
2026/6/22 · 9:21
Tampa Bay takes the trophies, Florida gets the Tkachuk: NHL off-season digest, June 15–22
Tampa Bay Lightning swept the 2026 NHL Awards — Kucherov (Hart), Vasilevskiy (Vezina), Cooper (Jack Adams) — despite not reaching the Cup Final, while McDavid claimed a record-tying fifth Ted Lindsay Award. Off the ice: Brady Tkachuk was traded to Florida to reunite with Matthew five days before the draft; Toronto hired Jim Hiller and landed Darren Raddysh; Vegas disclosed a serious injury toll from its Cup Final run; and the 2026 NHL Draft opens Thursday in Buffalo with the McKenna vs. Stenberg debate still genuinely unsettled.
Tampa Bay Lightning won the most hardware of the 2025-26 season without hoisting the Cup. Carolina got the Cup. The off-season is here, and the NHL's first full week of transactions, awards, and injury disclosures gave every fan something to recalibrate around — including a Brady Tkachuk blockbuster that landed four days before the draft.
Tampa Bay sweeps the awards room
The Lightning left the 2025-26 season without a Cup Final appearance but walked away with three of the six player-voted or coach-voted major trophies. Call it a soft consolation or a statement of organizational depth — either way, the hardware is real.
Nikita Kucherov won his second Hart Memorial Trophy on June 11, edging Connor McDavid by just 10 voting points (1,436 to 1,426) — the third-tightest Hart margin in NHL history. 1 Kucherov posted 44 goals, 86 assists, and 130 points in 76 games, led the league in points per game (1.71), even-strength assists (57), and even-strength points (92), and finished at +43. 1 He is the 10th player in NHL history with multiple 130-point seasons, and only the third to win Hart Trophies more than seven years apart, joining Jean Béliveau and Sidney Crosby. 2
McDavid finished second in Hart voting but took the Ted Lindsay Award for the fifth time, tying Wayne Gretzky's all-time record for most NHLPA player-voted outstanding-player wins. 3 He posted 48 goals, 90 assists, and 138 points — his sixth Art Ross Trophy, tied with Gordie Howe and Mario Lemieux for second all-time behind Gretzky (10). 3 McDavid's comment on the Lindsay, coming from the players he competes against: "This award, coming from the guys you play against every night, who you battle against every night — that they honor me with such a prize means a lot to me." 3
Andrei Vasilevskiy secured his second Vezina Trophy on June 6, going 39-15-4 with a 2.31 GAA and .912 SV% in 58 starts. 4 He is now the sixth goalie in NHL history with nine or more seasons of 30-plus wins, and his nine consecutive such seasons rank second all-time behind Martin Brodeur (12). 4
Jon Cooper took his first Jack Adams Award on June 3 by the slimmest possible margin — three points over Lindy Ruff (226–223), the tightest three-way race since voting results were first published in 1983-84. 5 Cooper reached 600 career wins on January 12 — second-fastest in NHL history behind Scotty Bowman. 5

Beyond Tampa, the other major awards painted a picture of a league with genuine depth at the top. Zach Werenski (Columbus Blue Jackets) won the Norris Trophy as the NHL's best defenseman — the franchise's first — with 22 goals, 59 assists, and 81 points in 75 games, leading NHL defensemen in shots (260) and averaging 26:37 of ice time. 6 Cale Makar (Colorado Avalanche) finished second.
Matthew Schaefer (New York Islanders) won the Calder Trophy unanimously — 198 of 198 first-place votes — at 18 years and 223 days, making him the youngest Calder winner in NHL history, one day younger than Nathan MacKinnon in 2013-14. 7 His 23 goals tied the NHL single-season record for a rookie defenseman, and his 2,023:59 in ice time was more than 500 minutes ahead of the next rookie. 7 The last unanimous Calder was Teemu Selanne in 1992-93.
In one of the off-season's better ceremony moments, Nick Suzuki (Selke Trophy, dominant at 151 first-place votes) and Cole Caufield (Lady Byng) each showed up to surprise the other — Suzuki thought he was delivering the Lady Byng to Caufield; Caufield was holding the Selke for Suzuki. 8 9 Caufield's Lady Byng came with an asterisk worth noting: he scored 51 goals and 29 go-ahead goals (second-most in a single NHL season, trailing only Brett Hull's 39 in 1990-91) while collecting just 14 penalty minutes. 9
Gabriel Landeskog (Colorado Avalanche) won both the Masterton Trophy and the Mark Messier Leadership Award — the only NHL player to return from knee cartilage replacement surgery, having missed three full regular seasons. 10 Colorado went 45-7-8 with him in the lineup, 10-9-3 without. 10 Teammate Parker Kelly: "If you can create the captain in NHL26, you just copy Gabe Landeskog. That's exactly how you'd create him." 10
2025-26 All-Star Teams
| G | D | D | C | RW | LW | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First | Vasilevskiy (TBL) | Werenski (CBJ) | Makar (COL) | McDavid (EDM) | Kucherov (TBL) | Robertson (DAL) |
| Second | L. Thompson (WSH) | Bouchard (EDM) | Dahlin (BUF) | MacKinnon (COL) | Pastrnak (BOS) | Caufield (MTL) |

All-Rookie Team: G Jakub Dobes (MTL), D Alexander Nikishin (CAR), D Matthew Schaefer (NYI), F Ivan Demidov (MTL), F Beckett Sennecke (ANA), F Jimmy Snuggerud (STL). All three Calder finalists made the team. 12
One format note: the NHL ran no live awards broadcast in 2026, announcing winners on a rolling basis through surprise moments during the playoffs. The approach generated stronger social engagement than the traditional TV special — Vasilevskiy's K-9-unit ambush in particular went viral — though the Jim Gregory GM of the Year Award remains unannounced as of this writing. 13
Draft: four days out, two players, one big debate
The 2026 NHL Draft runs June 26-27 at KeyBank Center in Buffalo (first round, June 26, 7:00 PM ET on ESPN/ESPN+/SN/TVAS). 14 Toronto holds the #1 pick after winning the lottery; San Jose is at #2, Vancouver #3, and Chicago #4.
The consensus top prospect is Gavin McKenna (LW, Penn State, NCAA) — 51 points in 35 games as a freshman, with 33 of those coming in his final 18 games. 15 Seven of ten NHL scouts surveyed by NHL.com ranked McKenna over #2 prospect Ivar Stenberg (LW/RW, Frölunda, SHL), though those three dissenting votes represent real disagreement. 15 One pro-Stenberg scout: "I wouldn't say McKenna lost the No. 1 spot for me, I would say that Stenberg won it because the numbers that Stenberg put up in the SHL is, like, record breaking." 15 A McKenna backer countered: "McKenna has the ability to make others better." 15 Sam Cosentino (Sportsnet), who has McKenna at #1 in his final rankings, summarized: "The race for No. 1 has been tight all season long and getting to see McKenna up close and personal at the NHL Combine was enough to convince me that he is the top prospect available in this draft class." 16

The draft board was reshuffled significantly on June 21, five days before the first round. The Ottawa Senators traded Brady Tkachuk to Florida (see below), and as part of the return the Panthers sent their #9 and #25 picks to Ottawa. Ottawa now holds three first-round picks — #9, #25, and #32 — and leads all teams in 2026 first-round selections along with St. Louis (three picks: #11, #15, #29). 14
Transactions: one blockbuster, two coaching hires, and a quiet buyout window
Brady Tkachuk to Florida is the off-season's first legitimate blockbuster. The Panthers acquired the Senators' captain and left wing — 59 points in 60 games last season at $8.21M AAV with two years remaining — in exchange for the #9 and #25 picks in this week's draft, a 2029 first-round pick (top-10 protected), and a 2027 second. 17 Brady joins his brother Matthew Tkachuk ($9.50M AAV, four years remaining) in Florida, and the Panthers' top six now reads Barkov, Bennett, Marchand, Reinhart, Verhaeghe, and both Tkachuks — all under contract for at least two more seasons. ESPN graded the deal A for Florida, B+ for Ottawa. 17 Tkachuk told Ottawa management he would not re-sign when his contract expires, which forced the move; the Senators, flush with cap space and now three first-round picks, get to rebuild through a deep draft class while two of those selections arrive with 2026 stakes attached. 18
Toronto's off-season renovation continued at pace. The Maple Leafs hired Jim Hiller (57) as head coach on June 17, replacing Craig Berube after Toronto missed the playoffs for the first time since 2015-16. 19 Hiller went 93-58-24 with Los Angeles and previously served as a Leafs assistant (2015-19). GM John Chayka, who interviewed 25 candidates: "We didn't hire to satisfy a narrative or check a box. We hired based on what we believed would be best to support the growth of the players." 19 Toronto also acquired defenseman Darren Raddysh from Tampa Bay in a sign-and-trade on June 19 — Raddysh signed an 8-year, $68 million contract ($8.5M AAV) after posting career highs of 22 goals, 48 assists, and 70 points in 73 games. 17 He was the consensus top UFA defenseman before the deal removed him from the board. Edmonton remains the only NHL team without a head coach. 18
Vegas promoted Ryan Craig to NHL head coach on June 17, declining to renew John Tortorella's contract despite a 7-0-1 close to the regular season and a Cup Final run. Craig had been head coach of AHL Henderson; the Vegas front office appears to have used Tortorella as a short-term stabilizer while always planning an internal succession. 18 Carolina signed enforcer Nic Deslauriers to a 2-year, $875K AAV extension on June 20 — announced live on stage during the Hurricanes' Stanley Cup parade in Raleigh, with GM Eric Tulsky walking him to the podium. 20
Jonathan Toews officially retired on June 19 after 16 seasons, all in Chicago, where he won three Stanley Cups (2010, 2013, 2015) and the Conn Smythe in 2010. 18
The NHL buyout window opened June 17 and closes June 30, but as of June 22 no team has executed a single buyout. The salary cap ceiling rose $8.5M to $104M this season, significantly reducing the urgency across the league. 21 Columbus confirmed they will not make any. Jesperi Kotkaniemi (Carolina, $4.83M AAV, healthy scratch for the entire 2026 playoffs) remains the most discussed potential candidate, but nothing is imminent. 22
UFA top 5 as of June 21 (Daily Faceoff): 1. Alex Tuch (BUF, RW, $4.75M); 2. Rasmus Andersson (VGK, D, $4.55M); 3. John Carlson (ANA, D, $8M — prefers Eastern Conference); 4. Sergei Bobrovsky (FLA, G, $10M); 5. Alex Ovechkin (WSH, LW, decision expected in July). 23 Free agency opens July 1 at noon ET. 22
Injuries and early 2026-27 odds
Vegas GM Kelly McCrimmon held his post-Final press conference on June 18 and disclosed the full scope of what his team played through to reach the Cup Final:
- Mark Stone (Golden Knights captain, RW): torn adductor for the entire playoff run 24
- William Karlsson (C): fractured wrist in Game 5, underwent surgery June 17, missed Game 6 24
- Noah Hanifin (D): upper-body injury that would have meant a 6-8 week absence in the regular season 24
- Brayden McNabb (D): three separate injuries during the playoff run 24
Stone's post-conference comment: "The stuff that guys battled through, I've never seen anything like it. Guys never complained. They just put their gear on, go out there and try to compete." 24

Elsewhere: Anaheim's Troy Terry (RW, 28) underwent hip surgery on June 9 to repair an impingement and labral tear, with a 5-6 month recovery timeline — best case, he returns around mid-November; worst case, early December. 25 Terry scored 57 points in 61 games last season. Toronto's Max Domi had surgical complications from off-season work on an injury he played through in 2025-26; GM John Chayka confirmed Domi's status is indefinite and will be reassessed at training camp. 26
2026-27 Stanley Cup futures (as of June 22):
| Team | Odds (Odds Shark) | Odds (ESPN/DraftKings) |
|---|---|---|
| Carolina Hurricanes | +650 | +700 |
| Colorado Avalanche | +700 | +800 |
| Tampa Bay Lightning | +1000 | — |
| Vegas Golden Knights | — | +850 |
| Florida Panthers | +1100 | +1100 |
| Edmonton Oilers | +1100 | 11-1 |
Carolina opens as favorite with $11.98M in remaining cap space to improve the roster. Florida's odds reflect the Tkachuk acquisition, even with the goaltending situation (Bobrovsky is a UFA) still unresolved. The VGK injuries disclosed this week will likely nudge their odds downward as the full rehab picture becomes clearer. Next up: June 23 Board of Governors meeting, then the draft June 26-27, followed by July 1 free agency.
参考ソース
- 1Kucherov wins 2026 Hart Memorial Trophy
- 2NHL Awards 2026 Tracker
- 3McDavid wins 5th Ted Lindsay Award
- 4Vasilevskiy wins 2026 Vezina Trophy
- 5Cooper wins 2026 Jack Adams Award
- 6Werenski wins 2026 Norris Trophy
- 7Schaefer wins 2026 Calder Trophy
- 8Suzuki wins 2026 Selke Trophy
- 9Caufield wins 2026 Lady Byng Trophy
- 10Landeskog wins Masterton Memorial Trophy
- 112025-26 NHL First and Second All-Star Teams
- 122025-26 NHL All-Rookie Team
- 13Breaking Down 2026 NHL Awards and Voting Results
- 142026 NHL Draft 1st-round order set
- 15McKenna and Stenberg have experts divided on No. 1 pick
- 16Sportsnet's 2026 NHL Draft Rankings: Final Edition
- 17NHL 2026 offseason trade grades
- 18Five Key Stories 6/15–6/21
- 19Maple Leafs hire Jim Hiller as head coach
- 20Deslauriers signs extension at Stanley Cup parade
- 21NHL buyout window now open through June 30
- 22Key NHL offseason dates
- 23Top 50 NHL UFAs 2026
- 24Golden Knights played through significant injuries in Cup run
- 25Terry undergoes successful surgery
- 26Chayka on Joseph Woll trade to Philadelphia
- 27NHL Stanley Cup odds 2026-27
- 28Stanley Cup odds — Hurricanes favored to repeat




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