Sabres Suddenly Have A Serious New Threat In Their Goalie Pursuit

The San Jose Sharks unexpectedly join the race for Connor Hellebuyck, challenging the Buffalo Sabres as they look to bolster their goaltending roster.

The San Jose Sharks have suddenly become a team to watch in the Connor Hellebuyck chase.

For weeks, the Buffalo Sabres have been treated as the favorite in the Winnipeg Jets star’s trade buzz. But a new report has put San Jose in the mix as a real challenger, and the Sharks’ latest move may have made their case even stronger.

Alex Nedeljkovic is expected to open as San Jose’s starter. Last season, he appeared in 40 games and finished with an .896 save percentage and a 2.87 goals-against average.

Those are respectable numbers, and with Yaroslav Askarov and Eric Comrie also in the picture, the Sharks have a goaltending group that could help them chase a playoff spot on the back of an improved defense. Still, that’s a far cry from Hellebuyck.

The Comrie addition is the part that stands out. According to Mike McIntyre of the Winnipeg Free Press, San Jose’s decision to bring in Comrie - Hellebuyck’s longtime backup in Winnipeg - could matter more than it looks on paper.

McIntyre called Comrie Hellebuyck’s “personal security blanket” and said the reunion could make the Sharks’ pitch to the Jets goalie much more attractive. “I still believe Buffalo is the most logical landing spot, but I also keep coming back to San Jose as a suitable destination - and that was before they went and inked Comrie, which no doubt would make the sales pitch to Hellebuyck even easier,” McIntyre wrote.

McIntyre also made his belief clear about where this is headed. “I firmly believe Connor Hellebuyck is going to be traded.

In fact, I’d put the odds somewhere north of 95 per cent. I just don’t know exactly when, or to whom.”

If the Sharks do pull it off, they’d probably have to clear the crease by moving on from Nedeljkovic, who has a three-team no-trade clause. That would leave San Jose with a projected tandem of Hellebuyck and Comrie, while 24-year-old Yaroslav Askarov keeps developing behind them.

It’s already been a busy summer for San Jose. The Sharks added Jacob Trouba and Mason Marchment in free agency, then traded for Darnell Nurse and acquired Michael Kesselring. If GM Mike Grier is going to make one true statement move, landing Hellebuyck would be the kind of swing that changes the whole conversation.

In Other News...

Can Zach Benson Really Fill The Void Buffalo Just Created

Buffalos long-awaited playoff breakthrough last season changed the conversation around the roster, and Zach Benson was right in the middle of it. After signing his extension, the young winger kept building on a strong 2025-26 campaign in which he showed real play-driving ability and steady offensive growth, making himself look less like a promising piece and more like someone the Sabres can trust in bigger moments.

Now the challenge is different. With Alex Tuch gone, Buffalo has a clear opening for someone to absorb more of the scoring burden, and Benson is one of the players most likely to see his role expand. The Sabres already know he can help tilt the ice in their favor, but the next step is whether he can turn that into the kind of production that helps replace what just walked out the door. [Read more 🡒]

Why Sabres Fans Are Suddenly Watching This Late Round Winger

Dylan Dumont is the kind of late-round pick that can quietly start to matter if the development keeps trending the right way. The 17-year-old winger, taken by the Sabres in the sixth round of the 2026 NHL Draft, turned heads last season with the Drummondville Voltigeurs in the QMJHL by showing real growth in his own end while still bringing the offensive skill that made him interesting in the first place.

Drummondville coach Sylvain Favreau saw enough improvement from Dumont to believe the foundation is there, but the next steps are still significant. Dumont is expected to spend another season in the QMJHL before possibly moving on to college hockey, and Buffalo is looking at a long runway here rather than an immediate solution, with his NHL path still several years away. [Read more 🡒]