The Penguins have checked off the first bit of offseason business, formally issuing qualifying offers to seven impending restricted free agents and keeping their NHL rights for all of them heading into next season.
That group covers the team’s entire collection of restricted free agents, and there weren’t any real curveballs in the bunch. Two recently acquired forwards, Hendrix Lapierre and David Gustafsson, were among those to receive offers, while the rest of the group also stays in the fold for now.
The offers don’t completely lock things in, though. Starting July 1, these players can still sign offer sheets with other teams, even if that kind of move is rare around the NHL.
If it happens, Pittsburgh would have the chance to match.
The biggest decisions in the bunch center on Egor Chinakhov and Silovs. Those two appear to be the key pieces as the Penguins weigh whether to go short term and keep the cost down, or make a longer commitment and pay more up front.
Chinakhov’s season gives the front office plenty to think about. After arriving in a mid-season trade, he put up 36 points in 43 games with Pittsburgh.
AFP projects him at nearly $3.7 million on a one-year deal or $5.5 million on a four-year contract, while Evolving Hockey has him at $3.3 million for one year. He was making $2.1 million annually on his previous contract, so a meaningful raise is coming either way.
The real question is how much the Penguins want to buy in now. If they’re convinced the 49 games they saw across the regular season and playoffs were enough to justify a longer commitment, they could go big.
If not, a bridge deal makes sense and would send Chinakhov back into restricted free agency next summer. That would keep the door open for a longer agreement before he reaches unrestricted free agency in July of 2028.
A one-year deal would also put pressure on him to produce in what could be a defining 2026-27 season, with arbitration potentially pushing negotiations even higher. A contract in the $3.3-3.8 million range would be a team-friendly outcome, and it could even mean Chinakhov nearly doubles his previous $2.1 million salary.
Silovs is looking at a smaller number, but the same basic contract question. Evolving Hockey projects him at $1.7 million for one year, $2.3 million annually on a two-year deal, and as much as $3.5 million annually on a three-year deal.
AFP’s one-year projection comes in at $1.8 million for 2026-27. The most reasonable expectation, based on those figures, is a short deal in the $1.75-2.0 million range to keep him in the goalie tandem next season.
Like Chinakhov, Silovs is the same age and won’t be eligible for unrestricted free agency until July 1, 2028, giving Pittsburgh two more seasons to evaluate him before that leverage kicks in.
The rest of the group projects as simpler business. Those players are expected to land one-year deals close to their qualifying offers, which were set at 105% of their 2025-26 salaries. Lapierre, Koivunen and Blomqvist could negotiate for modest raises on top of that, but none of them should be major sticking points as they try to prove themselves in 2026-27 and set up bigger paydays down the line.
In Other News...
Penguins Finalized Development Camp Roster Comes With A Few Concerns
The Penguins are set to open development camp Monday at the UPMC Lemieux Sports Complex in Cranberry, and the roster offers the usual mix of fresh faces and a few early reminders that July is still more about evaluating than celebrating. Five of the teams six 2026 draft picks are expected to take part, along with a sizable group of undrafted free agents, and the practices and Friday tournament will be open to the public as the organization gets a first real look at its newest prospects.
There is, however, a small wrinkle attached to the list. Three forwards, Will Horcoff, Mac Swanson and Melvin Fernstrom, are marked injured but will still be around camp, which keeps them in the mix even if they are limited on the ice. The only draft-class prospect not expected to attend adds another layer of curiosity to a camp that already feels worth watching, especially with so many young players looking to make an impression in front of Penguins evaluators. [Read more 🡒]
Kyle Dubas May Have Quietly Won Two Important Penguins Deals
Kyle Dubas did not land a splashy summer headline with Blake Lizotte or Connor Dewar, but the Penguins general manager may have quietly done something just as useful during the regular season. Both forwards were extended on short-term money that keeps the cap commitment manageable, and in a league where bottom-six depth can get pricey in a hurry, that matters. The deals also give Pittsburgh a little more certainty around two players who have fit well enough to earn trust without forcing the club into long, expensive commitments.
The broader appeal for the Penguins is what those contracts avoid. Around the NHL, comparable role players have been getting longer terms and higher price tags, which can clog up flexibility fast if the fit is merely solid instead of essential. Lizotte and Dewar may not move the needle on their own when it comes to Pittsburghs bigger picture, but they do give the team a cleaner financial path and a chance to keep building without overpaying for familiar depth. [Read more 🡒]
Jason Robertson Trade Saga Just Took A Much More Serious Turn
Jason Robertsons future has become one of the leagues more interesting summer watch items, and Pittsburgh has stayed in the conversation for a reason. The restricted free agent turned down an offer from Seattle and reportedly showed no interest in St. Louis, which only adds to the sense that his next move will be more complicated than a simple fit-and-sign scenario. For the Penguins, the appeal is obvious: they have the cap flexibility to make a serious run at him if the opportunity opens up.
The harder part is getting Dallas to the point where a deal makes sense for them, and that is where the process has slowed. Pittsburgh is being viewed as a club looking to do something meaningful, but interest alone does not close the gap on a player of Robertsons stature. The Penguins may still be in the mix, though the bigger question now is whether they can put together the kind of trade package that would keep the Stars engaged. [Read more 🡒]
