Schenns welcome Winnipeg winter

Veteran blue-liner steps behind bench as sons hit the ice for Jets Challenge Cup

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Luke Schenn is looking forward to switching from professional hockey player to amateur hockey dad for a few days this holiday season.

The Winnipeg Jets defenceman will be spending part of his break the way many parents do: at the rink, cheering on his children. Schenn’s two oldest boys, ages eight and five, will hit the ice in the annual Winnipeg Jets Challenge Cup, an event that draws dozens of teams from around the city, province and beyond.

“With our schedule, obviously I miss a lot of their time. But when I’m able to go… I even took all the coaching certifications this year. That’s 10 hours of my life I’ll never get back,” Schenn joked in a recent chat with the Free Press.

“But yeah, I try to get on the ice with the kids and help out whenever I can, push some pucks around.”

JOE PUETZ / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
                                Jets D-man Luke Schenn won’t be far from the rink over the Christmas break as he will be helping coach is sons at the Winnipeg Jets Challenge Cup.

JOE PUETZ / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

Jets D-man Luke Schenn won’t be far from the rink over the Christmas break as he will be helping coach is sons at the Winnipeg Jets Challenge Cup.

Schenn is thrilled to be back in a hockey-crazed community, considering he and his younger brother, Brayden — currently the captain of the St. Louis Blues — were born and raised in Saskatchewan, where the sport was a central part of their childhood.

“Street hockey, roller hockey, we’d be out at all hours,” he recalled.

Schenn wanted his own kids to enjoy a similar experience, but that proved far more difficult while the family lived in Nashville for most of the past two years. While the sport continues to grow at the grassroots level, rink availability remains a major challenge.

“There’s more and more kids playing hockey, but there might be five or six sheets available across all of Nashville,” he said.

Last winter, Schenn’s oldest son played on a team alongside the sons of then-Predators teammates Steve Stamkos, Ryan O’Reilly and Jonathan Marchessault.

“Out of nowhere, one of the rinks folded. The last half of the year, we had like three teams on the ice at a time, sharing ice for practices,” he said.

That’s not a concern in Winnipeg.

“Night and day,” said Schenn. “You come here and see how intense it is. It’s probably a little bit much, a little bit over the top. You know, every parent thinks your kid is going to play in the NHL. It’s not reality.”

Schenn shakes his head as he discusses the year-round grind that kids as young as six or seven now face — from spring skill camps to summer specialized teams that can become all-consuming and financially draining for many families.

“I probably see things in a little bit different way and don’t agree with the majority of it,” he said.

“Obviously it has changed a lot from when I was a kid, where you’d just play hockey with your friends. There were no tryouts. Now you’ve got people going crazy. It’s about balance for me. I’m trying not to drink the Kool-Aid too much.”

His advice: allow kids to take part in a variety of activities outside the traditional hockey season, including other sports such as baseball or soccer. He believes they’ll thank you later in life.

LUKE SCHENN PHOTO
                                Weston (left) and Kingston Schenn hit the ice as often as they can.

LUKE SCHENN PHOTO

Weston (left) and Kingston Schenn hit the ice as often as they can.

Schenn said his boys are only playing hockey because they want to — not because he’s pushing them into it.

“First of all, they’ve got to enjoy it. And they love it,” he said.

Schenn has built a rink in the backyard of his Winnipeg home, with his boys taking skating lessons alongside the children of Jets teammates Dylan DeMelo, Haydn Fleury, Tanner Pearson and Connor Hellebuyck.

“I wasn’t sure how they were going to act because they’ve only grown up in warm weather, mostly. But they’re loving it out there. They want to go every day. Minus 30, it doesn’t matter. We’re out there for a couple hours,” he said.

Schenn said his five-year-old was recently “called up” to play on his big brother’s team — and may have been a little too amped.

“He’s a little bit crazy and was taking some penalties. He doesn’t hold back,” he said with a laugh. Like father, like son.

“…they’re loving it out there. They want to go every day. Minus 30, it doesn’t matter. We’re out there for a couple hours.”

Now in his 17th NHL season, the 36-year-old Schenn is in the final year of his contract and facing an uncertain future. Still, he said it’s been nice to settle in Winnipeg — especially after a whirlwind stretch last March that saw him traded twice in a matter of days, from Nashville to Pittsburgh and then to Winnipeg.

“That rocked our world a little bit,” he said.

“You’re not really expecting anything and then all of a sudden you’re gone. Kids are in school, all kinds of activities and everything changes.”

Along with his wife, Jeska, and their third son, who is two, the family is embracing the Prairie lifestyle — including, of course, early mornings at the rink. Holidays, too.

If you happen to see Schenn at the Hockey For All Centre in the coming days, feel free to say hello. You may just want to cool your jets when it comes to discussing the current state of his own team, which limped into the five-day holiday break at 15-17-3.

“People for the most part are always really good. You’ll get the odd person that comes up and tries to tell you how to play,” said Schenn.

“You just kind of laugh it off. It goes with the territory. But the Winnipeg community has been great.”

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Mike McIntyre

Mike McIntyre
Reporter

Mike McIntyre is a sports reporter whose primary role is covering the Winnipeg Jets. After graduating from the Creative Communications program at Red River College in 1995, he spent two years gaining experience at the Winnipeg Sun before joining the Free Press in 1997, where he served on the crime and justice beat until 2016. Read more about Mike.

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Winnipeg Jets

Schenns welcome Winnipeg winter

Mike McIntyre 5 minute read 5:26 PM CST

Luke Schenn is looking forward to switching from professional hockey player to amateur hockey dad for a few days this holiday season.

The Winnipeg Jets defenceman will be spending part of his break the way many parents do: at the rink, cheering on his children. Schenn’s two oldest boys, ages eight and five, will hit the ice in the annual Winnipeg Jets Challenge Cup, an event that draws dozens of teams from around the city, province and beyond.

“With our schedule, obviously I miss a lot of their time. But when I’m able to go… I even took all the coaching certifications this year. That’s 10 hours of my life I’ll never get back,” Schenn joked in a recent chat with the Free Press.

“But yeah, I try to get on the ice with the kids and help out whenever I can, push some pucks around.”

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Jets out of excuses

Mike McIntyre 6 minute read Preview

Jets out of excuses

Mike McIntyre 6 minute read Updated: 9:23 AM CST

SALT LAKE CITY — It was hard to miss the presence of Winnipeg Jets co-owner Mark Chipman on this just-completed road trip through St. Louis, Denver and Salt Lake City — one that produced a single point and pushed the team further into the NHL abyss.

Chipman doesn’t travel with the club as often as he once did, but his timing couldn’t have been better. He got an up-close look at everything that has gone wrong for the reigning Presidents’ Trophy winners, who have just six wins in the past 23 games to sit at 15-17-3.

“That’s 35 games, for me, of inconsistency throughout the games themselves or that might be individual players. In the remaining 47, that has to change,” Jets coach Scott Arniel told the Free Press on Sunday evening at Delta Center.

Notably, Chipman was standing in the hallway outside the team’s locker room just a short distance away as the bench boss spoke with obvious frustration in his voice.

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Updated: 9:23 AM CST

Melissa Majchrzak / The Associated Press

Jets’ defenceman Josh Morrissey is an elite blue-liner on a team stuck in a terrible rut.

Melissa Majchrzak / The Associated Press
                                Jets’ defenceman Josh Morrissey is an elite blue-liner on a team stuck in a terrible rut.

Jets lose in OT to Mammoth

Mike McIntyre 7 minute read Preview

Jets lose in OT to Mammoth

Mike McIntyre 7 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 8:52 AM CST

SALT LAKE CITY — Adam Lowry stood in front of the Winnipeg Jets media backdrop, a grim look on his face, and immediately put on a display of public accountability by pointing the finger of blame at himself.

“That’s on me,” the captain told the Free Press. He was referring to Sunday’s 4-3 overtime loss to the Utah Mammoth inside Delta Center — a game in which his team essentially didn’t show up for the first half, mounted a frantic late rally and then gave away a valuable point just 13 seconds into the three-on-three session.

Lowry was a surprising choice to start the fourth period, given that head coach Scott Arniel typically sends out top-scoring centre Mark Scheifele, along with linemate Kyle Connor and No. 1 defenceman Josh Morrissey. But the bench boss opted to go with a more defensive posture off the hop, hoping Lowry could win the faceoff and gain possession.

“It was a case of hopefully you go out and do the right things and get a chance to get the next group out there,” Arniel explained afterwards of using Lowry, along with Gabe Vilardi and Neal Pionk.

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Updated: Yesterday at 8:52 AM CST

Utah Mammoth left wing Lawson Crouse, front, fights for the puck against Winnipeg Jets defenseman Logan Stanley (64) during the first period of an NHL hockey game, Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Melissa Majchrzak)

Utah Mammoth left wing Lawson Crouse, front, fights for the puck against Winnipeg Jets defenseman Logan Stanley (64) during the first period of an NHL hockey game, Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Melissa Majchrzak)

Jets mailbag: chemistry, second line centre, point structure, and looking to the future

Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe 20 minute read Preview

Jets mailbag: chemistry, second line centre, point structure, and looking to the future

Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe 20 minute read Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025

Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe answer your Jets questions in this month's Winnipeg Jets mailbag.

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Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025

Lindsey Wasson / The Associated Press files

Winnipeg Jets defenceman Logan Stanley prepares to collide with Seattle Kraken centre Matty Beniers during the Nov. 13 game.

Lindsey Wasson / The Associated Press
                                Winnipeg Jets defenceman Logan Stanley prepares to collide with Seattle Kraken centre Matty Beniers during the first period, Thursday.

Nyquist looks to impress on top line

Mike McIntyre 5 minute read Preview

Nyquist looks to impress on top line

Mike McIntyre 5 minute read Saturday, Dec. 20, 2025

SALT LAKE CITY — The latest spin of the Winnipeg Jets’ line blender produced a surprising concoction on Saturday.

Step right up, Gustav Nyquist. You’re up next to take a twirl alongside top scorers Mark Scheifele and Kyle Connor.

“Hopefully lightning in a bottle here and we get something to build off,” Jets coach Scott Arniel told the Free Press following his team’s practice.

While at first blush this may seem like a curious move — Nyquist has yet to score a single goal in 25 games this year — what do the Jets have to lose at this point? Winnipeg has now dropped 16 of its last 22 games, including the first two stops on this three-game road trip which ends Sunday against the Utah Mammoth.

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Saturday, Dec. 20, 2025

Matt Slocum / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

Winnipeg Jets’ Gustav Nyquist looks set to play alongisde Mark Scheifele and Kyle Connor.

Matt Slocum / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
                                Winnipeg Jets’ Gustav Nyquist looks set to play alongisde Mark Scheifele and Kyle Connor.

Jets fall to league-leading Avalanche 3-2

Mike McIntyre 9 minute read Preview

Jets fall to league-leading Avalanche 3-2

Mike McIntyre 9 minute read Friday, Dec. 19, 2025

DENVER — It ended up being a nail-biter, rather than the blowout many expected. However, the end result on Friday night was all-too-familiar for the Winnipeg Jets: Another loss.

This one came at the hands of the NHL’s top team, the Colorado Avalanche, who raced out to an early two-goal advantage and hung on for a 3-2 victory at Ball Arena.

“There was a lot more battle, a lot more compete. We had some really good looks, some opportunities. That was a better effort than the last one,” said Jets coach Scott Arniel.

“But we’ve got to find a way to get over that hump of winning those games. Right now, we’re a delicate, fragile group and we’re finding ways to lose games.”

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Friday, Dec. 19, 2025

David Zalubowski / The Associated Press

Colorado Avalanche defenceman Devon Toews, left, covers Winnipeg Jets’ Gabriel Vilardi, front right, who sets up in front of Avalanche goaltender Scott Wedgewood, back right, in the second period Friday, in Denver.

David Zalubowski / The Associated Press
                                Colorado Avalanche defenceman Devon Toews, left, covers Winnipeg Jets’ Gabriel Vilardi, front right, who sets up in front of Avalanche goaltender Scott Wedgewood, back right, in the second period Friday, in Denver.

Predictions for Milan-Cortina as men’s hockey roster deadline looms

Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe 9 minute read Preview

Predictions for Milan-Cortina as men’s hockey roster deadline looms

Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe 9 minute read Friday, Dec. 19, 2025

A weekly lap around the NHL by Free Press hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe

DENVER — There hasn’t been a whole lot to smile about lately for Josh Morrissey, with his Winnipeg Jets experiencing extreme turbulence these days.

But the mere mention of the upcoming Winter Olympics brought an instant glow on Friday morning, especially since he’d be hitting the ice a few hours later with an expected pair of future teammates in Colorado’s Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar.

“They’re both special players. Just what they’re doing is incredible every night,” Morrissey told the Free Press.

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Friday, Dec. 19, 2025

Nick Wass / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

Winnipeg Jets defenceman Josh Morrissey lit up talking about the upcoming Winter Olympics Friday and the potential opportunity to suit up for Team Canada with 4 Nations Face-Off teammates Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar.

Without major shakeup, Jets’ Cup hopes rapidly fading

Mike McIntyre 8 minute read Preview

Without major shakeup, Jets’ Cup hopes rapidly fading

Mike McIntyre 8 minute read Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025

DENVER — The Winnipeg Jets cancelled their scheduled practice here on Thursday, apparently deciding a day away from the rink was the best course of action.

That’s a curious move for a club that has struggled to show up on game nights for large stretches of the season — the latest example coming Wednesday in St. Louis, where the Jets suffered their 15th loss in the past 21 outings (6-13-2).

How bleak are things for the reigning Presidents’ Trophy winners, who were just three points clear of the NHL basement prior to Thursday’s slate of games? Allow us to count the ways.

General manager Kevin Cheveldayoff hasn’t made a move beyond sending a few promising young skaters back to the farm, seemingly unwilling to disrupt the slow, aging lineup he assembled. A frustrated head coach Scott Arniel appears to have run out of fresh ideas. Underperforming players have few words to explain what’s happening — and not happening — on the ice.

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Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press

SPORTS - Cheveldayoff

Photos of Jets GM Cheveldayoff answering questions about draft pics.

Media event with Winnipeg Jets General Manager Kevin Cheveldayoff for pre-NHL Draft in the Matt Frost Media Centre, Canada Life Centre on Thursday.

June 26th, 2025

Ruth Bonneville  / Free Press 

SPORTS - Cheveldayoff

Photos of Jets GM Cheveldayoff answering questions about draft pics.  

Media event with Winnipeg Jets General Manager Kevin Cheveldayoff for  pre-NHL Draft in the Matt Frost Media Centre, Canada Life Centre on Thursday.



June 26th,  2025

Jets find another way to lose

Mike McIntyre 7 minute read Preview

Jets find another way to lose

Mike McIntyre 7 minute read Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025

ST. LOUIS — This time around, the “Manitoba Miracle” would have been the Winnipeg Jets scoring even once.

A fragile hockey club that can’t seem to do much right these days found yet another frustrating way to lose on Wednesday night, falling 1-0 to the St. Louis Blues to kick off a critical three-game road trip.

“We’ve been kind of saying that for a while. That’s part of your job. That’s what you get paid for. Show up. Do your job,” an obviously frustrated Jets head coach Scott Arniel told the Free Press outside the Jets locker room.

Blues goaltender — and Winnipeg product — Joel Hofer stopped all 24 shots he faced, with his teammates doing a great job in front of him for much of the night. The Jets mustered 60 shot attempts, but a whopping 20 went wide and another 16 were blocked.

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Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025

Joe Puetz / The Associated Press

St. Louis goaltender Joel Hofer stopped 24 shots Wednesday night in the Blues’ 1-0 shutout of his hometown Jets.

Joe Puetz / The Associated Press
                                St. Louis goaltender Joel Hofer stopped 24 shots Wednesday night in the Blues’ 1-0 shutout of his hometown Jets.

Schenn brothers meet for first time this season, relive first-round scrap

Mike McIntyre 6 minute read Preview

Schenn brothers meet for first time this season, relive first-round scrap

Mike McIntyre 6 minute read Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025

ST. LOUIS — It was a wild moment in an epic playoff series that had no shortage of them.

Now, at long last, we can bring you the scoop on what exactly went down between Luke and Brayden Schenn last spring — a confrontation that escalated to the point officials had to step in.

Turns out the highly competitive brothers, who are otherwise best friends when they’re not trying to end each other’s seasons, were locked in a salty game of one-upmanship as the on-ice temperature soared.

With Luke’s Winnipeg Jets getting blown out by Brayden’s St. Louis Blues in Game 3 of their first-round matchup, a post-whistle scrum involving multiple players followed. Threats flew: Brayden promising to come after more of Luke’s teammates — something he’d already done plenty of, as Mark Scheifele would attest — and Luke vowing painful retribution in return.

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Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025

St. Louis Blues' Brayden Schenn (10) is checked by Winnipeg Jets' Luke Schenn (5) during first period NHL playoff action in Winnipeg, Monday April 21, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Fred Greenslade

Jets still in search of consistency outside of top line, Stanley

Ken Wiebe 6 minute read Preview

Jets still in search of consistency outside of top line, Stanley

Ken Wiebe 6 minute read Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025

The only thing Mark Scheifele could do was look skyward in disbelief.

The Winnipeg Jets’ first-line centre was on the ice in the waning moments of Monday’s game with the Ottawa Senators, doing everything in his power to help preserve a one-goal lead.

With Senators defenceman Jake Sanderson looking to unload a shot from the point during a six-on-five situation, Scheifele instinctively got his stick in the lane in an effort to block it.

Instead of preventing the puck from getting to the net, Sanderson’s shot changed direction and somehow made it behind Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck with 1:54 to go in regulation time.

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Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS

Winnipeg Jets defenceman Logan Stanley (left) celebrates his goal against the Ottawa Senators with Mark Scheifele on Monday. Stanley is currently tied for fourth among all NHL defencemen in even strength goals.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS
                                Winnipeg Jets defenceman Logan Stanley (left) celebrates his goal against the Ottawa Senators with Mark Scheifele on Monday. Stanley is currently tied for fourth among all NHL defencemen in even strength goals.

Perfetti looking for a St. Louis spark

Mike McIntyre 7 minute read Preview

Perfetti looking for a St. Louis spark

Mike McIntyre 7 minute read Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025

ST. LOUIS — Cole Perfetti isn’t looking for another Manitoba Miracle. But the struggling Winnipeg Jets winger sure could use a change of fortune after a frustrating run of bad luck and sub-par play.

Perhaps Wednesday’s Central Division clash here in Missouri might get him and some of his teammates going. A St. Louis spark, if you will.

It’s the first meeting between the Jets and Blues since that magical moment last spring, when Perfetti saved his team’s season with a last-second, Game 7 tying goal. Winnipeg went on to win the series thanks to Adam Lowry’s overtime heroics.

“It’s nice to look back on and it’s a very good memory to have,” Perfetti said Tuesday when asked by reporters to take a stroll into the past.

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Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025

Karl DeBlaker / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

Winnipeg Jets forward Cole Perfetti has just seven points through 18 games since returning from a high-ankle sprain he suffered in a pre-season game against Calgary.

Karl DeBlaker / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
                                Winnipeg Jets forward Cole Perfetti has just seven points through 18 games since returning from a high-ankle sprain he suffered in a pre-season game against Calgary.

Late surge sends Sens past Jets

Mike McIntyre 6 minute read Preview

Late surge sends Sens past Jets

Mike McIntyre 6 minute read Monday, Dec. 15, 2025

Nobody said it was going to be easy. The long road back to NHL relevancy hit an early detour Monday night for the Winnipeg Jets.

A 2-1 lead with less than two minutes to play in regulation turned into a 3-2 overtime defeat to the Ottawa Senators, resulting in a costly lost point for a Winnipeg team that already finds itself trying to play catch-up.

“That is a game that should have been won by us,” said a clearly unhappy coach Scott Arniel.

“At the end of the day, these are the games you’ve got to learn to win. We’ve got to find a way, however that is. If that’s making the next play so that it gets out of the zone, if that’s blocking a shot, whatever it is. We need two points. We need them bad.”

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Monday, Dec. 15, 2025

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS

Ottawa Senators’ Tim Stulzle carries the puck past Winnipeg Jets’ Cole Perfetti in the first period.

Jets forward Morgan Barron returns to form after injury

Ken Wiebe 6 minute read Preview

Jets forward Morgan Barron returns to form after injury

Ken Wiebe 6 minute read Monday, Dec. 15, 2025

The motor never stops running for Morgan Barron.

Whether he’s been used at centre or shifted back to the wing, the Winnipeg Jets forward is impossible to ignore, given his combination of size, speed and strength.

For a Jets team looking for more secondary scoring, Barron is a prime candidate to take the leap forward.

After enduring a stretch that included no goals and two assists in 19 games, Barron notched goals against the Washington Capitals and Boston Bruins this week to get back on track — moving to five for the season and back on pace to eclipse the career-high of 11 he produced during the 2023-24 season.

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Monday, Dec. 15, 2025

MATT KROHN / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

Winnipeg Jets centre Morgan Barron netted goals in back-to-back games going into Monday night’s action against the Ottawa Senators.

Matt Krohn / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
                                Winnipeg Jets centre Morgan Barron netted goals in back-to-back games going into Monday night’s action against the Ottawa Senators.

Jets prospects update: two defencemen set for World Juniors

Mike McIntyre 7 minute read Preview

Jets prospects update: two defencemen set for World Juniors

Mike McIntyre 7 minute read Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025

It’s among the most wonderful times of the hockey year — and the Winnipeg Jets will have a pair of prospects participating in the upcoming World Juniors over the Christmas holidays.

Defencemen Alfons Freij and Sascha Boumedienne will represent their native Sweden at the tournament, which gets underway on Boxing Day down in St. Paul.

They lead off our latest monthly look at Winnipeg’s talent pipeline, which involves 25 young drafted and developing players currently skating in various leagues and levels.

Freij, 19, is playing full-time in the top Swedish men’s league after tearing up the junior ranks a year ago. The second-round pick from 2024 has two assists through 25 games. He signed a three-year entry-level contract with the Jets last summer and is expected to join the organization once this season is complete.

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Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS FILES

Alfons Freij (48), during the first day of the 2024 Winnipeg Jets development camp at the Hockey for All Centre Thursday morning. 240704 - Thursday, July 04, 2024.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Alfons Freij (48), during the first day of the 2024 Winnipeg Jets development camp at the Hockey for All Centre Thursday morning. 240704 - Thursday, July 04, 2024.

Jets get Hellebump from return of MVP goaltender

Mike McIntyre 5 minute read Preview

Jets get Hellebump from return of MVP goaltender

Mike McIntyre 5 minute read Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025

Connor Hellebuyck could feel the nagging discomfort in his knee as early as training camp. But the reigning Hart and Vezina Trophy figured he could keep playing through it.

No pain, no gain, right?

“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. That’s kind of where I was for a bit,” the Winnipeg Jets goaltender shared on Saturday night. “And then it finally broke, so I had to fix it.”

Hellebuyck went under the knife on Nov. 22, officially sidelined with the first injury of his 11-year career. Doctors told him to expect a four-to-six-week recovery, but the fiercely competitive goaltender with 331 career NHL victories figured he’d be able to beat that.

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Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025

JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS

Winnipeg Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck (37) saves a shot as Luke Schenn (5) defends against Washington Capitals’ Brandon Duhaime (left) during the second period in Winnipeg on Saturday.

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