The Utica Comets have been turned over almost entirely this offseason, and the changes go well beyond the ice. With Sunny Mehta now running the New Jersey Devils’ hockey operations, the organization has made its AHL affiliate a clear point of emphasis, and that shift has already brought a new general manager in Braden Birch after Dan MacKinnon was not retained.
Mehta said on July 2 that the Devils’ thinking now runs through Utica as part of the same larger roster plan.
“When I got here and talked it through, even with ownership, David Blitzer and I talked about what are some of the things we really want to focus on,” Mehta said during his media availability on July 2nd. “He himself brought up Utica also. That needs to be something that we make more of a priority, that we think more about in terms of both not just the success of that organization in terms of wins and losses, but just also in terms of player development.
“As much as we used this sort of decision-making process that I talk about to focus intently on our decisions at the NHL, we really have done the same thing at the AHL,” Mehta continued. “On the screen, when we put up our NHL roster, we've got the AHL roster right next to it, and we're thinking of it all as one big thing, where we are trying to use that same roster strategy in Utica.”
That philosophy has shown up fast in the Comets’ 2025-26 roster, which has been reshaped across forwards, defensemen and goaltending.
Up front, Utica has added Jeremy Wilmer on a one-year AHL contract, Amadeus Lombardi on a two-year, two-way deal, Ben Steeves on a one-year, two-way contract, Riley Tufte on a one-year, one-way contract, Gabe Klassen on an AHL contract and Zach Gallant on an AHL contract. The Comets also brought back Ryan Schmelzer on an AHL contract, Xavier Parent on a one-year, two-way contract, Marc McLaughlin on a one-year, two-way contract and Jack Malone on an AHL contract.
The departures have been just as notable. Angus Crookshank was traded to the Florida Panthers along with Jacob Markstrom.
Brian Halonen left for a two-year, two-way contract with the Boston Bruins. Dylan Wendt did not receive a qualifying offer, while Mike Hardman, Jonathan Gruden, Nathan Legare and Kyle Criscuolo are also out.
On the blue line, the biggest headline is Etienne Morin coming in from the Calgary Flames in exchange for Simon Nemec. Vladislav Kolyachonok signed a one-year, one-way contract, and Eamon Powell joined on an AHL contract. Topias Vilen is back after being tendered a qualifying offer.
Utica also lost several defensemen. Colton White signed a two-year, two-way contract with the Columbus Blue Jackets.
Dennis Cholowski signed a two-year contract with the New York Rangers. Austin Strand signed with Ilves in the Finnish Liiga.
Dmitry Osipov is gone as well, and Calen Addison did not receive a qualifying offer.
In goal, the Comets added Seth Eisele on an AHL contract. Nico Daws and Jakub Malek both re-signed to two-year, two-way contracts, and Jeremy Brodeur also signed an AHL contract. Tyler Brennan did not receive a qualifying offer.
There is still a core of players already under contract for 2026-27: Josh Filmon, Lenni Hameenaho, Shane Lachance, Matyas Melovsky, Seamus Casey, Mikael Diotte and Ethan Edwards.
The Comets’ home opener for the 2026-27 season is set for Oct. 10 at the Adirondack Bank Center at the Utica Memorial Auditorium.
In Other News...
Devils Are Quietly Redrawing Uticas Depth Chart This Summer
Uticas summer reset has been easy to miss from a distance, but the Comets have spent the early weeks of the offseason quietly remaking the roster around the edges. Under GM Braden Birch, the Devils AHL affiliate has already seen some notable departures and a fresh wave of additions, with the kind of turnover that can change the look of a depth chart long before training camp opens.
The most interesting part for New Jersey is how many of the new faces are arriving with a chance to matter quickly. Utica has brought in a mix of proven AHL scorers, reclamation projects and depth signings, while also keeping several familiar pieces in place on new deals. The result is a roster that feels less settled than it did a few weeks ago, and the next question is which of these moves are simply about filling out the Comets, and which ones are aimed at creating a real path upward for Devils prospects. [Read more 🡒]
