Current track

Title

Artist


‘Sends a message’: Maple Leafs sign Sergei Bobrovsky on first day of NHL free agency

Written by on July 1, 2026

Sergei Bobrovsky twice broke the hearts of his new team.

The Maple Leafs are hoping the veteran goaltender will now help get their tortured franchise back on track.

Toronto signed the two-time Stanley Cup winner to a three-year contract worth a reported US$21 million as NHL free agency opened Wednesday.

“Sergei’s a real game-changer for us in terms of the stability, the consistency, the durability,” Maple Leafs general manager John Chayka said of the two-time Vezina Trophy winner as the league’s top netminder on a video conference call with reporters. “The resume speaks for itself — possibly ends up being the best in that position of all time.

“We feel like it was the right player at the right time, not just on the ice, but certainly off the ice. The mentorship, the professionalism, the championship pedigree. We thought about it at all different angles.”

Bobrovsky, who eliminated the Maple Leafs from the 2023 and 2025 playoffs as a member of the Panthers, but is coming off a down season statistically, hit the open market at 12 p.m. ET and will partner with Anthony Stolarz after the pair hoisted hockey’s holy grail in tandem with Florida two years ago.

Owners of the league’s longest title drought, Toronto missed the post-season for the first time in a decade to cap a miserable 2025-26, but beat the draft lottery odds and selected winger Gavin McKenna with the first pick.

The Maple Leafs then added Bobrovsky — along with four depth forwards in Colton Sissons (two years for a reported $8.5 million), Jack Roslovic (two years for a reported $8 million), Teddy Blueger (two years for a reported $5 million) and Zack MacEwen (two years for a reported $1.75 million) — via free agency on Canada Day.

Chayka, who was hired in May, continued his roster renovation by dealing Dennis Hildeby from a crowded crease along with third- and fourth-round picks to the Tampa Bay Lightning for centre Nick Paul after shipping winger Nick Robertson to the Pittsburgh Penguins for a fourth-rounder.

“A player of Sergei Bobrovsky’s calibre sends a message that we’re serious about moving this team ahead and getting back on track and trying to take it to another level,” said Chayka, who trumpeted all the day’s moves after also recently bringing defenceman Darren Raddysh into the fold. “If you look at the full picture, we’re a much more dynamic team today than we were 24 hours ago.”

Shortly before the 37-year-old Bobrovsky pivoted to a new chapter in Toronto alongside Auston Matthews and William Nylander, a fellow Russian committed long-term to another Original Six franchise.

The Canadiens inked 20-year-old forward Ivan Demidov to a $73.2-million contract extension through 2034-35 that kicks in after next season as Montreal locked up another key piece of its peach-fuzzed core.

“I’m happy to be here,” Demidov told reporters in Brossard, Que. “I can’t wait to play more games for this jersey.”

Edmonton freed up a boatload of money by trading Darnell Nurse to the San Jose Sharks for fellow blueliners Shakir Mukhamadullin and Zack Sharp in a swap that didn’t include any dollar retention.

Oilers GM Stan Bowman used that flexibility to sign defenceman Ryan Shea to a five-year, $20-million contract as he looked to improve Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl’s supporting cast. Edmonton also re-signed winger Kasperi Kapanen for one year at $2.6 million.

The Sharks also got bigger in free agency by adding blueliner Jacob Trouba (four years, $33 million) and forward Mason Marchment (five years, $33.75 million).

The Vegas Golden Knights re-signed unrestricted free agent defenceman Rasmus Andersson to a reported seven-year, $59.5-million contract.

The Utah Mammoth acquired centre Vincent Trocheck from the New York Rangers for blueliner Sean Durzi, prospect Cole Beaudoin and a third-round pick.

The Winnipeg Jets got goaltender Stuart Skinner on a two-year, $7.5-million pact with the future of Connor Hellebuyck up in the air.

Players eligible to sign extensions July 1 — like Demidov in Montreal — also cashed in.

The Chicago Blackhawks signed defenceman Bowen Byram to a contract worth $75 million over six years that starts in 2027-28 after a recent trade with the Buffalo Sabres.

The New Jersey Devils agreed to a five-year, $58.5-million deal with captain Nico Hischier and the Panthers inked forward Eetu Luostarinen to an eight-year deal worth a reported $40 million. The Philadelphia Flyers, meanwhile, locked up forward Tyson Foerster (eight years, $56.8 million) and goaltender Dan Vladar (five years, $27.5-million).

The Washington Capitals signed UFA centre Boone Jenner (fours year, $23 million) and defenceman Vincent Desharnais (four years, $16.8 million).

The Vancouver Canucks brought defenceman Luke Schenn (one year, $2.25 million) and grabbed forward Paul Cotter (one year, $2.15 million). The Ottawa Senators re-signed pending UFA forward Nick Cousins (two years, $3.175 million) and goaltender Samuel Ersson (two years, $4.4 million).

Elsewhere around the league, the Dallas Stars traded restricted free agent Mavrik Bourque and defenceman Ilya Lyubushkin to the Nashville Predators for a 2027 second-round pick and a 2028 third-rounder.

The Los Angeles Kings signed forward Erik Haula (two years, $7.2 million), the Lightning signed winger Ilya Mikheyev (four years, $15.5 million) and the Seattle Kraken kept RFA forward Mackie Samoskevich (three years, $11.55 million).

The St. Louis Blues came to terms on a one-year, $850,000 contract with Dillon Dube after he played for the club’s American Hockey League affiliate in 2025-26. The centre was among five members of Canada’s 2018 world junior team acquitted in a high-profile sexual assault trial last summer.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 1, 2026.

Joshua Clipperton, The Canadian Press