Anthony Mantha is still on the board after free agency day, and that makes him one of the more intriguing names left hanging around. He’s coming off the best season of his career, and with teams still hunting for scoring depth, there’s a clear case for why he should have a market.
The 31-year-old winger played 81 games with the Pittsburgh Penguins last season and delivered 33 goals and 31 assists for 64 points. Over his career, he has 179 goals and 188 assists for 367 points in 588 games. That kind of production is exactly why he remains a tempting option, even with the questions that come with him.
The catch is the contract. There’s been speculation that Mantha wants a longer-term deal, but most teams appear hesitant to go there right now. That leaves him in a tricky spot: productive enough to help, but not quite enough to get the kind of commitment he may be chasing.
Boston is one club that stands out. The Bruins have a little over $5 million in cap space and are looking to make another deep playoff run next season.
After adding J.J. Peterka to strengthen their top-six forward group, they may still be one more top-six piece away from looking like a real contender in the 2026-27 season.
Mantha would bring risk, no question. His career year came with a major jump across the board, and that kind of leap always makes teams pause.
But the Bruins also need offense, and after a disappointing finish last season, they have to keep pushing to add firepower. Mantha fits that need.
Montreal is another team to watch. The Canadiens are coming off an incredible 2025-26 campaign and have a young core that could use more scoring support. There has been speculation that they’d be open to a short-term deal for Mantha, which makes the fit at least believable.
Marc-Olivier Beaudoin recently said in a tweet that the Canadiens have shown interest in Mantha, though he also noted that the chances of a deal are quite slim. Still, if Mantha is willing to soften his ask and take a shorter contract to prove himself again, Montreal would make sense as a landing spot for a boost to its middle-six forward group.
Philadelphia also belongs in the conversation. The Flyers missed out on Leo Carlsson, but they still have plenty of cap space and are looking to add players who can help them build on last season and chase an even deeper playoff run. Like the other teams on this list, they’d probably prefer Mantha on a short-term arrangement.
At this point, that may be the real obstacle. If one of these teams was ready to hand out at least four years, Mantha likely would have already signed.
Instead, he may have to wait for a one- or two-year deal to materialize. A 33-goal scorer is going to draw attention, but the question is whether Mantha lowers his demands or a team eventually gives him the term he wants.
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