A few days ago, I took a look at the possible line combinations for the St. Louis Blues for this coming season. I made the lines based on how the roster currently looked.
With a busy draft week and the start of free agency in the rearview mirror, the St. Louis Blues moved on from two forwards while adding four. In GM Alex Steen’s first weeks at the helm, many wonder if he has something bigger up his sleeve.
Now that the dust has settled on the NHL Entry Draft and the early days of free agency, it’s fair to begin making sense of the direction certain teams are headed.
St. Louis Blues’ training camp starts in just over two months. The team is slowly taking shape, especially now that free agency has opened. More moves could be coming, but today, let’s take a look at what the team’s forward lines could look like.
NHL general managers are finally starting to realize restricted free agency is not only a viable strategy, it might also be one of the best options teams can have in finding impact talent.
The best player in Washington Capitals history? Alex Ovechkin. The best Red Wing? Gordie Howe or Steve Yzerman…or maybe Nicklas Lidstrom. Some NHL franchises have a clear best player, while others have the proverbial Mount Rushmore of potential choices.
The St. Louis Blues have been busy during the 2026 NHL offseason. The Blues traded for Mason McTavish at the NHL Draft, and that came after they traded Jordan Kyrou to the Washington Capitals.
The Philadelphia Flyers sent shockwaves through the NHL on Friday afternoon when they announced that they signed Anaheim Ducks restricted free agent Leo Carlsson to a five-year offer sheet.
The St. Louis Blues made several altercations to their front office, as the team has announced that they’ve promoted Keith Tkachuk to advisor to president of hockey operations, promoted Chris Thorburn to director of player development, and hired Robert Bortuzzo as a pro scout, according to NHL.com’s Lou Korac.
The St. Louis Blues have had a busy offseason to this point. The Blues traded Jordan Kyrou to the Washington Capitals to begin the offseason. At the 2026 NHL Draft, St.
The St Louis Blues have officially named Alex Steen the new general manager of the club. His appointment was announced over two years ago, when Doug Armstrong said he would step down from the role.
Working his final full week as the St. Louis Blues GM, arguably nobody in the NHL has been busier than Doug Armstrong. Before moving up in the organization and giving up the title to Alexander Steen, Armstrong made one thing certain — the Blues are not rebuilding.
According to the team over at PuckPedia, the St. Louis Blues have signed Jonatan Berggren to a one-year, $2MM contract for the 2026-27 season. Despite not being tendered a qualifying offer by yesterday’s deadline, the Blues will instead retain Berggren for another season.
The St. Louis Blues did not issue a qualifying offer to Jonatan Berggren ahead of Monday’s tender deadline, converting the would-be restricted free agent into a pending unrestricted free agent.
The St. Louis Blues placed veteran forward Jonathan Drouin on waivers Tuesday for the purpose of buying out his contract. Drouin, 31, is signed through the 2026-27 season and carries a cap hit of $4 million.
The St. Louis Blues have made their position clear: two of their most prominent names are not going anywhere. According to a report from Frank Seravalli,
The Washington Capitals are not messing around this offseason, and they are making it very clear that they still see themselves as Stanley Cup contenders in the very near future.
The ball has started to roll on the 2026 NHL offseason, and several St. Louis Blues players find themselves in constant rumors. Every year heading into the offseason, pundits will put together their own trade boards, a list of players and assets who could be heading to a different organization.
The Worcester Railers have named the St.Louis Blues as their new NHL affililate with a multi-year extension that carries them through the 2030-31 season.