Bruins RFA Decisions Just Put New Focus On Development Camp

As the NHL offseason heats up, the Boston Bruins make decisive moves in development camp, player contracts, and strategic trades to bolster their future roster.

The Bruins’ offseason has shifted into a busy stretch, and Tuesday brought a little bit of everything: qualifying offers, a new contract for a recent addition, and a fresh batch of development camp notes as the next wave of prospects gets on the ice in Brighton.

Boston had seven restricted free agents this summer, and four of them were issued qualifying offers by yesterday’s deadline. Three are moving on, including Jordan Harris, who played just eight games this season. Matt Poitras is the biggest name among the four players staying in the fold.

One of those returnees is Ivan Ivan, who signed a one-year, two-way deal yesterday with a cap hit of $850,000, matching his qualifying offer. The Bruins picked up the 23-year-old in the Fabian Lysell trade over the weekend, and Don Sweeney had already confirmed he would get a qualifying offer before the deadline.

Development camp is still the main event at Warrior Ice Arena, where the Bruins’ prospects and camp invites were on the ice Monday and are back at it again today. The first group skates at 9:15 AM, with the defensemen scheduled for the opening session and scrimmages set for Thursday. The camp is open to the public.

There was also a first-rounder drawing attention for the right reasons. Dean Letourneau, Boston’s 2024 first-round pick, is at his third development camp after a breakout season that jumped from 3 points to 39. The 6-foot-7 forward said he was able to stay confident, and he’ll return to BC next season for a larger role now that James Hagens is in Boston.

A few other names stood out from day one. Kyle Chauvette, who plays at UNH, is set to be the Bruins’ emergency backup goalie this season, according to Bridgette Proulx.

North Kingstown, Rhode Island native Max Macchioni also joined camp after four years at Fitchburg State and a recent stint with the FPHL’s Blue Ridge Bobcats. Bruins 2026 draft picks Yuri Ivanov, a second-rounder, and Oscar Olsson, a fourth-round pick, made a strong first impression.

Adam McQuaid singled out Matvei Kotkov and Liam Pettersson as his standouts from the opening day.

Kirill Yemelyanov is not at camp. Loko Yaroslavl won the Kharlamov Cup in the Russian MHL, and the quick turnaround before KHL training camp begins kept him away.

There’s also a deadline looming later today, with the buyout window closing at 5:00 PM ET.

Around the league, the qualifying-offer market produced its own set of names. PuckPedia’s list of players who did not receive one includes Matias Maccelli, Bobby Brink, and Johnny Beecher. The Wild are reportedly working on an extension with Brink, while Devils forward Paul Cotter was also unqualified and will become an unrestricted free agent on July 1.

The trade market stayed active too. Florida dealt the rights to UFA AJ Greer for the rights to UFA Radko Gudas, and Elliotte Friedman said both players may end up signing with their new teams.

The Panthers also added goaltender Akira Schmid from Vegas for a 2028 third-round pick; Schmid is a restricted free agent with arbitration rights and can become an unrestricted free agent next season. Florida now has $5,871,786 in cap space.

In Canada, the Canucks acquired Brendan Gallagher from Montreal for future considerations, with the Canadiens retaining half of his $6.5 million cap hit. Gallagher’s contract runs through the end of the 2026-27 season. Vancouver also sent Nils Hoglander to Nashville for a third-round pick.

Pittsburgh and Winnipeg swapped a pair of players in a deal that sent right-shot defenseman Jack St. Ivany to the Jets for center David Gustafsson.

Dan Kingerski wrote that Winnipeg won the trade, pointing to St. Ivany as a 26-year-old right-handed defenseman on the rise while Pittsburgh added another bottom-six center.

The rumor mill is humming, too. Pierre LeBrun reported that the Stars and Jason Robertson are looking for a middle ground, and that Dallas is not comfortable paying him “that much more money than Mikko Rantanen,” who makes $12 million yearly. Elliotte Friedman said on 32 Thoughts: The Podcast that Zach Werenski is looking for a place where he thinks he can win and does not believe Werenski will consider San Jose.

And on the Darnell Nurse front, Friedman said his trade list still includes Boston, Pittsburgh, and Philadelphia. The issue with the Penguins was money retention, and Friedman added that “things would have to happen” for Boston.

In Other News...

Maple Leafs May Have Just Opened A Door Bruins Can't Ignore

With the NHLs restricted free-agent decisions now largely set, the Bruins offseason shopping list still has a few obvious gaps to fill. Don Sweeney has been tied to the search for forwards and a right-shot defenseman, and Bostons own qualifying-offer move on Jordan Harris showed the club is willing to make a few surprising calls as it sorts out the blue line and the forward group.

One name that suddenly looks worth watching is Matias Maccelli, whose situation in Toronto has created a possible opening for a team looking to add skill without paying the usual market premium. He fits the kind of forward depth Boston is still trying to sort out, and with July 1 approaching, the Bruins may have a chance to see whether that door stays open long enough for them to walk through it. [Read more 🡒]

Bruins Tied To Rugged Blue Line Option That Could Divide Fans

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The appeal is obvious from Bostons side: a physical defenseman with plenty of NHL mileage who just finished a seven-year deal and is heading into free agency after his move from the Rangers to the Ducks. But this is also the sort of target that can split a fan base, because the Bruins would be weighing toughness and edge against the risk that comes with a player whose style is built around force first and everything else a distant second. [Read more 🡒]

Bruins Suddenly Tied To Another Move Fans Can't Ignore

Bostons Development Camp is underway, and the Bruins are already using it as a springboard into the rest of their offseason. Their first major addition came with JJ Peterka arriving from the Utah Mammoth, while director of player development Adam McQuaid said prospect James Hagens will spend most of his summer in Boston working on his development. It is the kind of early-summer setup that tells you the front office is still shaping the roster and the pipeline at the same time.

Kyle Chauvette also is expected to slide into the emergency backup goalie role next season, practicing and traveling with the club as needed. Those are the kinds of details that can get lost in the calendar shuffle, but they matter because they show how the Bruins are trying to tighten every layer of the organization while the bigger offseason picture keeps unfolding around them. [Read more 🡒]