Seattle Kraken prospect Casey Mutryn is about to share the ice with a familiar face - and a familiar rival.
Mutryn, Seattle’s 2026 second-round pick, will reunite with his older brother Teddy later this month when both skate for Team USA at the World Junior Summer Showcase, set for July 26-Aug. 1 in Windsor, Ontario. The two brothers from Norwell, Mass. have spent plenty of time competing against each other already, and Teddy said Casey’s selection by the Kraken was a moment he was thrilled to see.
“It was awesome,” Teddy Mutryn said about Casey being Seattle’s 2nd round choice. “I was so happy for him.
Obviously, we’ve grown up together our whole lives playing hockey, competing against each other. But I’m his No. 1 fan, maybe besides my parents.
So happy, so proud of him.”
Teddy, who was a 3rd round pick of the San Jose Sharks in 2025, knows his younger brother well enough to describe the edge he brings.
“Case, he’s feisty, that’s for sure. Maybe I got the best of him when we were younger, and then backed off once he got a little taller than me. We have our battles, but growing up it was just competing.
“We had a bunch of good buddies in the neighborhood playing anything we could; football, baseball, wiffle ball, literally anything. Usually some tears came, some fights, but it helped us all out, and I think that’s the biggest part of our competitive spirit. I don’t want to lose to him, I’ll tell you that for sure.”
For now, though, the brothers won’t be crossing paths in pro hockey. They’re both headed to Boston College this fall, which means the family spotlight stays in one place a little longer. And, as the story goes, both young men should probably remember to call their mom now and then.
While the Kraken are watching one set of brothers, one of their organizational veterans is sticking around in Coachella Valley.
Mitchell Stephens has signed a new two-year deal with the Firebirds after becoming an unrestricted free agent. Firebirds GM Troy Bodie called him “a leader our players look up to,” and the numbers back up why he matters in that room. Stephens played 69 games for Coachella Valley last season and finished with 12 goals and 15 assists.
The 29-year-old forward is one of the more seasoned players on the roster. He said what players miss most when a season ends isn’t the scoring - it’s the daily grind.
“When the season’s over, you don’t miss the goals or the points,” Stephens said. “You miss every day grinding with (teammates) in the practices, the travel, the dinners on the road.”
Stephens also spent time with Seattle last season, appearing in 35 games for Coachella Valley and 28 for the Kraken in 2024-25. In his NHL career, the center has played 123 games. Drafted in the 2nd round by the Tampa Bay Lightning, he appeared in 38 regular-season games and seven playoff games as a rookie in 2019-20, and because Tampa won the Stanley Cup that year, his name is on the trophy.
Coachella Valley’s playoff run also gave Stephens a reason to talk about the group’s growth. The Firebirds won two playoff rounds this spring, which he said was a sign of how far the team had come.
“The maturity of our group grew this year,” Stephens said. “With being the youngest team in the league, that’s a big positive.
You see the development of guys from the start of the year. We surprised a lot of people and surprised ourselves, too.
“These young guys coming up now, they’re good players. A lot of them are gonna play for Seattle or in the NHL soon.
We made to the third round. That’s good experience for these guys.”
And while hockey is the main event around the Kraken organization, a couple of familiar radio voices are about to step into a different kind of competition.
Everett Fitzhugh, the Kraken Audio Network voice, and KAN host Mike Benton are set to take part in the Seattle All-Star Classic Celebrity Softball Game on Saturday, July 11 at 3:30 pm in Tacoma. The event, which also includes a Home Run Derby, will be held at Cheney Stadium, home of the AAA Tacoma Rainiers. Fitzhugh and Benton will be on teams that also feature several current and former Seattle Seahawks, along with other local figures, and the proceeds benefit South Sound charities.
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