The Sabres have wasted no time reshaping their roster this offseason, and the early returns look promising. In a summer that has already featured a wave of trades, extensions and new deals across the league, Buffalo has been active enough to make it clear it’s trying to keep pace in a loaded Atlantic Division.
The biggest swing came with Bowen Byram, who is now the highest paid defenseman in the NHL. Rather than pay him more than they were comfortable with or risk losing him in free agency next summer, the Sabres moved on. They sent Byram to the Chicago Blackhawks and got the fourth overall pick, Daxon Rudolph, plus additional assets in return.
From there, Buffalo turned around and filled the vacancy by acquiring Olen Zellweger from the Anaheim Ducks. Zellweger is 22, a puck-moving defenseman, and someone who spent last season buried in Anaheim’s lineup.
He’s a cheaper version of Byram, though the belief here is that he may actually have the higher ceiling because of his two-way game. There are defensive rough edges - especially from time to time in his first two NHL seasons - but the upside is obvious.
The Sabres then signed him to a three-year contract worth $3 million a season.
The fourth overall pick, meanwhile, became its own storyline. Buffalo’s general manager shopped the selection after landing it from Chicago and came close to moving it the day before the draft. The Sabres were in deep talks with the Winnipeg Jets for goaltender Connor Hellebuyck, and per Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet, Hellebuyck was willing to waive his no movement clause for Buffalo.
But the deal never came together. Kekalainen felt the Jets were asking for too much, with Winnipeg reportedly wanting Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, Jack Quinn, the fourth overall pick and another player, with some believing that player was Zach Benson. Buffalo wanted the eighth overall pick instead and did not want to include Benson, but the Jets said no, and the talks fell apart.
So the Sabres kept the pick and went a little off the board with Rudolph. The choice caught plenty of people off guard, especially with Chase Reid and Keaton Verhoeff still available, but Rudolph does check important boxes for Buffalo.
He’s a right-handed defenseman, stands six-foot-two, and is a strong skater. Last season, he put up 78 points in 68 games, which ranked third among all defensemen in the Western Hockey League.
Rudolph plans to spend one season in college before making the jump toward pro hockey. Whether that means he goes straight to the NHL or needs a year in the American Hockey League, like prospect Radim Mrtka, remains to be seen.
Even with those moves, Buffalo still looks like it has another step to take. The Sabres have had a strong start, but they could still use one more impact addition, ideally another top-six piece. Kekalainen, though, is not in a hurry.
One name worth watching is Patrick Kane. The hometown connection is obvious, and he could help deepen the forward group, work on the second power play unit and bring veteran leadership. He’s not the player he once was, but he still produced 57 points in 67 games last season, which is solid work for a 37-year-old.
The offseason is nowhere near finished, but Buffalo has clearly made progress. Right now, the moves have been good enough to keep the Sabres in the mix in a tough Atlantic Division.
For now, the grade sits at an A-. Add one more scorer, and that number could climb even higher.
In Other News...
Ducks Just Made Their Stance Clear On Young Defenseman Tyson Hinds
The Ducks have made a clear commitment to Tyson Hinds, locking up the young defenseman on a two-year extension that runs through the 2027-28 season. It is also a one-way deal, which says plenty about how Anaheim views a player it drafted in 2021 and has continued to develop through the organization.
Hinds has already started to turn that long runway into NHL opportunity, making his debut this season after building up his rsum in San Diego and adding to a profile that already included a QMJHL best defensive defenseman honor and a gold medal with Canada at the 2023 World Junior Championship. For Anaheim, the larger question now is how quickly that trust translates into a more regular role at the NHL level. [Read more 🡒]
Ducks Lock In Tyson Hinds As Blue Line Depth Starts Taking Shape
Tyson Hinds is the latest young Ducks defenseman to get a real foothold in the organizations plans, with Anaheim signing the 2021 draft pick to a two-year contract after his steady climb through the AHL. Hinds has already gotten a taste of the NHL, appearing in six games with the club, and the Ducks are clearly betting that his development has reached the point where he can be part of the conversation on the back end.
For a team still sorting out its blue-line depth, the move gives Anaheim another controllable option as the roster takes shape for next season. Hinds is expected to fill a depth role, but the way the Ducks structure his deal suggests they want him ready for more than just emergency duty, especially if the defensive mix keeps shifting during camp and into the fall. [Read more 🡒]
Ian Moore Just Earned A Bigger Place In Anaheims New Blue Line
Ian Moores first full look with the Ducks came in a season that asked him to do a little bit of everything, and it ended with a stronger case for a long-term role on the blue line. Drafted by Anaheim in 2020 after his path ran through the USHL and Harvard, Moore spent most of the 2024-25 campaign in the NHL and showed enough poise to stick around for 67 games, finishing with four goals and 12 points while also getting into 10 playoff games.
What makes Moores rise interesting is how much he had to adapt along the way, even before the postseason. At different points he was shuffled around the lineup, then sent back to defense, and the Ducks clearly saw enough to keep investing in him with a new two-year deal. Now the real question is how he fits into a blue line that is getting more crowded, and whether his next step is simply surviving camp or carving out a regular role in a defense corps that is starting to take shape. [Read more 🡒]
