Where Does Knight Fit In Goalie Market?

The goaltending market has shifted dramatically in 2025. Since January, six starting netminders have signed long-term extensions — Logan Thompson in Washington, Karel Vejmelka in Utah, Adin Hill in Vegas, Thatcher Demko in Vancouver, Lukas Dostal in Anaheim, and Dustin Wolf in Calgary. All of those deals reset the market for young starters and established veterans alike. For the Chicago Blackhawks, the focus now turns to Spencer Knight.

At just 24 years old, Knight is the youngest goalie in this group. He has never played more than 40 games in an NHL season, and until last year, he hadn’t been a true starter.

But after a full campaign in Chicago, his next contract looms large. His current deal carries a $4.5M AAV (4.7% of the cap) and expires in 2026.

The question is simple: where does Spencer Knight fit in this new goalie market?

Current Season Snapshot (Contracts, Cap% & Last 2 Years Stats)

Here’s the money-and-box-score baseline, with contract and cap data from CapWages.com, before we layer in EDGE and MoneyPuck.

GoalieContract (AAV / Term)Cap% 25–26 ($95.5M cap)2023–24 Stats2024–25 Stats
Logan Thompson (WSH)6 yrs • $5.85M6.1%25–14–5, 2.70 GAA, .908 SV%31–6–6, 2.49 GAA, .910 SV%
Karel Vejmelka (UTA)5 yrs • $4.75M5.0%13–19–2, 3.35 GAA, .895 SV%26–22–8, 2.58 GAA, .904 SV%
Adin Hill (VGK)6 yrs • $6.25M6.5%19–12–2, 2.71 GAA, .909 SV%32–13–5, 2.47 GAA, .906 SV%
Thatcher Demko (VAN)3 yrs • $8.5M8.9%35–14–2, 2.45 GAA, .917 SV%10–8–3, 2.90 GAA, .889 SV%
Lukas Dostal (ANA)5 yrs • $6.5M6.8%14–23–4, 3.33 GAA, .902 SV%23–23–7, 3.10 GAA, .903 SV%
Dustin Wolf (CGY)7 yrs • $7.5M (starts 26–27)N/A (ELC)N/A AHL29–16–8, 2.64 GAA, .910 SV%
Spencer Knight (CHI)4 yrs • $4.5M (RFA 2026)4.7%N/A AHL 38 GP • 17–16–3, 2.72 GAA, .902 SV%
GoalieAAV25–26 ($95.5M)26–27 ($102M)27–28 ($110M)28–29 ($116M)29–30 ($124M)
Logan Thompson$5.85M6.1%5.7%5.3%5.0%4.7%
Karel Vejmelka$4.75M5.0%4.7%4.3%4.1%3.8%
Adin Hill$6.25M6.5%6.1%5.7%5.4%5.0%
Thatcher Demko$8.5M8.9%8.3%7.7%N/AN/A
Lukas Dostal$6.5M6.8%6.4%5.9%5.6%5.2%
Dustin Wolf$7.5M (starts 26–27)N/A7.4%6.8%6.5%6.0%
Spencer Knight$4.5M (RFA 2026)4.7%N/AN/AN/AN/A


Cap% projections are based on salary data from CapWages.com and our assumptions about the NHL’s rising salary cap

Knight is currently one of the cheapest starters in the league, but the comparables are easy to spot. Thompson locked in at $5.85M, Dostal at $6.5M, and Wolf will hit $7.5M when his extension kicks in for 2026–27.

Demko sits as the high-priced outlier at $8.5M, while Vejmelka remains the budget play at $4.75M.

With the salary cap climbing sharply over the next five years, those deals will all settle into the 6–7% range of team payroll. Knight sits at just 4.7% today.

When his deal expires in 2026, he’ll either rise into that tier — or risk being left behind as the market passes 

Performance Beyond the Box Score: NHL EDGE Save% by Shot Distance

NHL EDGE breaks down save percentage by shot quality, giving us a clearer view than just GAA or overall SV%.

GoalieHigh-Danger SV%League .803PercentileMidrange SV%League .887PercentileLong-Range SV%League .970Percentile
Logan Thompson (WSH).822.80376.912.88790.955.970Below 50th
Karel Vejmelka (UTA).784.803Below 50th.898.88764.984.97086
Adin Hill (VGK).803.80354.897.88762.978.97066
Thatcher Demko (VAN).807.80358.912.88786.973.97056
Lukas Dostal (ANA).794.803Below 50th.905.88778.971.97052
Dustin Wolf (CGY).826.80378.899.88768.978.97068
Spencer Knight (CHI).835.80390.887.970

Looking at GAA and SV% doesn’t tell the real story for Knight. Chicago’s defense is young, inconsistent, and still developing. What matters more are the advanced metrics that isolate a goalie’s individual impact.

On NHL EDGE, Knight ranked in the 90th percentile for High-Danger Save Percentage (.835 vs league .803).

That puts him in the same conversation as Thompson and Wolf, two of the most efficient young goalies in the league.

His midrange and long-range splits are still incomplete, but if they settle around league average, Knight’s profile begins to resemble that of a legitimate top-10 starter.

MoneyPuck adds another layer. Knight posted 6.45 GSAA and 1.15 WAR last season.

Those numbers don’t touch Thompson’s breakout (19.82 GSAA, 4.33 WAR), but they compare well with Wolf (7.85 / 1.99) and Dostal (8.33 / 2.39). Importantly, Knight delivered a net positive — and at just 24 years old, that trend suggests growth rather than plateau.

For the Blackhawks, that’s exactly what they need to see heading into his contract years.

Advanced Goalie Value: GSAA and WAR (MoneyPuck)

Now let’s move beyond save percentages and look at overall impact — Goals Saved Above Average (GSAA) and Wins Above Replacement (WAR).

GoalieGSAA / GSAxWins Above Replacement (WAR)
Logan Thompson (WSH)19.824.33
Adin Hill (VGK)10.722.42
Karel Vejmelka (UTA)8.912.36
Lukas Dostal (ANA)8.332.39
Dustin Wolf (CGY)7.851.99
Spencer Knight (CHI)6.451.15
Thatcher Demko (VAN)2.230.24

Thompson dominates this category with 19.82 GSAA and 4.33 WAR — elite starter value at a mid-tier cap hit, and the clearest sign he’s one of the NHL’s most efficient deals.

Hill, Dostal, and Vejmelka form the next tier, each delivering strong positive value and proving they can carry stretches as a No. 1.

Wolf impressed immediately, posting nearly 8 GSAA as a rookie, while Knight’s 6.45 GSAA and 1.15 WAR show progress but also highlight that he’s still chasing the consistency of his peers.

His results are encouraging for a first full season as a starter, but they also explain why his next contract hinges on another step forward.

Demko’s 2.23 GSAA and 0.24 WAR are the red flag — a reminder that even highly paid goalies can swing toward negative value when form dips or injuries creep in.

For Knight, the lesson is clear: to earn that $6.5M–$7M AAV range, he needs to prove he belongs in the Thompson/Dostal/Wolf tier, not the Demko end of the spectrum.

Market Projection Value for Cap Efficiency

When you combine the contracts, cap % projections, EDGE splits, and advanced value, the picture becomes clearer: which goaltenders truly deliver the best bang for their cap hit.

Using salary and contract data from CapWages.com, we can measure efficiency by dividing WAR by cap percentage.

GoalieCap% 25–26WAR (2024–25)WAR ÷ Cap%Rank
Logan Thompson (WSH)6.1%4.330.71???? 1st
Lukas Dostal (ANA)6.8%2.390.35???? 2nd
Karel Vejmelka (UTA)5.0%2.360.47???? 3rd
Adin Hill (VGK)6.5%2.420.374th
Dustin Wolf (CGY)N/A (ELC this year)1.99N/A
Spencer Knight (CHI)4.7%1.150.245th
Thatcher Demko (VAN)8.9%0.240.036th

Of course, raw WAR doesn’t tell the whole story — you have to factor in how much each goalie costs against the salary cap.

Thompson is the clear efficiency king — elite production for just over 6% of Washington’s cap.

Vejmelka benefits from a budget deal, sneaking into the top three, while Dostal and Hill form the middle tier.

Knight lags for now but has room to climb, while Demko is the least efficient of the group.

  • Floor: $5.5M AAV, if he stalls or stays in the Vejmelka range.
  • Likely Range: $6.5M × 6 years, similar to Dostal, right in the 6–7% cap range.
  • Ceiling: $7M+ AAV, if Knight continues to post elite high-danger numbers and climbs into double-digit GSAA territory.

Prediction and Final Thought

This is a pivotal year for Spencer Knight and the Blackhawks. He’s not yet a proven 50-game starter, but his advanced profile points toward a goalie who can be.

If he can sustain his elite high-danger play and push his GSAA and WAR into the Wolf/Dostal tier, he’ll be paid like Chicago’s goaltender of the future.

The Blackhawks have the cap space to make that commitment when the time comes. The only question left is whether Knight will prove he deserves it.

Data Sources: Contract and salary data from CapWages.com. Advanced metrics from NHL EDGE and MoneyPuck.

Home Forums Where Does Knight Fit In Goalie Market?

Viewing 9 posts - 1 through 9 (of 9 total)
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  • #26324
    CoachFrenchy
    Participant

    Spencer Knight has always had the potential to develop into an outstanding NHL goalie. What’s the value of potential vs. performance in today’s market?

    [See the full post at: Where Does Knight Fit In Goalie Market?]

    #26377
    THErealWiz1901
    Participant

    I don’t think we need to figure out anything more on Spencer Knight except for him finally to get a real dose of NHL games under his belts.

    The hop is that he starts to deliver as a better puck saver and that the kids feed off that in games.

    Can he help keep the team in games, enabling the young core to play strong infront of his and WIN more?

    I think big Sam may be on track towards a rookie of the year nomination.

    Will Arty start to see where to position himself in his end? Will he restain himself to seeing the simple over the jump up urges his quick feet have to save the day?

    Will enough youngsters take steps that elevate themselve in NHL pro status and stick?

    I don’t think any of the starved for success fanbase will be opposed to seeing any and all of Rockford rotating in and out.
    We don’t want regualt roles handed out before the second wave of prospects arrives, and then the third, and then the fourth in this years 2026 deep class, where essntially the Balckhawks can start selecting developmental players who will be on track to fill and replace the draft picks that have failed to show NHL muster.

    #26391
    Assman22
    Participant

    I don’t think we need to figure out anything more on Spencer Knight except for him finally to get a real dose of NHL games under his belts.

    The hop is that he starts to deliver as a better puck saver and that the kids feed off that in games.

    Can he help keep the team in games, enabling the young core to play strong infront of his and WIN more?

    I think big Sam may be on track towards a rookie of the year nomination.

    Will Arty start to see where to position himself in his end? Will he restain himself to seeing the simple over the jump up urges his quick feet have to save the day?

    Will enough youngsters take steps that elevate themselve in NHL pro status and stick?

    I don’t think any of the starved for success fanbase will be opposed to seeing any and all of Rockford rotating in and out.
    We don’t want regualt roles handed out before the second wave of prospects arrives, and then the third, and then the fourth in this years 2026 deep class, where essntially the Balckhawks can start selecting developmental players who will be on track to fill and replace the draft picks that have failed to show NHL muster.

    Thank you Wiz. No need to put the cart before the horse. We’ve only had a small sample size of Knight and down the stretch he was average at best. Let him play a full season and we’ll come back to this discussion early next offseason.

    #26461
    flamescratchpad
    Participant

    Loads of talent for Knight. I am really pulling for him. Love your work coach extremely talented writer

    #26488
    boilermaker
    Participant

    I don’t think we need to figure out anything more on Spencer Knight except for him finally to get a real dose of NHL games under his belts.

    The hop is that he starts to deliver as a better puck saver and that the kids feed off that in games.

    Can he help keep the team in games, enabling the young core to play strong infront of his and WIN more?

    I think big Sam may be on track towards a rookie of the year nomination.

    Will Arty start to see where to position himself in his end? Will he restain himself to seeing the simple over the jump up urges his quick feet have to save the day?

    Will enough youngsters take steps that elevate themselve in NHL pro status and stick?

    I don’t think any of the starved for success fanbase will be opposed to seeing any and all of Rockford rotating in and out.
    We don’t want regualt roles handed out before the second wave of prospects arrives, and then the third, and then the fourth in this years 2026 deep class, where essntially the Balckhawks can start selecting developmental players who will be on track to fill and replace the draft picks that have failed to show NHL muster.

    Welcome Wiz. If you are not aware there is a forum for general discussion. Here’s a link. Stop by and add your expertise. A lot of the old regulars are there.

    Blackhawks 2025-2026 General Comments

    #26515
    Mr Ricochet
    Participant

    Frenchy, The Real Wiz has compiled a 7 rd mock draft the last 20-25 yrs at lines.com and had Hawk’s season tickets in the 60’s!! And he has thoughts…….. Glad to see you stumble in, Wiz.

    Damn fine work, Frenchy. .. Frenchy, followed the USHL Steel from 2005 all the way to Covid. Season tix for 10-12 of them which means I’ve seen the U-17 and U-18 NTDP every single yr live during that span. As you know it’s a flat out goalie factory and for my money Knight is the best I’ve seen out of The Program, or from the USHL, until Hrabal 3-4 yrs ago (Hrabal went 3 picks after Gajun to AZ, Augustine after that).

    IMO Knight is the most technical goalie I’ve seen since Price and as his HD SPG will attest the kid is an elite athlete. This dude is eye candy, he moves and skates so so beautifully and understands being square and in balance is priority 1. I think it’ll take seeing him start 50 games for the Hawks until I believe he is a Hawk. … This trade might impact the organIzation more than any other the next 10 yrs.

    I’m all in one this guy and Wiz is right, let’s sit back and watch this kid over a full season. The position is volitile but you gotta bet on someone and this kid is a bona fide blue chipper.

    • This reply was modified 3 weeks, 5 days ago by Mr Ricochet.
    #26522
    CoachFrenchy
    Participant

    Welcome to HHS, and thanks for your comment! ???? I agree with you on Knight — the big key now is simply getting more NHL games under his belt.

    As for Rinzel, I think after Nazar he might be the prospect who surprises the most this upcoming season. With Arty, I see it as just a period of adaptation. The kid is very talented, he just needs some time — maybe a few months — to settle in.

    This season will be a great chance to watch how all these prospects develop. It’s part of the process, and the patience will pay off.

    #26523
    CoachFrenchy
    Participant

    Thank you and welcome in the HHS family.

    #26527
    CoachFrenchy
    Participant

    Thanks for the great comment, my friend — it’s clear you really love the game. ???? I had the chance to scout in the USHL and worked with the Panthers, and I was at the NHL Draft when so many NTDP players went in the first round — Turcotte, Knight, York, Caufield, and others.

    Back when I was with Florida, I had some good conversations with Luongo about Knight. He loved the kid — especially his calm presence and the way he tracks the puck. Of course, Knight went through a rough stretch with some personal challenges, but he got the help he needed and has moved forward.

    Like you said, this season will be the true test. For me, there’s no doubt — if he gets the games and the consistency, he’s going to become a top goalie in the NHL

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