Jets Prospect Arrival Just Raised The Stakes In A Familiar Battle

From cover athlete celebrations to strategic roster shifts, explore the latest NHL rumors shaking up the league.

Macklin Celebrini is on track for a major off-ice milestone, Viggo Bjorck is heading to Winnipeg, and the Anaheim Ducks are staring at a cap squeeze that could push Frank Vatrano out the door.

The Celebrini news comes from a leak reported by Mike Straw on X, who said EA’s marketing push for NHL 27 is set to start next week. Straw also found a preorder link that identifies Celebrini as the game’s cover athlete.

If that holds, Celebrini will become the youngest player ever featured on the cover, topping Trevor Zegras, who was 21 when he fronted NHL 23. The San Jose Sharks haven’t had one of their players on an EA cover since Owen Nolan for NHL 2001, though Joe Thornton did appear on the cover of NHL 2K7.

At just 20 years old, Celebrini has already built the kind of profile that makes this an easy sell. He put up 115 points in 2025-26 as a sophomore, then followed that with a strong international run.

He became the first teenager to play for Team Canada on the Olympic stage, scoring 10 points in six games and helping Canada to a silver medal. He added 14 more points at the 2026 IIHF World Championship.

Bjorck, meanwhile, is leaving Djurgardens of the Swedish Hockey League and heading to the Jets organization after being selected eighth overall in the 2026 NHL Draft. The move gives him a chance to make an early push for an NHL job.

It would be a lot to ask for an 18-year-old to step right into the second-line centre role, but Winnipeg will give him the opportunity to try. The Jets still have uncertainty around the Connor Hellebuyck situation, according to Chris Johnston, and their biggest offseason need remains finding a true second-line centre.

They’ve used Vladislav Namestnikov, Jonathan Toews, Adam Lowry, and others in that spot, but none have fully filled the role the way the club wants. Bjorck brings a compact 5-foot-9 frame, but his game is built on competitiveness, maturity, strong two-way play, and real offensive instincts. There’s a legitimate path for him to crack the roster in the fall and challenge for that opening.

In Anaheim, the aftermath of Leo Carlsson’s offer sheet may force the Ducks to clear money, and Vatrano looks like the name sitting closest to the chopping block.

That would be a sharp turn after several productive seasons with the Ducks, but 2025-26 was a rough one for Vatrano. He managed just nine points in 50 games, and his $4.57 million cap hit over the next two seasons makes him a candidate to be moved if Anaheim needs room to maneuver.

Rick Dhaliwal reported that the Ducks have already been making calls to gauge interest, though no team has stepped up yet. He also said the Canucks were among the teams contacted by general manager Pat Verbeek.

Anaheim has a little more than $9 million in cap space, but Cutter Gauthier still needs to be signed, and the Ducks could also use help on defense. Alex Killorn and Chris Kreider are other possible cap casualties, with both carrying salaries above $6 million and each having one season left on their deals.

The Ducks are in a tight spot, but the core they’ve locked up - Carlsson, Jackson LaCombe, Troy Terry, and Pavel Mintyukov - gives them a strong base to work from, and the rising cap should help them through the pressure.

In Other News...

Why The Ducks Blue Line Suddenly Looks Different In This Market

The blue line market has been moving fast enough this offseason that even a deal that once would have looked steep can start to feel normal in a hurry. Darren Raddyshs new contract with Toronto is the latest example, but the bigger point for Anaheim is how quickly defensemen prices keep climbing as teams pay up for stability, size and minutes on the back end.

That matters for the Ducks because their own recent and future blue-line decisions are being judged against a market that keeps resetting upward. With Bowen Byrams massive new contract helping set the tone and other defensemen deals stacking up around the league, Anaheims front office has to weigh whether its next move is a bargain, a reach or simply the cost of doing business now. [Read more 🡒]

Ducks Just Sent A Loud Message About Their Future Down The Middle

For a Ducks team trying to build a real identity down the middle, keeping Leo Carlsson in the fold matters as much as any move Anaheim could make this summer. It preserves a centerpiece the organization clearly values and keeps the long-term picture from getting scrambled just as the front office is trying to stabilize the roster around its young core.

The broader ripple is felt beyond Orange County, too, because Philadelphia had been looking for a way to accelerate its own rebuild at center and came up empty. With that avenue closed, the Flyers still have paths to explore, from other restricted free agents to the trade market and even waiting on arbitration situations to sort themselves out, but the message from Anaheim is clear: the Ducks are not eager to let their future drift away. [Read more 🡒]