Sabres Fans Just Got A Telling Update On Radim Mrtka

Radim Mrtka addresses trade rumors while showcasing his talents at the Buffalo Sabres' Development Camp, as he aims to refine his skills for a future NHL career.

The Buffalo Sabres’ 2026 Development Camp ended Thursday morning the same way these camps always seem to find a way to end: with goals, pace and a few prospects making sure their names stuck.

Team Blue topped Team Gold, 18-15, in the annual 3-on-3 scrimmage at LECOM Harborcenter. Defenseman Gavin McCarthy scored four times for Blue, all in an eight-minute burst in the second half.

Forward Jake Richard answered with four goals for Gold and added another when he kicked it in for fun. Blue defenseman Adam Kleber piled up three nearly identical breakaway goals with the same slick finish each time, and sixth-round pick Dylan Dumont added three goals for Blue as well.

Beyond the final scrimmage, one of the week’s biggest storylines belonged to Radim Mrtka. Before the March trade deadline, his name was floating around in rumors as the Sabres tried to upgrade a playoff-bound roster. The ninth-overall pick from last year said he kept his head down through it all.

“I would say that’s hockey business,” he said. “Either gonna be fine with it, or I don’t know what else. It’s just what it is in hockey, and I’m just fine with it.”

The 6-foot-6 defenseman again flashed the blend that makes him so intriguing: size, reach, physical edge and enough skill to make you notice him with the puck. Since his last appearance in Buffalo during the 2025 preseason, Mrtka has bounced between levels. He played four games with the Amerks to start the regular season, went back to Seattle for another productive WHL season with 34 points in 43 games, then returned to Rochester for seven more games, including three in the playoffs.

He described the AHL as a different kind of test.

“It’s a little different than juniors, a little heavier,” he said. “… Some guys were telling me it’s even harder than NHL, because everyone’s just fighting for a spot.

So, I knew that. It’s a great league, but nothing I can’t handle.”

Amerks coach Michael Leone laid out what he sees as Mrtka’s road to becoming an NHL defenseman. The list starts with quicker puck movement and dependable defending, then moves into the harder, grind-it-out stuff.

“To move the puck quick, to be a really good defender, to be able to shut down plays,” Leone said. “His transitional gapping against speed is gonna be really important.

His ability to kill plays in the corner and then be hard to play against in the net front. Because you see the size, he’s a good skater, he moves the puck well - I think those things are really important.

But the No. 1 (thing) is probably away from the rink, to get stronger.”

Another prospect drawing attention this week was Doman Szongoth, Buffalo’s 2026 fifth-round pick, who is trying to carve out a rare place in Hungarian hockey history.

Tim Kennedy had a quick answer when asked what he’d learned about Szongoth.

“That there’s a direct flight from Hungary to Toronto.”

Szongoth was in Budapest with his family when he got the call around 10 p.m. last Saturday. By 7 a.m. the next morning, he was on his way to Buffalo for Development Camp.

He now sits in a very small group. Szongoth became just the fourth Hungarian-born player drafted to the NHL, joining Janos Vas (2002), Levente Szuper (2000) and Tamas Groschl (1999). None of the three played above the AHL in North America, and each reached out after the pick.

“All of them said, ‘Congrats, and nice to have you in our group,’” Szongoth said. “And they hope I will be the first to play (in the NHL).”

Hungary is better known as a soccer country, and the national team did not qualify for the 2026 World Cup, but Szongoth’s hockey roots run deep. His father, Kristof, played professionally for two decades and now coaches in Hungary’s National Team Development Program. His grandfather Gabor, uncle Gergely and several cousins also played.

Szongoth has spent the past three seasons with KooKoo in Finland’s junior system and produced 28 points at the U-20 level in 2025-26. He also represented Hungary in the last two IIHF World Championships, where he got to share the ice with some of the game’s biggest names.

“It’s an amazing feeling with the big stars there, playing against (Macklin) Celebrini, (Aleksander) Barkov and those big players,” he said. “And I was doing it two times before my draft, so it’s amazing.

It teaches a lot, like how competitive, physical you have to be to get to this level. The biggest thing, they were motivating me.”

He plans to move to North America and join the OHL’s Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds this season.

Assistant general manager Jerry Forton called him “Very competitive player,” while also crediting Frank Musil and Buffalo’s European scouts for finding him. Forton said Szongoth has “a good two-way game,” needs work on his skating and will have “a long path” ahead, but added that the Sabres like the intangibles.

“Gets to the inside of the game, gets around the net, and he still takes care of his own end. Natural center qualities.”

Tim Kennedy also offered a broader view of what Buffalo’s development staff is trying to do, now that he has been promoted from development coach to director of player development earlier this week.

He said older players naturally become part of the teaching chain, because that’s how the game works. He pointed to veterans like Mike Grier, Shane Doan and Ed Jovanovski as examples of teammates who helped him along.

He also stressed the importance of staying aligned with junior, college, CHL, AHL and NHL coaches so prospects aren’t being pulled in different directions. For Buffalo’s taller defensemen, he said the league is trending toward big, mobile blue-liners who can move the puck and still provide help in tough areas.

On the Sabres’ playoff run, Kennedy said the experience felt different from the outside.

“The playoff experience for me was surreal, because you’re watching it as an employee of the team, but you’re also watching it as a fan of the team that you grew up rooting for and I played for. … Doing this for now six years, you don’t really cheer for goals anymore, but I hate to say it, I was cheering for goals in the playoffs.”

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