2024–25 NHL season

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2024–25 NHL season
League National Hockey League
Sport Ice Hockey
Duration October 4, 2024[1] – June 2025
Number of games 82
Number of teams 33 (32 active)
TV partner(s) Sportsnet, CBC, TVA Sports (Canada)
ESPN/ABC/ESPN2, TNT/TBS (United States)
Draft
Regular season
Playoffs
Stanley Cup
NHL seasons
2025–26 →

The 2024–25 NHL season is the upcoming 108th season of operation (107th season of play) of the National Hockey League (NHL). Following concerns about an indefinite timeframe on a new arena, the Arizona Coyotes were deactivated and its players and personnel were transferred to a new expansion team in Utah. The regular season is planned to begin on October 4, 2024, when the Buffalo Sabres and New Jersey Devils are scheduled to play the first of two games in Prague, Czech Republic, as a part of the 2024 NHL Global Series.[1] The Stanley Cup playoffs are then planned to begin in April 2025, ending with the Stanley Cup Finals in June.

League business

Utah expansion and Arizona Coyotes deactivation

On April 13, 2024, it was reported that, with the NHL's permission, the Arizona Coyotes were making efforts to relocate to Salt Lake City, Utah, following concerns about an indefinite timeframe on a new arena and the effects of continued play at the 4,600-seat Mullett Arena.[2] The sale, which involved the NHL buying the franchise from Coyotes owner Alex Meruelo, then reselling it to Ryan Smith, owner of the Utah Jazz of the National Basketball Association (NBA), was finalized on April 18 after the NHL Board of Governors voted to establish a team in Utah, with the Coyotes' hockey assets;[3] however, rather than formally relocate, the Coyotes franchise was instead marked "inactive", with Utah considered an expansion team in a similar situation to the Cleveland Browns and Baltimore Ravens of the National Football League (NFL). Meruelo subsequently remains on the NHL Board of Governors as an observer, retaining the rights to the Coyotes brand with a five-year window to complete a new arena and "reactivate" the Coyotes as an expansion team.[4] Of the reported $1.2 billion sale price,[5][6] $1 billion was paid to Meruelo, with $200 million paid to the NHL's other owners as a relocation fee.

The as-yet-unnamed Utah NHL team will play home games at the Jazz's home arena, the Delta Center. Renovations will be required to make it the team's permanent home, similar to the renovations made to Climate Pledge Arena before the Kraken began play in the NHL.[7]

Entry draft

The 2024 NHL Entry Draft is scheduled for June 28–29, 2024, at the Sphere in Paradise, Nevada.[8]

Regular season

The regular season is planned from October 2024 to April 2025.

International games

The Buffalo Sabres and New Jersey Devils are scheduled to play their first two regular season games against each other on October 4 and 5, 2024, at O2 Arena in Prague, Czech Republic. Then, the Dallas Stars and Florida Panthers are scheduled to play two games on November 1 and 2, at Nokia Arena in Tampere, Finland.[1]

Outdoor games

The league has scheduled the following outdoor games:

Four Nations Face-Off

There will not be an All-Star game this season, as the league will instead hold a new Four Nations Face-Off tournament as a preview for the NHL's return to Olympic participation in 2026. Four teams representing NHL players from Canada, Finland, Sweden, and the United States will play a total of seven games from February 12 to 20. Games will be held in one American city and in one Canadian city, to be announced at a later date.[11]

Coaching changes

Coaching changes
Off–season
Team 2023–24 coach 2024–25 coach Notes
Buffalo Sabres Don Granato Lindy Ruff On April 16, 2024, one day after the conclusion of their season, the Sabres fired Granato. In just over three-and-a-half seasons with Buffalo, Granato totaled a 122–125–27 record, with no playoff appearances.[12] Ruff, who had previously coached Buffalo from 1997 to 2013, and most recently served as head coach of the New Jersey Devils from 2020 to 2024, was named head coach on April 22.[13]
Los Angeles Kings Todd McLellan
Jim Hiller*
TBD McLellan was fired on February 2, 2024, with the Kings holding a record of 23–15–10; despite a 20–7–4 start to the season, the team went 3–8–6 in the 17 games preceding his dismissal. In four and a half seasons with Los Angeles, McLellan posted a 164–130–44 record, reaching the playoffs twice but failing to advance past the first round. Hiller, an assistant coach, was promoted to interim head coach.[14][15]
New Jersey Devils Lindy Ruff
Travis Green*
TBD Ruff was fired on March 4, 2024, after the Devils started 30–27–4. In just over three-and-a-half seasons with New Jersey, Ruff totaled a 128–125–28 record, with one playoff appearance. Green, the associate coach, and previously head coach of the Vancouver Canucks from 2017 to 2021, was promoted to interim head coach the same day.[16]
Ottawa Senators D. J. Smith
Jacques Martin*
TBD Smith was fired on December 18, 2023, after the Senators started the season 11–15–0. In just over four seasons with Ottawa, Smith compiled a 131–154–32 record, with no playoff appearances. Martin, a senior advisor to the coaching staff who previously served as the team's head coach from 1996 to 2004, and most recently served as head coach of the Montreal Canadiens from 2009 to 2011, was promoted to interim head coach.[17]
San Jose Sharks David Quinn TBD On April 24, 2024, one week after the conclusion of their season, the Sharks fired Quinn. In two seasons with San Jose, Quinn posted a 41–98–25 record, with no playoff appearances.[18]
St. Louis Blues Craig Berube
Drew Bannister*
TBD Berube was fired on December 12, 2023, after the Blues started the season 13–14–1. In parts of six seasons with St. Louis, Berube compiled a 206–132–44 record with four playoff appearances, leading the franchise to its first Stanley Cup championship in 2019. Bannister, previously the head coach of the Blues' AHL affiliate, the Springfield Thunderbirds, was promoted to interim head coach.[19]

(*) Indicates interim

Front office changes

General managers
Off–season
Team 2023–24 general manager 2024–25 general manager Notes
Columbus Blue Jackets Jarmo Kekalainen
John Davidson*
TBD Kekalainen was fired on February 15, 2024, after the Blue Jackets began the season 16–26–10. Kekalainen had served as general manager of the Blue Jackets since 2013, overseeing five playoff appearances, including the franchise's first playoff series win in 2019. Davidson, the president of hockey operations, was named interim general manager.[20]

(*) Indicates interim

Uniforms

  • This will be the first season for Fanatics as the official apparel provider of the NHL under a 10-year contract, replacing Adidas, which was the official apparel provider on a seven-year contract from the 2017–18 season.[21]

Broadcast rights

Canada

National

This will be the 11th season of the 12-year Canadian national broadcast rights deal with Sportsnet. This includes Sportsnet's sub-licensing agreements to air Saturday Hockey Night in Canada games on CBC Television and French-language broadcasts on TVA Sports.[22] Games will be streamed on Sportsnet+, with national games available on the Standard level, out-of-market games on the Premium tier, and via authenticated streaming on participating teams.[23]

This will be the first season of a two-year sub-license for Amazon Prime Video to air Prime Monday Night Hockey.[24]

United States

National

This will be the fourth season of the league's seven-year U.S. national broadcast rights deals with the ESPN family of networks and TNT Sports.[25] ESPN's contract allows at least 25 exclusive games per season on ABC or ESPN (including ABC Hockey Saturday on selected Saturdays), up to 75 exclusive games streamed on ESPN+ (also simulcast on Hulu), out-of-market games streamed on ESPN+ (under the NHL Power Play branding), exclusive rights to the opening night games and the Stadium Series, and simulcasts/alternate broadcasts on other ESPN networks.[26] TNT Sports' contract allows for up to 72 games per season (some may be non-exclusive broadcasts and thus blacked out in local markets), including Wednesday night games, selected Sunday games, the Winter Classic, simulcasts/alternate broadcasts on TBS and TruTV, and the rights to stream its games on Max.[27] The rights to the eight-day Four Nations Face-Off tournament, replacing ESPN's broadcast of All-Star Weekend this season, will be decided at a later date. As per the rotation, TNT will hold rights to the Stanley Cup Finals this season.

Local

Bally Sports will be rebranded before the start of the season.[28]

The Arizona Coyotes transferred its existing broadcasting contract with Scripps Sports to the Utah expansion team. KUPX-TV in Salt Lake City, which had been televising Coyotes and Vegas Golden Knights games, will become the Utah team's new flagship station.[29]

On April 25, 2024, the Seattle Kraken announced a multi-year agreement with Tegna to start airing games on Tegna's Seattle broadcast stations KING and KONG, replacing Root Sports Northwest as the Kraken's regional broadcaster, and syndicate the telecasts to other stations across the team's broadcast territory. Amazon Prime Video will also stream Tegna's Kraken games within the team's territory.[30]

References

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