The Florida Panthers have already added one goalie, but they still don’t have the one they need most.
On Monday night, Florida acquired Akira Schmid from the Vegas Golden Knights, sending a third-round pick two years from now the other way. Schmid brings NHL experience and gives the Panthers a backup option, and maybe even a name that could factor into the starter conversation later on.
But as of now, Florida is not planning to roll into the season with Schmid as its No. 1.
That leaves the Panthers staring at a ticking clock. They have just over 24 hours to work something out with Sergei Bobrovsky before he reaches the market on Wednesday at noon.
The problem is money. Florida is roughly $5.8 million under the NHL’s $104 million salary cap, but teams can stay up to 10 percent over the ceiling in the offseason. That gives the Panthers some short-term wiggle room, and it means any move to clear space can wait until later in the summer if needed.
It also matters because Schmid still has to be signed. As a restricted free agent, he’s likely looking at about $1 million for this season, which is another piece Florida has to fit into the puzzle. The offseason cap flexibility helps, not just for the NHL roster but for AHL Charlotte as well.
If Bobrovsky does leave, the free-agent market offers names, but not necessarily comfort. Stuart Skinner is there after handling plenty of the Edmonton Oilers’ netminding duties in the 2024 and 2025 Stanley Cup Final against Florida.
Connor Ingram is available after the past two seasons with Utah and Edmonton. Frederik Andersen, who has seen the Panthers plenty through battles with the Hurricanes in the 2023 and 2025 Eastern Conference final, is also on the board.
Andersen, 36, helped push Carolina to the Cup Final this year by going 13-2 in the playoffs before Brandon Bussi took over in Game 4. Cam Talbot, who nearly landed with Florida in a trade during the 2015 draft in Sunrise, is another option.
That’s a list, but maybe not a great one. So if the Panthers want a real answer in goal, a trade may be the cleaner path.
Bill Zito brushed off questions Saturday about Florida needing to move salary to make key additions, but that doesn’t make the cap reality go away. The Panthers could make one or even two moves before Wednesday to open room, or they could try to swing one deal that both clears money and lands a starter.
There are a few possible names floating around. St.
Louis was thought to be a possible Jordan Binnington spot at the draft this past weekend, but the word out of there is the Blues plan to give the 2019 Cup champ a shot at a bounce-back season. Binnington has one year left on his contract with a $6 million cap hit.
Then there’s Connor Hellebuyck, who sits at the center of a much bigger conversation. Winnipeg doesn’t need to move him - he has five years left on his deal with an $8.5 million cap hit, and he’s the only active NHL goalie to win the Vezina Trophy three times, while also being one of three goalies to win MVP in the 2000s.
Still, Jets GM Kevin Cheveldayoff says he’s listening to offers, and word over the weekend was that Hellebuyck would accept a trade to Buffalo. The Sabres and Jets, according to the reporting, are talking.
Of course, that can shift fast. Hellebuyck also played for Paul Maurice in Winnipeg, and Maurice is said to be a big fan.
So the Panthers may be in for a busy day. Maybe they land their goalie in free agency.
Maybe they find him in a trade. Either way, Wednesday is coming fast.
In Other News...
Panthers Just Made A Goalie Move That Could Matter More Than Expected
The Panthers latest move in net was the kind that can look modest at first glance but matter more once roster decisions start stacking up. Florida acquired Akira Schmid from the Golden Knights for a 2028 third-round pick, adding an NHL-tested goalie to a position group that needed attention ahead of the upcoming season.
Schmid arrives with 82 career games on his resume and a recent regular-season workload in Vegas that showed he could handle more responsibility, even if the results were uneven. For Florida, the bigger picture is obvious: the Panthers were thin at goaltender entering the summer, and this trade gives them another option while the rest of the depth chart still has to be sorted out. [Read more 🡒]
Panthers Just Made A Goalie Move That Changes Everything
Floridas goalie picture is changing fast, with the Panthers reportedly close to adding New Jersey veteran Jacob Markstrom after already bringing in Akira Schmid. The move would come as a significant swing in the crease for a team that has spent the offseason reshaping its depth, and it also underlines how aggressively Florida is trying to address a position that can define a season in a hurry.
What makes this development even more notable is the structure behind it, with no salary retained on Markstroms deal as the Panthers work through the cap implications of the swap. It is the kind of transaction that signals more than just a short-term adjustment in net, because it may also have ripple effects on the rest of Floridas goaltending plans in the days ahead. [Read more 🡒]
Evan Rodrigues Just Reopened A Familiar Sabres Debate
Evan Rodrigues move out of South Florida adds another chapter to a career that has been defined by versatility, winning and a knack for fitting wherever he is needed. For the Panthers, he was part of the fabric of back-to-back title runs, a veteran presence whose value showed up in the grind of the postseason and in the kind of bottom-six role that contenders need to keep stocked.
Now he is on the other side of a deal that brought Jacob Markstrom and Angus Crookshank to Florida, with Jesper Boqvist and Ben Steeves also changing uniforms. Rodrigues arrives with one year left on his contract before free agency, and his departure only sharpens the familiar question around Buffalo ties and NHL value: when a player like this changes teams, how much of his worth is production, and how much is the championship aura that follows him from room to room? [Read more 🡒]
