The Jets’ first-rounder won’t be waiting nearly as long as expected to get to North America.
Swedish center Viggo Björck, whom Winnipeg took with the eighth overall pick last month, has been released by Djurgårdens IF and will be able to pursue opportunities in the Jets organization for 2026-27. That’s a notable shift from the original expectation that he wouldn’t arrive in Winnipeg until spring 2027 at the earliest, since he was in the final season of his contract with the Swedish Hockey League club.
Björck still hasn’t signed his entry-level deal, so he’s not eligible to play NHL games for Winnipeg right now. Even so, there’s time for that to change before training camp.
The Jets technically already had the ability to send him to the AHL after camp as a first-round pick, even without Djurgården’s release, because of the NHL’s transfer agreement with the Swedish Ice Hockey Association. But today’s announcement gives an early green light that Björck will be in the picture for either Winnipeg or AHL Manitoba when the 2026-27 season begins.
That’s a big development for a player who instantly became the organization’s top prospect when he was drafted. Björck gave the Jets a clear No. 1 prospect in a system that many viewed as sitting around the middle of the league. He’s only 5’9″ and 181 lbs, but he spent almost all of his draft year against pro competition in Sweden’s top league and was projected to push for Djurgården’s first-line center role this season.
His numbers backed up the buzz. In 42 SHL games last year, Björck scored six goals and finished with 15 points, which led all under-18 players in the league. He also stood out on the international stage, putting up nine points in seven games for Sweden during its gold-medal run at the World Juniors, then adding a 1-5-6 line in eight games with the senior team at the World Championship in May.
Still, expecting him to jump straight from that kind of role into being an NHL difference-maker as a rookie would be jumping the gun, especially with his size. The more likely path is a run in Manitoba, where he could start in a high-leverage role before the Jets even think about a call-up.
And there’s another layer here: Björck remains slide-eligible this season. If he plays fewer than 10 NHL games, the first year of his entry-level contract would be pushed to 2027-28.
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Bjorck is arriving at a time when the Jets are still searching for a true second-line center, which gives his push more relevance than a routine prospect audition. He is not the only player on the move in the wider hockey conversation, either, as Anaheim is weighing its own cap decisions after the Leo Carlsson offer sheet, but for Winnipeg the focus is simpler: whether this new arrival can turn an opening into something much bigger. [Read more 🡒]
Jets Fans Just Got A Big Viggo Bjorck Reality Check
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Bjorcks arrival also opens the door to his entry-level deal with Winnipeg and a real shot at competing for a roster spot right away. If he is not on the opening-night roster, the Jets could still keep his development on track another way, with a return to Djurgrden remaining a possibility depending on how camp unfolds. [Read more 🡒]
