Ducks Just Drew A New Line Around Several Young Players

The Anaheim Ducks have strategically repositioned their talent pool by extending qualifying offers to seven restricted free agents, yet the decision to release four notable prospects has sparked intrigue ahead of the NHL free agency period.

The Anaheim Ducks made their biggest qualifying-offer decisions before Monday’s 2 p.m. PST deadline, and the list tells you a lot about how Pat Verbeek is sorting the organization’s depth chart.

Out of 11 pending RFAs, Anaheim extended qualifying offers to seven. The group included center Leo Carlsson, left winger Cutter Gauthier, defenseman Pavel Mintyukov, defenseman Tyson Hinds, goaltender Vyacheslav Buteyets, goaltender Calle Clang and left winger Sasha Pastujov.

That means the Ducks kept the obvious core pieces in the fold. Carlsson, Gauthier, Mintyukov and Hinds were the cleanest decisions on the board as NHL roster players, while Buteyets and Pastujov were qualified as AHL players.

Clang’s qualifying offer stood out a little more. The 24-year-old had recently signed a two-year deal with Rogle BK in the SHL, the same club he played for before coming to North America and joining the San Diego Gulls. Anaheim’s move appears aimed at holding onto his rights in case his path eventually circles back to North America after a reset in Sweden.

Four Ducks prospects were not tendered qualifying offers and will head to the open market on July 1 at 9 a.m. PST if they remain unsigned before then: defenseman Jeremie Biakabutuka, defenseman Kyle Masters, center Jan Mysak and right winger Jaxsen Wiebe.

Biakabutuka, 24, came to Anaheim from the St. Louis Blues in the Cam Fowler deal, along with a 2027 second-round pick going back to the Ducks and a 2027 fourth-round pick heading the other way. He logged just 11 games with the Gulls and 75 games with the Tulsa Oilers during his time in the organization.

Masters, 23, had only been acquired two days earlier, on the second day of the 2026 NHL Entry Draft. Anaheim got him and a sixth-round pick, Noah Kosick, from the Carolina Hurricanes in exchange for the signing rights to defenseman John Carlson. Since then, Masters’ signing rights have been traded back to Carolina for the signing rights to AHL center Noah Philp, 27.

Mysak, 24, arrived from the Montreal Canadiens two years ago in the Jacob Perreault trade. Like Clang, he has already signed a two-year deal in the SHL, with HV71. He played 138 games for the Gulls over two and a half years in the Ducks organization.

Wiebe, 24, signed an entry-level contract as an undrafted free agent in March 2023 and spent his Anaheim tenure bouncing between the AHL and ECHL.

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