Devils Just Got A Free Agency Opening They Can't Ignore

The New Jersey Devils are eyeing Toronto's unqualified rising star Matias Maccelli to boost their offensive lineup as NHL free agency looms.

The New Jersey Devils may have a clean opportunity sitting right in front of them after the Toronto Maple Leafs decided they will not be qualifying pending restricted free agent Matias Maccelli, according to notable hockey pundit Chris Johnston. That move sends the 25-year-old left-winger to the free agent market on Wednesday.

For a Devils team that has been active over the last week and still needs more offense across the lineup, Maccelli checks a lot of boxes. He looks like the kind of player who could come in at a reasonable price and give New Jersey a real boost without forcing the club to overpay.

Maccelli has long been viewed as more of a passer than a pure scorer, but his game brings more than just setup ability. Over his career, he has scored 51 goals on 48.34 individual expected goals (ixG), which puts him slightly above average as a finisher at all strengths. He does not fire the puck often, but when chances come his way, he has shown a knack for putting them away.

His best trait is still his playmaking. Maccelli is especially good at creating high-danger looks, often with cross-ice feeds and passes into the slot from the perimeter, particularly when working the cycle.

He also brings decent skating ability, with a 75th percentile top speed and burst that sits in the top half of the league, even if he does not use that speed to drive transition play very often. That part of the game is usually left to his linemates.

There is also a work-rate element that should appeal to New Jersey. Maccelli does not pile up hits - he has 91 in 295 career games - but he stays active on the forecheck.

In that way, he resembles Jack Hughes and Jesper Bratt, relying more on anticipation and puck pressure than brute force to create turnovers. The underlying numbers back up that style, too.

The fit makes sense for a Devils team that came up short on the trade market for a number of top-six options, including Jordan Kyrou, William Eklund, and Valeri Nichushkin. Maccelli could be a lower-cost answer with real upside, especially if New Jersey can land him on the contract AFP Analytics is projecting: two years at less than $3.2 million per season.

If he ends up playing alongside members of the Devils’ top six, there is room for him to build on his career-best marks of 17 goals and 57 points. Wednesday, when free agency opens, should give a clearer picture of where New Jersey is headed in 2026-27 - and whether Maccelli becomes part of that plan.

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