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Archives for September 2016

Red Wings Notes: Helm, Mantha, Howard

September 14, 2016 at 8:14 pm CDT | by natebrown 1 Comment

It appears that communication was a key roadblock between Darren Helm and Red Wings head coach Jeff Blashill throughout the 2015-16 season. The Detroit News’ Ted Kulfan writes that Helm grew frustrated by a lack of understanding when it came to his role on the team. From Helm:

“Sometimes I just didn’t feel like the message was relayed to me clearly,” Helm said. “I didn’t know if I was moving (lines) because I wasn’t playing well or doing things wrong or matchups.

Helm is convinced after talking with Blashill and general manager Ken Holland that things will improve for him during the upcoming season. Helm believes that he will slot in as a third line center and after signing a five-year, $19.25MM deal in July with the Wings, many fans and analysts wonder if Helm will live up to a $3.85MM AAV deal. The biggest knock on Helm is his inability to finish scoring plays. Though his speed and penalty killing prowess is valuable, Helm failed to convert breakaways and excellent scoring chances into goals. For a return on investment, Detroit certainly must hope that Helm will improve upon that and continue to keep the lines of communication open with Blashill.

In other Red Wings news:

  • Top prospect Anthony Mantha believes the time is now to cement his place on the Wings roster. Helene St. James reports that Mantha can “be a force” and is “brimming” with confidence as training camp approaches. Last season, the Red Wings’ 2013 first round pick added some buzz to the power play before being sent back to Grand Rapids to finish the season. For Mantha, he remembers those ten games and uses it as motivation to make the team full time. While the Red Wings roster has a glut of forwards, it’s also been trimmed by injuries to Teemu Pulkkinen, Henrik Zetterberg, and Tomas Jurco. If there’s any time for Mantha to make the roster, this would be a golden opportunity. Zetterberg is expected to return by the start of the season, but Jurco and Pulkkinen are expected to miss some time. For Mantha to stick with the big club, St. James opines that he has to prove himself a top 9 forward instead of jockeying for time on the fourth line. Despite needing youth to step up, Holland will often favor veterans, hence the signing of Steve Ott, to play on a fourth line while the younger players can “over ripen” in the minors.
  • Goaltender Jimmy Howard, who was shopped around the league all summer, plans to give Petr Mrazek a run for his money as the starter reports Ansar Khan.  The 32-year-old netminder lost his starting job to Mrazek two seasons ago, despite a $5.3MM price tag. Now, Howard finds himself on a team as the backup and with a murky future. Howard is expected to be left off the Wings list when it comes time to protect players in the expansion draft next summer. Until then, Howard maintains that he’s happy to still be in Detroit and never wanted to leave. Howard insists that he’ll “push” Mrazek with the intent of making both goaltenders better.

Detroit Red Wings Depth Chart

Detroit Red Wings Anthony Mantha| Darren Helm| Henrik Zetterberg| Petr Mrazek

1 comment

Snapshots: Cap Overages, Strachan, Rinaldo, Stransky

September 14, 2016 at 7:11 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 2 Comments

CapFriendly released a series of tweets today outlining the teams that suffered cap overages in 2015-16 and will thus feel the effect in 2016-17. Overage penalties are incurred when players with bonus-laden contracts meet the contractual criteria to receive those bonuses. The resulting payout is attributed to the prior season, in which the bonuses were earned, but if the increases put the team over the salary cap for that year, the overage carries over as a cap penalty in the following season. The following teams had players earn bonuses that put the team’s salary cap payroll over the 2015-16 salary cap limit, and CapFriendly has calculated rough estimates of the accompanying penalty against the 2016-17 cap:

Florida Panthers – $1.42MM

San Jose Sharks – $617K

Detroit Red Wings – $550K

Toronto Maple Leafs – $512K

Edmonton Oilers – $322K

Vancouver Canucks – $315K

Tampa Bay Lightning – $314K

St. Louis Blues – $190K

Unfortunately, but also predictably, many of these teams are already struggling with the off-season salary cap crunch, and must also take these overage penalties into account. The Red Wings are currently further over the cap (about $4.24MM) than any other team in the league and already must be considering trading away a significant piece to become cap compliant. The Leafs and Sharks are also right up against the cap, and overage penalties give them even less cap flexibility to maintain compliance. The Lightning currently have over $6MM in cap space, but have yet to re-sign key restricted free agents Nikita Kucherov and Nikita Nesterov, and the last thing they need is yet another reason why they can’t afford to meet the asking price of the pair.

In other league news:

  • Veteran journeyman defenseman Tyson Strachan has signed an AHL deal with the Rochester Americans, the affiliate of the Buffalo Sabres, the team announced today. Strachan has bounced around the NHL and AHL throughout his career, never finding a permanent home at the big league level. The soon-to-be 32-year-old had his best season in 2014-15 though, with five points in 46 games for none other than the Sabres. Buffalo does not have much depth on the blue line at the AHL level, and Strachan seems likely to earn an upgrade to a two-way deal with his former team should the injury bug strike the defense corp in 2016-17.
  • Another player looking to get back to the NHL is the Bruins’ Zac Rinaldo. WEEI’s D.J. Bean caught up with Rinaldo’s agent, Todd Reynolds, who says he hopes to see Rinaldo given another chance this season. After trading a 3rd-round pick to the Philadelphia Flyers last summer to get Rinaldo, Boston was happy with his grit and intensity early in the year. However, as young players pushed for ice time and the Bruins focused more on scoring and fighting for a playoff spot, Rinaldo got into fewer and fewer games. Eventually, he was put on waiver, went unclaimed, and was optioned to AHL Providence in February. Rinaldo was not recalled for the remainder of the season, and now questions what his role is in the organization. While Rinaldo is likely to get the chance to earn a spot in Boston during training camp and the pre-season, the Bruins have several young grinders like Noel Acciari and Tyler Randell who played well last year, as well as young scorers like Seth Griffith, Danton Heinen, and Jake DeBrusk who will look to earn NHL spots. Factor in the additions of Riley Nash and Dominic Moore, and there appears to be very few energy line spots up for grabs. Rinaldo’s NHL future is very much in doubt right now.
  • The Bruins are giving another player whose future was once in doubt a fighting chance, as 2016 NHL Draft pass-over Simon Stransky has been invited to rookie camp. The biggest surprise left on the board in June, Stransky was a point-per-game player in juniors this past season, and is considered by many to be an elite offensive talent who is held back by his mediocre defensive game. However, if an organization that emphasizes the two-way game, like the Bruins, can work on developing his defensive game, his scoring and play-making skill could make him a great value find.

Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| CBA| NHL

2 comments

2016 World Cup Of Hockey: Final Rosters

September 14, 2016 at 5:56 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

The World Cup of Hockey makes it’s triumphant return this Saturday in what should be a competitive and exciting tournament and a great way to kick off the hockey season. The first World Cup since 2004, the tournament will take place in Toronto, Ontario at the Air Canada Centre, unlike its predecessors which featured many venues. The host nation of Canada is one of eight competing teams, which also include the United States, Sweden, Finland, Russia, the Czech Republic, Team Europe (composed of players from all other European countries), and Team North America (composed of Canadian and American skaters under the age of 24). The tournament will have two groups of teams competing in a round robin format, with two teams advancing to a semi-final knockout round, followed by a best-of-three final series. The groups are divided up as follows:

Group A – Team Canada, Team Czech Republic, Team Europe, Team U.S.A

Group B – Team Finland, Team North America, Team Russia, Team Sweden

With the pre-tournament wrapping up and the schedule set, the World Cup is about to get underway. Pending any unexpected, last-minute changes, below are the final rosters for each team:

Canada (A)

G Corey Crawford, Chicago Blackhawks

G Braden Holtby, Washington Capitals

G Carey Price, Montreal Canadiens

D Jay Bouwmeester, St. Louis Blues

D Brent Burns, San Jose Sharks

D Drew Doughty, Los Angeles Kings

D Jake Muzzin, Los Angeles Kings

D Alex Pietrangelo, St. Louis Blues

D Marc-Edouard Vlasic, San Jose Sharks

D Shea Weber (A), Montreal Canadiens

F Patrice Bergeron, Boston Bruins

F Logan Couture, San Jose Sharks

F Sidney Crosby (C), Pittsburgh Penguins

F Matt Duchene, Colorado Avalanche

F Ryan Getzlaf, Anaheim Ducks

F Claude Giroux, Philadelphia Flyers

F Brad Marchand, Boston Bruins

F Corey Perry, Anaheim Ducks

F Ryan O’Reilly, Buffalo Sabres

F Steven Stamkos, Tampa Bay Lightning

F John Tavares, New York Islanders

F Joe Thornton, San Jose Sharks

F Jonathan Toews (A), Chicago Blackhawks

Read more

 

Czech Republic (A)

G Petr Mrazek, Detroit Red Wings

G Michal Neuvirth, Philadelphia Flyers

G Ondrej Pavelec, Winnipeg Jets

D Michal Jordan, Free Agent

D Michal Kempny, Chicago Blackhawks

D Tomas Kundratek, Slovan Bratislava (KHL)

D Zbynek Michalek, Arizona Coyotes

D Jakub Nakladal, Free Agent

D Roman Polak, Toronto Maple Leafs

D Andrej Sustr, Tampa Bay Lightning

F Michal Birner, Traktor (KHL)

F Roman Cervenka, Fribourg-Gotteron (NLA)

F Radek Faksa, Dallas Stars

F Michael Frolik, Calgary Flames

F Martin Hanzal, Arizona Coyotes

F Ales Hemsky (A), Dallas Stars

F Dmitrij Jaskin, St. Louis Blues

F Milan Michalek, Toronto Maple Leafs

F Ondrej Palat, Tampa Bay Lightning

F David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins

F Tomas Plekanec (C), Montreal Canadiens

F Vladimir Sobotka, St. Louis Blues/Avangard Omsk (KHL)

F Jakub Voracek (A), Philadelphia Flyers

 

Europe (A)

G Thomas Greiss, New York Islanders

G Philipp Grubauer, Washington Capitals

G Jaroslav Halak, New York Islanders

D Zdeno Chara (A), Boston Bruins

D Christian Ehrhoff, Free Agent

D Roman Josi, Nashville Predators

D Luca Sbisa, Vancouver Canucks

D Dennis Seidenberg, Free Agent

D Andrej Sekera, Edmonton Oilers

D Mark Streit (A), Philadelphia Flyers

F Pierre-Edouard Bellemare, Philadelphia Flyers

F Mikkel Boedker, San Jose Sharks

F Leon Draisaitl, Edmonton Oilers

F Marian Gaborik, Los Angeles Kings

F Jannik Hansen, Vancouver Canucks

F Marian Hossa, Chicago Blackhawks

F Anze Kopitar (C), Los Angeles Kings

F Nino Niederreiter, Minnesota Wild

F Frans Nielsen, Detroit Red Wings

F Tobias Rieder, Arizona Coyotes (unsigned)

F Tomas Tatar, Detroit Red Wings

F Thomas Vanek, Detroit Red Wings

F Mats Zuccarello, New York Rangers

 

United States (A)

G Ben Bishop, Tampa Bay Lightning

G Jonathan Quick, Los Angeles Kings

G Cory Schneider, New Jersey Devils

D Dustin Byfuglien, Winnipeg Jets

D John Carlson, Washington Capitals

D Erik Johnson, Colorado Avalanche

D Jack Johnson, Columbus Blue Jackets

D Ryan McDonagh, New York Rangers

D Matt Niskanen, Washington Capitals

D Ryan Suter (A), Minnesota Wild

F Justin Abdelkader, Detroit Red Wings

F David Backes, Boston Bruins

F Brandon Dubinsky, Columbus Blue Jackets

F Patrick Kane (A), Chicago Blackhawks

F Ryan Kesler, Anaheim Ducks

F T.J. Oshie, Washington Capitals

F Max Pacioretty, Montreal Canadiens

F Kyle Palmieri, New Jersey Devils

F Zach Parise, Minnesota Wild

F Joe Pavelski (C), San Jose Sharks

F Derek Stepan, New York Rangers

F James van Riemsdyk, Toronto Maple Leafs

F Blake Wheeler, Winnipeg Jets

 

Finland (B)

G Mikko Koskinen, SKA St. Petersburg (KHL)

G Tuukka Rask, Boston Bruins

G Pekka Rinne, Nashville Predators

D Jyrki Jokipakka, Calgary Flames

D Sami Lepisto, Salavat Yulaev Ufa (KHL)

D Esa Lindell, Dallas Stars

D Olli Maatta, Pittsburgh Penguins

D Ville Pokka, Chicago Blackhawks

D Rasmus Ristolainen, Buffalo Sabres (unsigned)

D Sami Vatanen, Anaheim Ducks

F Sebastian Aho, Carolina Hurricanes

F Aleksander Barkov, Florida Panthers

F Joonas Donskoi, San Jose Sharks

F Valtteri Filppula (A), Tampa Bay Lighting

F Mikael Granlund, Minnesota Wild

F Erik Haula, Minnesota Wild

F Jussi Jokinen, Florida Panthers

F Mikko Koivu (C), Minnesota Wild

F Leo Komarov, Toronto Maple Leafs

F Lauri Korpikoski, Free Agent

F Patrik Laine, Winnipeg Jets

F Jori Lehtera, St. Louis Blues

F Teuvo Teravainen, Carolina Hurricanes

 

North America (B)

G John Gibson, Anaheim Ducks

G Connor Hellebuyck, Winnipeg Jets

G Matt Murray, Pittsburgh Penguins

D Aaron Ekblad (A), Florida Panthers

D Shayne Gostisbehere, Philadelphia Flyers

D Seth Jones, Columbus Blue Jackets

D Ryan Murray, Columbus Blue Jackets

D Colton Parayko, St. Louis Blues

D Morgan Rielly, Toronto Maple Leafs

D Jacob Trouba, Winnipeg Jets (unsigned)

F Sean Couturier (A), Philadelphia Flyers

F Jonathan Drouin, Tampa Bay Lighting

F Jack Eichel, Buffalo Sabres

F Johnny Gaudreau, Calgary Flames (unsigned)

F Dylan Larkin, Detroit Red Wings

F Nathan MacKinnon, Colorado Avalanche

F Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs

F Connor McDavid (C), Edmonton Oilers

F J.T. Miller, New York Rangers

F Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Edmonton Oilers

F Brandon Saad, Columbus Blue Jackets

F Mark Scheifele, Winnipeg Jets

F Vincent Trocheck, Florida Panthers

 

Russia (B)

G Sergei Bobrovsky, Columbus Blue Jackets

G Semyon Varlamov, Colorado Avalanche

G Andrei Vasilevskiy, Tampa Bay Lightning

D Alexei Emelin, Montreal Canadiens

D Dmitry Kulikov, Florida Panthers

D Alexey Marchenko, Detroit Red Wings

D Andrei Markov, Montreal Canadiens

D Nikita Nesterov, Tampa Bay Lightning (unsigned)

D Dmitry Orlov, Washington Capitals (unsigned)

D Nikita Zaitsev, Toronto Maple Leafs

F Artem Anisimov, Chicago Blackhawks

F Evgeny Dadonov, SKA St. Petersburg (KHL)

F Pavel Datsyuk (A), SKA St. Petersburg (KHL)

F Nikita Kucherov, Tampa Bay Lightning (unsigned)

F Nikolai Kulemin, New York Islanders

F Evgeny Kuznetsov, Washington Capitals

F Evgeni Malkin (A), Pittsburgh Penguins

F Vladislav Namestnikov, Tampa Bay Lightning

F Alexander Ovechkin (C), Washington Capitals

F Artemi Panarin, Chicago Blackhawks

F Vadim Shipachyov, SKA St. Petersburg (KHL)

F Vladimir Tarasenko, St. Louis Blues

F Ivan Telegin, CSKA Moscow (KHL)

 

Sweden (B)

G Jhonas Enroth, Toronto Maple Leafs

G Henrik Lundqvist, New York Rangers

G Jacob Markstrom, Vancouver Canucks

D Mattias Ekholm, Nashville Predators

D Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Arizona Coyotes

D Victor Hedman, Tampa Bay Lightning

D Niklas Hjalmarsson, Chicago Blackhawks

D Erik Karlsson (A), Ottawa Senators

D Hampus Lindholm, Anaheim Ducks (unsigned)

D Anton Stralman, Tampa Bay Lightning

F Mikael Backlund, Calgary Flames

F Patrik Berglund, St. Louis Blues

F Nicklas Backstrom, Washington Capitals

F Loui Eriksson, Vancouver Canucks

F Filip Forsberg, Nashville Predators

F Carl Hagelin, Pittsburgh Penguins

F Patric Hornqvist, Pittsburgh Penguins

F Marcus Kruger, Chicago Blackhawks

F Gabriel Landeskog, Colorado Avalanche

F Daniel Sedin (A), Vancouver Canucks

F Henrik Sedin (C), Vancouver Canucks

F Jakob Silfverberg, Anaheim Ducks

F Carl Soderberg, Colorado Avalanche

Uncategorized World Cup

0 comments

Stanley Cup Odds

September 14, 2016 at 4:08 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

Las Vegas odds-maker Bovada released their odds (listed below) for the 2016-17 NHL season today, as well as the odds for each conference and division. Among the surprises was the inclusion of a co-leader alongside the reigning champion Penguins, as the Blackhawks are odds-on favorites win it all out of the West. The (relatively) high ranking of the Edmonton Oilers is also a shock, as the perennial bottom-dwellers of the last decade were given the same odds as a 2015-16 playoff team team, the Philadelphia Flyers. A mash up of Eastern Conference contenders at the 25/1 mark will also confuse many, as the Metropolitan’s Islanders and Rangers performed significantly better than the Atlantic’s Bruins, Red Wings, and Canadiens last year.

Other than the Blackhawks, who have to battle through a tough division simply to make it to the Western Conference Final, and the Oilers, who have yet to prove they can even remain in the playoff conversation past the holidays, the worst bet may be the Dallas Stars. Although they are coming off a strong 2015-16 campaign, the Stars have severe goal-tending problems, a depleted defensive unit, and a pair of banged-up superstars leading their offense. Dallas seems primed for a regression in 2016-17, and their #5 ranking in the odds is a little too high to be a smart take.

The best bet available? Any of the 16/1 teams seem like a smart choice. The Florida Panthers especially have re-tooled this off-season and likely have only Tampa Bay standing between them and an easy division title. The Los Angeles Kings have won two of the last five Stanley Cups and shouldn’t be counted out, and if they do fail to make it out of the Pacific Division, the Anaheim Ducks seem likely to be the ones knocking them out. The Nashville Predators are a dark horse candidate seemingly every season, and after bringing in P.K. Subban, who projects to be a perfect fit in their system, this could finally be the year that the Preds put it all together. The long shot: how about the Carolina Hurricanes, who missed the playoffs in 2015-16 by a handful of points and have several young players just waiting to break out. With the worst odds of any team, that’s a high-yield bet worth making.

Pittsburgh Penguins    9/1

Chicago Blackhawks    9/1

Tampa Bay Lighting    10/1

Washington Capitals   10/1

Dallas Stars                   12/1

St. Louis Blues              14/1

San Jose Sharks            14/1

Anaheim Ducks             16/1

Florida Panthers           16/1

Los Angeles Kings         16/1

Nashville Predators       16/1

Boston Bruins                25/1

Detroit Red Wings        25/1

Minnesota Wild             25/1

Montreal Canadiens      25/1

New York Islanders        25/1

New York Rangers          25/1

Edmonton Oilers            33/1

Philadelphia Flyers         33/1

Buffalo Sabres                 50/1

Calgary Flames                50/1

Colorado Avalanche        50/1

New Jersey Devils            50/1

Ottawa Senators              50/1

Toronto Maple Leafs      50/1

Winnipeg Jets                  50/1

Arizona Coyotes               66/1

Carolina Hurricanes        66/1

Columbus Blue Jackets   66/1

Vancouver Canucks         66/1

NHL

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2016-17 Season Preview: Dallas Stars

September 14, 2016 at 3:08 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

With the NHL season just weeks away, we continue to look around the league and analyze each team’s off-season moves and look ahead to 2016-17. Today, we focus on the Dallas Stars.

Last season: 50-23-9 (109 points), 1st place in the Central Division. Defeated the Minnesota Wild in the first round (4-2), but lost in the second round vs. the St. Louis Blues (4-3)

Cap Space Remaining: $5.98MM according to CapFriendly

Key Newcomers: D Andrew Bodnarchuk (free agency, Colorado Avalanche), LW Adam Cracknell (free agency, Edmonton Oilers), D Dan Hamhuis (free agency, Vancouver Canucks), LW Jiri Hudler (free agency, Florida Panthers)

Key Departures: D Jason Demers (free agency, Florida Panthers), C Vernon Fiddler (free agency, New Jersey Devils), D Alex Goligoski (trade, Arizona Coyotes), LW Travis Moen (unsigned), D Kris Russell (unsigned), RW Colton Sceviour (free agency, Florida Panthers)

Player to Watch: Kari Lehtonen and Antti Niemi – If there was a clear leader in goal, then just that player would be the one to watch. Unfortunately for Stars fans, both Lehtonen and Niemi played equally poorly in 2015-16 and thus share the blame and the spotlight heading into a new season. The duo almost single-handedly eliminated Dallas from the playoffs last season, as neither could quite figure it out in the postseason.  At a combined cap hit of $10.4MM and a league-low .904 save percentage, many thought that something had to change for the Star’s net-minding situation this off-season. However, neither goalie was bought out or (to this point) traded. GM Jim Nill has little that he can do. There is no market for a goalie upgrade without shedding one of the two, and no one is looking to acquire either of the goalies. It appears as if Lehtonen and Niemi will be given a second chance in 2016-17, at least until they force Nill’s hand into making a move. With a depleted defensive unit now playing in front of them, one of the pair will have to step up and claim the starter job with his strong, consistent play, or a potent Dallas offense could be rendered meaningless this season. The ship that is the Stars’ 2016-17 season is about to depart, and whether it will sink or float depends on the play in net.

Key Storyline: No team in recent memory has lost more talent from their blue line in one fell swoop than the Dallas Stars did this summer. Dallas perhaps overestimated their potential salary cap crunch, as they first traded elite puck-mover Alex Goligoski to the Arizona Coyotes, where he signed a long-term extension worth $5.475MM per year. They then sat back and watched as solid two-way defenseman Jason Demers capitalized on his free agency and signed with the Florida Panthers at a $4.5MM clip. With almost $6MM remaining in cap space (having not yet re-signed RFA winger Valeri Nichushkin), the Stars likely could have found a way to bring back one of the pair. They did go out and sign veteran blue liner Dan Hamhuis though. Hamhuis was first targeted by the Stars at the 2016 Trade Deadline, but a deal could not be worked out and the team instead acquired the stay-at-home shot blocker Kris Russell. The addition of Hamhuis will help to make up for the loss of Goligoski and Demers, though the 33-year-old has had durability concerns and a drop-off in production over the past few years and will not be able to totally replace either of the two departed top defenseman. Assuming that a reunion with the still-unsigned Russell is also unlikely, the Stars will enter 2016-17 with three of their postseason top four now gone. Young stud John Klingberg will have to carry even more weight for the defense this year, while inexperienced players like Stephen Johns, Esa Lindell, and Patrik Nemeth will also be expected to step up their games. Look for veteran defenseman Johnny Oduya to play a bigger role with the Stars in his second season in Dallas as well. If the Stars want to win the Central Division again, and even attempt to reach the Stanley Cup Final, they need their defense to do it’s best to play up to their championship-caliber offense.

Stars Depth Chart

Dallas Stars Season Previews

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2016 World Cup Of Hockey: Schedule

September 14, 2016 at 1:21 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

The World Cup of Hockey makes it’s triumphant return this Saturday in what should be a competitive and exciting tournament and a great way to kick off the hockey season. The first World Cup since 2004, the tournament will take place in Toronto, Ontario at the Air Canada Centre, unlike its predecessors which featured many venues. The host nation of Canada is one of eight competing teams, which also include the United States, Sweden, Finland, Russia, the Czech Republic, Team Europe (composed of players from all other European countries), and Team North America (composed of Canadian and American skaters under the age of 24). The tournament will have two groups of teams competing in a round robin format, with two teams advancing to a semi-final knockout round, followed by a best-of-three final series. The groups are divided up as follows:

Group A – Team Canada, Team Czech Republic, Team Europe, Team U.S.A

Group B – Team Finland, Team North America, Team Russia, Team Sweden

With the pre-tournament wrapping up and final rosters set, the World Cup is about to get underway. Below is the schedule for the tournament:

Group Stage (Round Robin)

Saturday, September 17th

Group A: United States at Europe (3:30pm EST)

Group A: Czech Republic at Canada (8pm EST)

Sunday, September 18th

Group B: Sweden at Russia (3pm EST)

Group B: North America at Finland (8pm EST)

Monday, September 19th

Group A: Europe at Czech Republic (3pm EST)

Group B: Russia at North America (8pm EST)

Tuesday, September 20th

Group B: Finland at Sweden (3pm EST)

Group A: Canada at United States (8pm EST)

Wednesday, September 21st

Group B: North America at Sweden (3pm EST)

Group A: Europe at Canada (8pm EST)

Thursday, September 22nd

Group B: Finland at Russia (3pm EST)

Group A: United States at Czech Republic (8pm EST)

Semi-Final Round

Saturday, September 24th

Group B 2nd-place at Group A winner (7pm EST)

Sunday, September 25th

Group A 2nd-place at Group B winner (1pm EST)

Final Round

Tuesday, September 27th

Game One (8pm EST)

Thursday, September 29th

Game Two (8pm EST)

Saturday, October 1st 

Game Three* (7pm EST)

*if neccessary

Uncategorized World Cup

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Analyzing Chances Of Blues Tryouts To Make Team

September 14, 2016 at 10:45 am CDT | by Glen Miller 1 Comment

Last year, both Scottie Upshall and Scott Gomez earned jobs with St. Louis after coming to camp on a tryout basis. While Gomez didn’t make it through the year with the club, Upshall performed well enough to earn a second one-year deal with the Blues. St. Louis appears to be going back to that well again by inviting six players to camp on PTO agreements. Those in search of a job with the Blues are Yan Stastny, Chris Porter, T.J Galiardi, Eric Nystrom, Scooter Vaughan and Mike Weber.

Writing for the St. Louis Post Dispatch, Jeremy Rutherford provides a closer look at each of the six players invited to camp. Included in the post are comments from Blues head coach Ken Hitchcock. Those comments provide unique insight into the odds faced by each of the players attempting to make the 2016-17 Blues.

The Blues lost team captain David Backes and veteran power forward Troy Brouwer as free agents this summer. But the team acted quickly by signing David Perron to fill a hole on the wing. St. Louis also expects Vladimir Sobotka to return this season from the KHL and play a regular role with the Blues. That would seem to limit the opportunities for a forward to earn a job.

The team’s blue line is also stocked with enough quality players to fill all six regular slots, as the team’s depth chart on Roster Resource shows. Robert Bortuzzo is listed currently as the team’s seventh option on defense and he’s a decent fit for that role. Additionally, the team has their 2012 first-round pick, Jordan Schmaltz, waiting in the wings. The North Dakota product made his pro debut in 2015-16 with Chicago of the AHL and tallied 36 points in 71 games for the Wolves.

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Stastny, the older brother of St. Louis center Paul Stastny, last appeared in the NHL way back in 2009-10, seeing action in four games with the Blues. For his career Stastny has scored just 16 points in 91 games. His presence is likely more about giving Paul a chance, albeit a brief one, to suit up on the same squad as his brother than it is about trying to find a diamond in the rough.

Hitchcock appreciates Yan’s intelligence but admits it’s going to be an uphill battle for the elder Stastny brother to make the team given how long he has been out of the league.

“With the way our team is built, the thing that impresses you about him is his smarts. To me there is always room for intelligence, and he’s a very, very intelligent player. The challenge for Yan is having not played in the league for a little while, how is he going to feel about the pace of practices and games.”

Porter appeared in parts of six seasons with the Blues but participated in no more than 47 games or scored more than eight points in any single campaign. He spent this past season with Minnesota, who claimed the forward off of waivers from Philadelphia. The Flyers had inked Porter to a one-year deal last summer.

One advantage Porter has is his familiarity with Hitchcock and new assistant head coach Mike Yeo, having played under both coaches with the Blues and Wild respectively.

“There’s a real trust with Chris’ game and now he’s got familiarity with both coaching staffs, ourselves and also the guys coming in from Minny. So there’s a real comfort level with him.”

Galiardi burst onto the NHL scene as a 21-year-old with Colorado during the 2009-10 campaign. Skating in 70 games with the Avalanche, Galiardi tallied 15 goals and 39 points in his first full season in the league. Since that impressive rookie year, Galiardi has failed to record either double-figures in goals or exceed 17 points in any single campaign.

Of course Galiardi was a teammate and sometimes a linemate of Paul Stastny when both were members of the Avalanche organization. That experience combined with Galiardi’s speed and skill could increase his chances of making the team in a depth role.

“We know his chemistry, playing with Paul (Stastny) in Colorado. He was a really good third-line player in the National Hockey League, and if he comes to camp and plays with an edge, based on his skating ability and his skill, he has a chance to make an impression.”

Nystrom, chosen 10th overall in the 2002 draft by Calgary, never developed much of an offensive game but adds plenty of grit and toughness to the lineup. Hitchcock knows Nystrom well as each has spent the last six seasons toiling in the Central Division, albeit for different clubs.

“Knowing him and having coached against him, every game is going to feel like his first and last, and our feeling is he’s going to want to make a real impression.”

You can never have too much blue line depth and that mantra gives Weber a realistic shot of making the Blues despite the appearance their defense corps has plenty of quality players. Weber, a veteran of 351 NHL games – all but 10 as a member of the Buffalo Sabres – plays a simple game and competes with a bit of an edge. Considering the praise Hitchcock bestowed upon Weber, it would seem as if he has an excellent chance to make the Blues, assuming he turns in a solid performance in camp.

“We really like ’Webs.’ We know him from coaching against him last year. He’s a guy that is really good at killing penalties, he’s really strong in his coverage responsibilities and he’s really dependable from a competitor standpoint. Another honest guy that you want to give a shot too.”

Finally, Vaughan would seem to be a real long shot to make the team and appears to be an organizational depth guy. After finishing up his senor season at the University of Michigan, Vaughan began his pro career with the Wheeling Nailers of the ECHL in 2011-2012. Since his pro debut, Vaughan has gone on to suit up in 70 more ECHL games and 190 in the AHL for the Islanders and Blues organizations.

Vaughan is listed as both a defenseman and a right-wing, suggesting his versatility might be a strong selling point. He’s never been much of an offensive producer in the minor leagues, notching a career-best 20 points in 50 games for South Carolina in the ECHL during the 2012-13 season. Hitchcock seemed to confirm the odds are likely stacked against Vaughan in his quest to make the NHL this year with the Blues.

“Multi-dimensional, competitive as heck, a hockey player that really helped (with the Chicago Wolves) a lot and that didn’t go unnoticed by the team here.”

“It’s up to them,” he said. “This is 100 percent up to each guy individually, it’s not up to the coaches. Guys that have come in have earned jobs. This is all about winning, and if any of these guys look like they can help us win hockey games, then it’s up to us to make space for them.”

It’s difficult to envision there being a regular role available for any of these players to earn even with an outstanding training camp. But every team needs quality depth and St. Louis is well aware that you can find solid contributors via the PTO. The guess here is Weber and Nystrom have the best chances to make the team out of camp. Hitchcock is an old-school coach and values grit and toughness, qualities both players bring to the table.

AHL| Buffalo Sabres| CHL| Coaches| Colorado Avalanche| ECHL| KHL| Minnesota Wild| NHL| New York Islanders| Philadelphia Flyers| Players| St. Louis Blues| Uncategorized| Waivers Chris Porter| David Backes| David Perron| Eric Nystrom| Mike Weber| Paul Stastny

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Grossmann Joins Flames On PTO

September 14, 2016 at 9:37 am CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

The Calgary Flames have added D Nicklas Grossmann to its training camp roster, agreeing to a PTO the 10-year vet per this tweet from Dean Molberg of The Fan 960. Grossman appeared in 58 games in 2015-16 with the Arizona Coyotes, scoring three goals and seven points and posting a -3 plus-minus rating. Drafted by Dallas in the second-round of the 2004 entry draft, Grossman has also spent time with the Stars and Philadelphia Flyers during his NHL career.

Grossman joins a relatively crowded Flames blue line corps led by team captain Mark Giordano and rising young star Dougie Hamilton.  Veterans T.J. Brodie, Dennis Wideman and Deryk Engelland also figure to hold down regular roles. Young Jyrki Jokipakka, acquired at the trade deadline in the Kris Russell deal, will compete with Ladislav Smid and presumably Grossman for the sixth spot.

There has been talk that Calgary could be interested in a reunion with Russell, who has lingered on the free agent market all summer. It’s unclear if adding Grossman in any way changes that line of thinking though Russell, despite his struggles landing a lucrative free agent deal, is still a reasonably competent NHL blue liner whereas Grossman is likely more of a depth option at this point.

Feel free to check out our Invite Tracker for updates on all of the recent PTO signings.

Calgary Flames| Dallas Stars| NHL| Newsstand| Philadelphia Flyers| Utah Mammoth Jyrki Jokipakka| Kris Russell| Ladislav Smid| Nicklas Grossmann

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Seguin Expected To Miss World Cup With Injury

September 13, 2016 at 7:54 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

UPDATE (8:20pm CT): Buffalo Sabres forward Ryan O’Reilly will replace Seguin on Team Canada, the league announced in a press release tonight. Although O’Reilly was not considered one of the most likely replacement candidates (the Hall omission continues to puzzle many), he brings a strong all-around game and two-way ability, adding some versatility and defensive presence to the Canadian forward corp. Seguin has officially been ruled out of the World Cup.

It seems as though another Team Canada forward has fallen victim to the injury bug. Sportsnet’s Nick Kypreos first reported that Dallas Stars center Tyler Seguin sustained an injury during the pre-tournament for the World Cup of Hockey and is now likely to miss the actual event. Kypreos added that the injury, believed to be concerning his right knee, is not deemed to be serious. However, Seguin likely needs a week or more to recover, which is time that Team Canada does not have. They are likely to leave Seguin off of the roster, meaning he will miss the entirety of the World Cup. Elliotte Friedman has corroborated the story, and reports that an official announcement is expected tomorrow.

This injury comes after fellow Team Canada forward, Los Angeles Kings center Jeff Carter, was hurt while training for the World Cup. As they did when Carter went down and was replaced by Corey Perry, it seems likely that Canada will add another winger to a center-heavy roster. The team has 24 hours to make an addition before the tournament officially begins. The top candidate is likely to be the newest New Jersey Devil, Taylor Hall, who would be a fitting replacement for Seguin, as the top two 2010 draft picks will forever have their careers compared to one another. Depth is hardly an issue for the Canadian side though, and there are any number of options should they choose to add another body to the roster.

Seguin meanwhile will look toward getting healthy for the start of the NHL season. With line mate and fellow NHL star Jamie Benn also on the shelf, recovering from injury, the Stars hope that the pair can rest up and be ready for puck drop on the 2016-17 campaign. The team is hopeful that Benn will be at 100% by game time, and Seguin’s injury is not considered serious, so he too is likely to be ready for action when the new season begins next month.

 

Dallas Stars| Team Canada World Cup

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Snapshots: Zetterberg, Miller, Brown

September 13, 2016 at 6:25 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

With the departure of Pavel Datsyuk to the KHL, Detroit Red Wings captain Henrik Zetterberg assumed the mantle as the team’s longest tenured player. Entering his 14th NHL campaign and soon to turn 36-years-old, the skilled Swedish forward has certainly seen better days as evidenced by his 16-point drop in scoring from 2014-15 to this past season. That being said, Zetterberg is still someone the Wings will lean on if the team wishes to stretch its streak of qualifying for the postseason to 26 years.

Zetterberg acknowledges a drop-off in his play during the second half of each of the previous two seasons and suggests he is looking at different ways to stay fresh throughout the coming season, according to Helene St. James of the Detroit Free Press.

“That’s what’s gotten me the last two years, I ran out of gas. You can’t play hockey in this level when you run out of gas. So that’s one thing we’re going to play around with.”

Zetterberg tallied 27 points in the season’s first 34 games through December but struggled down the stretch recording just nine points over the final 24 contests. He also chipped in just a single point, a goal in game three, during Detroit’s five-game, first-round playoff loss to Tampa Bay. Zetterberg stated he is at least willing to listen if head coach Jeff Blashill suggests decreased ice time or even taking a game off here and there.

“As a player, as soon as you hear ’less minutes,’ you’re not happy. I don’t think I will go and tell Coach I need less minutes. But if he decides that I need to play less or get some rest dates, I’m open to listen to that.”

“We want to see the younger guys take steps and kind of take minutes from the older guys. But I won’t give it away, they have to earn it. That’s part of the transition. I went through it when I came in and started to play more. But you have to earn it.”

Zetterberg has five seasons remaining on a long-term deal that took effect in 2009-10. He carries a cap hit just in excess of $6MM annually but the final three seasons of his contract come with actual salaries of $3.35MM, $1MM and $1MM respectively. It will be interesting to see if Zetterberg is both willing and able to finish out the pact with the Red Wings.

Elsewhere around the league:

  • After trading away talented young blue liner Dougie Hamilton and steady veteran defender Johnny Boychuk in successive offseasons, the Boston Bruins are still searching for a reliable top-four defenseman, as Joe Haggerty opines. An aging Zdeno Chara is still the club’s top defenseman with Torey Krug likely not far behind but beyond those two, pickings are slim. Haggerty admits the team has the cap space and veteran assets to make a trade if they so choose, though they may already have the top-four option they seek on the roster. While also listing prospect Brandon Carlo and youngster Joe Morrow as possibilities, Haggerty believes Colin Miller might be the Bruins “X-factor” on the blue line. As Haggerty notes, Miller scored 19 goals and 52 points in 70 AHL games with the Manchester Monarchs in 2014-15, suggesting he has the skill to put up points in the big leagues. Miller came to Boston from Los Angeles in the Milan Lucic trade during the 2015 offseason and may be coming into his own as an NHL player after producing 16 points in just 42 games as a rookie. With few quality options available either on the trade market or in free agency, it might be wise for Boston to give Miller a chance before looking outside the organization for a top-four blue liner.
  • According to Chris Johnston of Sportsnet (via tweet), Mike Brown is the latest veteran player to land a PTO with the tough guy winger signing on in Columbus. Brown, 31, spent time with both San Jose and Montreal last season, scoring two goals and three assists in 58 games with 90 PIMs. For his career, Brown has potted 19 goals and recorded 778 minutes of penalties in 407 NHL games. He has suited up for Vancouver, Anaheim, Toronto and Edmonton in addition to the Sharks and Habs in his nine NHL seasons. The Blue Jackets bought out the contract of veteran enforcer Jared Boll earlier this summer and could see Brown as a possible replacement depending on his play during training camp.

AHL| Boston Bruins| Columbus Blue Jackets| Detroit Red Wings| Free Agency| KHL| Los Angeles Kings| NHL| San Jose Sharks| Snapshots Colin Miller| Henrik Zetterberg| Jared Boll| Joe Morrow| Milan Lucic| Pavel Datsyuk| Torey Krug

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