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Former Devils Defenseman Signs With New Team

Former Devils Defenseman Signs With New Team

Yahoo2 days ago
A former New Jersey Devils third-round pick has taken his game overseas. Defenseman Reilly Walsh has signed overseas, per his agent Matt Keator. The 26-year-old has signed a contract with the Barys Astana of the KHL after five seasons in the American Hockey League (AHL). He most recently played for the Ontario Reign, where he collected 32 points in 70 games.
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Will Artemi Panarin sign a contract extension? Burning Rangers questions for 2025-26
Will Artemi Panarin sign a contract extension? Burning Rangers questions for 2025-26

New York Times

time29 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Will Artemi Panarin sign a contract extension? Burning Rangers questions for 2025-26

From a hockey perspective, the New York Rangers' signing of Artemi Panarin as a free agent in July 2019 has gone about as well as they could have hoped. He's led New York in scoring each of his six seasons and ranks first in franchise history in points per game (1.28). The team has made the Eastern Conference final twice with him as its top offensive producer. He's twice finished in the top five in Hart Trophy voting for the league's most valuable player. Advertisement Now only one year remains on the seven-year deal, worth $11.6 million in average annual value, that brought him to New York. This leaves the Rangers at a massive crossroads. What comes next with Panarin is perhaps the team's biggest question entering the 2025-26 season. 'He's not going to sign if he's not paid as a premier player,' one Western Conference executive said. 'That's what they're going to have to decide.' Of course, there is more to the Panarin decision than just hockey. In April, The Athletic reported that Panarin and Madison Square Garden paid financial settlements to a Rangers employee last year after she alleged that Panarin sexually assaulted her in December 2023. The Rangers did not publicly discipline Panarin, who played in every game in 2023-24 and missed only two games in 2024-25, both because of an upper-body injury. Panarin is coming off a 37-goal, 89-point season, the second-most goals of any season in his career, but it's his lowest rate of point production since coming to New York. 'His top game is fantastic,' said an NHL scout based in the East. 'But the consistency, of course, wasn't there, along with the rest of the team, too. Definitely doesn't all fall on him. I haven't seen much of a regression in terms of his overall talent.' Evolving-Hockey projects Panarin's next contract to come in at three years with a $10.1 million average salary. That lines up with Panarin's projected market value for the coming years, according to colleague Dom Luszczyszyn's model. New York has $29.6 million of projected cap space in the 2026 summer, according to PuckPedia. If Panarin re-signs with the Rangers, his cap hit will eat into that, as will the next contracts for multiple restricted free agents, namely Braden Schneider. There is a loaded class of pending unrestricted free agents in 2026, headlined by Connor McDavid, Jack Eichel and Kirill Kaprizov. Still, it's also a real possibility that none of those stars reach the open market. If those players start signing extensions, Panarin's camp could potentially gain instant bargaining leverage. Advertisement Though a dominant offensive player in the regular season, Panarin's production has not always translated to the playoffs. In 73 postseason games, he has 21 goals and 61 points — a paltry 24-goal, 69-point pace for a full season, well below his career average of 33 goals and 95 points. 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2025 NFL preseason: How to watch the New England Patriots vs. New York Giants game tonight
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Yahoo

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2025 NFL preseason: How to watch the New England Patriots vs. New York Giants game tonight

It seems like the New York Giants are committed to starting veteran Russell Wilson when the season kicks off in September, but it also seems like they're willing to take a chance on rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart, as evidenced by the strategic use of Dart during their first two preseason games. With one more preseason game this week against the New England Patriots, Dart will have another chance to prove his value to the team and determine his spot on the depth chart. Both the Giants and Pats are 2-0 heading into week 3 of the preseason, they meet on Thursday at Met Life Stadium for one last exhibition game before the season begins. Here's all the info you need about tonight's Patriots vs. Giants game, plus the dates and times for the rest of the NFL's preseason games. How to watch the Giants vs. Patriots preseason game: Date: Thursday, August 21 Time: 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT Game: Giants vs. Patriots TV channel: Local stations Streaming: Prime Video Giants vs. Patriots game time: The New York Giants play the New England Patriots on Thursday, August 21 at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT. What channel is the Patriots vs. Giants game on? The game will stream on Prime Video and airs locally on NBC4 in New York and WCVB 5 in Boston. The game will be available to stream after the fact on NFL+. How to watch the Giants vs. Patriots game: 2025 NFL preseason schedule: All times Eastern Week 3 Thursday, August 21 Pittsburgh Steelers at Carolina Panthers, 7:00 England Patriots at N.Y. Giants, 8:00 p.m. (Prime Video) Friday, August 22 Philadelphia Eagles at N.Y. Jets, 7:30 Hawks at Dallas Cowboys, 8:00 Vikings at Tennessee Titans, 8:00 p.m. (CBS)Chicago Bears at Kansas City Chiefs, 8:20 p.m. Saturday, August 23 Baltimore Ravens at Washington Commanders, noonIndianapolis Colts at Cincinnati Bengals, 1:00 p.m.L.A. Rams at Cleveland Browns, 1:00 Texans at Detroit Lions, 1:00 Broncos at New Orleans Saints, 1:00 Seahawks at Green Bay Packers, 4:00 Jaguars at Miami Dolphins, 7:00 Bills at Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 7:30 p.m.L.A. Chargers at San Francisco 49ers, 8:30 Vegas Raiders at Arizona Cardinals, 10:00 p.m. How to watch the 2025 NFL preseason: Many NFL preseason games are broadcast on local channels, so if you're looking to catch an in-market game, it may be as simple as turning on your TV (or setting up a digital TV antenna). If you want to watch out-of-market games, a $7/month subscription to NFL+ will get you access to NFL Network, which will have every out-of-market game in the preseason. The downside of NFL+? When it comes to the regular season, it's a much less helpful option because there are far fewer NFL Network games during the regular season. More ways to watch NFL games in 2025:

NHL cap accrual explained, Quinn Hughes' future and more: Mirtle mailbag, part 2
NHL cap accrual explained, Quinn Hughes' future and more: Mirtle mailbag, part 2

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

NHL cap accrual explained, Quinn Hughes' future and more: Mirtle mailbag, part 2

We're back. Part 1 of the summer NHL mailbag came out last week. Now, let's kick off Part 2 as we head into late August with your queries on how salary cap space works for teams that have extra room, the Philadelphia Flyers' rebuild, Quinn Hughes' future and the Florida Panthers' attempts at a threepeat. Do the Flyers make the playoffs, and more importantly, are they finally heading in the right direction? — Brian S. To recap: Philadelphia finished in 29th last season with only 76 points. Offensively, the Flyers were okay, with 2.83 goals per game, but they really got filled in the other way, allowing a whopping 3.45 goals per game, fifth-worst in the league. Bringing in Rick Tocchet behind the bench should help there, and they have some young players I really like. Cam York and Ty Foerster are really solid, developing talents that don't get a lot of attention outside the market. Emil Andrae impressed me in the games he played. I liked the low-risk flier (pun intended) they took on Trevor Zegras, too. Advertisement Nevertheless, this is still a team that's thin down the middle, and more importantly, I don't think they properly addressed last season's biggest weakness with their offseason moves. Statistically, the Flyers weren't that poor of a team defensively, finishing around the top 10 in expected goals against them. They have a lot of smart, two-way players, and they're not an easy team to play night to night. However, they were dead last, by a mile, in goals against above expected, with their goaltenders allowing 46 more goals than expected. The good news is that more than half of that deficit was due to how poorly KHL imports Ivan Fedotov (13.6 goals allowed above expected in just 26 games) and Aleksei Kolosov (nine in 17 games) played. Any replacement should be an upgrade over those numbers. A tandem of Dan Vladar (who received a two-year UFA deal for $3.35 million a season) and Samuel Ersson, however, is fairly underwhelming. Of the 65 goalies who have played the most NHL minutes the past three years, Vladar ranks 59th, and Ersson is 62nd in goals saved above expected. I do think they'll be better than last season, and they'll probably surprise some teams with how well they defend. The 20-plus point jump they'd need to make the postseason feels like a pretty big reach, though, barring something unexpected from the crease. Should the Toronto Maple Leafs enter the season with material cap space, can you explain how it will accrue over the course of the season? How would (the Long-Term Injured Reserve pool) impact this if used? What type of move could the Leafs make with the accrued space, should they hold onto it? — Tom L. I'm glad someone asked this question because it applies to far more than Toronto this season. Including the Leafs, there are 22 teams right now that have around $2 million in cap space or more. Eight of those are listed with $10 million or more. I'll use the Leafs as an example here because they're an interesting case as a contender that lost a star player who they'll be looking to replace in-season. Technically, PuckPedia lists them at the roster limit of 23 players with $1.92 million available, but they could waive Henry Thrun ($1 million cap hit) and trade a forward like David Kämpf ($2.4 million) or Calle Järnkrok ($2.1 million) and bump that up to $5 million-ish at some point. Advertisement Let's start with the lowest figure of $1.92 million, just for illustrative purposes. The way the NHL's cap works is by using a daily accounting formula, so it changes as your roster shifts throughout the year. The cap looks at player salaries as a day-to-day figure, meaning someone like Thrun will cost $1 million divided by the 191 days in the 2025-26 season for every day he's in the NHL. That's about $5,235 and change. In theory, the Leafs could leave that $1.92 million open all season. By the trade deadline, with 41 days left in the season, the amount of cap space available can accommodate an additional player (or players) worth $8.94 million, because by March 7, you only have to pay those new players' salaries for the remaining 21.5 percent of the season. Demote a Thrun to start the year, and that $8.94 million is more like $13.6 million. It's a lot of flexibility, and the Leafs aren't anywhere close to having the most room among potential playoff teams. If we're talking about a team like the Detroit Red Wings, who have $12 million in space, they could effectively add $56 million more in salaries at the deadline. What complicates this a little is that no teams have the same roster all season. There are injuries, call-ups and trades that shift the daily accounting all season. It's why you sometimes see cap-strapped teams send players up and down to the AHL between games or on off days; every practice day someone like Thrun goes to the minors, saves another $5,235 that will grow over time. (That said, these paper transactions will no longer be allowed once the new CBA takes effect in 2026-27.) The benefit for teams using long-term injured reserve is that they can exceed the cap using an injured player's salary. Many, many teams have done this to great effect during the flat-cap era to add key pieces for a playoff run. With so many teams flush with space, though, that's likely to become less of a factor, as those clubs simply won't need to go over the cap anymore. Accrual will also be a very real benefit to the teams that can keep a few million free throughout the year. The downside to LTIR is that you don't accrue the extra space; if you go over the cap by $2 million due to an injury, LTIR only frees up $2 million, so it's definitely better to accrue than to use LTIR, especially once the new playoff salary cap rules kick in for 2027. The challenge in this environment right now is that if everyone has cap space, it becomes a less valuable asset. Plus, the real assets a team like Toronto will want at the deadline — good players — are scarce. I think we could theoretically see some weird things like contending teams with a lot of cap space (the Carolina Hurricanes?) taking on bad money in a deal just to increase the likelihood they get the deadline acquisition they want. Absorbing cap dumps may no longer be only the domain of the rebuilders. Advertisement All of this is to say that cap space is going to be less of a barrier than ever for a lot of teams, and this could be an advantage for Detroit, Carolina, the Ottawa Senators, the Winnipeg Jets, Toronto and maybe a few other plausible playoff teams come the deadline. They won't necessarily need retention to get deals done, and they won't have to worry about sending salaries back the other way. The bigger challenge will be finding the right talent to use that cash on and outbidding all the other teams with plenty of money to spend. Do you honestly see the New Jersey Devils trying to make a deal to acquire Quinn Hughes? I just don't see the timeline fitting in with their cap situation. — Mike S. Let me get into the Vancouver Canucks side of this a bit to start. I feel for fans here, as this is a team in a pickle. They finished 18th overall last year with 90 points. There are scenarios where you can see them getting a bump higher than that this season, but the middle of the pack is likely where they belong. With huge question marks around Elias Pettersson and Thatcher Demko, the ceiling feels too low to compete with the real contenders in the West. If you're Hughes, indisputably now one of the best players in the league and with two years left on your deal, it feels natural to wonder about your future if this Canucks team isn't going to break through and win. Maybe Vancouver surprises and has a huge bounce-back season that convinces their captain to stay. Feels unlikely to me, to be honest, but that's their best-case scenario. Otherwise, they have to start contemplating what a blockbuster trade might look like and whether it's all about futures. For the Devils, if Hughes wants to go there to join his brothers, how do you not make that commitment next summer? By the time he gets a massive new extension in 2027-28, New Jersey has acres of cap room: $62 million, before accounting for a potential RFA deal for Luke. They're going to be out from under Ondrej Palat and Brenden Dillon by then, who combine for $10 million, and Dougie Hamilton will only have one year left on his deal. Plus, the cap will be at least $113.5 million, so I don't see the finances as the barrier here, especially when you consider any potential trade with the Canucks could also involve salary going the other way. Even if Quinn is commanding $15 million-plus in 2027-28, that still fits — and it's not like he's going to be particularly old by then. This is a nice-looking group to try and build around. Obviously this is a team overloaded on the back end even years from now, and I'm not including intriguing prospects Seamus Casey and Anton Silayev, who will be factors by 2027. With how few top four D are making it to free agency every year, there's going to be considerable trade value there for whoever they decide to move. Advertisement The fact that they have Jack Hughes and Jesper Bratt on such bargain deals with term gives them the flexibility to add one of the biggest salaries in the league, too. I've left out a new contract for Nico Hischier, which would also be a priority, but with $30 million in cap space, the kids coming on D and the ability to deal someone, it all leaves them a lot of different lanes to go down if Quinn does become available. I don't really see the downside, to be honest; the Devils are fortunate that a perennial Norris Trophy candidate likely has them at the top of his to-go list. It could be a game-changer for a team on the cusp of taking another step. The (Panthers) have almost all of their team back, and most of the core signed long-term. Bobrovsky and Mikkola's contracts expire next year, but the Cats will have plenty of cap space to re-sign them and almost whomever else they want over the next few years. Is anyone a realistic threat to challenge their potential dominance in the foreseeable future? — Amir C. Well, as they say, Father Time comes for everyone. Sergei Bobrovsky is 37 next month; at some point, there will have to be a succession plan in the crease. Could he have another big year, though, especially in the playoffs? Absolutely. You're right in that the Panthers look formidable again, and they're the betting favorites to take the Stanley Cup with about 7 to 1 odds, depending on where you look. However, that's still only a roughly 12.5 percent chance of winning, making the field the stronger pick. Matthew Tkachuk's injury and absence early in the year is one concern I have for them. The Olympics will also potentially take some energy out of a lot of Panthers players. At some point, the overall fatigue of three runs to the Final has to take a toll, no? As for who could potentially challenge them in the years to come, that's a great question. We can see some new rising potential powers like New Jersey, the Montreal Canadiens, Utah Mammoth and Ottawa starting to show a bit of life, but actually beating a team like Florida in a best-of-seven feels a ways off. That leaves us looking at the teams that have contended the past few years — the Colorado Avalanche, Dallas Stars, Vegas Golden Knights and Edmonton Oilers in the West, and Carolina, the Tampa Bay Lightning and (maybe) Toronto in the East — as the likely candidates. Advertisement None of them really screams Cup winner. No one had a huge transformative offseason, either, although the Golden Knights (Mitch Marner) and Hurricanes (Nikolaj Ehlers) made some nice additions. Still, one thing to keep in mind is that part of why Florida won this past year was the transformational moves they made in-season. Airlifting in Seth Jones and Brad Marchand late in the year was massive, and I don't think they go the distance without general manager Bill Zito pulling off that wizardry. Maybe the Panthers are the deadline winners again, but it could also be one of those next tier of teams, especially with all the cap room floating out there. That could put them on even footing with Florida, at least on paper. Thanks for reading. I should have more of these queued up before training camp, so stay tuned for that. We'll take more questions at some point in the fall, too. Plus, sign up for Red Light, our hockey newsletter, for more similar content from Sean McIndoe and me all year. (Top photo of Quinn Hughes: Bruce Bennett / Getty Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

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