The Bruins are running out of time to settle Viktor Arvidsson’s future, and if they can’t get something done before Wednesday, one of their own pending UFAs could wind up on the open market.
That possibility matters even more now that Boston has added JJ Peterka from the Utah Mammoth on the first day of the NHL Draft, a move that only sharpened the questions around Arvidsson’s place with the team. If he reaches free agency, he won’t be short on suitors.
One of the most interesting landing spots floated already is Toronto. In a recent piece for TheScore, Josh Wegman projected Arvidsson to land with the Maple Leafs on a three-year, $15 million deal worth $5 million annually.
"Arvidsson's speed and motor should be appealing for a Maple Leafs team that needs to get faster and could use another top-nine winger option," Wegman wrote. "The Swedish influence already on the team in William Nylander and Oliver Ekman-Larsson, plus Mats Sundin in the front office, could help sway Arvidsson. He also excelled playing under new Leafs head coach Jim Hiller in Los Angeles."
For Boston, that would be a rough outcome. Arvidsson delivered a strong 2025-26 season, putting up 25 goals, 29 assists and 54 points in 69 games.
A productive winger walking away is one thing. Watching him do it for a division rival would be another.
There is still a window for the Bruins to keep him from getting there. Of all their pending UFAs, Arvidsson looks like the one they should be pushing hardest to retain, and a short-term return to Boston would make a lot of sense if they can make it happen.
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The Bruins blue line has become a familiar conversation piece again, even with the front office already busy reshaping the roster after landing JJ Peterka from the Utah Mammoth before the NHL Entry Draft. Boston had its sights on Rasmus Andersson at one point, too, in a deal with Calgary that never got across the finish line before the defenseman wound up with the Vegas Golden Knights. Between the Peterka move and the earlier flirtation with Andersson, the Bruins have made it clear they are still looking for ways to balance the lineup around both immediate help and longer-term fit.
Anderssons name is likely to keep circulating in Boston circles because the Bruins have shown interest before, and the fit on the back end is easy to imagine from a roster-building standpoint. The wrinkle is that nothing is settled yet, and any future pursuit would depend on a lot of moving parts lining up at the right time. For now, it remains one of those offseason threads that hangs over the team until the market clarifies and Boston decides how aggressively it wants to keep chasing a familiar target. [Read more 🡒]
