Panthers Just Made A Goalie Move That Could Matter More Than Expected

The Panthers look to stabilize their goaltending situation with the strategic acquisition of promising netminder Akira Schmid.

The Florida Panthers have made their first move to stabilize a goaltending picture that had started to look pretty bare. On Tuesday, they acquired Akira Schmid from the Vegas Golden Knights in exchange for a 2028 third-round pick, according to a team announcement.

For Florida, the timing says plenty. Before the deal, the Panthers had only three goaltenders under contract for next season: AHL starter Cooper Black, AHL/ECHL tweener Kirill Gerasimyuk, and rookie NCAA signing Tyler Muszelik.

At the NHL level, though, the situation was about to get even thinner. Sergei Bobrovsky, Daniil Tarasov, and Louis Domingue are all set to become unrestricted free agents on Wednesday.

Schmid gives the Panthers a goalie with real NHL mileage, not just a name on a depth chart. The 26-year-old has appeared in NHL games in every season since leaving the USHL, piling up 82 career appearances from 2021-22 through 2025-26.

His path has been uneven, but there have been clear flashes. As an AHL rookie in 2021-22, Schmid put up a .911 save percentage in 38 games. The next season, he posted a .922 save percentage in 18 NHL games.

That same year also brought the biggest spotlight of his career. Schmid took over in the middle of the Devils’ first-round series against the New York Rangers, and Lindy Ruff’s decision to start him changed the tone of the matchup.

Over five starts, Schmid delivered two shutouts and a combined .951 save percentage. His 4-0 shutout in Game 7 became one of the franchise’s biggest moments in the decade after its 2012 run to the Stanley Cup Final.

At that point, it looked like Schmid might be on track to become the Devils’ “goalie of the future.” Instead, the momentum stalled. He struggled the next season, finishing with a .895 save percentage in 19 games, and was later sent to Vegas with Alexander Holtz on this date two years ago.

In Vegas, Schmid settled into a steadier role. He spent most of the 2024-25 season in the AHL, but during a five-game NHL stint he turned in a .944 save percentage, enough to convince the Golden Knights he could be part of their plans. This past season, he went 16-10-6 with an .893 save percentage and a 2.59 goals-against-average.

Even with those numbers, Schmid wasn’t the top option in Vegas. Carter Hart was the team’s No. 1 goalie, and Schmid started the most regular-season games of any Golden Knights netminder while still remaining behind Hart in the pecking order.

Vegas went on to win its third Clarence S. Campbell Bowl in franchise history.

The trade also helps explain where the Golden Knights are headed next. Hart is still under contract and expected to keep the No. 1 job next season, while 2023 Stanley Cup champion Adin Hill is considered a real trade candidate in the coming days.

Hill carries a $6.25MM cap hit, and Vegas may need to clear that money to extend Rasmus Andersson. Another name to watch is Carl Lindbom, one of the organization’s top goalie prospects, who looks close to NHL-ready after posting a .926 save percentage in the AHL.

Because Schmid was out of a contract and arbitration-eligible, this felt like a clean moment for Vegas to make the move.

For Florida, the price fits the market. The Panthers gave up a third-round pick, and the article notes that the Pittsburgh Penguins paid a fourth-rounder last summer to land Arturs Silovs, though Silovs had a much thinner NHL track record than Schmid.

The Panthers are not bringing in Schmid with the expectation that he carries the net alone. They are aiming for a third Stanley Cup in four years, and this move looks more like an effort to secure at least one half of the tandem. That points toward Tarasov, who posted an .895 save percentage in 33 games last season, likely heading to free agency.

It could also be read as a sign that Florida is preparing for life without Bobrovsky, the goalie who helped carry the team through three deep playoff runs. Still, that’s not something anyone should rush to declare.

Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic wrote the trade “shouldn’t be seen as a sign of whether or not Bobrovsky is gone.” What is clear is that the Panthers needed NHL-ready help in goal, and they’ve now made that investment.

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