Utah signs 1st draft pick Tij Iginla to entry-level deal

The Utah Hockey Club signed forward Tij Iginla to a three-year, entry-level deal, the team announced Thursday.

His contract carries a cap hit of $975,000 with an additional $1 million in performance bonuses, per PuckPedia.

The first pick in Utah's history, Iginla was selected sixth overall at the 2024 NHL Draft in June.

Iginla posted 47 goals and 84 points in 64 games as a member of the WHL's Kelowna Rockets this past season.

He also starred at the World U18 Championship in the spring, totaling six tallies and six assists while helping Canada capture its first gold medal at the event since 2021.

Utah general manager Bill Armstrong is a fan of Iginla's knack for finding the back of the net.

"I said to him, 'We have a lot of 20-goal scorers. We need a 50-goal scorer,'" the executive recounted, according to NHL.com's Matthew Komma. "He's got a chance to kind of push the pace and score some goals for us. I love his mindset."

Iginla spent the 2022-23 campaign with the Seattle Thunderbirds, where he was teammates with current Utah forward Dylan Guenther.

The 17-year-old is the son of Hall of Famer Jarome Iginla. Tij was drafted higher than his father, who was selected 11th overall by the Dallas Stars in 1995.

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Projecting 4 Nations Face-Off rosters for Sweden, Finland

Sweden 🇸🇪/Finland 🇫🇮
United States 🇺🇸
Canada 🇨🇦

We're still seven months away from the NHL's 4 Nations Face-Off, but we figured there's no better time than the dead of the offseason to project the rosters for each nation competing in the February 2025 event.

We begin our three-part series with Sweden and Finland. While neither country is as deep as Canada or the United States, the top-end talent is on par. Both Nordic nations have shown in the past that the whole can be greater than the sum of its parts.

Each team unveiled six players in late June; those names are bolded in the tables below. Teams will carry 23 total players - 20 skaters and three goalies.

Sweden 🇸🇪

Toughest omissions: Gabriel Landeskog, Mikael Backlund, Gustav Nyquist

The biggest question mark for Sweden is Landeskog's status. If he's healthy and looks like his old self on the ice, he's a key member of this team - potentially the captain. But the Avalanche winger's undergone three knee surgeries since last appearing in an NHL game (the 2022 Stanley Cup Final), so we're erring on the side of caution and assuming he won't be ready. Even if Landeskog returns early next season, it's unclear how effective he'll be.

Sweden's forward group has a nice blend of high-end speed and skill - especially on the wings - and two-way reliability, particularly down the middle.

Toughest omissions: Rasmus Andersson, Adam Larsson

As usual, Sweden is loaded on defense. The main issue is that it's not a perfectly balanced bunch, as Erik Karlsson is the only right-handed shooter. Still, these are undoubtedly Sweden's seven best blue-liners. Would the brain trust of team manager Anders Lundberg and head coach Sam Hallam instead pick Andersson or Larsson, just for the sake of having another righty?

We pondered it but decided to roll with the best players, regardless of handedness. Dahlin regularly plays on his off-side in Buffalo. That hasn't been the case for the other lefties in recent years, though. However, as long as one of them is comfortable making the switch (Ekholm?), we don't foresee any issues.

Toughest omission: Jesper Wallstedt, Samuel Ersson

Barring a breakout first half from the Wild's Wallstedt - one of the sport's top goalie prospects - Sweden's pretty set between the pipes. There's a case to be made for starting Ullmark, who won the Vezina Trophy in 2023, but we decided to give the nod to the more experienced netminder in Markstrom.

Markstrom, 34 and almost 500 games into his career, finished third in the NHL last season in goals saved above expected, according to Evolving-Hockey.

Finland 🇫🇮

Toughest omissions: Mikael Granlund, Jesperi Kotkaniemi

We were tempted to slot Granlund into the extra forward slot, but Haula's well-roundedness is more useful than Granlund's playmaking-heavy game in a bottom-six role. On the whole, Finland's built to grind teams down.

There's a notable dip in talent after Barkov, Rantanen, Aho, and Hintz. Laine, who's part of the second tier of offensive weapons, is a true wild card. He's currently in the NHL/NHLPA player assistance program and has reportedly requested a trade out of Columbus, yet he still produces at a fairly high rate.

Toughest omissions: Jani Hakanpaa, Urho Vaakanainen

The Finns are blessed with just one marquee defenseman in Heiskanen, who'll surely be logging upwards of 30 minutes per game. His familiarity with Stars teammate Lindell should make for a solid top pair, whereas the rest of the blue line is a mishmash of NHL depth guys. One positive: lots of size and strength.

Hakanpaa, a 6-foot-7, 222-pound defensive specialist, would be on the second or third pair if not for serious injury concerns. It'll be interesting to see how team manager Jere Lehtinen handles the remaining five defensive selections on defense if Hakanpaa is competing and looking decent but not feeling 100%.

Toughest omission: Ville Husso

Lehtinen and coach Antti Pennanen technically have plenty of options, with eight Finnish goalies appearing in at least 14 games last season. The picks are easy, though: Saros, arguably a top-five goalie in the world, is the starter, and Luukkonen, who's fresh off a career-high 51 starts for Buffalo, is the backup.

Saros, 29, hasn't played a ton of high-stakes games for Finland or Nashville over the years. This will be both a tremendous opportunity and a challenge.

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Lightning, Moser avoid arbitration on 2-year deal

The Tampa Bay Lightning and restricted free-agent defenseman J.J. Moser avoided arbitration on a two-year pact with a $3.375-million cap hit, the team announced Thursday.

The first year of his deal carries a salary of $2.7 million and he'll earn $4.05 million in the second campaign, according to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.

Moser was one of 14 players to file for salary arbitration by last Friday's deadline. Hearings are scheduled to take place from July 20 to Aug. 4.

The 24-year-old will once again be an RFA with arbitration rights when his new deal expires. He'll be due a qualifying offer worth $4.05 million, according to PuckPedia.

Tampa Bay acquired Moser as part of the trade that sent blue-liner Mikhail Sergachev to Utah during Day 2 of the 2024 NHL Draft.

The Switzerland native registered five goals and 26 points in 80 games this past season with the Arizona Coyotes while averaging 20:34 minutes per contest. He spent the bulk of his ice time on the top pair with Sean Durzi.

Moser is a left-handed shot and will likely get pushed behind Victor Hedman and the recently reacquired Ryan McDonagh if the Lightning play him on that side. Tampa Bay's blue line could shape up like this in 2024-25:

LD RD
Victor Hedman Darren Raddysh
Ryan McDonagh Erik Cernak
J.J. Moser Nick Perbix

The Coyotes selected Moser in the second round of the 2021 NHL Draft. He has accumulated 72 points in 205 career games.

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Report: Lightning, Moser avoid arbitration on 2-year deal

The Tampa Bay Lightning and restricted free-agent defenseman J.J. Moser avoided arbitration on a two-year pact with a $3.375-million cap hit, reports Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.

The first year of his deal carries a salary of $2.7 million and he'll earn $4.05 million in the second campaign.

Moser was one of 14 players to file for salary arbitration by last Friday's deadline. Hearings are scheduled to take place from July 20 to Aug. 4.

The 24-year-old will once again be an RFA with arbitration rights when his new deal expires. He'll be due a qualifying offer worth $4.05 million, according to PuckPedia.

Tampa Bay acquired Moser as part of the trade that sent blue-liner Mikhail Sergachev to Utah during Day 2 of the 2024 NHL Draft.

The Switzerland native registered five goals and 26 points in 80 games this past season with the Arizona Coyotes while averaging 20:34 minutes per contest. He spent the bulk of his ice time on the top pair with Sean Durzi.

Moser plays the left side, likely pushing him behind Victor Hedman and the recently reacquired Ryan McDonagh on the Lightning's depth chart. Tampa Bay's blue line could shape up like this in 2024-25:

LD RD
Victor Hedman Darren Raddysh
Ryan McDonagh Erik Cernak
J.J. Moser Nick Perbix

The Coyotes selected Moser in the second round of the 2021 NHL Draft. He has accumulated 72 points in 205 career games.

Copyright © 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.