Rebuilding NHL teams prioritize
developing top prospects amid NHL's rising salary cap
[October 01, 2025]
By JAY COHEN
CHICAGO (AP) — When it comes to his plans for the Chicago
Blackhawks, general manager Kyle Davidson is focused on the growth
and maturation of the organization's top prospects. That group
includes a total of 11 first-round picks since the 2022 draft.
Such is life these days for the NHL's rebuilding teams, looking to
chart a course back to the playoffs in a league with a rising salary
cap. Financial flexibility — when it comes to free agency, or using
cap space to facilitate a trade — isn't what it used to be, putting
an even bigger emphasis on player development.
“(Free agency) is something that’s definitely a tool in our toolbox
in roster building,” Davidson said. “But I think the main one has to
be and will be growing from within and building from within.”
The salary cap for this season is $95.5 million, up from $88
million. It goes up to $104 million for the 2026-27 season and
$113.5 million in ’27-28. Making the most of the NHL's healthy
financial outlook, many of the league's top teams retained their
best players this summer.
Mitch Marner went from Toronto to Las Vegas in a sign-and-trade deal
before free agency started, and Nikolaj Ehlers waited until July 3
before agreeing to a $51 million, six-year contract with Carolina.
But depth pieces made up most of the free agent market.
Kirill Kaprizov agreed to a $136 million, eight-year contract with
Minnesota that was announced on Tuesday. The 28-year-old Kaprizov
could have hit free agency after this season, but the talented
forward stayed with the Wild for a record-setting deal.

“You saw it this summer,” Columbus general manager Don Waddell said.
“Summers before you’d always have seven, eight, nine teams that had
to move money to get under the cap. You didn’t see that this summer.
... I think going forward you’re going to see less free agency.
You’re going to see teams locking up their own players if they can.”
A diminished level of free agency puts the NHL's non-playoff teams
in the same boat, facing even more pressure to grow their own stars.
“Ultimately, for teams in our situation, I think you need those
young players coming in to build that core," Detroit general manager
Steve Yzerman said.
[to top of second column] |

Detroit Red Wings executive VP/general manager Steve Yzerman speaks
to the media following their NHL hockey season, Friday, April 19,
2024, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

Developing those young players goes beyond the
organization, stretching to its draft picks on college, junior and
international club teams. Anton Frondell, an 18-year-old forward who
was selected by Chicago with the No. 2 overall pick in this year's
draft, is staying in Sweden this season, and Vaclav Nestrasil,
another first-rounder for the Blackhawks, is playing for the
University of Massachusetts.
When it comes to their prospects in other programs, NHL teams stay
in close contact with their players and the coaching staffs on their
teams. It doesn't sound as if Davidson and the Blackhawks have any
plans to alter their approach even with their development focus.
“We let the player, we’re an input into their decision-making
process, and then we let them go,” Davidson said. “And then once
they’re in an environment, in a program, we try and work with and
alongside the coaching staff, because what we don’t want is our
player to be put in the crosshairs or at an intersection of our
direction and the coaching staff direction with where they’re at,
and then the player has just got a million things in their head."
Technology has become a major part of player development across the
NHL. The Blackhawks use an internal app to share video, tips and
other information with their current players and the prospects in
their system. Davidson described the Blackhawks as “actively
investigating” how it can use artificial intelligence within the
organization.
“We’re working on that," Waddell said. "We’ve actually brought it in
this year to our prospects and add some AI tests and so forth to
find out. But I don’t think it’s any secret. Other teams are doing
it, too. But I think with AI coming and with your analytics
department ... the two could be tied together where it may help in
certain areas."
___
AP Hockey Writers John Wawrow and Larry Lage contributed to this
report.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |