The Penguins have locked in Nicholas Robertson on a new two-year deal, sidestepping an arbitration hearing that had been set for later this month.
According to Elliotte Friedman, the 24-year-old winger signed for $6.5 million total, carrying a $3.25 million average annual value. Robertson had been one of 15 restricted free agents who filed for salary arbitration, and his hearing was scheduled for July 28. If the two sides hadn’t reached an agreement, Pittsburgh would have had the option of a one- or two-year contract, with the arbitrator deciding the price tag.
Instead, Robertson is now under contract through the 2028-29 season. He’ll turn 26 that year and become an RFA again.
The move comes after a career-best season in Toronto, where Robertson scored 16 goals and totaled 32 points in 2025-26. Those numbers were both personal highs for the former 2019 second-round pick. The Maple Leafs then traded him to Pittsburgh on July 1 for a 2028 fourth-round pick, bringing him back together with the GM who originally drafted him, Kyle Dubas.
Robertson’s track record points to a forward who can chip in secondary offense from a middle-six role. Over the last three seasons, he’s settled into the 20-to-30-point range, while posting 14, 15 and 16 goals in those years.
His path in Toronto was anything but smooth, though. After his entry-level deal expired in 2024, he signed two straight one-year contracts, never got more than 13 minutes of ice time, and spent years in the middle of trade chatter, with Penguins links going back to 2024.
Now he lands in Pittsburgh as a younger piece in the forward mix. He turns 25 in September, and the Penguins currently have about $13 million in cap space with 14 forwards on the books.
There’s also a family angle here: Nicholas is the younger brother of Stars winger Jason Robertson, who still needs a new contract. If Pittsburgh is looking to make a bigger swing for the American scorer, bringing in his brother is at least a notable place to start.
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