• Powered by Roundtable
    Steve Warne
    Steve Warne
    Jul 15, 2025, 12:50
    Updated at: Jul 15, 2025, 21:41

    The NHL is overflowing these days with young talent that’s not just promising for the future, but already helping to reshape their franchises in real time. At 23, Tim Stützle is already the Ottawa Senators' most skilled player (spoiler: he has been for a long time), and on Monday was named by NHL.com as one of the league's 10 best forwards under 25 entering this season.

    Stützle is the first name listed in a top 10 that includes the likes of Jack Hughes, Cole Caufield, and Connor Bedard. Stützle led Ottawa with 79 points (24 goals, 55 assists) and helped the club return to the playoffs for the first time since 2017.

    More Sens Headlines:
    Key Takeaways From Senators Development Camp
    Five Former Senator First-Rounders All Found New NHL Homes
    Is Yakemchuk In The Sens' NHL Plans For This Fall?
    Steve Staios' Top Five Trades (So Far) As Senators GM
    Claude Giroux Reveals Why He Signed Back In Ottawa

    Stützle has registered at least 70 points in three consecutive seasons, but his two-way game has improved along the way, and while it may seem like the smallest of intangibles, his body language has been much better as well. Stützle looks more in charge of his emotions, like a man with a job to do, unfazed by the nonsense. That's all part of the maturation process, never getting too high or too low.

    Stützle has remained both durable and productive, and as he continues to work out the balance between offence and defence, he'd like to return to the 39-goal, 90-point levels he achieved three years ago. He'll have plenty of time to grow with the club, under contract with the Senators for six more years.

    For now, for one of the best young players in the game, it's about summer training and a little golf. Earlier this month, Stützle and Red Wing defenseman Mo Seider teed it up in the BMW International Open Pro-Am event in Munich. They played in a foursome with Welsh soccer legend Gareth Bale and European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald. 

    Image credit, Tim Stützle Instagram: Left to right, Stutzle, Luke Donald, Gareth Bale, and Mo Seider.

    Another of Stützle's many virtues as a player is his happy demeanour and popularity as a teammate. And friendly chirps always come with that territory. Under Stützle's Instagram post, where Stützle says his group won the Pro-Am, teammates chimed in hard.

    Stützle: A great day on the course!⛳️  Thank you for a fun day @bmw_golfsport @dpworldtour. W🤘🏽

    Thomas Chabot: "Nothing like shooting a 98 on the @dpworldtour."

    Stutzle: "Nothing like winning."

    That's a motto that's music to the ears of Sens fans. After finally making the playoffs this year and getting a taste of some team success, the sky's the limit for one of the game's brightest young stars. 

    More Sens Headlines:
    Can The Senators Count On Dylan Cozens To Consistently Produce?
    Expectations For The Senators' Mount Rushmore Of Old Guys
    Sens Rewind: Looking Back On The Sens Season Of 13 Goalies
    Sam Gagner Says Hockey IQ Is Teachable
    Creating The Sens Opening Night Roster Based On Salary