
The Arty Party is over — and Canucks fans aren't taking the trade well
Meanwhile, media around the hockey world are praising the move for the Penguins.
Article content
'The Penguins … have a need at the position. They have a few promising young goalies in their system, but guys that probably should spend more time in the AHL. That includes Joel Blomqvist, who played some at the NHL level this year … (Silovs) showed during the Calder Cup Playoffs that it's time to give him some more NHL net time.
Article content
'If Silovs hits and can be a starter for the Penguins in the near future, this might solve one of their most immediate needs at the NHL level. (Tristan) Jarry's days as a reliable No. 1 appear to be dwindling. Adding a young, athletic and fairly accomplished young goalie is probably one of the more intriguing moves the Pens have made all summer.'
Article content
Arturs Silovs has been traded from the Vancouver Canucks to the Pittsburgh Penguins in exchange for Chase Stillman & 4th round draft pick '27. Low risk-high reward opportunity for Pittsburgh. I like this deal from Penguins' perspective. pic.twitter.com/jcGbsxfRQB
— Rono (@RonoAnalyst) July 13, 2025
Article content
Article content
Article content
Over at Pittsburghhockeynow.com, analyst Dan Kingerski writes:
Article content
'This is an A+ trade for (Kyle) Dubas and the Penguins. They've risked nothing and may get an NHL goalie. (Chase) Stillman was a 2021 first-round pick by New Jersey, but has done little to force his way to the NHL. He's an AHL depth player and the other asset given up was merely a fourth-round pick amongst the treasure trove of draft picks over the next three years.
Article content
'Silovs is young enough to keep improving upon his subpar regular-season performances. He's just a year older than Blomqvist, who also struggled mightily in NHL action this season.'
Article content
Have to think another goalie move is coming for #Pens.
NHL contracts: Tristan Jarry, Arturs Silovs, Joel Blomqvist, Flip Larsson & Sergei Murashov
AHL contracts: Taylor Gauthier & Max Pavlenko
Can't have Murashov in ECHL-Wheeling again in 2025-26, IMO. @InsideAHLHockey https://t.co/oQYBoy4Y8X
— Tony Androckitis* (@TonyAndrock) July 13, 2025
Article content
Article content
And predictably, the Penguins faithful are welcoming Silovs into the fold with open arms.
Article content
Artūrs Šilovs in my favorite team's net pic.twitter.com/GtnbnBBe1l
— PGHconcepts (@PGHconcepts) July 13, 2025

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
2 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Sabres avoid arbitration with Bowen Byram by signing him to a 2-year, $12.5M contract
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — The Buffalo Sabres avoided arbitration with Bowen Byram late Monday night by re-signing the restricted free agent defenseman to a two-year contract worth $12.5 million. Byram will count $6.25 million against the salary cap through the 2026-27 NHL season. He was considered a candidate for a trade or an offer sheet from another team before the Sabres elected salary arbitration with him earlier this month. The 24-year-old is coming off setting career highs with 31 assists, 38 points and 116 blocked shots while playing all 82 games in his first full season with Buffalo. The team acquired him from Colorado in exchange for center Casey Mittelstadt at the 2024 trade deadline. Byram had nine points on the Avalanche's 2022 Stanley Cup run. He has 33 goals and 89 assists in 273 regular-season and playoff games since debuting in the league in 2021. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. ___ AP NHL:


Toronto Star
5 hours ago
- Toronto Star
New Leafs defenceman Henry Thrun grew up a Bruins fan. He's anxious to see the other side
Henry Thrun began his first media conference as a Maple Leaf with a confession. 'As much as I hate to say it, I was a Bruins fan growing up,' he said. Childhood loyalties aside, the 24-year-old defenceman, acquired in the trade that sent Ryan Reaves to the San Jose Sharks last week, said he was happy to be the newest member of the Leafs. Thrun grew up in the Boston suburb of Southborough, not to be confused with Scarborough, which means he'll arrive in Toronto relatively well-versed in at least a few recent chapters of Toronto's difficult post-season story arc. 'I knew the Toronto-Boston rivalry and kind of the history that they've seen in the playoffs, and just knowing how electric of a hockey market (Toronto) is,' Thrun said. 'When (Sharks general manager Mike Grier) told me I was traded, it was definitely a nice way for that phone call to wrap up, just knowing I was going to a city like Toronto, just knowing the history and the success that the team has had the past couple of years, with obviously the end goal still in sight. There's more to push for.' That there's 'more to push for,' of course, is a kind way of saying a team that has won two playoff series in its most recent nine playoff runs has massively underachieved. But achievement is relative. And Thrun, after spending the past two-plus seasons with the league's worst team in San Jose, would be taking a big step up in class if he can carve out a role with the Leafs. Exactly what that role will be is anybody's guess. Not that the trade didn't make sense. The Leafs had essentially given up on Reaves, who played in just 35 games last season and did not see the ice in the playoffs. Moving out the remaining year on Reaves' contract, with a $1.35-million (U.S.) cap hit, in exchange for the remaining year on Thrun's $1-million deal offered salary-cap savings. Still, Thrun, a fourth-round 2019 draft pick of the Ducks who signed in San Jose as a free agent after his junior year at Harvard, is far from a proven commodity as an NHL regular. He has played 119 NHL games as a second- and third-pairing guy on a bottom-feeding team. Grier told reporters in San Jose last week that the Sharks' depth chart was such that Thrun was going to be in tough to earn regular playing time this coming season. 'It's going to be heavy competition here (for spots in the lineup on defence),' Grier said. 'And at the end day, I think this (trade) might help Henry out as well.' If Thrun was going to have a hard time finding ice time on the back end of the reigning basement dwellers, it's difficult to know where he slots on a Leafs blue line where the top six spots appear spoken for. Then again, depth never hurts. And perhaps Toronto's perceived defensive surplus means it's the logical place from which to eventually pluck a trade piece to service GM Brad Treliving's self-announced need for another top-six forward. It's possible, of course, that the Leafs see untapped potential in Thrun, a left-shot blueliner who made the case on Monday that his puck-moving skills weren't exactly showcased in San Jose, where it's safe to say the Sharks spent plenty of time in their own end. Perhaps the game will look different for Thrun in Toronto, even if Reaves offered a cautionary view of life as a Leaf in his introductory media availability in San Jose last week. 'I started the season two years ago really well, and then things were just going really wrong for me. All of a sudden the whole city wanted me out of there. I don't think you see that in other organizations,' Reaves said. Reaves was right about his great beginning: In his first two games as a Maple Leaf in engaged in a pair of fights. But less than a month into his first of two seasons in Toronto the fundamental worth of carrying a so-called enforcer on an NHL roster was called into question when Boston's Brad Marchand delivered a dirty hit that injured then-Leaf Timothy Liljegren. That nobody on the Leafs, including Reaves, offered any sort of response did not sit well. Liljegren, of course, now plays in San Jose, where he and Thrun were neighbours and friends. 'I got to hear (from Liljegren) a little about Toronto, and just, you know how passionate the fans are and how first class in the organization it is,' Thrun said. 'So it's something that I've only heard good things, and I'm excited to see it all firsthand and experience it.'


National Post
8 hours ago
- National Post
New Leafs defenceman Henry Thrun hopes for better times in Toronto
Henry Thrun remembers the night in early 2024 he was thrown in against the Maple Leafs and scored his first NHL goal. Article content 'Pretty exciting,' recalled the new Toronto defenceman Monday on an introductory Zoom call. 'It was a bizarre moment, the game out of hand (his Sharks headed to a 7-1 road loss on the strength of three William Nylander assists right after signing his new contract). Our power play coach came bombing down the bench asking if I could go on.' Article content Article content Article content Mikael Granlund found Thrun open for a goal against goalie Martin Jones, one of six the 24-year-old managed before San Jose decided to accelerate its rebuild with more veteran blueliners and acquired idle enforcer/winger Ryan Reaves from Toronto last week in the process. Article content Thrun, yet to play a full National Hockey League season, now must find a role among full-time Leaf defencemen Chris Tanev, Jake McCabe, Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Brandon Carlo, Morgan Rielly and Simon Benoit. Philippe Myers also made a push last year from the farm. Article content 'I've had no major conversations yet with (general manager Brad Treliving or coach Craig Berube,' the left-shooting Thrun said. 'I'm just getting my feet wet in Toronto, the first time I've been traded. I'll get more information as the week goes on.' Article content The Sharks' lack of on-ice success the past few years did little for Thrun's competitive nature, though he was called on in a variety of duties he hopes to duplicate with the Leafs. A more offensive player in college with Harvard, he has 25 points in 119 NHL games and comes at a very reasonable $1 million US ticket for this season. Article content 'I want to use my versatility up and down the lineup,' Thrun said. 'I've learned how to defend at the NHL level, but there are still steps I want to take.' Article content Article content He was shocked by the trade, which came while he was engrossed in a Top Gun video game in his native Massachusetts. He couldn't help feel the irony of joining the other side of one of hockey's great rivalries, growing up a big fan of Hall of Fame Bruin defender Zdeno Chara and once part of a summer training skate with the big man him in the Boston area. Article content 'I've been up to Toronto for a lot of summer tournaments. I'm eager to explore the city and get rolling with the team.' Article content Thrun will bring his San Jose No. 3 sweater choice with him and has some friendships in the Leafs organization already with frequent Marlies call-up Marshall Rifai. Thrun is the third player the Leafs have acquired from another team from the top of the fourth round of the 2019 draft with Matias Maccelli and Marlies defenceman Cade Webber, whom Thrun played prep school hockey against.