The Senators may not have made a splash in free agency, but they did spend the week quietly thickening the pipeline.
That’s the real story of Ottawa’s recent work: not a headline-grabbing NHL addition, but a batch of moves that should help Belleville and, down the road, the big club. GM Steve Staios has been waiting on Claude Giroux, and in the meantime he’s been building out the organization’s depth chart.
On Wednesday, Ottawa signed five players to two-way deals: forwards Sammy Blais, Philippe Daoust, Ryan Suzuki and Philip Tomasino, plus defenceman Christian Kyrou. Those moves came after the late June trade for winger Kasper Halttunen from the San Jose Sharks and the selection of Jonas Lagerberg Hoen and Jaxon Cover in the first round of the 2026 NHL Draft.
None of it lit up the league’s news cycle. But taken together, it gives the Senators a much healthier prospect pool and a deeper reserve of call-up options.
Blais is the most straightforward depth piece of the group. The 30-year-old has played 278 NHL games and brings a physical edge that Ottawa has a little less of after Brady Tkachuk’s departure.
He’s the kind of winger who finishes checks, works around the crease and can make a game messy for the other side. In that sense, he fits a role similar to Nick Cousins, whom the Senators valued enough to bring back this summer on a two-year deal.
Blais gives Ottawa another veteran who could slide into a fourth-line NHL job if injuries open a door.
Tomasino is the name with the highest offensive ceiling. Nashville drafted him in the first round in 2019, and he followed that by putting up 100 points in 62 OHL games the next season.
His NHL start was promising too, with 32 points in 76 games as a rookie. Since then, the production has tapered off.
He has played 218 NHL games and is still only 24, though, and last season he put up 41 points in 52 AHL games while moving between the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia organizations. His last meaningful NHL season came two years ago, when he had 23 points in 50 games for Pittsburgh.
If he finds that first-round scoring touch again, he could work his way back into the NHL picture.
There’s a familiar note to the Suzuki and Kyrou signings, too. Yes, Ottawa added Ryan Suzuki and Christian Kyrou - younger brothers of Nick and Jordan - though the family angle is more fun than the actual roster impact.
Suzuki helped lead the Chicago Wolves to the Calder Cup Final and finished first on the team in playoff scoring with 18 points in 21 games. Like Tomasino, he’s a former first-round pick with skill that should help Belleville.
Kyrou, meanwhile, is coming off his best pro season, posting 34 points in 59 games with Lehigh Valley in the AHL. Ottawa’s NHL blue line looks set, but right-shot offensive defencemen still carry real organizational value.
Daoust’s signing stands out as a Belleville success story. Ottawa drafted him in 2020, and after spending last season on an AHL deal, he broke out with a 50-point campaign.
That was easily his best pro season, more than doubling his previous highs in goals, assists and points. The one question is how much of that production was tied to playing alongside Arthur Kaliyev and Xavier Bourgault.
Kaliyev is a UFA and won’t return, while Bourgault is an RFA still waiting on a new deal.
Halttunen may be the most intriguing piece of all. Ottawa got him in the William Eklund trade, which was a spinoff of the Brady Tkachuk deal, and he already looks like one of the organization’s best prospects.
The 6-foot-3, 205-pound winger helped the London Knights win back-to-back OHL titles in 2024 and 2025, scoring 32 goals in 35 playoff games over that stretch. His first AHL season with the San Jose Barracudas was a learning year, but at 20 he still managed 35 points in 69 games.
Individually, none of these moves is likely to change Ottawa’s current NHL roster. Collectively, though, they give the Senators a much better foundation.
Add Lagerberg Hoen and Cover to the mix, and the picture becomes pretty clear: Staios is not just filling holes for today. He’s paying closer attention to what this organization looks like tomorrow.
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