Former Red Wings Pick Anthony Mantha Is Still Chasing What Could Have Been

Anthony Mantha joins the New Jersey Devils, eager to reignite his NHL career and bolster their offensive lineup with his versatile playing style.

The New Jersey Devils added a big offensive piece on Wednesday, July 15, agreeing to a two-year deal with forward Anthony Mantha worth $9.5 million. The contract carries a $4.75 million average annual value, with the breakdown listed as $5.4 million in 2026-27 and $4.1 million in 2027-28.

For New Jersey, the appeal is pretty clear: Mantha is coming off the strongest season of his career, and when he’s healthy, he has shown he can tilt the ice with scoring.

Mantha’s path to this point started in Detroit, where the Red Wings took him 20th overall in the 2013 NHL Draft. After being drafted, he stayed in the then-named Quebec Major Junior Hockey League with the Val-d’Or Foreurs before moving into the Red Wings’ system. In 2014-15, he joined Grand Rapids of the AHL and put up 33 points in 62 games.

He spent most of 2015-16 back in Grand Rapids, where he posted 45 points in 60 games, but he also got his first NHL taste that season. Mantha made his debut on March 15, 2016, against the Philadelphia Flyers, picked up his first NHL point with an assist on Darren Helm’s goal on March 22, and scored his first NHL goal two days later against the Montreal Canadiens.

By 2016-17, he was splitting time between the Griffins and the Red Wings, but the NHL side of the ledger was starting to take over. He played 60 games for Detroit and finished with 36 points.

The next season was his first full one in the league, and he delivered 48 points in 80 games. He matched that point total the following year despite playing in only 67 games.

The injuries started to interrupt the rhythm in 2019-20. Mantha still produced 38 points in 43 games, but a lower-body injury in November and a lung injury in February cost him 20 games.

He opened 2020-21 with Detroit, putting up 21 points in 42 games before being traded to the Washington Capitals on April 12, 2021, for Jakub Vrana, Richard Panik, a first-round pick in the 2021 NHL Draft, and a second-round pick in the 2022 NHL Draft. He finished that season with 14 games in Washington.

His first full season with the Capitals was supposed to be 2021-22, but shoulder surgery cut it short. Mantha played 37 games and scored 23 points, his lowest game total since becoming a full-time NHL player.

He followed that with 67 games and 27 points in 2022-23, then started 2023-24 in Washington before a late-season trade sent him to the Vegas Golden Knights for a second-round pick in the 2024 NHL Draft and a fourth-round pick in the 2026 NHL Draft. He played 18 games for Vegas to close out the year.

Mantha then moved on to Calgary for the start of 2024-25, where he got off to a solid start with seven points in 13 games before an ACL tear ended his season. He signed with the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2025 free agency and delivered the best year of his career: 81 games, 64 points, 33 goals and 31 assists. He also earned a nomination for the Bill Masterton Trophy.

That’s the version of Mantha New Jersey is betting on. He can play either wing, he has bounced between top-six and bottom-six roles, and he gives the Devils another scoring option no matter where they slot him. He could fit alongside Nico Hischier and Timo Meier or Jack Hughes and Jesper Bratt on one of the top two lines, and he could also bring extra finishing touch to a lower line with Evan Rodrigues or Nick Bjugstad.

The upside is obvious. If Mantha stays healthy, the Devils are getting a proven scorer who just posted the best season of his career.

In Other News...

Penguins Could Have Another Ducks Deal Fans Will Definitely Debate

The Penguins have made a habit of turning salary-cap room into future assets, and that approach has become one of the more recognizable parts of Kyle Dubas roster-building playbook. Instead of sitting on unused space, Pittsburgh has been willing to help other clubs solve their cap problems if it means adding draft capital, even when the deal is more about bookkeeping than immediate help on the ice.

Anaheim now looks like the kind of team that could fit that pattern, with enough pressure on its books to at least make the idea worth discussing. If the Ducks decide they need relief, Pittsburgh could be the kind of partner that takes on a contract and asks for a sweetener in return, and the debate for Penguins fans would be whether another future pick is worth absorbing that kind of money. [Read more 🡒]

Penguins May Have Found A Goalie Prospect Worth Watching Closely

The Penguins added a goalie prospect worth a closer look in Matvei Nikonovich, the Minsk-born netminder they took in the fifth round of the 2026 NHL Draft. At 160th overall, he was not the kind of pick that turns heads immediately, but his recent work in the Rus-MHL with Tolyatti Ladia gave the organization a reason to pay attention.

Nikonovichs numbers last season were strong enough to stand out, and his development now comes with a layer of uncertainty because of what happens next in Russia. He could remain overseas for a while before the Penguins even begin thinking about bringing him to their North American pipeline, which makes him one of those late-round goalie bets that can take patience before the payoff comes into focus. [Read more 🡒]

Penguins May Have Found A Trade Fit For Life After Crosby And Malkin

As the Penguins keep sorting out what life will look like after Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, one recent trade idea points them toward a younger center with some offensive upside. A Daily Faceoff piece from Mike Gould named Pittsburgh as a possible destination for a Seattle forward who could help bridge that gap, the kind of move that would fit a team trying to stay competitive while also thinking a step ahead.

The appeal is obvious enough: the Penguins need more long-term help down the middle, and this player has already shown he can contribute at the NHL level. He put up 12 goals and 27 points in 74 games last season, and after a stronger scoring year before that, he looks like the sort of upside swing that could make sense for a club trying to balance the present with whatever comes next. [Read more 🡒]