Latest news with #ChrisYoung


Al Arabiya
14 hours ago
- Sport
- Al Arabiya
Texas Rangers CF Wyatt Langford to IL again with oblique strain while RHP Nathan Eovaldi returns
Texas Rangers center fielder Wyatt Langford has been placed on the 10-day injured list because of an oblique strain for the second time this season. Chris Young, the team's president of baseball operations, said Friday that Langford has a very low-grade strain. The second-year outfielder hasn't played since Tuesday in Baltimore. 'Feel like it's just the right thing to do. With two off days, it shortens the amount of games missed,' Young said. 'Just getting this right on the front end.' The Rangers also, before the opener of their home series against Seattle, activated right-hander Nathan Eovaldi from the 15-day injured list to start Friday night, exactly one month after his last game before going on the IL because of elbow inflammation. Right-handed reliever Dane Dunning was sent back to Triple-A Round Rock. Michael Helman, an outfielder-middle infielder who was claimed off waivers from Pittsburgh last month, was being brought up from Triple-A to take over Langford's roster spot. Young said Langford's issue was just on the cusp of whether he needed to go on the IL. But the move was backdated to Wednesday and, combined with off days for the Rangers on consecutive Thursdays, Langford will miss only eight games if he has the expected minimal IL stay. He would be eligible to return July 5 at San Diego. Langford missed nine games in mid-April while on the IL with a right oblique strain, while the latest issue is on the left side. He is hitting .232 with a team-leading 13 home runs and 31 RBIs. Left-hander Cody Bradford was back in the clubhouse with teammates and went to the pregame pitching meeting Friday, two days after season-ending elbow surgery. Young said Bradford's surgery was successful and that team physician Dr. Keith Meister did an internal brace procedure rather than a more extensive procedure. The pitcher will still be out at least 10–12 months, but that is shorter than if he had needed Tommy John surgery. Bradford was expected to be part of the starting rotation this season but was shut down during spring training in mid-March because of elbow soreness. His rehab had been going well until Bradford felt something in his elbow when he resumed throwing after a recent flu bug. The 27-year-old Bradford is 10–6 with a 4.28 ERA in 34 games (21 starts) for Texas the past two seasons. As a rookie, Bradford was 1–0 with a 1.17 ERA in five relief appearances during the 2023 playoffs when the Rangers won their first World Series title. He pitched a scoreless inning in both of his World Series appearances. 'The brace procedure, optimistically, would mean a shorter timeline to returning to competition,' Young said. 'All things considered, everything went smoothly. It was the best of the outcomes we could have anticipated.'
Yahoo
14 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Texas Rangers CF Wyatt Langford to IL again with oblique strain while RHP Nathan Eovaldi returns
Texas Rangers' Wyatt Langford hits a double that scored teammate Sam Haggerty in front of Kansas City Royals catcher Freddy Fermin during the first inning of a baseball game, Wednesday, June 18, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/LM Otero) ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Texas Rangers center fielder Wyatt Langford has been put on the 10-day injured list because of an oblique strain for the second time this season. Chris Young, the team's president of baseball operations, said Friday that Langford has a 'very low grade' strain. The second-year outfielder hasn't played since Tuesday in Baltimore. Advertisement 'Feel like it's just the right thing to do. With two off days, it shortens the amount of games missed,' Young said. 'Just getting this right on the front end.' The Rangers, also before the opener of their home series against Seattle, activated right-hander Nathan Eovaldi from the 15-day injured list to start Friday night, exactly one month after his last game before going on the IL because of elbow inflammation. Right-handed reliever Dane Dunning was sent back to Triple-A Round Rock. Michael Helman, a outfielder-middle infielder who was claimed off waivers from Pittsburgh last month, was being brought up from Triple-A to take over Langford's roster spot. Young said Langford's issue was 'just on the cusp' of whether he needed to go on the IL. But the move was backdated to Wednesday, and combined with off days for the Rangers on consecutive Thursdays, Langford will miss only eight games if he has the expected minimal IL stay. He would be eligible to return July 5 at San Diego. Advertisement Langford missed nine games in mid-April while on the IL with a right oblique strain, while the latest issue is on the left side. He is hitting .232 with a team-leading 13 home runs and 31 RBIs. Bradford's surgery Left-hander Cody Bradford was back in the clubhouse with teammates and went to the pregame pitching meeting Friday, two days season-ending elbow surgery. Young said Bradford's surgery was successful, and that team physician Dr. Keith Meister did an internal brace procedure rather than a more extensive procedure. The pitcher will still be out at least 10-12 months, but that is shorter than if he had needed Tommy John surgery. Advertisement Bradford was expected to be part of the starting rotation this season, but was shut down during spring training in mid-March because of elbow soreness. His rehab had been going good until Bradford felt something in his elbow when he resumed throwing after a recent flu bug. The 27-year-old Bradford is 10-6 with a 4.28 ERA in 34 games (21 starts) for Texas the past two seasons. As a rookie, Bradford was 1-0 with a 1.17 ERA in five relief appearances during the 2023 playoffs when the Rangers won their first World Series title. He pitched a scoreless inning in both of his World Series appearances. 'The brace procedure, optimistically, would mean a shorter timeline to returning to competition,' Young said. 'All things considered, everything went smoothly. It was the best of the outcomes we could have anticipated.' ___ AP MLB:

Associated Press
14 hours ago
- Sport
- Associated Press
Texas Rangers CF Wyatt Langford to IL again with oblique strain while RHP Nathan Eovaldi returns
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Texas Rangers center fielder Wyatt Langford has been put on the 10-day injured list because of an oblique strain for the second time this season. Chris Young, the team's president of baseball operations, said Friday that Langford has a 'very low grade' strain. The second-year outfielder hasn't played since Tuesday in Baltimore. 'Feel like it's just the right thing to do. With two off days, it shortens the amount of games missed,' Young said. 'Just getting this right on the front end.' The Rangers, also before the opener of their home series against Seattle, activated right-hander Nathan Eovaldi from the 15-day injured list to start Friday night, exactly one month after his last game before going on the IL because of elbow inflammation. Right-handed reliever Dane Dunning was sent back to Triple-A Round Rock. Michael Helman, a outfielder-middle infielder who was claimed off waivers from Pittsburgh last month, was being brought up from Triple-A to take over Langford's roster spot. Young said Langford's issue was 'just on the cusp' of whether he needed to go on the IL. But the move was backdated to Wednesday, and combined with off days for the Rangers on consecutive Thursdays, Langford will miss only eight games if he has the expected minimal IL stay. He would be eligible to return July 5 at San Diego. Langford missed nine games in mid-April while on the IL with a right oblique strain, while the latest issue is on the left side. He is hitting .232 with a team-leading 13 home runs and 31 RBIs. Bradford's surgery Left-hander Cody Bradford was back in the clubhouse with teammates and went to the pregame pitching meeting Friday, two days season-ending elbow surgery . Young said Bradford's surgery was successful, and that team physician Dr. Keith Meister did an internal brace procedure rather than a more extensive procedure. The pitcher will still be out at least 10-12 months, but that is shorter than if he had needed Tommy John surgery. Bradford was expected to be part of the starting rotation this season, but was shut down during spring training in mid-March because of elbow soreness. His rehab had been going good until Bradford felt something in his elbow when he resumed throwing after a recent flu bug. The 27-year-old Bradford is 10-6 with a 4.28 ERA in 34 games (21 starts) for Texas the past two seasons. As a rookie, Bradford was 1-0 with a 1.17 ERA in five relief appearances during the 2023 playoffs when the Rangers won their first World Series title. He pitched a scoreless inning in both of his World Series appearances. 'The brace procedure, optimistically, would mean a shorter timeline to returning to competition,' Young said. 'All things considered, everything went smoothly. It was the best of the outcomes we could have anticipated.' ___ AP MLB:


New York Times
a day ago
- Sport
- New York Times
MLB notes: Globe Life Field has turned into a hitter's nightmare and the Rangers don't know why
One of baseball's more baffling trends is set to resume Friday night when the Texas Rangers host the Seattle Mariners. Texas' Globe Life Field has turned into a pitcher's paradise – and hitter's nightmare. 'Our people are perplexed,' Rangers general manager Chris Young said. 'We're looking at everything from the humidor to which doors and windows are open at what points of time during the game for entrance and egress. We don't have answers right now.' Advertisement Globe Life this season is the most difficult run-scoring environment in the majors, according to Statcast's Park Factor metric. It was the third most difficult last season. But in 2023, the year the Rangers won the World Series, it was the third easiest. The odd transformation of Globe Life is not the reason the Rangers are one of the game's most disappointing teams – they're 23-16 at home, 17-25 on the road. But their record at Globe Life is largely attributable to their pitching staff's major-league best 2.68 home ERA. Texas is scoring 3.44 runs per game at home, second lowest in the majors. Consider the team's performance on barrels – hard-hit batted balls that, in terms of exit velocity and launch angle, have led to a minimum .500 batting average and 1.500 slugging percentage since the introduction of Statcast in 2015. The Rangers are batting just .458 on barrels at home. On the road, they're at .722. Their opponents' splits on barrels are less severe – .564 at Globe Life, .678 on the road. The league average, in all parks, is .676. The flip side for the Rangers is that their pitchers are benefiting from the same trends, ranking second in the majors with a 3.25 ERA. But the team's offense this season has been its downfall. Virtually ever Texas hitter is underperforming. And Globe Life might be part of the problem. 'It's a really hard thing for me to reconcile,' Young said. 'Yes, the park is playing bigger. We've also found ways to win at home. Is that impacting us on the road? I can't say.' Based on the Miami Marlins' track record, it's reasonable to assume they will trade both of their top right-handers, Sandy Alcantara and Edward Cabrera. But Alcantara, if he continues his recent resurgence, is perhaps the more likely to go. Alcantara, 29, is older than Cabrera, more expensive and under club control for one fewer season. He is owed the balance of his $17 million salary this season and $17 million next season with a $21 million club option for 2027. Cabrera, 27, is earning $1.95 million this season, with three years of arbitration left after that. The Marlins plan to contend before he becomes a free agent. But they do not figure to be in that position next season, Alcantara's final guaranteed year. Alcantara, coming off Tommy John surgery, had an 8.47 ERA in his first 11 starts, a 2.74 in his last four. He is a favorite of owner Bruce Sherman and really, the entire organization. The Marlins could wait until the offseason to trade him. But at that point, he would be available for two pennant races instead of three, and teams would not necessarily consider his $21 million option to be automatic. Advertisement Going forward with Cabrera would be a different kind of risk. The Marlins are tantalized by his talent. His stuff and command are improving, as is his mental approach. But Cabrera has been on the injured list seven times since 2021, including three times for a shoulder impingement in 2023 and '24. He has never made more than 20 starts in a season. With both pitchers, much depends upon what happens in the next five weeks. The better Alcantara and Cabrera perform, the better the offers teams will make for them. And the greater temptation for the Marlins to move them will be. Ten days ago, the Milwaukee Brewers were in the middle of a 6-7 stretch, 6 1/2 games back in the NL Central and a half game back in the wild-card race. At that moment, a trade of right-hander Freddy Peralta seemed well within the range of possibility. And now? A 6-1 run has elevated the Brewers to within three games of the Chicago Cubs and past the San Diego Padres for the third wild-card spot. Sitting on a potential surplus of starting pitching, even after trading righty Aaron Civale, the Brewers still might consider moving Peralta or lefty José Quintana. But after the blowback the team experienced from the Josh Hader trade in 2022, owner Mark Attanasio almost certainly will be reluctant to authorize a similar move. The Hader deal worked out well long-term, yielding outfielder Esteury Ruiz, whom the Brewers later flipped to the Athletics for catcher William Contreras and reliever Joel Payamps, as well as top pitching prospect Robert Gasser, who is recovering from Tommy John surgery. But the Brewers invited scrutiny for trading an elite closer in the middle of the season, and missed the playoffs in '22. Attanasio is sensitive to perception. Peralta, on track for potentially his best season, is signed for a below-market $8 million salary both this season and next. Trading him at the deadline – after an offseason in which the Brewers parted with Hader's successor, Devin Williams, and lost shortstop Willy Adames to free agency – likely would not be received well, both inside and outside the clubhouse. Advertisement A postseason rotation headed by Peralta, Quintana and rookie phenom Jacob Misiorowski, on the other hand, would appear formidable. The Brewers' current starting group also includes Quinn Priester and Chad Patrick, who has a 7.80 ERA in his last three starts. Logan Henderson and Tobias Myers are at Triple A. And Brandon Woodruff and Nestor Cortes Jr. are working their way back from injuries. Anything is possible if the Brewers stumble before the deadline, and maybe even if they don't. The team could use a boost at both shortstop (28th in OPS entering Thursday's play) and third base (27th), though Joey Ortiz and Chad Durbin are hitting well in June. Peralta is not quite an ace – his 3.74 expected ERA is above his actual 2.90. But at his salary, he's also not the kind of pitcher a small-market contender should trade at the deadline. Not unless the return significantly upgrades another part of the major-league roster. Only 18 months ago the Pittsburgh Pirates signed right-hander Mitch Keller to a five-year, $77 million extension. The team is in a different place now than it was then, making a trade of Keller possible, if not likely. In both the majors and minors, the Pirates are deep in young starting pitching. Yet, any payroll increase they anticipated isn't happening, in part because their attendance is down as they keep losing. Their offense, meanwhile, remains a major problem, as evidenced by Keller's 1-10 record despite an ERA+ that is four percent above league average. Under Derek Shelton, the Pirates were 12-26 and averaged 3.11 runs per game, last in the majors. Their 20-24 record under Don Kelly is an improvement, but their average of 3.39 runs per game during that time is . . . next to last. Ace right-hander Paul Skenes and franchise icon Andrew McCutchen are the Pirates' only untouchables, according to officials briefed on the team's plans. As free-agent prices for starting pitchers soar, Keller's contract looks increasingly reasonable. But his $15 million salary this season occupied nearly 20 percent of the Pirates' Opening Day payroll, and his guarantees will rise to $16.5 million, $18 million and $20 million over the next three years. Advertisement If Pirates owner Bob Nutting refuses to increase payroll, that money would be better spent on offense. And with the team's home attendance more than 3,000 per game lower than it was last season, expecting Nutting to shift course is sheer folly. Keller lacks a no-trade clause. At 29, he still has upside. And he is available for four pennant races. The Pirates' asking price likely will be high for a pitcher who was a 2023 All-Star. Keller's history of inconsistency might temper the offers. But in a market thin on quality starting pitchers, the Pirates should be motivated to take advantage. Everyone can relax about Juan Soto, no? His 19 homers through 81 team games matched his total from last season with the New York Yankees, the club he supposedly didn't want to leave. And according to Sarah Langs, he entered Thursday night with an expected slugging percentage of .879 in June. The player who ranked second on that list, the Los Angeles Angels' Jo Adell, was nearly 200 points below that at .694. On top of all that, Soto is devoting more attention to a less notable part of his offense — stolen bases. Soto's sprint speed is in the bottom 17 percent of the league, but this season he has stolen nine bases in 10 attempts. His career-high in steals is 12, a total he reached in his second season with the Washington Nationals in 2019 and with the San Diego Padres in 2023. Before a recent game in Philadelphia, Soto could be seen in the Mets clubhouse with first base coach Antoan Richardson, working on his secondary leads and first steps. Soto said Richardson makes base stealing fun, picking up opponents' tendencies 'no one else in the league sees.' 'What we've done is come up with creative ways to game plan for that pitcher,' Richardson said. 'The part where he said we're making it fun is not putting him in a box. It's not, 'Hey, this is how we've always done it, so you have to do it this way.' No, I want you to feel confident that what you see is real and trust that information and be an athlete out there. Advertisement 'He's just taking that and running with it. His baseball IQ is really, really high. In the past, he hasn't gotten credit all the time for having a high IQ as a baserunner. But when we talk the game and I see him execute the information that's given to him, it's as good as anybody else I've been around.' The most pressing question catcher J.T. Realmuto will face at the end of the season is whether he will re-sign with the Philadelphia Phillies as a free agent. Beyond that, Realmuto must consider something else: How long does he want to continue playing? Realmuto, 34, isn't putting a number on it. 'The body feels as good as it's ever felt,' he said. 'It actually feels better now than it did in the second half of last year. After the (right knee) surgery (on June 12), I was still trying to get some inflammation out. But this year, the knee has felt great. Everything has felt really good. 'I do want to play as long as I can. I want to keep my body in the best shape I can. I want to continue to have fun. I'll know when it's time to hang 'em up. If I'm not productive, if I'm not helping the team, I'm not going to try to get to the number 40.' Family also will be a consideration. Realmuto and his wife, Alexis, have four children, ages 2 to 6. 'If my kids get to an age where they want daddy home . . . they already want daddy home, obviously,' Realmuto said. 'But if they're not enjoying it, not enjoying the big-league life anymore, that will probably be a day I hang it up as well. Either my performance or body will tell me first, or my family will.' Perhaps it's a good thing no catcher is projected to be a top-five pick in the draft. Joe Mauer, the No. 1 pick in 2001, made it to the Hall of Fame. But the last three catchers to go either first or second — collegians Joey Bart in 2018, Adley Rutschman in 2019 and Henry Davis in 2021 — have yet to fulfill their promise. Advertisement Rutschman, drafted by the Baltimore Orioles one place ahead of Bobby Witt Jr., currently is on the injured list for the first time with a strained left oblique, and has a .628 OPS since June 21, 2024. Bart hit 13 home runs for the Pirates last season after the San Francisco Giants designated him for assignment, but has only one homer in 166 at-bats this season. Davis went No. 1, in part, because he was willing to sign below slot, enabling the Pirates to go above slot with two pitchers who became top prospects, Anthony Solometo and Bubba Chandler. But with a career .584 OPS, he still qualifies as a disappointment. Which is not to say teams should avoid drafting catchers in the first round. The Cincinnati Reds' Tyler Stephenson, Los Angeles Dodgers' Will Smith, Cleveland Guardians' Bo Naylor, Athletics' Shea Langeliers, Giants' Patrick Bailey and New York Yankees' Austin Wells all were first rounders, though none went higher than ninth overall. And while a number of other first-round catchers were busts, so were a number of first rounders at other positions. Fun fact: Realmuto, the Seattle Mariners' Cal Raleigh and Atlanta Braves' Sean Murphy and Drake Baldwin were all third rounders. Some of the coolest All-Star stories are ones in which players overcome injuries to reach their previous level of performance or attain an even higher one. Minnesota Twins center fielder Byron Buxton certainly fits into that category. So do three pitchers who entered Thursday ranked among the top three in the majors in ERA – Rangers right-hander Jacob deGrom (4th), Tampa Bay Rays righty Drew Rasmussen (8th) and Cubs lefty Matthew Boyd (13th). The last time deGrom made an All-Star team was 2021. The last time he pitched in the game was 2019. The All-Stars that year included David Dahl, Joey Gallo and Tommy La Stella, Austin Meadows, Hunter Pence and Masahiro Tanaka. Advertisement Rasmussen, who underwent three major elbow surgeries, has never been an All-Star. Neither has Boyd, who underwent flexor-tendon surgery in Sept. 2021 and Tommy John surgery in 2023. Don't look now, but the symbol of the Orioles' early collapse, right-hander Charlie Morton, is emerging as a legitimate trade candidate. Morton, 41, lost his spot in the rotation after posting a 10.89 ERA in his first five starts. But since returning to the rotation for good on May 26, his ERA in six starts is 2.90. He also has struck out 37 in 31 innings. The biggest concern for a team interested in acquiring Morton might be paying the balance of his $15 million salary. At the deadline, he still would be owed nearly $5 million. (Top photo of Josh Jung at Globe Life Field in April:)


Economic Times
a day ago
- Sport
- Economic Times
NHL Draft 2025: Live streaming, dates, draft lottery and other details - All you need to know
AP This year's NHL Draft will feature 234 total picks spread across seven rounds. The first round will take place on June 27, followed by Rounds 2 through 7 on June 28. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press via AP, file) With the two-day NBA Draft now complete, attention shifts to Los Angeles, where the highly anticipated 2025 NHL Draft kicks off Friday night at the Peacock Theater. The Florida Panthers clinched back-to-back Stanley Cup titles last week with another victory over the Edmonton Oilers. With the offseason underway, NHL front offices are now focused on building rosters capable of challenging for the 2025-26 title and shaping their long-term futures. The New York Islanders defied the 3.5% odds to win the draft lottery in May and hold the coveted No. 1 overall pick. Rounding out the top five selections are San Jose Sharks, Chicago Blackhawks, Utah Mammoth, and Nashville Predators. This year's NHL Draft will feature 234 total picks spread across seven rounds. The first round will take place on June 27, followed by Rounds 2 through 7 on June 28. Defenseman Matthew Schaefer leads this year's draft class despite an injury-shortened campaign. After dealing with mononucleosis and suffering a broken clavicle during the World Juniors, he still managed to post an impressive seven goals and 15 assists in just 22 games for the Erie Otters in the OHL. Other top prospects expected to draw early attention in the first round include Caleb Desnoyers, Michael Misa, and James Hagens - all considered high-upside talents with strong potential at the next level. ROUND 1: Date: June 27, Friday Time: 7pm ET TV: ESPN, NHL Network Stream: ESPN+, Fubo ROUND 2 TO 7: Date: June 28, Saturday Time: 11am ET TV: ESPN, NHL Network Stream: ESPN+, Fubo Venue: Peacock Theater, Los Angeles NHL DRAFT ORDER 2025 (ROUND 1) 1. New York Islanders 2. San Jose Sharks 3. Chicago Blackhawks 4. Utah Mammoth 5. Nashville Predators 6. Philadelphia Flyers 7. Boston Bruins 8. Seattle Kraken 9. Buffalo Sabres 10. Anaheim Ducks 11. Pittsburgh Penguins 12. Pittsburgh Penguins 13. Detroit Red Wings 14. Columbus Blue Jackets 15. Montreal Vancouver Canucks 16. Montreal Canadiens (from Calgary Flames) 17. Montreal Canadiens 18. Calgary Flames (from Devils) 19. St. Louis Blues 20. Columbus Blue Jackets (from Wild) 21. Ottawa Senators 22. Philadelphia Flyers (from Avalanche) 23. Nashville Predators (from Lightning) 24. Los Angeles Kings 25. Chicago Blackhawks (from Maple Leafs) 26. Nashville Predators (from Golden Knights via Sharks) 27. Washington Capitals 28. Winnipeg Jets 29. Carolina Hurricanes 30. San Jose Sharks (from Stars) 31. Philadelphia Flyers (from Oilers) 32. Calgary Flames (from Panthers) NHL DRAFT ORDER 2025 (ROUND 2) 33. San Jose Sharks 34. Chicago Blackhawks 35. Nashville Predators 36. Philadelphia Flyers 37. Washington Capitals (from Boston) 38. Seattle Kraken 39. Buffalo Sabres 40. Philadelphia Flyers (from Anaheim) 41. Montreal Canadiens (from Pittsburgh) 42. New York Islanders 43. New York Rangers 44. Detroit Red Wings 45. Anaheim Ducks (from Columbus via Philadelphia) 46. Utah Mammoth 47. Vancouver Canucks 48. Philadelphia Flyers (from Calgary) 49. Montreal Canadiens 50. New Jersey Devils 51. Boston Bruins (from St. Louis via Pittsburgh and Edmonton) 52. Minnesota Wild 53. San Jose Sharks (from Ottawa) 54. Calgary Flames (from Colorado via Washington) 55. Nashville Predators (from Tampa Bay) 56. Tampa Bay Lighting (from Los Angeles) 57. Seattle Kraken (from Toronto via Utah and Tampa Bay) 58. Vegas Golden Knights 59. Pittsburgh Penguins (from Washington) 60. Anaheim Ducks (from Winnipeg via New Jersey) 61. Boston Bruins (from Carolina via Colorado) 62. Chicago Blackhawks (from Dallas) 63. New Jersey Devils (from Edmonton via Utah) 64. Toronto Maple Leafs (from Florida) NHL DRAFT ORDER 2025 (ROUND 3) 65. Vancouver Canucks (from San Jose via Vegas and NY Rangers) 66. Chicago Blackhawks 67. Nashville Predators 68. Philadelphia Flyers 69. Boston Bruins 70. New York Rangers (from Seattle) 71. Buffalo Sabres 72. Anaheim Ducks 73. Pittsburgh Penguins 74. New York Islanders 75. Detroit Red Wings (from NY Rangers via Utah) 76. Detroit Red Wings 77. Columbus Blue Jackets 78. Utah Mammoth 79. Montreal Canadiens (from Vancouver) 80. Calgary Flames 81. Montreal Canadiens 82. Montreal Canadiens (from New Jersey) 83. Edmonton Oilers (from St. Louis) 84. Pittsburgh Penguins (from Minnesota via Philadelphia and Nashville) 85. Pittsburgh Penguins (from Ottawa via St. Louis) 86. Toronto Maple Leafs (from Colorado via Nashville and San Jose) 87. Carolina Hurricanes (from Tampa Bay) 88. Los Angeles Kings 89. New York Rangers (from Toronto via Anaheim) 90. New Jersey Devils (from Vegas) 91. Vegas Golden Knights (from Washington) 92. Winnipeg Jets 93. Washington Capitals (from Carolina) 94. Dallas Stars 95. San Jose Sharks (from Edmonton) 96. Ottawa Senators (from Florida) NHL DRAFT ORDER 2025 (ROUND 4) 97. Ottawa Senators (from San Jose) 98. Chicago Blackhawks 99. New Jersey Devils (from Nashville) 100. Boston Bruins (from Philadelphia via Toronto) 101. Anaheim Ducks (from Boston via Detroit) 102. Minnesota Wild (from Seattle) 103. Buffalo Sabres 104. Anaheim Ducks 105. Pittsburgh Penguins 106. New York Islanders 107. Chicago Blackhawks (from NY Rangers) 108. Montreal Canadiens (from Detroit) 109. Columbus Blue Jackets 110. Utah Mammoth 111. New York Rangers (from Vancouver via Colorado) 112. Florida Panthers (from Calgary) 113. Montreal Canadiens 114. New Jersey Devils 115. San Jose Sharks (from St. Louis via Columbus) 116. Buffalo Sabres (from Minnesota via Anaheim) 117. Edmonton Oilers (from Ottawa via Vancouver) 118. Colorado Avalanche 119. Detroit Red Wings (from Tampa Bay) 120. Los Angeles Kings 121. Minnesota Wild (from Toronto) 122. Vegas Golden Knights 123. Washington Capitals 124. San Jose Sharks (from Winnipeg via Dallas) 125. Carolina Hurricanes 126. Dallas Stars 127. Tampa Bay Lightning (from Edmonton) 128. Florida Panthers NHL DRAFT ORDER 2025 (ROUND 5) 129. Florida Panthers (from San Jose) 130. Pittsburgh Penguins (from Chicago via Toronto and Washington) 131. Nashville Predators 132. Philadelphia Flyers 133. Boston Bruins 134. Seattle Kraken 135. Buffalo Sabres 136. Anaheim Ducks 137. Toronto Maple Leafs (from Pittsburgh) 138. New York Islanders 139. New York Rangers 140. Detroit Red Wings 141. Minnesota Wild (from Columbus) 142. Utah Mammoth 143. Vancouver Canucks 144. Calgary Flames 145. Montreal Canadiens 146. Dallas Stars (from New Jersey) 147. St. Louis Blues 148. Pittsburgh Penguins (from Minnesota via NY Rangers) 149. Ottawa Senators 150. San Jose Sharks (from Colorado) 151. Tampa Bay Lightning 152. Los Angeles Kings 153. Toronto Maple Leafs 154. Vegas Golden Knights 155. Washington Capitals 156. Winnipeg Jets 157. Philadelphia Flyers (from Carolina) 158. Dallas Stars 159. Anaheim Ducks (from Edmonton) 160. Columbus Blue Jackets (from Florida) NHL DRAFT ORDER 2025 (ROUND 6) 161. New Jersey Devils (from San Jose) 162. Chicago Blackhawks 163. Nashville Predators 164. Philadelphia Flyers 165. Boston Bruins 166. New York Rangers (from Seattle) 167. Buffalo Sabres 168. Anaheim Ducks 169. Pittsburgh Penguins 170. New York Islanders 171. New York Rangers 172. Detroit Red Wings 173. Columbus Blue Jackets 174. Utah Mammoth 175. Vancouver Canucks 176. Calgary Flames 177. Montreal Canadiens 178. New Jersey Devils 179. St. Louis Blues 180. Minnesota Wild 181. Ottawa Senators 182. Nashville Predators (from Colorado) 183. Carolina Hurricanes (from Tampa Bay) 184. Los Angeles Kings 185. Toronto Maple Leafs 186. Vegas Golden Knights 187. Vegas Golden Knights (from Washington) 188. Winnipeg Jets 189. Carolina Hurricanes 190. Dallas Stars 191. Edmonton Oilers 192. Florida Panthers NHL DRAFT ORDER 2025 (ROUND 7) 193. Tampa Bay Lightning (from San Jose) 194. Chicago Blackhawks 195. Buffalo Sabres (from Nashville) 196. Los Angeles Kings (from Philadelphia) 197. Chicago Blackhawks (from Boston) 198. Seattle Kraken 199. Buffalo Sabres 200. Anaheim Ducks 201. Pittsburgh Penguins 202. New York Islanders 203. New York Rangers 204. Detroit Red Wings 205. Columbus Blue Jackets 206. Tampa Bay Lightning (from Utah) 207. Vancouver Canucks 208. Calgary Flames 209. Montreal Canadiens 210. San Jose Sharks (from New Jersey) 211. Detroit Red Wings (from St. Louis) 212. Tampa Bay Lightning (from Minnesota) 213. Ottawa Senators 214. Colorado Avalanche 215. Tampa Bay Lightning 216. Los Angeles Kings 217. Toronto Maple Leafs 218. Columbus Blue Jackets (from Vegas) 219. Buffalo Sabres (from Washington via San Jose) 220. Winnipeg Jets 221. Carolina Hurricanes 222. Dallas Stars 223. Edmonton Oilers 224. Florida Panthers