The Nashville Predators are keeping Justin Barron around for another season, and they’re betting on the 24-year-old defenseman’s upside.
On Monday, general manager Chris MacFarland announced that Barron has signed a one-year contract with the club. The deal carries a cap hit of $1.575 million for the 2026-27 season.
MacFarland pointed to Barron’s age and tools in the team’s announcement, saying, “Justin Barron is a 24-year-old, right-handed defenseman who we feel still has growth in his game,” said MacFarland. “He can skate and has a lot of physical tools. We’re looking forward to seeing him at our training camp in September.”
Barron’s new deal gives him a modest raise after finishing his two-year contract, which he originally signed with the Montreal Canadiens in July 2024. That contract came with an AAV of $1.15 million. He was then dealt to Nashville in December 2024 in the trade that sent Alexandre Carrier to Montreal.
Barron’s first full season in Nashville was a mixed one. Injuries and inconsistency kept him in and out of the lineup, and he spent some nights in the press box while the Predators tried to hang around the Western Conference Wild Card race. He played in 52 games, the most of his NHL career, and finished with nine assists, a minus-1 rating and an average of 14:15 of ice time per night.
That production dipped from the previous season, when he put up six goals and 13 points across his split time with the Canadiens and Predators.
In 208 regular-season games in the NHL, the former Colorado Avalanche defenseman has now added another year in Nashville to continue building his game.
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Predators Add Vukie Mpofu As Front Office Vision Takes Shape
The Predators have added another layer to their front office, hiring Vukie Mpofu as assistant general manager as the organization continues to shape its hockey operations structure. Mpofu arrives after working with the Pittsburgh Penguins and will help general manager Chris MacFarland in a range of areas, giving Nashville another experienced voice in the room as it builds out its decision-making group.
Mpofus path to Nashville also came with the usual complications of bringing in a front office executive from another club, and the move reflects how carefully the Predators are assembling this part of the organization. He spent the past three seasons in Pittsburgh as director of hockey operations and legal affairs under Kyle Dubas, and he said he and his wife are thrilled to join a franchise he described as world-class with a promising future. [Read more 🡒]
