Logan Stanley is still out there, and that’s turning a few heads.
More than two weeks into free agency, the defenseman remains without a new contract after plenty of people expected him to land one on day one. Stanley had been moved to the Buffalo Sabres with Luke Schenn ahead of the 2026 Trade Deadline, and Buffalo’s playoff push carried all the way into the second round before it was ended in seven games by the Montreal Canadiens. Even with that run, some around the team figured the Sabres might try to keep him around.
That possibility seemed even more logical once Buffalo traded Bowen Byram. At that point, Stanley looked like a clean way to help firm up the blue line depth. Instead, he’s still an unrestricted free agent, and the market has left him waiting.
One team that fits the bill is the Anaheim Ducks. Their offseason has already been busy, nearly losing Leo Carlsson to a massive offer sheet while also saying goodbye to Radko Gudas and Jacob Trouba. The biggest issue there is the blue line, especially the right side, but adding Stanley would at least give them more stability on the left and could help make the overall defensive group more playable.
The Boston Bruins also make sense. They’re close enough to true contention that another defenseman feels like a practical move, and Stanley shouldn’t cost much.
He would be an upgrade on Mason Lohrei, and there’s also a path where he becomes Charlie McAvoy’s partner. Either way, Boston would get more flexibility with its pairings.
Then there’s Calgary, where the timeline is different. The Flames are not expected to contend this season and are likely to finish near the bottom of the standings.
Their future still looks promising, but they’re several years away from being serious Western Conference threats. That’s why a one-year deal for Stanley could work for both sides.
He could bet on himself, the Flames could potentially flip him at the 2027 Trade Deadline for future assets, and he’d have a chance to land with a contender and earn a raise from the next team that comes calling.
Calgary’s young defensemen, especially Zayne Parekh, also make Stanley a useful fit as someone who could help keep the group focused through the rebuild.
The Sabres were worth mentioning as a possible landing spot, but after they added Olen Zellweger from the Ducks, that return now looks unlikely.
Still, Stanley should have options. Anaheim, Boston, and Calgary all make sense in different ways, and he ought to find a new deal before training camp arrives.
In Other News...
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Anaheims offseason has already turned into a stress test for the front offices plan to build around a young core, with roster turnover, a key defensive addition in Nick Jensen and the lingering impact of Troy Terrys hip surgery all landing at once. The Ducks have tried to keep the picture balanced between adding stability and protecting their long-term flexibility, but the moves have also made it clear how much of the roster is still being shaped on the fly.
The biggest pressure point now sits with the next wave of contracts, where every decision seems to ripple into the next one. A high-value offer sheet to Leo Carlsson has forced Anaheim to confront its cap reality sooner than expected, and it has only sharpened the focus on Cutter Gauthiers upcoming extension as the Ducks try to keep their young talent together without boxing themselves in. [Read more 🡒]
Cutter Gauthier Just Put Pat Verbeek In Another Brutal Spot
Cutter Gauthiers next deal is already shaping up to be one of the more delicate negotiations on Anaheims summer docket. A report on the Spittin Chiclets podcast suggested the young forward is aiming high in contract talks, and the backdrop matters here because Pat Verbeek is trying to keep the Ducks restricted free agents lined up without letting one negotiation spill over into the rest of the roster picture.
The comparison floating around the conversation is what makes this especially tricky for Anaheim, even if the reported number is only an opening ask and not a final landing spot. Gauthier has every reason to press his case after a strong season, but he is still a restricted free agent without arbitration rights, which gives Verbeek some leverage and also puts the Ducks in the kind of standoff that can drag deeper into the summer than anyone around the team would prefer. [Read more 🡒]
