of the team’s 16 scoring chances at five-on-five.

In a short spell with Glendening on the ice with Bratt and Mercer, before Nico could get on the ice, Bratt let back a great little drop pass to Luke Hughes, creating the only goal for the Devils.

This rip of a shot by Luke Hughes breathed life into the Devils, but all of that control led to nothing else. Including the time they spent with the empty net, that top line generated over 1.3 expected goals alone at even strength, while the rest of the forwards generated 1.45 expected goals in all situations. On a pure hockey level, I did enjoy watching the way Luke Hughes played with them. When Hughes was on the ice with Hischier (9:58 at five-on-five), The Devils controlled shot attempts at a 17-1 rate, with the Devils outshooting Vancouver 7-0. By comparison, when Hischier played with Hamilton (7:42), the Devils only had two shots on goal.

Luke Hughes was great in the offensive zone today, and he had strong defensive numbers at five-on-five as well, with the Canucks only getting two shots on goal against him. Does he still need to be killing penalties with Brenden Dillon, though? Colton White had an excellent minute and a half on the kill against Anaheim, but got exactly zero seconds of usage there today. Of course, the Hughes-Dillon penalty killing pairing was on the ice for both goals against, though I would not blame Luke for either. 99.9% of the individual blame lies on Dillon and Markstrom, there.

Obviously, players like Nico Hischier and Jesper Bratt have to start scoring goals again. Nico got off to a hot start in the first several games after Jack Hughes got hurt, but he has not had as much success at getting to the front of the net with Jesper Bratt on his line over the last few games. Beyond them, though, the rest of the team needs more consistency. Cody Glass had a great game yesterday, but had the worst run of play of any Devil today. Stefan Noesen scored yesterday, but took a bad penalty today. Juho Lammikko was on point yesterday, but was playing more reserved today.

Final Thoughts​


I reject the notion that unnecessary penalties killed the Devils today. Their penalty kill and Jacob Markstrom put those two on the board for Vancouver. If Markstrom played a positionally sound game, DeBrusk could have shot that puck five times without scoring. If Brenden Dillon played well on the penalty kill today, the pass to DeBrusk never would have made it there — or he at least could have not scored a goal for Zeev Buium with a one-handed deflection.

Penalties happen. Every game, NHL teams should expect to have to kill two, three, or four penalties. It’s not like Jacob Markstrom faced an onslaught of five or six penalty kills. But what’s making the difference here? Look at how the Devils’ goalies and Thatcher Demko have performed on the penalty kill this season:

  • Jake Allen: 4 goals against on 59 shots (.932 SV%)
  • Jacob Markstrom: 18 goals against on 77 shots (.766 SV%)
  • Thatcher Demko: 9 goals against on 49 shots (.816 SV%)

The only reason our penalty kill looked good for the first month and a half of the season, aside from Brett Pesce’s then-availability, was the fact that Jake Allen was making almost every save asked of him. Once Jacob Markstrom started taking over the net, the penalty kill fell apart. So, is it really because of Pesce? It’s not like Allen has fallen victim to countless PPGAs without him in the lineup. On the other side, Demko has not been outstanding for the Canucks, but he’s not at a critically low, unplayable level like Markstrom.

Tom Fitzgerald needs to do something. He should send Calen Addison, his extra defenseman, down if Simon Nemec is not hurt enough to warrant an IR stint. If Nemec is that hurt, what are they waiting for? It is past time to call Nico Daws up and relegate Jacob Markstrom to the press box for the time being. He has an .874 save percentage in 17 appearances and 16 starts. This is a level of bad that Markstrom has not shown since he became a full-time NHLer in 2015, and continual reps is simply not doing anything for him in terms of getting his game back on track.

The team might not be able to send him down to Utica, but Fitzgerald cannot let him continue to start games. He’s going to have to figure it out in practice and off the ice.

Your Thoughts​


What did you think of the game this afternoon? Were you surprised at all by the loss? Why do you think nobody on this team can finish? Is it time to shut Jacob Markstrom down? How long can this team continue to spiral before something happens? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ts-but-lose-2-1-as-offense-cannot-solve-demko
 
New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: Hameenaho Hammers Home Two Goals as Comets Go 1-2 on the Week

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The Comets offense came up too short to earn more than one win this week, despite the continued efforts of winger Lenni Hameenaho.

Hameenaho Remains Hot​


The Comets have been playing some of their best hockey of the season these past few weeks, which, if I’m being honest, isn’t really saying much. But still. On Wednesday night, Utica’s defense led the offense with two goals by Dmitry Osiprov and Seamus Casey’s first tally of the season for a 3-2 win over the Syracuse Crunch. On Friday, despite a 22 save effort by Jakub Malek, the Comets would fall 2-1 to the Hartford Wolf Pack. The bright spot on offense, Lenni Hameenaho. (Get used to reading that).

Hameenaho would stay hot on Saturday with this blast off the rush.

Lenni Hameenaho is starting to cook down in the AHL. Rocket 🚀 of a one-timer for another goal. #NJDevils pic.twitter.com/usSdP0PF0O

— Alex Chauvancy (@AlexC_NJD) December 14, 2025

It would not be enough; however, as the Comets fell to the Springfield Thunderbirds 3-2. Nico Daws earned the loss in this one, stopping 18 of 21. Despite the improved play, Utica remains dead last in the North Division with a 5-14-3-1 record, a full 10 points back from the 6th place Cleveland Monsters. Only the Iowa Wild have scored less goals (47) than the Comets 49 goals on the season. At least, Hameenaho is starting to find some twine.

A Quick Rundown​


Other than Hameenaho, it was a rather boring week for Devils prospects. Chase Cheslock continues to steadily gather points, now 15 in 19 games on the blueline for the University of St. Thomas. Center Samu Salminen has been holding steady at 14 points in 19 games for the University of Denver. Center Dylan Wendt has been stellar for Adirondack of the ECHL with 13 points in 16 games. Center Matyas Melovsky picked up a couple assists on Hameenaho’s goals. Seamus Casey picked up some more points as well, in addition to his goal, and now has 10 points in 16 games on the season.

Lastly, a stick tap for Mikhail Yegorov, who has been holding down the fort in a really bad season for Boston University.

BU finishes with a 348-177-19 record at Boston (Matthews) Arena

Mikhail Yegorov is the final goalie to record a win in the Arena

— BU Hockey Stats (@BUHockeyStats) December 14, 2025

Your Take​


Post your comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/p...s-home-two-goals-as-comets-go-1-2-on-the-week
 
A Breakdown of (Mostly) Every Signing Tom Fitzgerald Has Made Since Becoming Devils General Manager

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I might be a true sicko. The sickest of the sickos, if you will.

A few weeks ago, I decided to do a breakdown and grade every single trade Tom Fitzgerald has made as Devils general manager after I stole the idea from another blogger on the internet.

After well over 9000 words and a fair amount of research, as well as taking the time to collect my thoughts, I was pleased with how it came out. However, there was one line in that article that has gnawed at me since publishing.

“I’ll probably eventually do a similar article in the summer recapping and grading every free agent signing in the Fitzgerald era, but those moves won’t be included here.”

I don’t really consider myself to be obsessive compulsive, but I also have a tendency to not leave well enough alone. Its just my nature. I say I’m going to do something so I need to do it. I’m probably sick enough where I’ll grade every draft pick as well. It’s who I am, so it is what it is.

Consider this a Part 2 to that article, as I will breakdown and grade (mostly) every signing Tom Fitzgerald has made since becoming the Devils general manager on January 12th, 2020. With a few exceptions.

First, I will not be grading signing players to ELC contracts. The reason for that is that I genuinely believe there is no such thing as a bad ELC contract. We’re talking about players on a minimum salary, which is ultimately team-friendly. But there’s too many instances of a player signing an ELC, playing out his ELC in the organization, and then either signing another deal or being traded, and frankly, I think me saying “this deal is fine” for every ELC is boring. So I will not be doing that.

Second, I will not be grading two-way deals for many of the same reasons. I don’t watch AHL Utica or ECHL Adirondack, so it wouldn’t be right or fair for me to analyze those deals either for players who might ultimately be career minor leaguers. James Tracy is better qualified than me to analyze how the prospects are doing anyways, so I’d recommend reading his weekly article for more information on those specific players. It might sound like a bit of a cop out, but you deserve better analysis than me just stating “its fine”.

Lastly, I’m probably going to hand out ‘incomplete’ grades to some of the most recent signings (with a few exceptions). The reason being is that the season is ongoing and players who are off to a poor start have time to change the narrative and play better. Players off to a good start may go cold and struggle for a bit. And knowing this is the 2025-26 New Jersey Devils, there’s a decent chance some of these players are or were hurt.

Once again, our primary source for this exercise will be PuckPedia.

Corey Crawford, 2 years, $3.9M AAV


Date: October 9th, 2020

Tom Fitzgerald had the right idea targeting Corey Crawford to pair with Mackenzie Blackwood. Crawford was a part of two Cup-winning teams in Chicago and he consistently played well through his age 35 season.

Unfortunately, Crawford had second thoughts once training camp began and he decided to call it a career, putting Fitzgerald in a precarious position of having his starting goaltender walk out the door before the season began. The Devils struggled to keep the puck out of the net during the 56-game season and Fitzgerald would be right back in the goaltender business the following summer.

If there was any solace, Crawford’s cap hit was wiped from the books once he retired, but when a player you are counting on retires that close to the season, there’s no way it won’t have a negative impact on the team. I think this was a good contract that probably would’ve aged well had Crawford played it out, but its impossible to say without living in some sort of alternate reality. So I’m just going to grade this one as incomplete.

Grade: Incomplete

Dmitry Kulikov, 1 year, $1.15M AAV​


Date: October 22, 2020

I mentioned what Kulikov brought to the table in the previous article, but one year and just over $1M AAV for a solid bottom-pairing defenseman is a deal that I think Fitzgerald should be looking to do every day and twice on Sunday. Good value, no long-term commitment, and the Devils wound up flipping him to a contender at the deadline for a draft pick, which is exactly what the Devils should have been doing with their cap space every year between 2015-2022.

Grade: A

MacKenzie Blackwood, 3 years, $2.8M AAV​


Date: December 23, 2020

I think when Fitzgerald signed this deal, he was hoping that he was getting a steal for a player the Devils were hoping would be their franchise goaltender for the foreseeable future.

Unfortunately, things didn’t really work out that way.

Blackwood was great through his first two seasons, posting a .916 save percentage over 70 appearances. But after signing this deal and between COVID, injuries, and inconsistencies, his numbers dipped in the first year of that deal and continued to slip in the following years. Blackwood was ultimately traded to the Sharks for a late round draft pick, and has since moved on to Colorado.

I think this is one of those deals where Fitzgerald had the right idea locking up the young franchise goaltender for a few years with the intention of doing a long-term deal once he proved it. The problem is that Mac couldn’t stay on the ice long enough to prove it.

Grade: C

Sami Vatanen, 1 year, $2M AAV​


Date: January 7th, 2021

When I talked about Vatanen previously, I had mentioned how he was traded at the deadline for Janne Kuokkanen, Fredrik Claesson, and the draft pick the Devils used to take Nico Daws.

What I had forgotten in regards to Vatanen was that the Devils brought him back for the 56-game season. And it did not go well.

Vatanen skated in 30 games but struggled to find any offensive touch, registering 2 goals and 4 assists in 30 games. To make matters worse, the Devils were unable to flip him at the trade deadline for anything. I don’t know if this was a situation where Fitzgerald didn’t want to take what was a ‘nothing return’ for a player who had spent most of the last half decade in New Jersey, if the Devils refused to retain salary on his $2M salary, or just how non-existent his market was, but the Devils waived Vatanen on trade deadline day. Dallas wound up claiming him, where he played the final 9 games of his NHL career before continuing his career overseas.

I don’t have an issue with the Devils bringing back a player they were familiar with, but its safe to say Vatanen’s second tour in Jersey wasn’t nearly as good as the first.

Grade: C

Jesper Bratt, 2 years, $2.75M AAV​


Date: January 10th, 2021

Coming off of his ELC and with 100 points over his first 185 NHL contests, Jesper Bratt was due for a raise. The question would be how much, and what would the deal look like.

The answer wound up being a two-year bridge deal that turned out to be an incredible value in the second season of said deal.

Bratt’s scoring rates per game suggested that he was a player who could potentially break out, and while his point total was down in 2021-22, his scoring rate was actually up since he only appeared in 46 games. It wouldn’t be until the following season where his point totals would explode though, and he’s basically been right around a PPG player over the last four full seasons (317 points in 321 games).

Bratt would go through a few more contract negotiations in this timeframe, but its tough to argue that getting a 73 point player for $2.75M in 2021-22 isn’t incredible value. It’s a shame the rest of the team didn’t do their part that season and ultimately wasted that performance.

Grade: A+

Nathan Bastian, 2 years, $825,000 AAV​


Date: June 15th, 2021

Bastian’s first full NHL season was the 56-game campaign in 2020-21 and he showed some promise as a physical fourth line winger with 3 goals and 7 assists in 41 games. The Devils rewarded him with a two year deal.

One month later, he was selected by the Seattle Kraken in their expansion draft.

Leaving Bastian exposed made sense. The way the rules were set up at the time, you could only protect upwards of 7 forwards, and the Devils prioritized players playing higher in the lineup. Someone eligible at forward had to be exposed, and Bastian fit the criteria. It wound up being ‘no harm, no foul’ anyways as Bastian didn’t really fit in with Seattle. The Kraken waived him early in their inaugural season, the Devils claimed him, and he played the next three and a half seasons in New Jersey before departing as a free agent this past summer.

It’s tough to complain about a multi-year deal though for a fourth line grinder that is under $1M AAV. This is what those players typically cost, and with 17 goals and 14 assists in 103 games in Jersey over the life of that deal, the Devils got their money’s worth.

Grade: A

Jonas Siegenthaler, 2 years, $1.125M AAV​


Date: July 9th, 2021

Having just come over at the trade deadline last season and getting a cup of coffee with the Devils, Siegenthaler needed a new deal.

Siegenthaler stepped in as a top pairing defenseman almost immediately, averaging over 20 minutes a night. He’s been a fixture on the penalty kill and it wouldn’t be long before Fitzgerald would move to extend his contract yet again.

Grade: A+

Michael McLeod, 2 years, $975,000 AAV​


Date: July 15th, 2021

Having played out his ELC, McLeod established himself as an NHL regular in the COVID-shortened season. With just 20 points in 85 career games to this point, he didn’t have the counting stats to justify a long-term commitment, but he showed enough promise that he was worth investing in. The Devils gave him 2 years at $975k, and McLeod rewarded that faith in him by continuing to improve in multiple assets of his game. He became a better two-way center, he was trusted to play on the penalty kill, he developed into one of the top faceoff specialists in the league, and he mixed in a little physicality to boot.

With 46 points over the life of that contract, its tough to argue the Devils once again didn’t get appropriate value for McLeod.

Grade: A

Jonathan Bernier, 2 years, $4.125M AAV​


Date: July 28th, 2021

After what happened with Corey Crawford happened the previous season, the Devils needed to go out and get another veteran goaltender to pair with Mackenzie Blackwood.

This is another one of those signings where the process was sound but the results didn’t pan out.

Bernier had a long track record of consistent play in net. More often than not, he would give his team a chance to win. He had also accepted transitioning into more of a platoon role, so he seemed perfectly suited to be paired with a younger up-and-coming goaltender in Blackwood.

Unfortunately, his body quit on him as a lingering hip injury resurfaced during training camp of that season. Bernier tried to battle through it and wound up appearing in 10 games early in the 2021-22 campaign. He eventually had to have surgery on his hip, ending that season. He didn’t play the following season either, and retired after the 2022-23 campaign.

Ultimately, this is a results business, and the reality is that Fitzgerald was now 0-2 with his big free agent goaltender acquisitions. The good news is that the other big signing Fitzgerald made that same day went a lot better than this one.

Grade: C

Dougie Hamilton, 7 years, $9M AAV​


Date: July 28th, 2021

The Devils young core was taking shape. They had plenty of cap space with which to go out and make a big move. And with a top pairing RHD with a big shot sitting out there on the market, they pounced, signing Dougie Hamilton to a 7-year deal worth $9M AAV.

Hamilton has mostly been as advertised, bringing offense to the Devils blueline. He even added a new wrinkle to his game earlier this season playing some of the best defensive hockey he’s played since coming to New Jersey, which is probably a credit to the work Brad Shaw has done with him.

Injuries have slowed Hamilton down throughout his time in New Jersey. A puck to the face and subsequent broken jaw. A torn pec. A few lower body injuries. He’s a player who didn’t have much of an injury history prior to New Jersey, but has only appeared in roughly 70% of his games since signing with the Devils. To make matters worse, his offensive production has dried up in Year 5 of said deal, and for a guy who is primarily being paid for what he does on offense, its not good enough.

With two more years remaining on his deal after this one, it remains to be seen whether or not Dougie finishes this deal in New Jersey or if the Devils consider trading him and freeing up that $9M AAV to be used elsewhere. I didn’t think Dougie had a bad contract but his lack of production has given me pause. Sitting here in Year 5 of that deal, it was reasonable to expect a dropoff at some point. If this is who Dougie is going to be now, it’s a major problem because it’ll be much more difficult to find a trade partner and free up that cap space. The Devils had mostly gotten fair value from Hamilton prior to this year, but I’m concerned about his decline as a player.

Grade: B-

Yegor Sharangovich, 2 years, $2M AAV​


Date: August 5th, 2021

Sharangovich debuted for the Devils during the shortened season and more than held his own, with 16 goals and 14 assists over 54 games. This was good for a 10th place finish in the Calder Trophy voting, not to mention a new contract for the pending RFA.

Sharangovich took another step forward the following season with 46 points in 76 games. His shooting cooled off and he only registered 30 points in 75 games the following season before being traded to the Calgary Flames for Tyler Toffoli. But over the span of two years, the Devils got a player who was roughly a .5 PPG player for a $2M AAV. It’s a solid deal.

Grade: B+

Tomas Tatar, 2 years, $4.5M AAV​


Date: August 5th, 2021

The Devils had more cap space to play with and decided to take a shot on a well-traveled veteran with a reputation for putting the puck in the back of the net. With six 20+ goal seasons on his resume, the Devils brought in Tomas Tatar on a two-year deal.

Year 1 of that deal wasn’t very good, as he managed 15 goals and 15 assists over 76 games. He was much better in the second season, as he saw ice time with Nico Hischier and Dawson Mercer, tallying 20 goals and 28 assists over the 82 game campaign. Tatar departed in free agency before returning a year later.

This deal looked like a potential disaster in Year 1, but the second year was strong enough to salvage it and make it acceptable.

Grade: B-

Janne Kuokkanen, 2 years, $1.825M AAV​


Date: August 9th, 2021

Kuokkanen needed a new deal after the shortened season, and while the numbers on the surface look fair considering his body of work to that point, his struggles in the 2021-22 campaign effectively marked the end of the road for him as an NHL-caliber player.

With Kuokkanen being under the age of 25, Fitzgerald was able to take advantage of the buyout rules one year into the deal and save more money than he typically would against the cap via a buyout. But when we’re talking about buying out a 23 year old player a year into a deal with where the Devils were as an organization at the time, its a strong indicator of how things weren’t working out with the player that they were that eager to move on.

Grade: D

Jimmy Vesey, 1 year, $800,000 AAV​


Date: October 10th, 2021

The Devils brought Jimmy Vesey to training camp on a PTO and he showed enough to earn a 1-year contract.

Vesey was a fixture on the Devils fourth line that season with 8 goals and 7 assists in 68 games. He signed with that team across the river after the season, playing the next 2.5 seasons there before being traded to Colorado. He’s now with Geneve Servette of the Swiss-A league.

Grade: C

Jack Hughes, 8 years, $8M AAV​


Date: November 30th, 2021

After two subpar seasons to begin the former #1 overall pick’s NHL career, Fitzgerald stunned the hockey world by signing Jack Hughes to a max-term deal for $8M AAV.

A lot of the critiques at the time was about how Jack hadn’t “earned it” and how are you going to sign a player for $8M AAV when he hadn’t “shown it” yet.

Safe to say that Tom Fitzgerald knew what he was doing here.

Jack Hughes’s point production exploded the Year 3 of his career, as he’s been a 1.19 PPG player in his last 268 games. The deal has aged gracefully as one of, if not the, best deals in hockey.

The one ’yeah, but’ with Hughes has been health, as that’s really been the only thing that has slowed Hughes down. And it doesn’t help matters that after a few years of suffering notable hockey injuries, he got injured this year in maybe the dumbest setting imaginable…..a freak accident during a team dinner at an upscale steakhouse in Chicago.

Grade: A

Brendan Smith, 2 years, $1.1M AAV​


Date: July 13th, 2022

The Devils needed to add a depth defenseman to fill out their roster, and in free agency 2022, they went with veteran Brendan Smith.

Smith was what he was as a bottom-pairing defenseman. He brought a little physicality and is your classic “doesn’t make mistakes, but also doesn’t do much to contribute offensively” defenseman. He once was famously cited by Lindy Ruff for appearing in the playoff lineup as a “former Ranger”, which is certainly a choice when you had higher upside players like Luke Hughes available.

Overall, he probably wasn’t as bad as people remember, but he wasn’t all that great either. The Devils were also unable to flip him for anything at the deadline as an expiring contract despite his veteran presence, reputation as a player, and low AAV.

Smith has continued to bounce around the league with stops in Dallas and Columbus since departing New Jersey.

Grade: C

Ondrej Palat, 5 years, $6M AAV​


Date: July 13th, 2022

Of course, the Brendan Smith deal wasn’t the only move Fitzgerald made on that day.

After coming up short in his pursuit of Johnny Gaudreau as a UFA, the Devils announced that they had signed the veteran winger Ondrej Palat to a 5-year deal worth $6M a year.

On the surface, there were aspects of the Palat deal that made sense. Palat brought “rings to the room”. He brought a reputation for being a smart two-way player who is capable of playing with star players from his time in Tampa and helping bring the best out of them. He does all of the little things that don’t show up in a box score that helps a team win.

That’s all well and good, but when you’re being paid $6M AAV, you do have to score as well, and for the most part, Palat’s production declined once he got to New Jersey.

Palat was a consistent 40-50 point per season player from his time in Tampa, but his high water mark as a Devil is 31 points in 2023-24. He scored 15 goals last season when he spent a lot of time playing with Jack Hughes and Jesper Bratt, but also, how many goals were left on the ice because Palat couldn’t finish those opportunities? And don’t get me started on the lack of production this year.

The Devils needed to find a way out of this deal over the summer. They didn’t, and they’re paying for it now. I would imagine with a year to go, this is heading towards a buyout at the end of this season. Maybe Fitzgerald can find a trade partner, but I wouldn’t be lining up to take on a soon-to-be 35-year old Palat for $6M AAV if I were one of the other 31 GMs unless it was worth my while.

Grade: D-

Vitek Vanecek, 3 years, $3.4M AAV​


Date: July 19th, 2022

Having acquired Vanecek at the draft, the Devils needed to give the RFA a new contract. They did just that, giving him three years and lower-end starting goaltender money.

The first year of this deal was just fine, with Vanecek being a big part of the reason why the Devils played as well as they did and made it back to the playoffs. But his play dropped off significantly in Year 2 to the point where the Devils traded him in a salary cap dump deal slash change of scenery trade at the trade deadline in Year 2.

The good news is that at least Fitzgerald was able to fix the mistake of giving Vanecek the third year where it was someone else’s problem. The bad news is that its another goaltending move on a growing list of them that hadn’t panned out.

Grade: C-

Jonas Siegenthaler, 5 years, $3.4M AAV​


Date: July 26th, 2022

A year after inking Siegenthaler to a 2-year deal, the Devils liked what they saw enough from him to lock him up to a 5-year team-friendly deal with a $3.4M AAV.

There have been stretches where Siegenthaler has struggled, including this season. Some of it due to injury, and some of it likely due to the ebbs and flows that come with him playing a shutdown defenseman role. But I think Fitzgerald has gotten good value out of this deal up to this point. Maybe if his struggles continue, the Devils look for a way out of it after this season with two years to go on this deal, but they’d probably wind up spending more money trying to replace what he does as a player.

Grade: A

Tyce Thompson, 2 years, $762,500 AAV​


Date: August 2nd, 2022

It’s tough to criticize Fitzgerald for a two-year deal at a low AAV for Thompson. I think Fitzgerald was hoping that Thompson would push for an NHL roster spot, but that never happened.

Grade: B

Jesper Bratt, 1 year, $5.45M AAV​


Date: August 3th, 2022

Having broken out for 73 points in a contract season, it appeared the time is/was now for the Devils to try to lock up Bratt to a long-term deal.

Unfortunately, that deal would have to wait another year.

The Devils and Bratt went to arbitration. Or at least, they were about to, as the two sides agreed to this one-year deal at the literal last second to avoid the messy process of arbitration.

We don’t know what we don’t know, so who knows how amenable Bratt’s camp was to a long-term deal at the price point Fitzgerald wanted at the time. Obviously, the preference would’ve been to do the deal then and there and maybe save a little money, but it wasn’t meant to be. The Devils would get good value on yet another bridge deal in the meantime.

Grade: B+

Miles Wood, 1 year, $3.2M AAV​


Date: August 4th, 2022

Having missed almost the entire previous season, I think it was a fair question whether or not the Devils would even tender Wood a contract. They ultimately did though, giving him a 1-year, $3.2M deal that walked him to free agency.

Wood had a typical Miles Wood season in 2022-23. He would show some offensive touch and chip in his 13 goals and 14 assists. He’d play with a ton of speed. He’s play a physical brand of hockey. And he could commit a ton of penalties…..to the point where then coach Lindy Ruff would scratch him in the playoffs as Wood’s offensive zone penalties were backbreakers. For the most part though, I think Wood did what he was more or less expected to do, making the deal fair.

Grade: B-

Damon Severson, 8 years, $6.25M AAV​


Date: June 8th, 2023

While I graded this trade and gave Fitzgerald a good grade for the creativity shown with this deal, I think it would be unfair for me to grade Fitzgerald for this contract itself. Yes, Fitzgerald is the GM who technically signed him to the deal, but at the end of the day, Columbus negotiated this deal with Severson. The Devils involvement here was to get Severson the 8th year on the deal, and I’m not in the business of grading Jarmo Kekalainen signings.

Grade: None

Jesper Bratt, 8 years, $7.85M AAV​


Date: June 15th, 2023

Having played out a few bridge deals, the time was finally right for Fitzgerald and Bratt’s camp to agree to a long-term deal, cementing his spot as a core piece moving forward.

Bratt has continued to elevate his game, setting new career highs in points in the first two seasons of this deal and setting the Devils franchise record for assists in a season. His counting stats have taken a slight dip this season thanks in part to a shooting slump, but he’s also a good week away from being well over a PPG player again.

Grade: A

Erik Haula, 3 years, $3.15M AAV​


Date: June 23rd, 2023

After a really good first season in New Jersey, Fitzgerald signed Haula to a three-year deal to keep him from hitting UFA.

Haula had a solid second season in New Jersey with 16 goals and 19 assists in 76 games. His production took a bit of a hit in Year 2 of that deal, as Haula likely was playing through some ailment that hampered his production.

Fitzgerald wound up trading Haula with one year left on this deal in a salary-dump trade to Nashville.

Grade: C+

Timo Meier, 8 years, $8.8M AAV


After making the deal to acquire Meier, Fitzgerald needed to find a way to get him signed long-term so this deal wasn’t just an extended rental, and he did just that.

Meier hasn’t quite been “highest paid forward on the team” good, but with 142 points in 200 games as a Devil at the time of this writing, he’s been good. With two 50+ point seasons, he’s been good.

He hasn’t been consistently great, which I think is the hangup here.

I wouldn’t go as far as to call the Meier contract a disaster through two seasons and a quarter of a season. Meier is at least on pace to have his best season as a Devil, and the Devils are going to need it if they’re going to make a run.

Grade: B+

Nathan Bastian, 2 years, $1.35M AAV​


Date: July 1st, 2023

A pending RFA (although it should be noted that the Devils non-tendered both him and the next player on this list prior to market opening), Bastian was due for a slight raise. This deal accomplished that.

Bastian went through two injury-plagued seasons after signing this deal. He had his moments, with his performance in the Stadium Series game standing out, but the Devils decided to move on as Bastian his UFA at the completion of this deal.

Grade: C

Michael McLeod, 1 year, $1.4M AAV​


Date: July 1st, 2023

Another pending RFA, the Devils re-signed McLeod to a one-year deal.

McLeod was on his way to a career-best season in terms of points, two-way play, and winning faceoffs. But his season (and NHL career, effectively) came to an abrupt end due to his alleged involvement in the Hockey Canada scandal. McLeod and his co-defendants were ultimately found not guilty of all charges.

One could say that Fitzgerald should’ve had an idea that McLeod would’ve been dragged into the Hockey Canada mess and he should’ve planned accordingly. I think its tough to say what Fitzgerald should have known. In terms of that, the deal itself is questionable. In terms of hockey value on the ice, it was more than reasonable. I’m grading off of what McLeod did on the ice in that particular season before it came to an end, so my grade will be more favorable as a result.

Grade: B

Tomas Nosek, 1 year, $1M AAV​


Date: July 19th, 2023

After the initial wave of free agency passed, the Devils added some depth by signing the veteran Czech center to a one year deal.

I think this was a decent idea by Fitzgerald given Nosek’s track record. Unfortunately, a foot injury early in the season really hampered his production and lingered all year, making Nosek a mostly ineffective player.

Grade: D+

Kevin Bahl, 2 years, $1.05M AAV​


Date: July 31st, 2023

Having established himself as an NHL regular in the latter half of the 2022-23 season, Kevin Bahl was due a new contract. He got a two-year deal at a hair over $1M AAV.

Bahl was good in his first full NHL season, playing all 82 games. The Devils traded him to Calgary as part of the Jacob Markstrom trade and he’s played in a top pairing role and been extended since.

Grade: A-

Kurtis MacDermid, 3 years, $1.15M AAV​


Date: May 17th, 2024

Trading for MacDermid was one thing. Signing him to a three year deal is another.

Simply put, there was zero reason to sign MacDermid to a three-year extension six weeks before the market opened. It doesn’t matter that the AAV was low enough to be buriable (something the Devils never actually did while he was on the roster). Good general managers should simply never commit that much term to a 14th forward in the lineup. Never mind one who is only good at punching faces and literally nothing else.

The Devils were able to move off of the final 2 years of MacDermid’s deal when they flipped him for Zach MacEwen, but that doesn’t make the deal or the logic behind it any less egregious.

Grade: F-

Nick DeSimone, 1 year, $775K AAV​


Date: June 24th, 2024

The Devils re-signed Nick DeSimone after he played 11 games for them the previous season as a waiver claim. DeSimone wound up never playing for the Devils NHL team under this contract though, as he was claimed off of waivers by the Utah Hockey Club.

Grade: None

Brett Pesce, 6 years, $5.5M AAV​


Date: July 1st, 2024

After letting Damon Severson and Ryan Graves walk out the door the year prior, the Devils struggled defensively the following season. They needed to add some quality defensive defensemen to help insulate their younger defensemen in Luke Hughes and Simon Nemec.

Enter Brett Pesce.

Pesce, a Tarrytown New York native, was looking for a change of scenery after 9 good seasons in Carolina. The Devils traded away John Marino to open up the cap space to sign Pesce, and its tough to say that Pesce hasn’t been what the Devils wanted.

Pesce has eaten a ton of minutes playing in a top pairing role with Luke Hughes, elevating both of their games in the process. He’s also eaten a lot of pucks, as a puck to the hand has knocked Pesce out of the lineup in Year 2 of that deal. He’s already missed over a month, although hopefully he’ll be back in the not too distant future.

Grade: A-

Brenden Dillon, 3 years, $4M AAV​


Date: July 1st, 2024

The Devils doubled down on their defensive investment, inking Dillon to a three-year deal.

Dillon struggled a bit in Year 1 but has looked much better in Year 2. I don’t know how much of that might be health related….Dillon did play all 82 last season, but most players who even do that aren’t 100%. Perhaps some of it is tied with Brad Shaw’s tutelage, as Dougie Hamilton has also looked better defensively this season. Regardless, Dillon has continued to be a physical presence on the Devils blueline, recently playing his 1,000th NHL game.

Grade: B

Stefan Noesen, 3 years, $2.75M AAV​


Date: July 1st, 2024

The Devils reunited with Stefan Noesen on a three-year pact and right out of the gates, this deal looked like a steal.

Noesen set career highs in goals and points, scoring 11 power play goals while bringing a physical presence to the bottom six of the lineup.

Unfortunately, a groin injury hampered Noesen in the second half of the season. Noesen opted for rehab instead of surgery initially but ultimately went under the knife sometime over the summer, delaying his start to this season.

Noesen has gotten off to a slow start this year, and he hasn’t had the power play time he had last year to boost his counting stats. I would expect him to heat up at some point but it is something that needs to be noted.

Grade: B

Tomas Tatar, 1 year, $1.8M AAV​


Date: July 2nd, 2024

After a down year split between Seattle and Colorado, the Devils brought back Tomas Tatar hoping to recapture of of the magic he had with the team in 2022-23. Unfortunately, that never happened.

Tatar’s ice time continued to decline as he struggled to score, but his game isn’t really suited for a 4th line role, so he was stuck in that awkward spot where he’s not scoring enough to be higher in the lineup but doesn’t do enough of the little things further down in the lineup to stay. It wound up being Tatar’s final NHL season for now as the veteran decided to continue his career overseas.

At $1.8M AAV, even for just the one year, it was an overpay for the level of production the Devils got.

Grade: F

Nico Daws, 2 years, $812,500 AAV​


Date: July 30th, 2024

With Jacob Markstrom and Jake Allen in place at the NHL level, the Devils chose Nico Daws over Akira Schmid as the organizational #3 netminder, a role he has served in the last season and a quarter.

Daws has looked good in the limited NHL opportunities he has received since then. He seems unlikely to get more opportunities at the NHL level anytime soon though barring injuries or ineffectiveness of one of the players in front of him on the depth chart. More on that in a bit.

Grade: B

Dawson Mercer, 3 years, $4M AAV​


Date: September 20th, 2024

Coming off of his ELC, Mercer was due a new contract. The Devils went with a three year deal to cover his first three seasons of RFA status.

Mercer didn’t have a great first season as he managed 19 goals and 17 assists in the 2024-25 season. He’s gotten off to a hot start this season though.

Mercer has had to slide back to center with the Devils dealing with injuries to Cody Glass and Jack Hughes, and he hasn’t been quite as good centering a line as he’s been playing the wingman with Nico Hischier. He’s also cooled off a bit since the hot start to the season, which I guess is to be expected.

Grade: B+

Johnathan Kovacevic, 5 years, $4M AAV​


Date: March 7th, 2025

This is one of those deals that looks fine on the surface, but the timing of it was questionable at best.

Kovacevic came over to the Devils prior to the 2024-25 season and was expected to be the extra defenseman, but he won a spot in the lineup outright out of training camp. He got off to a great start on a pairing with Jonas Siegenthaler and looked so good, the Devils wanted to sign him to a contract extension. So they did that in the days leading up to the trade deadline.

Extending Kovacevic, both in terms of the timing and the deal itself, raised eyebrows. Putting the salary cap aside for a moment, the Devils already had Hamilton and Pesce signed long-term. They already had the top prospect in Simon Nemec trying to get playing time at the NHL level. They already had another RHD prospect in Seamus Casey who got some NHL time that season. They didn’t sign Kovacevic for $4M to be a healthy scratch, so did this mean they were trying to flip a defenseman? We never really got answers to this question, as the Devils didn’t trade any of their other RHD at the deadline in 2025. They still haven’t traded them to this day.

To make matters worse, Kovacevic suffered a serious lower body injury in the playoff series loss to Carolina. He has yet to make his debut for the Devils this season and likely won’t do so until some time after the New Year, which is a deliberately vague timeline.

Between the injury and Nemec’s growth, its fair to question whether or not the Kovacevic extension was even necessary. I would guess that it was in that the Devils clearly like the player. Kovacevic’s deal was in line with the UFA defenseman market this past summer so its tough to call it an overpay. If anything, Fitzgerald probably saved a couple bucks doing it when they did.

That said, he has yet to play a game under this new deal and we have no idea how Kovacevic will look when he does play. Even when he does return, it doesn’t necessarily mean he will ‘look right’ physically as he works himself back into game shape. I would grade this deal as an ‘incomplete’ for now, but there’s a wide range of potential outcomes depending upon how he looks when he eventually does return.

Grade: Incomplete

Juho Lammikko, 1 year, $800,000 AAV​

Connor Brown, 3 years, $4M AAV​

Dennis Cholowski, 1 year, $775,000 AAV​

Evgenii Dadonov, 1 year, $1M AAV​

Cody Glass, 2 years, $2.5M AAV​

Luke Glendening, 1 year, $775,000 AAV​


I lump all of these deals together because I’m going to grade them all as incomplete, but I did want to talk about each one.

Lammikko returned to the NHL this season after a three-year stint at Zurich SC of the Swiss-A league. He’s mostly served as the extra forward, only playing out of necessity due to the amount of injuries the Devils have had, and hasn’t done much of note in the games he has played in.

Brown was the Devils big UFA signing this past summer. He got off to a nice start before missing 7 games with an injury, but is one of the lone bright spots in the bottom six this season.

The Devils saw something in Dennis Cholowski to bring him back as the 7th defenseman this season. I’m not sure exactly what they see in him.

Dadonov got injured on Opening Night, missed the next 18 games, and returned to the lineup and has since gone back on the shelf with another injury.

Glass has a handful of goals in the early portion of the season, but also missed two separate stretches this season due to injury. He’s back now and has been mostly fine as a bottom six center.

Luke Glendening was in camp on a PTO and impressed enough to earn a contract. He’s been about what you would expect from a player with his track record. A solid fourth line center who kills penalties and wins faceoffs.

I think between the fact that we’re only a third of the way through the season, and most of these players have missed significant time with injuries, it would only be fair to grade them as incomplete. Brown, Glass, and Glendening are trending towards being positive signings, while Lammikko and Cholowski are probably more on the negative side since they haven’t been very good. Dadonov is probably more on the negative side as well although he simply hasn’t played enough to make a definitive statement one way or another. Even so, most of these deals are short-term and if they don’t work out, the Devils will simply move on to the next wave of bargain bin UFA signings next summer.

Grade: Incomplete

Jake Allen, 5 years, $1.8M AAV​


Date: July 1st, 2025

Considering Allen was slated to be the top UFA goaltender in a thin market, I’m still stunned that Fitzgerald convinced him to essentially sign a legacy contract.

Allen has certainly had a few stinkers, but he’s been mostly fine in net for the Devils in Year 1 of said deal. It goes without saying he’s clearly been the better of the two goaltenders, and probably should be playing something closer to 50 percent of the starts as long as Markstrom struggles. But it’s also year 1 of a 5-year deal for a goaltender who is 35 years old.

The best way of looking at this deal is probably similarly to how I looked at it when it was announced. Go year to year and see where your goaltending is. Obviously, you hope that Allen is still effective over the life of that deal, and if he’s not, you should be able to find a way out of it. Some might argue that this early into a multi-year deal that looking for an escape hatch isn’t a great way of looking at a contract but the AAV is low enough where it shouldn’t be an issue.

Grade: B

Luke Hughes, 7 years, $9M AAV​


Date: October 1st, 2025

Coming off of his ELC, the Devils signed the youngest Hughes brother to a 7-year deal worth $9M AAV. They’re paying him to be a top-pairing defenseman, and due to circumstances, he has certainly played as a top-pairing defenseman this season, averaging over 23 minutes a night.

Luke’s production hasn’t quite taken that next step like older brother Quinn’s had in his age 22 season. Luke’s point totals are roughly on pace to match what he did the previous two seasons, while Quinn starting improving year to year to the point where he’s a perennial Norris trophy contender. Luke isn’t quite at that level yet. But he has also been asked to do a lot for this Devils team, including playing off-hand for a stretch when both Hamilton and Pesce were out.

There are two areas where I’d like to see Luke improve for him to take that next step. First, I do think his shot needs improvement. It’s not a heavy shot. Too many of these shot attempts are being blocked in front and anything that is getting through is an easy save for the goaltender, which suggests to me that he’s telestrating his shot too much and making it too easy on the opposition. I’d like to see a few more wrinkles added in this area in future years for him to truly become elite.

Secondly, Luke does need to improve his decision making with the puck. I acknowledge that when the puck is on your stick as much as it is with him, and you play as many minutes a night as he is, turnovers come with the territory. Hughes ranks 6th among NHL defensemen in giveaways as of this writing. It’s a delicate balance because you don’t want to take offensive creativity out of his game but you do need to be smarter with the puck, especially when the team has struggled to keep the puck out of the net as much as they have.

If you asked me today if Luke is playing like a $9M AAV defenseman, I’d say no. But I do think he’s on track to get there and it would be silly to say that a 22-year old defenseman who has yet to cross the 200 NHL game threshold is what he is always going to be moving forward. If four years from now, Luke hasn’t improved any more than he has and this is what he is, I think that would be a disappointment given his pedigree and bloodlines. Even so, we’re still talking about a top-pairing defenseman playing tough minutes and contributing 45-50 points a season, which isn’t nothing. Maybe he’s not a $9M AAV defenseman, but its closer to $7M AAV in that case. Considering how much the cap is going up, and considering the player itself, I think the deal is still worth the gamble.

Grade: B

Jacob Markstrom, 2 years, $6M AAV​


Date: October 31st, 2025

Most of the deals that Fitzgerald has signed in the last few months are still at the point where its too soon to judge. I think there are two exceptions to that. One of them being the Luke Hughes deal I just wrote about.

The other being Jacob Markstrom.

Markstrom was slated to hit UFA after this upcoming season, but the Devils simply decided that they had to have him going forward. Never mind the fact that he’s going to be 36 years old when the new deal starts. Never mind the fact that Markstrom already missed time this season due to injury. Never mind the fact that Markstrom had yet to actually play well this season when he put pen to paper on the contract.

The timing of the Markstrom contract talks never made any sense. This was a correct first-guess on my part and I know most of you felt the same way.

There was zero reason for the Devils to sign Markstrom when they did, other than “we know there’s going to be nothing on the market next summer and this option is better than those options”. That may or may not be true, but the fact that Markstrom has looked as bad as he has in the early portion of the season just underscores the fact that they didn’t need to do this now. The Devils goaltending duo for the foreseeable future is going to be Markstrom and Allen, and while this deal does set up for Mikhail Yegorov to eventually take over down the road, there are other ways the Devils could’ve bridged that gap that didn’t involve haphazardly giving Markstrom $6M AAV.

I’m not saying that Tom Fitzgerald should be fired for giving Markstrom this deal. But I am going to say that this has the potential to end very poorly for him if Markstrom doesn’t improve. In fairness, Markstrom has had some games this season where he has looked good, but those have been few and far between. If Markstrom doesn’t show that he’s at least playable on a consistent basis, this is the type of self-inflicted mistake that can and should cost the GM who gave him that deal his job. This is a “fireable offense” type of signing that, and I can not stress this enough, DID NOT NEED TO HAPPEN WHEN IT DID.

The good news is that there is time for the narrative to change. But Markstrom needs to show it. If he doesn’t, it’s on the GM as much as it’s on the player because this is his guy and to extend him when they did was totally unnecessary.

Grade: F

Final Thoughts​


I think if one were to look at each signing on an individual basis and not really consider the context of how it fits in the salary cap, one could conclude there’s probably been more good than bad in the Fitzgerald regime.

There have been some excellent values, with Jack Hughes, Jesper Bratt, and Jonas Siegenthaler coming to mind. The Devils have also, in general, done a good job of correctly identifying which young players are worth investing in going forward and which ones weren’t. There’s been a couple minor whiffs along the way, but nothing that really made a huge impact going forward.

The problem is that this is a salary cap league, and when Fitzgerald has swung big and missed, it’s been bad.

There have been a lot of signings as the Devils have pushed forward from ‘rebuilding’ to ‘win now’ mode. Fitzgerald has made use of the ample cap space he inherited, but what has he actually done with it? The Devils have a couple playoff appearances to show for it, but I wouldn’t say they’re close to competing for a championship right now, let alone winning one. They’re capped out, but they’re stuck in the mushy middle of the standings with no obvious path to improvement. This is a problem created by Fitzgerald.

The Devils have a few problematic contracts on their books as we speak. Palat is on the books for one more season after this one at $6M AAV. Hamilton has two years to go at $9M AAV. We have no idea what Kovacevic will even look like once he finally returns, and he has four more years at $4M AAV remaining after this season. The Devils also threw away future flexibility by giving their starting goaltender who can’t make a save $6M AAV for two more seasons. This last point speaks to a larger issue he’s had where fixing the goaltending has become a perennial theme, as he inherited this issue on Day 1 of his run and it’s arguably still one today. Considering the Devils have ALSO invested draft capital into the goaltending position almost every year of the last decade, it’s inexcusable. Where are the results?

Now, the cap situation isn’t THAT dire where it should prevent them from figuring out what the next contracts for guys like Simon Nemec and Arseny Gritsyuk are, but it does make one question how are you fixing the obvious holes the roster still has. Where are you finding another center, or a scoring winger? You probably aren’t unless you’re getting creative.

Elliotte Friedman alluded to “several no-trade or modified no-trade clauses” being the holdup for the Devils getting business done, and it’s certainly plausible that that cost them an opportunity to land Quinn Hughes this past week. Fitzgerald has been generous with handing out no-trade protection in free agency. He’s also far from the only general manager who is pretty liberal when it comes to handing out no-trade protection. But when we’re getting to the point where its preventing the Devils from getting business done, it’s an issue. It’s also an issue that the Devils haven’t really gotten any sweetheart deals by UFAs (with the possible exception of Jake Allen). They’ve mostly paid market value for the players they have.

It’s also worth keeping in mind that the Devils still have to become salary cap compliant at some point later this season once everyone is healthy…..pause to laugh at the idea that they’ll ever all be healthy at the same time. But they are planning on getting Jack Hughes, Brett Pesce, Simon Nemec, Johnathan Kovacevic, Arseni Gritsyuk, Evgenii Dadonov, and Zack MacEwen back at some point later this season. Unless the plan is to live in LTIR all season, there’s not a lot of flexibility to do much of anything right now.

Of course, it shouldn’t actually be this difficult to move out bad money. It’s not difficult to pull up PuckPedia and see which teams have space, which ones do not, and figure out where a deal can be made. This is a league where general managers find a way out of problematic contracts all the time, and to quote “The Million Dollar Man” Ted DiBiase, “Everyone’s got a price”. It would require Fitzgerald to be more ruthless and cutthroat than he has been as the GM of this team, but the idea that it can’t be done is simply a fallacy.

When you’re paying players upwards of $4M a year or more and you’re giving them significant term though, you need to be right on those deals. If you’re wrong, its much harder to find a way out via a trade. At the end of the day, there’s probably more good than bad with Fitzgerald’s history, but the bad has been egregiously bad, it’s impacting the team in a significant manner right now, and is going to continue having an impact on the current team for quite some time until they do something to address it.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...as-made-since-becoming-devils-general-manager
 
Jake Allen Steals The Show As New Jersey Devils Win 2-1 In Shootout Over Vegas Golden Knights

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First Period​


By FAR the most notable thing about the first period is that it marked the return of Brett Pesce. Pesce was off to a really good start this season, picking up right where he left off with Luke Hughes to form an excellent defense pair. But Pesce was injured in the October 26 game against the Colorado Avalanche and had been out with an apparent hand injury since. What a welcome sight it was to see #22 out on the ice once more.

Aside from Pesce’s return, the first period was notable for actually being a pretty decent 20 minutes for the Devils. They did get outshot 10-8, but New Jersey generated their fair share of quality chances at 5-on-5. Jonas Siegenthaler taking a penalty before the game was one minute old really didn’t help, but after a solid kill, the Devils held the better of the play for most of the opening frame.

The goaltenders did a good job to keep things scoreless through the first. Jake Allen had to make a terrific save on a two-on-one to keep the Knights off the board. On the other side, former guest of the government Carter Hart made a nice save on Ondrej Palat, though honestly I put that more on Palat firing a shot directly into Hart than Hart making a good save. Nevertheless, both goalies were on their game in the first.

Vegas had a bit of a flurry late in the opening frame, but New Jersey survived that to get to the locker room scoreless.

Second Period​


The Golden Knights were on the front foot early in the middle frame. The Hischier line got pinned in the zone on a marathon shift, and while Vegas got a couple good looks on the shift, the New Jersey defense weathered the storm and eventually got a clear. Later on the Hischier line had a shift like that of their own, generating some high quality looks for what seemed like forever, though they couldn’t find the back of the net.

But you know who could find the back of the net? Connor Brown. He combined with Cody Glass on an extremely effective forecheck that saw Brown steal the puck near the corner, charge toward the net all alone, and make a sick move to hook a shot around Hart and in:


It was a gorgeous goal, one New Jersey sorely needed.

The game calmed down a little bit from there, but with a little less than five minutes to go, Hischier drew a tripping penalty on Mitch Marner to send the Devils to the power play. It was actually a pretty lousy man-advantage, with Vegas producing a couple shorthanded looks early in the 5-on-4. The second unit put some decent looks on net, but with one second to go in the power play, Paul Cotter was called for retaliating against Zach Whitecloud to send the Devils to the kill. What was he retaliating for? Probably the two blatant crosschecks (one by Whitecloud, one by Noah Hanafin) that went bewilderingly uncalled by the officials. Hey, the game isn’t going to manage itself!

Vegas held the zone for basically the entire power play, but couldn’t really crack New Jersey’s kill. And when they did manage to get to the inside, Allen was there to make the stop. The Devils successfully killed the call, as Cotter jumped back on with about a minute left in the middle frame. Vegas continued to hold the zone until the period ended, but couldn’t get any good looks at the net. New Jersey exited the second period still holding their 1-0 lead.

Third Period​


The third period got off to a bit of a choppy start, but eventually Vegas started to take control. New Jersey did a decent job keeping them to the outside for the most part, though at one point Brenden Saad found himself all alone right in front of the net. Fortunately he shot the puck right into Allen, who poke checked the rebound out of harm’s way. Aside from that, New Jersey held it together well, and eventually the Devils put together some offense themselves.

As the period wore on, the Devils started to play the “Get it deep and survive the next shift” game. Which is a dangerous game to play considering how much zone time you concede when you do that, but through the first half of the period it was working. The shot totals and Expected Goals were starting to really tilt Vegas’ way by the 10-minute mark, but the Devils maintained solid defensive structure and held their 1-0 edge as the game was ticking away.

From about the 10-minute mark to the 6-minute mark, the Devils actually started to push for offense again. The Hischier line generated some decent zone time, as did the Glass line. But they couldn’t find the insurance marker. Then with about five minutes left to go, Juho Lammikko got tagged for a tripping call to send the Devils to a crucial late penalty kill. And wouldn’t you know it, about 50 seconds into the kill, Pavel Dorofeyev one-timed a blast home to finally crack Allen and tie the game at 1-1 with about four minutes left in regulation.

New Jersey almost responded immediately, as Palat created a turnover in Vegas’ zone and backhanded a pass to a cutting Glass all alone. Glass skated down the slot and fired a shot that Hart swallowed up though, so the game remained tied. This was followed up by the Hischier line creating a ton of dangerous looks on the next shift, but they couldn’t find the go-ahead goal either.

With about two minutes left, Sheldon Keefe did something I really didn’t like: He send the fourth line out for a shift. Considering it was their penalty that allowed Vegas to tie the game, and they’re, you know, the fourth line, I thought this was a very avoidable mistake. Thankfully it didn’t burn the Devils, as they settled their shift with no harm done.

New Jersey iced the puck twice in the final 30 seconds of the period, but thankfully this didn’t hurt the Devils either, as the frame ended 1-1 to send this game to overtime. Because when a game was scheduled for 10pm and didn’t start until about 10:22pm anyway, why wouldn’t we have overtime?

Overtime​


The Golden Knights controlled the opening faceoff and the first 90ish seconds of possession, but they couldn’t do anything with all the possession time. New Jersey took the puck after that and did basically the same: Lots of possession but no chances. Tomas Hertl eventually led a 2-on-1 down the ice, but Allen made the stop for the first big opportunity of overtime.

Then with 1:53 left, Dawson Mercer got called for hooking Mark Stone to send the Devils to the penalty kill once more. On the 4-on-3, the Knights hit three posts and generally looked pretty dangerous while holding possession the entire time, but the Devils somehow held to send the contest to a shootout. Because again, why not at this point?

Shootout​


Paul Cotter was stopped on a deke.

Dorofeyev was saved on a wrister.

Bratt scored on an amazing deke and backhander!

Stone was saved on a wrister. Both him and Dorofeyev tried to go glove side on Allen but Allen snatched the shot each time.

Hamilton was stopped on a wrister.

Marner tried to deke around Allen, but Allen poke-checked it off his stick. In the process, the puck ricocheted off Marner’s skate and into the net. But the “goal” was immediately waved off for being struck twice, which is illegal in the shootout.

The Devils win!

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

Very Quick Hits​


Considering this game started at approximately 4:38am and went all the way to a shootout, I just do not have much more analysis in me at this point. Forgive me, I’m only human.

We’ll do this very quickly then:

  • I cannot begin to tell you just how happy I was to see Pesce back in the lineup. He paired up with Hughes once again and I thought he looked like he didn’t miss a beat. His underlying numbers weren’t amazing at around 47% xGF% at 5-on-5, but I still thought it was a quality return to action for Pesce. Hopefully he continues to get back up to speed in a hurry.
  • Jake Allen, take a bow. He allowed the late equalizer, but he was otherwise brilliant. He made 36 saves on 37 shots, and according to Natural Stat Trick, he saved a remarkable 3.75 Goals Above Expected.
  • Jesper Bratt, take a bow as well. His filthy move in the shootout made the difference.
  • Nico Hischier, you should take a bow as well. He was absolutely all over the ice tonight, generating high-quality chance after high-quality chance. He didn’t score this evening, but he certainly deserved to. His 54.77 xGF% at 5-on-5 looks good enough, but considering he was matched up against the Mark Stone-Mitch Marner line, it was even more impressive than it looks. Hischier was a dynamo tonight.
  • I really do feel like Cody Glass and Connor Brown have some serious chemistry. Once Arseni Gritsyuk comes back, I think those three can really be an excellent third line.

Next Time Out​


The Devils are back at it on Friday when they play the Mammoth in Utah. Puck drop is scheduled for 9:00pm.

Your Take​


What did you make of tonight’s game? And what do you expect next time out? And what did you think of Brett Pesce in his return? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...win-2-1-in-shootout-over-vegas-golden-knights
 
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