The Lightning’s latest wave of roster building brought three more names into the fold, and this time the focus was squarely on depth. Tampa Bay announced one-year, two-way contracts for goaltenders Olivier Rodeigue and Mads Sogaard, plus defenseman Michael Callahan.
That move comes after a busy stretch in goal for the organization. Before free agency opened, Tampa Bay had only three goaltenders under contract for next season: Andrei Vasilevskiy, Jonas Johansson and prospect Harrison Meneghin. With Meneghin carrying just one game of experience with the Syracuse Crunch and having run into some rough patches with the Orlando Solar Bears, it was clear the Lightning would need to add some veteran help once the market opened.
They had already started addressing that need by bringing in 24-year-old Denis Hildeby from Toronto in a trade. From there, the Lightning added two more goalies with more mileage behind them.
Sogaard is no stranger to Crunch followers, having logged 131 AHL games, all with Belleville. Last season, he went 7-13-4 with a 3.60 GAA and .874 SV% in 27 games for the AHL Senators.
He also appeared in two NHL games for Ottawa and got Olympic action with Denmark.
Rodeigue, 25, arrived with a different background but plenty of pro experience of his own. A second-round pick of the Edmonton Oilers in 2018, he has 141 AHL games on his résumé between Bakersfield and Rockford.
He has also appeared in two NHL games with Edmonton, both coming in 2024-25. In 10 games with the IceHogs last season, he posted a 3.20 GAA and .891 SV%.
Callahan adds another layer of organizational depth on the blue line. For the Crunch, this will be the first team he’s played for that doesn’t include “Providence” in the name since 2019-20, aside from a brief five-game stop with Boston.
After four seasons at Providence College, where he was teammates with Max Crozier, he moved on to the Providence Bruins in the AHL. Across 241 AHL games, Callahan has recorded 52 points, including nine goals and 43 assists.
At 26, Callahan fits the profile of a depth piece, and the same general outlook applies to the two new goaltenders. Most of the season could well be spent in Syracuse or Orlando if those ECHL assignments come into play.
Still, Tampa Bay’s recent moves show why teams keep adding bodies in the summer: hockey has a way of changing fast, and injuries can force everyone down the depth chart. For the Lightning, at least, there’s now a little more insurance behind Vasilevskiy and Johansson.
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Former Lightning Winger Lands With A Rival Tampa Bay Knows Well
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For the Rangers, the move also brings a right-shot option into a forward group that can use that kind of balance, and the contract structure suggests a short-term bet rather than a long commitment. It is the sort of low-drama summer addition that can matter later, especially if the new team decides it wants to keep its flexibility intact for what comes next. [Read more 🡒]
