Jets Fans Just Watched A Manitoba Dream Slip Away

Carson Carels swaps hometown dreams for fierce division rivalry as he's snapped up by Calgary Flames in a dramatic draft twist.

The Calgary Flames have made a strategic move, securing Carson Carels, the standout defenseman from the Prince George Cougars, before the Winnipeg Jets could make their play. This decision not only alters the trajectory of Carels' career but also intensifies the rivalry between these two divisional foes.

Carson Carels, an 18-year-old rising star from Manitoba, was selected sixth overall by the Flames in the 2026 NHL Draft. This move came as a surprise to many who anticipated that the Winnipeg Jets would seize the opportunity to bring the Cypress River native back to his roots. However, Calgary swooped in, ensuring that Carels will be a formidable opponent for the Jets in the years to come.

Celebrating this pivotal moment in his career, Carels was surrounded by his family and friends on his family's farm in Cypress River, Manitoba. It's a picturesque setting for a young man who has become one of the province's brightest hockey prospects.

Carels' selection at such a high draft position is a testament to his impressive performance with the Prince George Cougars. Last season, he transformed his game, racking up 20 goals and 53 assists, totaling 73 points in just 58 games.

This remarkable output solidified his status as one of the top prospects in the 2026 draft class. Some scouting services even ranked him as high as third overall, while others placed him at sixth, aligning with where he was ultimately picked.

Adding to his accolades, Carels represented Canada at the World Junior Championship, where he further showcased his skills by contributing an assist and maintaining a plus-three rating over five games, helping his team secure a bronze medal. His performance on the international stage only reinforced his reputation as a premier defenseman in this year's draft.

While the Jets had hoped to bolster their blue line with one of Manitoba's own, they now face the challenge of competing against Carels, who will don the Flames' jersey. What could have been a heartwarming homecoming story for Winnipeg fans has instead evolved into a new chapter in the ongoing rivalry between Winnipeg and Calgary.

In Other News...

Jets Just Turned A Seventh Round Pick Into Hockey History

The Jets used a seventh-round pick in the 2026 NHL Draft on Noa Ta'amu, a defenseman out of the Edmonton Oil Kings who has built his reputation on size, strength and steady work in his own end. At 18, he already fits the mold of a bruising blueliner, the kind of late-round swing teams take when they believe there is still room for a young defender to grow into more than his draft slot suggests.

Ta'amus selection also carried a broader significance for the organization and for the sport, adding another layer to a pick that otherwise would have been easy to overlook in a long draft weekend. For Winnipeg, the appeal is obvious: a physical young defenseman with a defensive foundation, a WHL track record and enough upside to make a seventh-round ticket worth watching a little more closely. [Read more 🡒]

Jets Just Made A Blue Line Move Fans Didn't See Coming

The Jets added to their blue line by bringing in Jack St. Ivany, a defenseman who has spent his pro career in the Penguins organization since signing as a collegiate free agent in 2022. For Winnipeg, it is the kind of depth move that can matter quickly, especially on the back end where teams are always looking for another reliable option to keep the rotation steady.

David Gustafsson heads to Pittsburgh after playing mostly for Winnipeg and the Manitoba Moose, where he was one of the more productive forwards in the AHL last season. The deal gives the Jets a different kind of roster piece on defense, and it comes at a time when the club could use more help filling out the lower part of the lineup as the season moves along. [Read more 🡒]

Jets Fans Are Facing The Hellebuyck Question Nobody Wanted

Connor Hellebuyck has spent years giving Winnipeg exactly what teams dream of at the position: elite, stable goaltending from a three-time Vezina Trophy winner. But with trade chatter swirling around one of the leagues most accomplished goalies, the bigger conversation is no longer about what he has been for the Jets. It is about what he would be for somebody else, and whether the value of landing a franchise name in net outweighs the realities attached to the rest of his contract.

Those are not small questions for a goaltender who is already 33 and carries a deal that runs deep into the 2030-31 season at $8.5 million per year. The broad historical view suggests top goalies can remain above average well into their mid-30s, but the late-career track record is uneven enough to make any projection uneasy. For Winnipeg, the tension is obvious: paying for the last great stretch of a goalies prime is one thing, but betting on the back half of a long deal can turn into a very different kind of gamble. [Read more 🡒]