The Devils may not need to swing for a blockbuster when free agency opens at noon on July 1. With Sunny Mehta weighing ways to improve the opening-night roster without parting with draft picks or prospects, the market could offer a cleaner path to help now while keeping the future intact.
This summer’s class does not carry the same star power as some recent ones, but there are still names that fit New Jersey’s needs. Here are five unrestricted free agents who could make sense for the Devils.
Patrick Kane stands out first because his track record does the talking. The three-time Stanley Cup champion and future Hall of Famer remains one of the most accomplished American-born players in NHL history.
He is no longer the elite offensive force he once was, but he still produced 57 points, including 16 goals and 41 assists, in 67 games with the Detroit Red Wings last season. Kane turns 38 in November, yet his experience, hockey IQ and championship pedigree could make him a useful short-term addition for a club with Stanley Cup aspirations.
He would also add another respected veteran presence to a locker room already led by Jack Hughes, Nico Hischier and Jesper Bratt. AFP Analytics projects him for a one-year deal worth approximately $3.27 million.
Vladimir Tarasenko is another veteran with a winning résumé. Since the start of the 2022-23 season, he has played for six different organizations and could soon be on to a seventh.
The two-time Stanley Cup champion and six-time 30-goal scorer put up 47 points, with 23 goals and 24 assists, in 75 games with the Minnesota Wild last season. He is not the explosive scorer he was at his peak, but the shot is still dangerous and the playoff experience is real.
At 34, he could slot in as a steady middle-six scoring option. AFP Analytics pegs him at one year and about $3.39 million.
If New Jersey wants more size in its top six, Mason Marchment is a name to watch. The 6-foot-5, 212-pound winger finished with 45 points, including 19 goals and 26 assists, in 68 games split between Seattle and Columbus.
Once he landed with the Blue Jackets, he caught fire, piling up 32 points, with 15 goals and 17 assists, in just 39 games. Since Tyler Toffoli left, the Devils have been looking for another scoring winger who can pair with Jack Hughes or Nico Hischier, and Marchment’s mix of size, physicality and production fits that need.
AFP Analytics projects a three-year contract with a $5.67 million average annual value.
Anthony Mantha brings a similar frame, but with a different scoring profile. The 6-foot-5, 240-pound winger had a productive year with the Pittsburgh Penguins, posting 64 points, including 33 goals and 31 assists, in 81 games.
When he is healthy and fully engaged, Mantha has shown top-six offensive ability and a physical edge that the Devils’ forward group has lacked. AFP Analytics projects him for four years at a $6.35 million average annual value.
Then there is Patrik Laine, whose goal-scoring upside is hard to ignore. The former No. 2 overall pick scored 36, 44 and 30 goals in his first three NHL seasons and once looked like one of the league’s premier snipers.
Injuries and personal challenges have slowed everything since then. Laine had 33 points, with 20 goals and 13 assists, in 52 games with the Montreal Canadiens in 2024-25 before injuries limited him to five games last season.
At 28, he still has a chance to reclaim some of that early-career form, which could make him one of the more intriguing buy-low options if his market plays out the way it is expected to.
In Other News...
Wild Just Dropped An Unexpected Winger Into Devils' Conversation
The Devils have already spent part of the offseason sorting their own restricted free-agent business, choosing not to tender qualifying offers to Paul Cotter, Calen Addison, Tyler Brennan and Dylan Wendt while keeping control of names such as Arseny Gritsyuk and Nico Daws. Those roster decisions helped clarify where New Jersey stands heading into the next phase of the summer, with the club still balancing depth moves against the need to preserve flexibility for bigger additions.
Now another name has entered the broader conversation, and it is one that should register for a Devils team still looking at ways to add scoring help without overcommitting. Bobby Brink was a surprising omission from Minnesotas qualifying-offer list, and the winger is expected to chase a deal above the amount he would have received, which could make him an interesting fit for teams hunting value on the market. Whether New Jersey treats that as a real opportunity or simply another name to monitor will become clearer as the market opens up. [Read more 🡒]
Panthers Just Made A Goalie Move That Changes Everything
The Panthers are moving quickly in goal, and Jacob Markstrom is back in the middle of it. Florida is reportedly close to bringing in the Devils netminder after recently adding Akira Schmid, a sequence that underscores how aggressively the organization is trying to reshape its crease before the market tightens. For New Jersey, the deal would open up another important roster decision, while Florida would be betting on a veteran goalie with a familiar connection to the franchise.
Markstrom also comes with the kind of contract detail that matters in a deal like this, since no salary retention is involved. That makes the move cleaner for Florida on the books and signals just how serious the Panthers are about committing to this reset in net. The ripple effects could still reach well beyond the trade itself, especially with the goaltending market moving fast and other dominoes expected to follow. [Read more 🡒]
Devils Development Camp Is Underway With One Prospect Drawing Attention
Development camp is underway at RWJBarnabas Health Hockey House, and the Devils are using the late-June session to give a fresh group of prospects a first taste of the organizations day-to-day standards. The annual program runs through July 1 at Prudential Center, with on-ice sessions set for June 30 and July 1, and this weeks work has centered on conditioning, skills and tempo drills for draft picks from the 2025 and 2026 classes.
Among the most watched names is first-rounder Alexander Command, who is taking part in off-ice work while the rest of the group goes through the ice portion of camp. The early focus is less about headlines than habits, but the Devils also built in a community stop after the workouts, sending the prospects to a local hospital as part of the clubs outreach around camp. [Read more 🡒]
