The Buffalo Sabres have signed defenseman Conor Timmins to a two-year, $4.4MM contract per a team release. Michael Augello of The Hockey News first reported the move. The two sides will avoid an arbitration date with this move, after previous reports claimed they were still far apart on a new deal. Buffalo acquired Timmins and Isaac Belliveau from the Pittsburgh Penguins during the 2025 NHL Draft in exchange for Connor Clifton and a second-round pick.
Timmins will double his salary in his new landing space, after spending the last two seasons on a two-year, $2.2MM contract originally signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs in 2023. The deal came on the heels of Timmins’ first full season with the Leafs, though his year was ultimately limited to 25 games by a long-term, lower-body injury. He scored 14 points in those appearances. That was enough to set up a return to the NHL ranks for the 2023-24 season, though Timmins was again limited to 10 points in 25 games due to routine injury.
The battles through health have headlined much of Timmins’ career, but strong play on both sides of the ice have kept him fixed in NHL lineups despite limited minutes. He found a bid of, mostly, clean health in the 2024-25 season – and managed to step into 51 games through the first half of Toronto’s season. He recorded eight points, 24 penalty minutes, and a plus-two in those appearances. But with Toronto tinkering with their blue-line in the Spring, Timmins was shipped out to the Pittsburgh Penguins at the Trade Deadline alongside forward Connor Dewar in exchange for a fifth-round draft pick. Timmins finished his year with seven points and a plus-nine in 17 games with the Penguins and will now be set for yet another move in the Eastern Conference.
Buffalo clearly sees potential in Timmins. They shipped out established defender Clifton and a valuable draft pick to land Timmins’ negotiating rights, and will now sign him to a hardy contract relative to his experience in the league. He’s been a stout, two-way defender in his healthy minutes – capable of moving the puck, shutting down opponents, and throwing hits. But he’s yet to appear in more than 51 games with one club in a single season, and has averaged just 27 games per season through his six-year NHL career. A move to Buffalo will mark a chance to truly plant his feet, and break out in the way many expected when he went 32nd-overall in the 2017 NHL Draft.
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