For the Blue Jackets’ development coaches, the work never really stops at Nationwide Arena.
A week after Columbus wrapped its 2026 prospects development camp presented by G&J Pepsi, the message from Tommy Cross was clear: the job is about much more than running drills. It’s about building trust, giving players tools they can carry into the season, and making sure the organization feels like a place they can grow.
That was the heartbeat of a camp that brought 33 NHL hopefuls to Columbus on Monday morning, from draft picks to invites trying to make an impression. Cross, along with Anthony Donskov, Matthew Donskov and goalie coach Brad Thiessen, spent the week at the center of it all, guiding the group through on-ice work and off-ice experiences designed to help them develop and settle in.
“The feedback we get is that it helps in (the players’) process and, I guess, fall in love with the city, because there's so much to like about being here. So that's a big thing,” Cross said.
“Secondly, just showing them the resources that we have, and our goal as a department is to flood them with resources. … Whether it's skating or skills or sports psychologists or a guest speaker, hopefully they take one or two or three things, and they bring it back to their own preparation for their own season.”
Cross knows the role from both sides. After a 12-year professional career, including a season with the AHL's Cleveland Monsters, he joined Columbus with a deep appreciation for the people who helped him bridge the gap from college to pro hockey. The Connecticut native spent four years at Boston College and won two national championships there before the Boston Bruins selected him in the second round of the 2007 NHL Draft.
“As a player, I spent the majority of my career in the minor leagues, and the player development coaches that I worked with, they had a big impact on me,” Cross said. “I always appreciated the time that they spent with the prospects and kind of their calming influence.”
That perspective shaped the way the Blue Jackets built the week. The on-ice sessions were a staple, and the Stinger Cup remained part of the routine, but the staff also worked in experiences away from hockey to show prospects the broader picture of the organization.
The group visited the OhioHealth Performance Center and got a look at the Columbus Crew’s facilities, including the nutrition, fitness and rehabilitation areas and the pitches. Later, the prospects headed to a golf simulator, a setting that gave plenty of the players a chance to compete without every swing being under a microscope. Cross also led a crossbar challenge on the green fields, and the day came with plenty of laughter.
The point, Cross said, is to keep players comfortable while still pushing them forward.
“(Development coaches) aren’t there all the time, so the wins and losses really aren't as big a part of the energy that they bring,” Cross said. “So I think having a strong relationship with our prospects, allowing them to trust us, and for them to know that we support them and we're there to help them is important.”
The camp ended, but the work didn’t. Cross spends the season traveling wherever the prospects are, whether that means his alma mater, Penn State, North Dakota or junior rinks in Canada. The goal is to stay connected and keep helping players along the path.
Boston Buckberger has already felt the benefit. The defenseman signed a two-year entry level contract in April after winning the 2026 NCAA championship with Denver, and he said the Blue Jackets’ development coaches have made a real impression.
“(The development coaches) are great people, and the stuff they bring on the ice is unbelievable,” defenseman Boston Buckberger said. “All of us have been talking about how tremendous they are with drills and their attitude toward getting better. I think that we really appreciate that and how much intent they bring every day out here.”
Buckberger was back at camp after his first experience last year, and this time he stayed in Ohio as part of the organization. He was one of several familiar names in the group, alongside fifth-year dev camp veteran James Fisher and 2026 14th overall pick Oscar Hemming.
For Cross, that mix of faces is part of the reward. The players arrive with different backgrounds and different levels of familiarity, but the mission stays the same.
“These guys, they want to learn, they want feedback, they want to grow, they want to become the highest versions of themselves,” Cross said. “It's rewarding to play a small part and then observe and watch as they continue to mature.”
And when next year’s camp rolls around, Cross will be back in front of the group again, helping another wave of Blue Jackets prospects take the next step. Between now and then, he’ll keep crisscrossing the continent, making sure Columbus’ young players have what they need to keep climbing.
In Other News...
Ryan Lomberg Immediately Tests What Blue Jackets Fans Want Most
Ryan Lomberg arrived in Columbus on the opening day of free agency with the kind of reputation Blue Jackets fans tend to notice right away. The undrafted winger from Richmond Hill, Ontario, has built his NHL career on physical play and grit, and his track record includes stops in Calgary and Florida along with a Stanley Cup ring. For a team looking to add more edge, he looks like the sort of depth piece who can make his presence felt quickly.
Lomberg is expected to bring that tenacity to the Blue Jackets fourth line, where energy and disruption matter as much as scoring touch. He also comes with a history that should make him familiar to at least one player already in the organization, and that kind of edge is part of what makes this addition interesting. The question now is how far that intensity carries once he gets into uniform and starts carving out his role. [Read more 🡒]
Blue Jackets Future In Net Just Took A Big Step Forward
The Blue Jackets have taken another step in shaping their long-range picture in goal, signing prospect Sergei Ivanov to a two-year entry-level contract that runs through the 2028 season. Drafted 138th overall in 2022, Ivanov has spent his development time in the KHL with SKA St. Petersburg, where the organization has seen enough growth to keep him firmly in its future plans.
Ivanov is still expected to remain in the KHL for the 2026-27 season before making the move to North America, which gives Columbus a little more patience in a position that rarely comes together quickly. If his trajectory keeps holding, the Blue Jackets could have a clearer idea of what their next goalie tandem looks like by the time he arrives, with executive Don Waddell already pointing to both his performance and upside. [Read more 🡒]
