
Most of the NHL’s top unrestricted free agents found homes early in July.
But there is still plenty of action to track during the NHL offseason. There are trades to be made and restricted free agents to re-sign. Salary arbitration hearings were scheduled from July 20 to Aug. 4, although players and teams settled beforehand in all 11 cases.
Also, players whose contracts run out after the 2025-26 season are eligible to sign contract extensions at any time.
Here is a look at the latest signings, trades and other news that have happened since the initial surge of movement in late June and early July:
Aug. 15: Travis Hamonic signs with Red Wings
Hamonic is getting a one year deal at $1 million. The veteran depth addition likely will play in the bottom defense pairing. He ranked second on the Ottawa Senators last season in blocked shots per 60 minutes and also killed penalties. Detroit will be his fifth NHL team. Hamonic, who turns 35 on Aug. 16, has 53 goals and 242 points in 900 career games.
Aug. 10: Jack Johnson signs tryout agreement with Wild
The 38-year-old defenseman will go to camp as a tryout in a bid for a 20th NHL season. He played 41 games last season with the Columbus Blue Jackets. The Wild might be without defenseman Jonas Brodin at the beginning of the season, according to the Athletic.
Also: The Kraken agreed to terms with defenseman Ryker Evans for two years at a $2.05 million average. He ranked fourth among Seattle blueliners with 25 points and was first with 123 hits.
Aug. 9: Nathan Bastian signs with Stars
He’ll get a one-year, $775,000 contract and add depth to the forward group. Bastian had played all but 12 games of his NHL career with the New Jersey Devils and ranked third among New Jersey regulars last season with 12.83 hits per 60 minutes. He has career totals of 33 goals, 68 points and 190 penalty minutes in 276 regular season games between the Devils and Seattle Kraken.
Aug. 8: Two-time Stanley Cup winner Kyle Clifford retires
Cllifford, who won Stanley Cup titles in 2012 and 2014 with the Los Angeles Kings, is retiring after 13 NHL seasons. The NHL Players’ Association said he would move into a player development role with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Clifford had two stints with the Leafs and finished his playing career in the organization with the American Hockey League’s Marlies. He also played for the St. Louis Blues and finished with 66 goals, 144 points and 905 penalty minutes in 753 NHL games.
Aug. 8: Avalanche re-sign Joel Kiviranta
Kiviranta is sticking around for a third season in Colorado by signing a one-year deal. Terms weren’t released. The bottom-six forward had 16 goals last season.
Aug. 2: Nick Robertson settles before arbitration hearing
All 11 players who filed for salary arbitration settled their cases before their hearings, with the Maple Leafs and Robertson the last to do so. Here are the new contracts the players agreed to, listed alphabetically.
- Morgan Barron (Winnipeg Jets): Two years, $3.7 million.
- Lukas Dostal (Anaheim Ducks): Five years, $32.5 million.
- Drew Helleson (Anaheim Ducks): Two years, $2.2 million.
- Kaapo Kakko (Seattle Kraken). Three years, $13.575 million.
- Nick Robertson (Toronto Maple Leafs). One year, $1.825 million.
- Dylan Samberg (Winnipeg Jets): Three years, $15.75 million.
- Arvid Soderblom (Chicago Blackhawks): Two years, $5.5 million.
- Jayden Struble (Montreal Canadiens): Two years, $2.825 million.
- Conor Timmins (Buffalo Sabres): Two years, $4.4 million.
- Maxim Tsyplakov (New York Islanders): Two years, $4.5 million.
- Gabriel Vilardi (Winnipeg Jets): Six years, $45 million.
July 31: Sabres’ Devon Levi re-signs for two years
He’ll average $812,500 in the deal and is the final restricted free agent who needed to re-sign. He has had back-to-back solid seasons in the American Hockey League. With the Buffalo Sabres signing Alex Lyon this summer, Levi is expected to spend more time in the AHL for now.
July 28: Nicklas Backstrom signs deal in Sweden
The former Capitals star, 37, is returning to hockey by signing a deal to play for Brynas for the first time since 2006-07. He had played 1,105 NHL games in between, recording 1,033 points. But he had missed all of last season and most of 2023-24 while recovering from 2022 hip surgery.
July 17: Maple Leafs acquire Dakota Joshua from Canucks
Vancouver receives a 2028 fourth-round pick. Joshua will likely slot in the Maple Leafs’ bottom six forwards. He had a career-best 18 goals and 32 points in 2023-24 but missed the beginning of last season after having surgery for testicular cancer. He finished with 14 points in 57 games. He originally was drafted by the Maple Leafs but never played for them.
July 17: Blue Jackets’ Yegor Chinakhov requests trade
Yegor Chinakhov, a former first-round draft pick of the Columbus Blue Jackets, has asked for a trade.
The agent for Chinakhov posted on X, formerly Twitter, about the trade request.
“I had some misunderstandings with the coach during the season,” read the post quoting Chinakhov. “Now I would be glad to have a trade. I would like to move to a different location. Will I return to Russia? As long as I can play in the NHL, I will keep developing here.”
Chinakhov, who was selected with the No. 21 overall selection in 2020, missed nearly half of last season with a back injury, an issue that also sidelined him for the final 17 games in the previous season. – Joey Kaufman, Columbus Dispatch
July 15: Sabres re-sign Bowen Byram for two years
The defenseman will average $6.25 million in the deal. He was considered a candidate for an offer sheet but the Sabres reportedly filed for arbitration to prevent that. He ranked third among Sabres defensemen in average ice time and third with 38 points. The cap hit makes him the third highest paid defenseman on the team behind Rasmus Dahlin and Owen Power.