Devils Camp Could Open With A Goalie Decision Fans Wont Ignore

As the New Jersey Devils gear up for a new season, they might surprise fans with an unconventional three-goalie rotation strategy to maximize their revamped roster.

The New Jersey Devils may be setting up for something unusual in net to open the season: a three-goalie rotation.

That possibility comes into focus after general manager Sunny Mehta moved Jacob Markstrom’s contract this offseason and brought back assets that should help the roster’s depth. The trade did not include a goalie, though, which left the Devils to sort out a partner for Jake Allen either from within or from the outside. Over the next few days of free agency, they ended up doing both.

First came Nico Daws on a two-year deal worth $1.1 million per season. The contract is one-way, so he gets paid the same whether he’s in New Jersey or Utica.

That kind of deal usually says a team expects NHL time, not just AHL depth. Then the Devils added veteran David Rittich on a one-year, $1 million, one-way contract.

On paper, Rittich could be dismissed as a depth signing, especially with the last couple of seasons not looking especially strong. But he has still handled a real workload, appearing in 34 games and 30 games over the last two seasons while starting 31 and 28 of them.

His 2025-26 numbers were, for the most part, better than Markstrom’s. With all three goalies on one-way deals, the idea of carrying all three at least to begin the year suddenly doesn’t sound far-fetched.

Allen, at least, looks locked in. If the Devils do go with three goalies, he would be the one most likely to stay in the crease as the backup, if not the starter, unless injury or illness intervenes.

He played well last season, and it will be worth watching whether he can hold that level with a heavier workload. The improved depth in front of him should help, too, since better puck movement and cleaner exits could take some pressure off his numbers.

He also has the only full no-trade clause among the group this season.

The real question sits with Daws and Rittich. Neither one seems likely to have signed with the expectation of being parked strictly in the AHL.

Rittich had a solid NHL season with an Islanders team that was not much better than the Devils last year, while Daws struggled in Utica behind a Comets team that offered very little support. That might make Rittich look like the favorite, but then the Devils also gave Daws a one-way deal.

That is not the kind of move a team makes for a goalie it views as a clear third-stringer.

If both end up in New Jersey, the early part of the season could become an extended tryout. The Devils would be watching to see whether either goalie can separate from the pack and give the team some stability behind Allen.

For now, though, it’s still July, and training camp is more than two months away. Nothing is settled.

Mehta may simply be waiting for the right opportunity, whether that comes later in the season or beyond it, instead of paying a premium now for a goalie he does not love. The Devils still need help in net, but teams have won with average goaltending before.

This may be a case of the front office choosing patience and keeping future options open.

If that’s the route they take, the hope is simple: the group is good enough to carry the Devils into 2026-27.

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