
The Nashville Predators are adding some seasoned versatility to their forward group, bringing in veteran Alex Kerfoot on a two-year contract reportedly worth $7 million, with a $3.5 million annual cap hit. Kerfoot, 31, comes in from Utah and offers nine NHL seasons of experience as a reliable middle-six option who can handle penalty-kill duty and chip in on offense. The move slots in as part of a hectic opening day of free agency for Nashville as the team works to overhaul its forward depth chart.
According to The Tennessean, TSN insider Darren Dreger first relayed word of the signing and reported that the deal carries a $3.5 million average annual value. At the time those reports surfaced, the Predators had not yet issued an official team announcement, as noted by The Tennessean.
Kerfoot's numbers and recent season
Kerfoot wrapped up the 2025-26 campaign in Utah with 7 goals and 6 assists across 34 games, per his player page on ESPN. Over the course of nine NHL seasons, he has appeared in 639 games and recorded 105 goals and 200 assists while averaging about 14:56 of ice time per night, according to Hockey-Reference.
Where he fits in Nashville
For Nashville, Kerfoot profiles as a relatively low-risk veteran who can slide between center and wing, handle penalty-kill minutes and help stabilize the middle six. His arrival follows several early free-agency pickups as the Predators continue to tinker with their forward mix, a pattern that observers say lines up with GM Chris MacFarland's preference for short-term, flexible depth additions. Local transaction roundups have flagged the Kerfoot signing as one more piece in a busy first-day puzzle, while Daily Faceoff has tracked the wider flurry of team moves.
The two-year term gives Nashville some roster wiggle room, and it offers Kerfoot a chance to reset his value in a new market. Contract trackers list the agreement at $7 million total with a $3.5 million AAV, figures echoed across league transaction coverage. PuckPedia and The Hockey Writers have both laid out the financial details and provided additional context on how the signing fits into Nashville's broader offseason strategy.









