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Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Alex Pietrangelo will not rule out a return to play this season as he continues to rehab a prolonged hip injury.

Pietrangelo, 35, and the Golden Knights announced in June that he was stepping away from “the intensity of hockey” to see if his injured hip could improve to the point where he could have “a normal quality of life.” GM Kelly McCrimmon said at the time that the injury “would require bilateral femur reconstruction, with no guarantee of success.”

Multiple reports indicated that Pietrangelo, the team’s No. 1 defenseman, would miss the entire 2025-26 season at a minimum. The defenseman himself said in June that “the likelihood is low that my body will recover to the standard required to play.”

But Pietrangelo said Monday that he has opted not to have surgery while continuing a rehab program that has given him positive results. When asked if a return this season was off the table, Pietrangelo wouldn’t rule it out.

“Nothing is really concrete. I’m just going to continue to take it day-by-day and see where it goes,” he said at the Golden Knights’ training camp.

Pietrangelo said that the hip issue started years ago but that last season “was when it really took a toll on me.” He played through it, skipping the 4 Nations Face-Off to focus on the Stanley Cup playoffs. He played 71 games overall and then another 10 in the postseason, averaging 23:03 in ice time in the playoffs.

A 17-year NHL veteran, Pietrangelo led the St. Louis Blues (2019) and the Golden Knights (2023) to Stanley Cup championships. He has 637 points in 1,087 career games.

Pietrangelo has two years remaining on a seven-year contract he signed as a free agent with Vegas in 2020, and it carries an $8.8 million salary cap hit. The Golden Knights have limited cap space after acquiring star winger Mitch Marner from Toronto with a new contract that has a $12 million hit.

Vegas will open the season with Pietrangelo on long-term injured reserve. The NHL and NHLPA recently agreed to expedite changes to the collective bargaining agreement that address the salary cap benefits from players on LTIR and establish a postseason cap.

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The many lives of Lane Kiffin: ‘I’m really trying to make it not about me’

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The many lives of Lane Kiffin: 'I'm really trying to make it not about me'

“E60: The Many Lives of Lane Kiffin,” debuts Wednesday, at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN. An extended version will be available afterward on the ESPN App. Fans can also watch the program in the official streaming hub.

The life of a football coach is one spent constantly searching for a better pathway. That’s why they spend such a significant percentage of their lives sitting in dark rooms, watching the same play over and over again. Searching for an opening. Scanning their opponents for even the tiniest cracks or tells. A constant, never-ending pursuit of anything and everything that will aid their ultimate goal of forward progress.

For Lane Kiffin, everything is game film. How he works his job, now in his sixth season as head football coach at Ole Miss, in arguably the greatest era of success in the program’s 132-year history. How he works on himself, having turned 50 in May and down that many pounds, thanks to a strict diet, a self-imposed alcohol ban and a daily dose of hot yoga. And how he works with his family, reconnecting with three children and even his ex-wife, all while hiring his brother as an assistant coach, with whom he shares a backyard border, and having said goodbye to each of his parents over the past two summers.

He studies it all. Just as diligently as he has studied Saturday’s opponent, SEC and Magnolia Bowl rival LSU (Saturday, 3:30 p.m. ET, ABC). And that study isn’t limited to the present day. It also includes his past. Perhaps the most public, polarizing, but also misunderstood past of any football coach of this century. A biography that is much too complicated to be told in mere chapters but rather would require entire volumes.

Fresno State backup QB-turned-undergrad assistant coach. USC assistant-turned-then-youngest-ever NFL head coach. Tennessee head coach-turned-Big Orange public enemy No. 1. USC head coach-turned-guy fired on the tarmac. Nick Saban mentee-turned-guy dismissed the week of the natty. Ole Miss head coach-turned-second chance father.

Kiffin goes into detail about each of those stops in “E60: The Many Lives of Lane Kiffin,” a story that ultimately lands in his current life.

“I think there’s things in life that you do, that you make mistakes,” Kiffin explains. “I call them self-inflicted wounds. Then there’s things, you actually are really trying to go above and beyond to do the right thing, and it just doesn’t work.”

Those mistakes tend to overshadow those right things. At some point over these six years in Oxford, while most were still rewatching Al Davis’s one-hour slideshow presentation explaining “I didn’t hire the person I thought I was hiring” in 2008 or Tennessee students setting mattresses ablaze to chants of “F— Lane Kiffin!” while the family fled Knoxville for Southern California one year later, the coach so many have loved to hate evolved. He grew up. The punk kid turned into … an elder statesman?

“It didn’t use to bother me because I was kind of like, man, I’m doing this my way and I don’t care what anybody thinks,” Kiffin says of how people perceive him. “I think as I’ve gotten older now and kids, they grow older, I’ve cared a little more just because I’m like, that’s your legacy, like what people say, you know?

“I used to just be like, hey, you know what? If you don’t work here, your opinion doesn’t matter. So what these people write around the country, not just fans, but even writers that don’t truly cover us and they want to write Lane Kiffin’s like this and he’s so terrible and he doesn’t care about this, and he’s got no respect for authority and all these things, they don’t know. That did not bother me at all. And now, I just would like to change that narrative really for legacy and for kids and grandkids.”

How does one do that? By looking back on their time as one of those kids. Kiffin was raised in locker rooms and on sidelines, the son of Monte Kiffin, aka the inventor of the Tampa 2 defense that helped the Tampa Bay Buccaneers win Super Bowl XXXVII. Lane was born in Lincoln, Nebraska, in 1975, when Monte was the Cornhuskers’ defensive coordinator under Tom Osborne; he then moved to Arkansas for the same role for Lou Holtz’s Razorbacks. But the kid’s first and greatest college football memories were during his father’s only stint as a head coach, leading the NC State Wolfpack from 1980 to 1982. That’s when little brother Chris was born.

From there, it was on to six different stops around the NFL as Lane moved into and through his teenage years. His mother, Robin, worked hard to create as normal a life as she could for Lane, Chris and sister Heidi. That meant celebrating Christmas in January and allowing the kids to stay up late on Monday nights, because if Monte wasn’t coaching in the “Monday Night Football” game, he was home watching and the kids would watch with him.

“I think people probably just assume that Dad wasn’t around because NFL coaches, they sleep in their office and all of that,” Kiffin says. “But my dad always did whatever he could to be involved. That might be taking us to practice with him or coming home for dinner when other coaches weren’t going home and just sleeping in their office. I think it probably would have been easier to just not care and just coach all the time and squeeze in family whenever you could fit it in, but that’s never how he made us feel.”

Robin would make sure to prolong those meals by offering after-dinner conversation topics, such as writing down three wishes and sharing them with the family for discussion. It was no easy task to keep Lane at the table, the perpetually moving and trouble-causing kid whom his mother lovingly referred to as “the helicopter.”

“He earned that nickname for sure,” Chris says with a laugh. Lane’s younger brother moved to Oxford to join the Rebels’ staff as a defensive assistant. He was his brother’s defensive coordinator at Florida Atlantic in 2017. “He would blow into a room, create some sort of havoc, and then blow back out again before he got caught or hurt or something worse. But he didn’t get away with it as much as he would have liked.”

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2:29

Lane Kiffin, Nick Saban reflect on coaching relationship at Bama

Lane Kiffin and Nick Saban reflect on their time coaching together at Alabama, offering a behind-the-scenes look.

That description sounds like how many would characterize Lane’s coaching career. So would he, admitting now that like so many — OK, most — football coaches, game prep and ladder climbing at the stadium overwhelmed whatever ruins of a family life were back at the house.

For Kiffin, that house was in Manhattan Beach, purchased when he infamously bolted Tennessee for USC, and left behind — with the family in it — when he was even more infamously dismissed from the Trojans in a runway office meeting room at LAX four years later. Later that fall, Saban invited him to come to Tuscaloosa to help the Crimson Tide revamp their offense. That turned into an offensive coordinator gig.

“I went to Alabama, we had no idea what was going to happen there so they didn’t move,” Kiffin says of his wife, Layla, and their three kids (two daughters and a son). “I didn’t know Alabama was going to go bad. So, then it was like, well, at that point we’ll just stay and move to the next place. Well, that ends up not working out and we get divorced.”

After three seasons and two national titles at Bama, he took the head coaching job at FAU. The kids would visit but not for long.

“It was definitely hard because I would call him every day after school, but he was just so busy during the season it was really hard,” his son, Knox, remembers.

Adds daughter Landry: “I feel like I was still a little bit young to fully understand it, but I kind of always just thought of it like, oh, he’s just at work.”

Kiffin won a lot of games with the Owls, along with a pair of Conference USA titles. But when he talks about that oft-forgotten stop along his coaching path, the win-loss record is never mentioned. Instead, he tells stories about morning walks on the beaches of Boca Raton with his parents and Chris. They helped him reconnect with the idea of family — and made him miss his own.

“You know, you have this obsession of work and being this youngest coach and the fastest moving and you’ve got to do all this,” he says of his relationship with Layla and the kids. “I really felt like as I have looked back, I should have done that better.”

He also acknowledges that when he was named Ole Miss coach on Dec. 9, 2019, given where his life was at the time, he was worried about the slower pace of a sleepy, isolated college town like Oxford. Now he sees that as a gift. A more methodical daily clock that created much more room for self-reflection, self-improvement and repairing severed ties. As he has become fond of saying, “I needed Oxford and Ole Miss more than they needed me.”

In 2022, Landry moved in with her father, attending her senior year of high school in Oxford and enrolling at Ole Miss. No sooner had she arrived than his name was mentioned as the leading candidate for the job at Auburn. So she and her friends conjured up a slideshow of images of their good times in town, set to a song they knew would attach itself to his heartstrings and tear ducts.

“I just moved here to be with you and you’re going to leave?” Landry said.

He did not.

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2:44

Lane Kiffin shares his daughter’s impact on his Ole Miss career

Lane Kiffin explains how his daughter, Landry, influenced his decision to continue coaching at Ole Miss.

Chris joined the staff in 2024 and moved into the house where Lane used to live. Lane moved all of a few hundred yards away, sharing that backyard border. Knox is a high school freshman in Oxford and ex-wife Layla has a place downtown. Middle child Presley is back in California, on the volleyball team at USC.

Monte, who had an office in the Ole Miss football facility next to his son’s, died July 11, 2024. Robin died 11 months later. Kiffin says that his parents’ final years, there in Oxford with him, weren’t merely a gift. They were also the reason he gave up alcohol, so that “my dad could see me at my best.”

When Chris was told what his big brother had said, he broke down crying, adding that Monte “had so much to do with helping Lane do that.”

Now, the family dinners are back. Everyone sits around the very long kitchen table, parents and kids, uncles and aunts, nephews and nieces. When dinner is over, Lane announces to the room that everyone needs to share their wishes.

Just like Mom used to do.

“I feel like a lot of my life decisions and time was about me. All about me,” Kiffin says. “And I’m really trying to make it not about me. I’ve got a long way to go, but I’ve come a long way too.”

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AD: Gundy exit in best interest of OSU long term

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AD: Gundy exit in best interest of OSU long term

STILLWATER, Okla. — Hours after Oklahoma State announced the firing of longtime football coach Mike Gundy amid a 1-2 start, athletic director Chad Weiberg emphasized the decision was made with the “best interest of moving the program forward in the long term.”

Gundy, the second-longest-tenured FBS head coach, was in his 21st season leading the Cowboys, trailing only Kirk Ferentz, Iowa‘s coach since 1999. Gundy’s exit, announced late Tuesday morning, comes four days after the Cowboys lost 19-12 to Tulsa on Friday.

“I expected the results of this season to be different than they’ve been so far,” Weiberg told reporters Tuesday. “That goes back to the expectation level that Coach Gundy has set for this program.

“We have higher expectations than that, so when it doesn’t appear that that was not going to be met, it felt like for the good of the program it was time to make this decision so that we could start the process of getting the program where we want it to be.”

Weiberg confirmed that he informed Gundy of his firing in a meeting Tuesday morning. Acknowledging Gundy’s long history in Stillwater, Weiberg spoke to the importance of ensuring his exit was handled “right” and said that contributed to the timing of the decision.

Gundy, 58, was not offered the opportunity to remain in his role through the end of the season, according to Weiberg, who explained that Gundy is set to receive the full sum of the $15 million buyout outlined in his contract, which was set to run through the 2028 season.

First-year Oklahoma State offensive coordinator Doug Meacham will serve as the Cowboys’ interim head coach, beginning with Saturday’s home game against Baylor. Longtime strength and conditioning coach Rob Glass is expected to oversee administrative duties within the program.

Gundy, the winningest coach in program history, returned to Oklahoma State this fall under a restructured contract following a 3-9 finish in 2024, the program’s first losing season since Gundy’s first in charge in 2005. The loss to Tulsa came two weeks after the Cowboys’ 69-3 loss at Oregon on Sept. 6 and marked Oklahoma State’s 11th consecutive defeat against FBS opposition. All told, Gundy dropped 11 of his last 12 games in charge.

In outlining the decision to move on from Gundy with nine games remaining, Weiberg pointed to those disappointing results, which came after the school poured “significant investments” into the program following the 2024 season. He also looked ahead, citing the long-term health of Oklahoma State football beyond 2025.

“I get that there’s things right here in the here and now, this week, today, tomorrow,” Weiberg said. “But we also have to be looking at what’s better for the program over the next year, two years, five years.”

While speculation swirled around Gundy’s job security this month, Weiberg’s own future with the school has been mired in uncertainty, with the 53-year-old athletic director working without a contract since late June. While a new deal has not been formally completed, sources told ESPN that Weiberg is poised to sign a four-year contract with a raise on his current annual salary of $750,000.

Weiberg said Tuesday that he will lead the search for the school’s next football coach. He said the timing of the firing will allow Oklahoma State to lay the groundwork for the program’s future and its pursuit of a new hire later this year but declined to offer a definitive timeline.

After parting with a coach who at times grumbled in college football’s NIL/revenue share era, Weiberg emphasized the resources available at Oklahoma State.

“This is not an inexpensive football team that we have on the field this season,” Weiberg said and reinforced the importance of what lies ahead as the program embarks on its first coaching search in two decades.

“This decision in no way should take away from the years of success OSU football has had under Coach Gundy’s leadership,” Weiberg said. “Thanks to him, we know winning the Big 12 championship, going to the College Football Playoff and competing for championships are realistic goals. They remain attainable goals, but the stakes are high and competition is intense. It will be critically important for the OSU family to unite behind the next leader of Cowboy football.”

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Burning questions for all 32 NHL teams: John Gibson’s impact in Detroit, a Sidney Crosby trade?

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Burning questions for all 32 NHL teams: John Gibson's impact in Detroit, a Sidney Crosby trade?

The Florida Panthers hoisted the Stanley Cup for the second straight season back on June 17. The 2025 NHL draft was decentralized, but there was no shortage of memorable moments and celebrity cameos. Finally, free agency was not quite as frenetic as in years past, but hundreds of players signed new deals.

And then, the hockey world went into its hibernation period for the rest of July and August.

But as a chill enters the air, the leaves start to change color and many pumpkin-themed items appear on food and drink menus, it’s time to get ready for another NHL season.

To help you get fully prepared for the coming weeks of the preseason — as teams make final decisions on rosters, lineups and goaltending tandems — let’s take a look at the biggest lingering question for all 32 clubs, thanks to ESPN reporters Ryan S. Clark (Western Conference) and Kristen Shilton (Eastern Conference).

How to watch the 2025-26 NHL season on ESPN networks — including 100 exclusive games and the out-of-market package (over 1,050 games).

Atlantic Division

No one could fault Swayman for chasing a big-time contract extension after the way he carried Boston at the end of the 2024-25 campaign. But after the netminder secured the bag — with a protracted contract negotiation last summer culminating in a seven-year deal worth $8.25 million per season — he was meant to perform like one of the league’s highest paid goalies.

That didn’t happen. Swayman posted career-worst numbers in 2024-25 with an .892 SV% and 3.11 GAA. Without a genuine tandemmate to back him up — as he had with Linus Ullmark before the latter departed to Ottawa — Swayman carried a hefty 58-game schedule and didn’t wear it well.

Boston requires better this season, especially considering the Bruins still don’t have a bona fide backup for Swayman (that would be Boston’s Burning Question, Part II). Regardless of who is second though, Swayman must prove he can be a true No. 1 — and what will it mean for the Bruins’ chances this season if he can’t?


Buffalo Sabres
Will Buffalo finally end its postseason drought?

It’s the overarching theme for Buffalo seemingly every year: Can the Sabres actually snap their historically long skid as non-playoff contenders? Or in other words: Is Buffalo’s rebuild over yet?

It’s only been …15 years now since Sabres fans saw their team in postseason action. And the better part of this decade has been an exercise in slow progress. For every step forward Buffalo has taken — most notably building its enviable young core — the Sabres have repeatedly stalled short of reclaiming a place as playoff contenders.

GM Kevyn Adams made a risky move acquiring oft-injured forward Josh Norris; but if Norris can stay healthy, that’s a potential No. 1 center for Buffalo. And the Sabres have intriguing newcomers Josh Doan and Michael Kesselring to fill out their roster.

What impact could those fresh faces — plus improvements from players like goaltender Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (already dealing with a “tweak” heading into training camp) and forward Jack Quinn — have on Buffalo’s chances? Every little bit helps. Ottawa and Montreal have proven to be quicker studies that Buffalo in rising through the Atlantic Division ranks. Is it the Sabres’ time now to do the same?


It’s not like Detroit hasn’t had decent goaltending in recent years. What the Red Wings have lacked is consistency. For all the good runs Ville Husso and Petr Mrazek managed to put together, they inevitably bookended too many subpar stretches that, combined with Detroit’s below-average defensive play, held the Red Wings back from fulfilling their potential.

Well, the midseason addition of head coach Todd McLellan yielded improvement. And now, enter John Gibson. GM Steve Yzerman traded for the veteran netminder from Anaheim in a bold offseason move that could be the difference between whether Detroit sinks or swims this season.

Gibson struggled a bit with the rebuilding Ducks, but the Red Wings are a more established team with enough talent to support him. He still posted a .911 save percentage in 29 appearances last season, showing he has the potential to reclaim his form as a No. 1 goalie. If Gibson can indicate early on he’s a reliable presence in the crease, then confidence should spread in Detroit and give the club a boost that’s been missing. Can Gibson provide all that in Year 1? We’ll find out.


Florida Panthers
Are the Panthers built for a three-peat?

Listen, what Florida GM Bill Zito pulled off this offseason was quite impressive. While the Panthers were basking in a second straight Stanley Cup victory, Zito managed to re-sign Sam Bennett, Aaron Ekblad and Brad Marchand, while also acquiring an intriguing backup goalie in Daniil Tarasov.

All good … right? Florida can’t be concerned about their depth when they’ve kept so many key players in the fold … correct?

It’s at least worth wondering whether the Panthers might run into issues there, given all they’ve invested salary-cap-wise in their top skaters. There’s an excellent chance that growth from within — from top young players like Mackie Samoskevich — will give Florida quite an edge in their bottom six. But there’s also the fact Matthew Tkachuk‘s health status is in doubt — that torn adductor and sports hernia issue suffered at the 4 Nations Face-Off has been a problem for Tkachuk ever since, and may hold him out to start the season — and there’s no telling what shape Tkachuk will be in when he can return.

Then, of course, there’s fatigue. Of course, we’ve wondered about that in regards to Florida before and they’ve shown serious mettle in reaching three straight Cup Finals (winning the last two). Do the Panthers have it in them to do it all over again?


Montreal Canadiens
Can the Canadiens’ youth movement produce another playoff run?

Montreal was a surprise postseason contender last season thanks to a 91-point campaign that provided just enough juice to secure the second wild-card spot. Was that a fluke? Or are the Canadians more ready to step forward than we thought?

GM Kent Hughes improved Montreal with the offseason addition of defenseman Noah Dobson and physical winger Zack Bolduc. Now the Canadiens are eager to see if their internal growth can continue as well.

All eyes will be on how 2024’s fifth-overall pick Ivan Demidov develops, how Lane Hutson keeps maturing and what sort of gains Juraj Slafkovsky can make, too. It’ll be a combination of factors — from Montreal’s established stars in Nick Suzuki and Cole Caufield — to it’s burgeoning skaters and questionable returnees (what does Kirby Dach have to offer when he’s healthy?) that will ultimately decide what trajectory the Canadiens take this year.

While their first-round experience in 2024-25 was valuable, there’s no telling what a regular season of sustained success could also do for Montreal’s core confidence. Certainly Hughes has put his weight behind this roster to signal his own assurance that they’re capable of reaching last season’s threshold.


Ottawa Senators
Has Ottawa adequately addressed its offensive depth?

It’s no secret the Senators struggled to score at 5-on-5 last season. Ottawa tallied the second-fewest even-strength markers in 2024-25, and if it wasn’t for a strong power play, it’s possible the Senators wouldn’t have forced their way into the playoffs at all. Despite what alarm bells could be ringing in that respect from Canada’s capital, GM Steve Staios didn’t do much to alter the Senators lineup in free agency, save for adding defenseman Jordan Spence and veteran Lars Eller.

The lack of significant movement indicates Ottawa is likely banking on internal improvement to win the day. That would have to include better performances from Dylan Cozens — still finding his way post-trade from Buffalo — and Fabian Zetterlund — a deadline pickup from San Jose — now that they’re acclimated to the organization. But will that be enough to give the Senators’ offense a true boost? Claude Giroux is also back in the fold — although where he plays in the lineup is up in the air — and Shane Pinto should be a top offensive driver coming off a gold medal-winning showing at the men’s world championships.

Ottawa just needs to find its mojo more often in the coming year — and that’s going to require a stronger collective effort up front.


Tampa Bay Lightning
Can Tampa Bay’s offense maintain an elite scoring level?

It’s easy to gloss over the fact Tampa Bay was the NHL’s highest-scoring team last season, given how their playoff run ended (with a first-round thud against Florida). The Lightning were formidable up front though all season long, averaging 3.56 goals per game and owning a top-five power play.

Four Lightning skaters eclipsed the 35-goal mark, two hit 40-plus (there were only eight players in the league who reached that benchmark) and Nikita Kucherov won the Art Ross Trophy (again) with 121 points.

Suffice to say, Tampa Bay felt confident in running it back with a similar roster of offensive threats. Is that wise, though?

Oliver Bjorkstrand and Yanni Gourde will have a better handle on the Lightning system after coming in at the deadline, but beyond those new faces Tampa Bay is counting on a repeat from Brayden Point, Jake Guentzel, Kucherov & Co. to maintain their place as perennial postseason contenders. Given how the Lightning continually find ways to keep the spark alive, so to speak, it won’t be shocking if they maintain their status quo. But it’s worth wondering how far they can stretch when their Atlantic rivals keep loading up around them.


The Maple Leafs accepted a true gut punch when trading Marner to Vegas before he could walk away (for nothing) in free agency. And no disrespect to Nicolas Roy — the returning player in that transaction — but losing a top-line, 102-point producer who appears in every situation — including as one of your most reliable penalty killers — creates a crater no team would envy trying to fill. The Leafs’ success this season will depend on their ability to do just that.

More responsibility than ever falls on Auston Matthews, William Nylander, Matthew Knies and John Tavares to anchor Toronto’s top two lines, while depth performances will be more critical than ever to keep the Leafs from falling too far off a cliff offensively.

What sort of strategy will head coach Craig Berube employ to have Toronto evolve into a new chapter for the franchise? Don’t forget: former president Brendan Shanahan is gone, too, and there are new voices behind the scenes being amplified. This is a transitional time for the Leafs in multiple respects. What sort of maturity have they cultivated to be able to handle what’s ahead?

Metropolitan Division

Carolina Hurricanes
Did Carolina do enough to tackle its scoring woes?

The Hurricanes landed a big fish in free agency when Nikolaj Ehlers came on board with a six-year, $51 million contract. That cemented him as the consistent scoring winger Carolina’s been lacking in previous seasons (particularly when it came to the postseason).

But even with Ehlers in the mix, Carolina has questions to answer about its offense.

The Hurricanes have been using Jesperi Kotkaniemi in a second-line center role for which he’s not wholly suited. Carolina opted not to re-sign free agent Jack Roslovic — who remains a free agent, and could be an option in that spot — and there’s no obvious upgrade over Kotkaniemi at the moment.

Will Logan Stankoven or Seth Jarvis have to move off the wing to cover for Carolina’s flimsy depth down the middle? Or will GM Erik Tulsky look at what’s available on the market before the season starts and make a change? It has to still sting the way Carolina produced just 10 total goals in their Eastern Conference finals loss against Florida last spring. If the Hurricanes expect to advance to the Cup Final, they’ll need to have the scoring prowess to match the competition.


The Blue Jackets didn’t have trouble scoring goals last season. It was keeping pucks out of the net that held Columbus back.

GM Don Waddell’s priority was addressing the latter issue this offseason and, well, he did. Sort of. As some of the top free agent defensemen were snapped up on July 1, Waddell opted to simply re-sign Ivan Provorov to a seven-year, $59.5 million contract.

Meaning there has been no specific upgrade on a blue line that — while anchored by a Norris Trophy-worthy performance from Zach Werenski — ranked eighth-worst in the NHL in goals against last season (3.26 per game). Considering Columbus was also eighth overall in goals scored (with 3.26 per game), it’s clear the defensive deficiencies were a serious factor in the Blue Jackets falling just shy of making the playoffs.

Are they doomed to a similar fate this season? Coach Dean Evason was transparent about Columbus’ need to improve on the back end; the only question is whether there’s enough internal improvement to make that a reality early and often. Steady goaltending would help in this regard as well; will the low-risk move of trading for Ivan Fedotov give the Blue Jackets some insurance behind (or beside) Elvis Merzlikins?


It’s not every team that has a single player capable of making or breaking their success. Jack Hughes is that for New Jersey, though.

The top-line forward just isn’t available as much as the Devils need him to be. Hughes has been hampered by injuries throughout his young career, limited to 62 or fewer games in two of his six seasons, and currently coming off shoulder surgery that cost him the final 25 regular-season games and five playoff contests.

Hughes is practically a point-per-game player when he’s healthy, and the 24-year-old is inarguably New Jersey’s best, most impactful skater. But what more might the Devils be able to do in helping Hughes maintain his on-ice presence? Is there something amiss in their training protocols? Does he require more rest days? Whatever the recipe for keeping Hughes on the ice ultimately has be New Jersey’s priority to figure out. The Devils can’t afford to lose more of what a generational talent like Hughes can bring to their lineup on a nightly basis.


The Islanders made a no-brainer decision by drafting defenseman Matthew Schaefer at No. 1 overall in June. The just-turned 18-year-old has all the makings of a franchise blueliner who will capably patrol New York’s back end for years to come. The question is whether that NHL tenure starts immediately, or if the Islanders ease Schaefer into the pro game. It’s a trajectory that will have ripple effects at multiple levels of the organization.

There’s a scenario where Schaefer jumps right into the Islanders’ lineup, joining Adam Pelech, Alexander Romanov and Ryan Pulock to punctuate their top-four rotation and start this new era for a New York defense corps that saw Noah Dobson depart via trade on draft night. Throwing Schaefer directly into that mix would be a strong statement about how the Islanders’ view their coveted new addition. But defensemen notoriously take longer to thrive in the NHL than their forward counterparts, and New York won’t want to shake Shaefer’s confidence out of the gate, either.

It’s a delicate balance, and how the Islanders choose to manage him ahead of their season opener could have short- and long-term effects on the team’s year overall.


New York Rangers
How will Mike Sullivan restructure the Rangers?

There’s no doubt New York needed a new voice behind the bench. And it’ll fall on Mike Sullivan to build the Rangers back into a contender.

Sullivan’s first task will be deciding where exactly Mika Zibanejad should be playing — at center or on the wing. Zibanejad turned in a disappointing 62 points over 82 games last season — his lowest output through a full campaign since 2017-18 — and it wasn’t until Zibanejad moved from center to J.T. Miller‘s wing in the latter half of the season that he began to look like himself again. Will that encourage Sullivan to load up the Rangers offense by keeping Miller and Zibanejad together? Or will he put Zibanejad back at center so as not to disrupt the team’s overall depth?

And beyond where to place Zibanejad, who exactly will Sullivan find to make up for the contributions that left with Chris Kreider — looking at you, Will Cuylle?

But before we move on from the subject of who plays where, how will Sullivan piece together the blue line now that Vladislav Gavrikov is in the lineup? Fortunately for Sullivan, he has had a long summer to think about what might work for the Rangers. The preseason will be a valuable time to tinker with the various options to get this team back among the postseason contenders.


Philadelphia Flyers
Have the Flyers upgraded enough at the right spots?

Philadelphia had two glaring needs after last season: better center depth and stronger goaltending.

The Flyers acquired Trevor Zegras from Anaheim in the hopes he could slot into a top-six center role despite the 24-year-old having spent the better part of the previous two seasons pushed off to the wing. Zegras maintains he’s more comfortable at his natural center position, and that should be music to Philadelphia’s ears — if Zegras’ defensive game can match his offensive capabilities. Going after him was a low-risk, high-reward move for the Flyers. New coach Rick Tocchet should give him every chance to excel there.

But then there’s the Flyers’ goaltending. GM Danny Briere brought in veteran Dan Vladar to play opposite Samuel Ersson, but given the numbers each netminder produced last season (with an .898 SV% and .883 SV%, respectively), there’s reason to wonder whether Philadelphia is truly better off with that tandem. Vladar stated his case to suit up in more than 30 tilts as he did a year ago, and if sharing an even workload gives Ersson more confidence when he is in the crease, the experiment might work.

Time will tell if Briere’s offseason changes will move the needle for Philadelphia.


There’s no such thing as an un-moveable star. If the Edmonton Oilers would trade Wayne Gretzky, well, it could happen to anyone.

Is this the year Pittsburgh completes a once-unfathomable transaction of its own by trading franchise icon Sidney Crosby? If the Penguins were ever going to do it, is now the time?

Crosby is under contract with Pittsburgh through the 2026-27 season (thanks to a team-friendly extension he inked last year). But the 37-year-old wants (and deserves) another chance or two at not just competing in the playoffs, but contending for the championship. Those aren’t necessarily opportunities Pittsburgh can offer him now. The Penguins are young and hungry, and they are being guided by a first-year NHL coach in the newly instated Dan Muse.

Evgeni Malkin is in the final season of his contract, too, signaling that more changes are to come in the next 12 months for the Penguins. It might be in everyone’s interest — Crosby’s and Pittsburgh’s — to part now while the return can help the Penguins in their ongoing retooling. And while Crosby wearing another NHL sweater would be jarring, there’s no denying he has earned the right to make the final years of his career as successful as they can be. But whether the Penguins could find a suitable partner who checks all the boxes on both sides remains to be seen.


Washington Capitals
Can Washington’s offense run deeper than before?

The Capitals had an enviable 2024-25 season, producing 111 points as the Eastern Conference’s top squad — and having Alex Ovechkin break Wayne Gretzky’s all-time goals record. The problem is, Washington was top-heavy. It leaned on its top six to produce, and while Dylan Strome, Ovechkin, Pierre-Luc Dubois & Co. were happy to oblige with impressive output, relying too much on too few is rarely a championship-winning strategy.

So, the question must be asked: Is Washington deeper now than it was last year?

Connor McMichael is key to that answer. If he can step into a third-line center role for Washington — and build off his career-best totals from last season in goals, points and assists — then the Capitals will be in good shape. They’d be better off, though, knowing how various personnel will deploy on the wing. Lars Eller, Taylor Raddysh and Andrew Mangiapane are gone. The Capitals then will turn to their own internal skaters — like Ryan Leonard and Hendrix Lapierre, plus trade acquisition Justin Sourdif — to fill in the gaps.

Washington can’t count on a repeat of the extraordinary years that guys such as Ovechkin and Strome had in 2024-25. Coach Spencer Carbery will need to maximize the Capitals’ collective talent to see their success stretch beyond just the regular season.

Central Division

Chicago Blackhawks
How much advancement does their rebuild make in 2025-26?

Suggesting this is one of the most frustrating stretches in Blackhawks history isn’t quite as hyperbolic as it sounds.

Having a fifth straight season of less than 70 points is the franchise’s longest streak of that regard since it went seven consecutive campaigns of doing the same from 1953 through 1960 — when the NHL had only six franchises.

Many items contributed to why the Blackhawks finished with the second-fewest points in the NHL last season. They were in the bottom 10 in goals scored per game, goals allowed per game, shots per game, shots allowed per game and team save percentage per 60.

Finding a solution to those challenges is what awaits Jeff Blashill in his first season in charge of a team that will seek to find cohesion with its young core led by Connor Bedard and a veteran group that added Andre Burakovsky in the offseason.


Colorado Avalanche
Is their supporting cast enough or do they need to add more?

Signing Brent Burns and Victor Olofsson was an indication of two items facing the Avalanche entering the season. The first is the need to find proven depth at a team-friendly price, which is why Burns signing for $1 million and Olofsson for $1.575 million has its own value.

The second is: Do the Avs have enough options within their supporting cast, or should they use the rest of their $1.325 million in projected cap space to do so?

Burns is expected to play on the Avs’ third defensive pairing with Sam Malinski, while Olofsson looks as if he’ll be on the third line with Ross Colton and Jack Drury. It leaves them a fourth line that could have Parker Kelly, Joel Kiviranta and rookie Ivan Ivan.

What complicates the decision to spend their remaining cap space is Logan O’Connor. He underwent knee surgery and is slated to come back some time in November or December, meaning they’ll need space for him when he does return.


Dallas Stars
What adjustments will Glen Gulutzan make to reach the Cup Final?

Are there other questions that could be asked about the Stars? Sure. It’s just that any question that’s worth considering all comes back to if it can be the difference between the Stars winning the Stanley Cup or falling in a fourth straight Western Conference finals — or possibly not returning to the conference finals at all.

Championship windows are difficult to open, with the argument that they might be even harder to sustain for an extended period. Part of the reason why the Stars hired Gulutzan, who previously coached the team from 2011 to 2013, was his experience as an Oilers assistant. He has been on teams that advanced to the conference finals three times in four years — and the Cup Final two years in a row — with their two most recent appearances coming after a coaching change.


Any time a star player or a team’s most important player is in the final year of his contract, it’s always going to be a primary topic of conversation. The discussion around Kaprizov further intensified on Sept. 10 when Frank Seravalli reported that Kaprizov turned down an eight-year extension worth $128 million that would have given him the highest average-annual-value deal in the NHL.

Wild GM Bill Guerin said on a podcast later that day that he and Kaprizov’s agent have “a very good relationship” while both sides were “working through things.” Guerin stated that he didn’t want the market to go into “an all-out panic mode” while noting he believes the Wild are “in a really positive place” with their star winger. But this remains a significant question until pen is put to paper on a new deal.


Nashville Predators
Can the Predators find the defensive stability that eluded them last season?

The Predators’ 2024-25 challenges can be viewed in one of two ways. The first is that Brady Skjei, who played in all 82 games, was the only Preds defenseman who played more than 70 games in 2024-25. Another is that he was one of 15 defensemen whom the team used to get through a campaign that began with high expectations — only to end with Nashville being high in the draft lottery.

Adding Nicolas Hague and Nick Perbix in the offseason gave the Preds a pair of proven options who have been top-four fill-ins when needed. But how will they handle being a consistent top-four option for the first time in their careers?

The same questions exist for Justin Barron and Nick Blankenburg. Barron emerged as a top-four option after he was traded to the Predators, and Blankenburg played more games last season than he had in his previous three combined.


St. Louis Blues
Where do they fit in the Western Conference landscape?

The Blues scraped together a playoff appearance last season. The moves they made in the offseason — adding Nick Bjugstad, Logan Mailloux and Pius Suter — along with the idea that prized prospect Jimmy Snuggerud is expected to challenge for a top-six place, suggest that they are in a window to return to the playoffs for the foreseeable future.

But what if the Blues are more than just “a playoff team”? Should they be included in the group of top Stanley Cup contenders in the Western Conference?

They return seven players who finished with more than 16 goals, with the expectation that Snuggerud can join that group. Meanwhile, Suter scored a career-high 25 goals in 2024-25. Couple that with how they responded to systematic changes made by Jim Montgomery, and the Blues should be setting their sights higher in 2025-26.


Utah Mammoth
Will they make the playoffs in 2025-26?

Exactly what was it that prevented the Mammoth from making the playoffs in their first season in Salt Lake City? Was it not scoring enough goals? Was it goal prevention? Was it both?

Or was it something different altogether?

Mammoth GM Bill Armstrong’s actions in the offseason saw him provide a potential answer to those questions.

Armstrong traded for one of the most sought-after top-six winger options in JJ Peterka, with the hope he can help the Mammoth improve upon being 21st in goals per game. Their defensive concerns led to them signing a proven two-way, bottom-six forward in Brandon Tanev, a veteran top-six defenseman in Nate Schmidt and goalie Vitek Vanecek.

Schmidt and Vanecek, who won the Stanley Cup with the Panthers, now give the Mammoth five players in their defensive setup with a championship ring, joining Ian Cole, Olli Maatta and Mikhail Sergachev.


Winnipeg Jets
Can their new-look second line find continuity amid change?

Options aren’t necessarily the challenge facing Scott Arniel and his staff when it comes to what they’ll do with their second line. If anything, it’s more about what’s the best way to manage their second-line situation, with the realization that change might be the constant, at least to start the season.

Nikolaj Ehlers is gone. Adam Lowry is recovering from a hip surgery but told reporters last week that he is targeting a late October/early November return. Jonathan Toews is coming back to the NHL after missing the past two seasons with inflammatory and immune system issues. Gustav Nyquist is seeking cohesion on his third team in the past year, and Cole Perfetti could be in line for a breakout season after scoring a career-high 50 points.

It appears the Jets might use Perfetti, Nyquist and Toews on their second line to start the season, with the idea they’ll face a decision about finding the strongest possible combination when Lowry returns.

Pacific Division

Anaheim Ducks
Is this the season the Ducks reach the playoffs again?

While still young, their homegrown core has varying levels of experience, from Troy Terry going into his seventh season to Cutter Gauthier seeking to build on a 20-goal rookie campaign. Over time, the Ducks have insulated that group with veterans. What began with getting Alex Killorn and Frank Vatrano years ago continued this offseason as they added Chris Kreider and Mikael Granlund.

They finished the 2024-25 campaign with 80 points for the first time since the 2018-19 season, which gives the Ducks confidence to reach the next stage of their rebuild — that stage being the end of the rebuild itself.

So, is this the season in which the Ducks transition from promising project to the latest perennial playoff contender? Or is this the campaign that allows them to understand what gaps they must fill in order to reach that desired destination?


One of the Flames’ most important players is entering the final year of his contract. This is nothing new for them, based on recent history. But Andersson’s circumstances are different from those of Noah Hanifin and Elias Lindholm because this version of the Flames is in contention for a playoff spot.

Teams will be willing to pay a premium for a proven top-pairing, right-handed defenseman like Andersson. The Flames need to determine the strongest window for them to maximize any potential return if they can’t re-sign Andersson.

Does it make more sense for them to see how they start the season before making a decision? Do they wait until closer to the trade deadline? Could they hold off if they’re in a playoff spot or close to one at the deadline, and seek to add help instead? What can they receive for him? Or do they possibly risk losing him for nothing?

It’s going to be fascinating to watch this saga play out.


Edmonton Oilers
Is this version of the Oilers as good as the past two seasons?

There will be frequent conversations surrounding 2026 free agent Connor McDavid and his future — and if that future includes staying with the Oilers or heading elsewhere next summer.

But another issue that’s likely to be raised is whether this can be the season in which the Oilers win another Stanley Cup and, in turn, allow the game’s premier player to win a title and stay with the only pro team he has known.

Edmonton parted ways with veterans such as Viktor Arvidsson, Connor Brown, John Klingberg, Evander Kane and Corey Perry in cost-cutting decisions this offseason. That opened the door for them to make the trade for Isaac Howard, with the intent that having young forwards such as Howard and Matthew Savoie can provide the Oilers with promising talents on cheap cap hits.

Like any team, the Oilers face questions about what lies ahead, and if there are any other changes that need to be made prior to the postseason. It’s just that those questions are ramped up with the world’s best player on an expiring contract.


Los Angeles Kings
Does the regular season really matter that much for the Kings?

Posing that particular question is usually reserved for teams that have won a championship, or ones that are in a championship window, mainly with the idea that the regular season is a necessary formality in order for them to advance to the postseason.

This current iteration of the Kings hasn’t won a championship. Nor has it shown it is in a tangible championship window. What the Kings have shown is that they’re a perennial playoff team that can finish with more than 100 regular-season points.

But failing to get beyond the first round for a fourth straight postseason ultimately cost GM Rob Blake his job and led to a summer overhaul that saw his replacement — Hall of Famer Ken Holland — sign numerous veterans. Above all, it’s also led to the reality that any of the major questions about the Kings won’t be answered until the end of the first round of the playoffs.


San Jose Sharks
Can they win 30 games this season?

The strongest sign concerning the state of the Sharks’ rebuild was witnessing the three main pillars of the young core — Macklin Celebrini, William Eklund and Will Smith — finish in the top four on the team in points in 2024-25. More growth is expected from that trio this season, with the expectation that goaltender Yaroslav Askarov could be the next promising prospect to carve out a key role.

Part of the team’s growth was fostered thanks to veterans such as Tyler Toffoli. The addition of more experience in the form of John Klingberg, Dmitry Orlov and Jeff Skinner this summer could lead to additional gains.

Is that enough for the Sharks to win 30 games this season? They’ve finished with fewer than 30 wins for three straight campaigns. That’s only the second such sequence in franchise history. In fact, the Sharks have won 30 games just once since their most recent playoff appearance in 2019.


Seattle Kraken: What changes will new coach Lane Lambert make?

Through their first five years of existence, the Kraken are already on their third head coach, with Dan Bylsma lasting one season before they hired Lambert. In that time, they’ve gone through a number of questions that essentially come back to the same place: What must the Kraken do to attain consistency throughout all facets of their game?

Although they were 13th in 5-on-5 goals and 16th in goals per game last season, they finished in the bottom 10 in high-danger scoring chances, total scoring chances and shots per game. They also had a power play that was 23rd, with an 18.9% success rate.

Their defensive play also faced struggles, as the Kraken were in the top 10 in most goals allowed, most high-danger scoring chances allowed and total scoring chances allowed in 5-on-5 play, with a penalty kill that was 21st with a 77.2% success rate.


Vancouver Canucks
Is their current center situation good enough for them to compete in the loaded West?

There was Elias Pettersson‘s decline from finishing with 89 points in 2023-24 to scoring nearly half that amount (45 points) a year later. The friction between Pettersson and J.T. Miller going public led to Miller being traded, with the Canucks losing another proven scoring option down the middle. That was further compounded when Pius Suter and his 25 goals left for the Blues in free agency this summer.

Entering training camp, there’s a belief that Pettersson could rediscover the spark that allowed him to emerge as a franchise center. But what does that mean for the rest of the group?

Second-line center Filip Chytil, who came over in the Miller trade, has one 20-goal season in his career, which was also his only 40-point campaign on an NHL résumé that has been interrupted by injuries.

As for the Canucks’ bottom six? Teddy Blueger‘s two-way consistency makes him a consistent contributor who can chip in more than 25 points a season. Aatu Raty‘s stint with the club last season included seven goals and 11 points in 33 games, in his longest run in the NHL to date.


Yes, the Knights made the splashiest move of the offseason in landing Mitch Marner. But there was major news on the blue line, as Pietrangelo will miss this season while recovering from femur reconstruction surgery and might never play again.

That poses questions about how the Golden Knights will fill the void left by a physically imposing, right-shot, top-pairing defenseman who led them in average ice time and was second in short-handed minutes — while trying to win another Stanley Cup after winning one in 2023.

Vegas’ current top-four setup could have Brayden McNabb partner with Shea Theodore on the top line, while Noah Hanifin could be joined by Zach Whitecloud, who lost his longtime defensive partner, Nicolas Hague, in a trade with the Predators. That would slot Kaedan Korczak and Jeremy Lauzon as the third pairing.

Under that potential configuration, Korczak and Whitecloud are the Golden Knights’ only right-handed defensemen.

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