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Archives for September 2016

Trade Rumors: Covering NHL, NFL, MLB, NBA

September 8, 2016 at 11:33 am CDT | by Tim Dierkes 3 Comments

The Trade Rumors Network of websites goes well beyond Pro Hockey Rumors.  Please check out our other sites:

  • NFL coverage at Pro Football Rumors.  Follow @pfrumors on Twitter.
  • MLB coverage at MLB Trade Rumors.  Follow @mlbtraderumors on Twitter.
  • NBA coverage at Hoops Rumors.  Follow @hoopsrumors on Twitter.
  • Download the Trade Rumors app for iOS here – now including Pro Hockey Rumors!  Android will be coming in October.
  • Depth chart and roster information across NHL, NFL, MLB, and NBA at Roster Resource.  Follow @NHLRosters on Twitter.

Newsstand

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Montreal Canadiens Hire Sean Burke As Pro Scout

September 8, 2016 at 11:06 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Montreal Canadiens announced today that they’ve hired former Coyotes’ assistant general manager and director of player development Sean Burke as a professional scout. Burke will cover the western region for the Canadiens, presumably focused on goaltending talent.

Burke, 49, backstopped 820 games in the NHL with a 2.96 GAA and .902 sv% and was named to three all-star games. He ranks 13th on the all-time games played list among goaltenders, and 41st for career shutouts. He represented Canada twice at the Olympic Games, suiting up in 1988 and 1992.

Joining the Coyotes in 2009 as a goalie coach, Burke was eventually promoted to assistant general manager in 2012, though he kept some of his duties helping the goaltenders. Now, he’ll enter into a pure scouting role for the first time in his career, and work with the Canadiens on bringing in the next wave of Montreal talent.

Montreal Canadiens| Utah Mammoth

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Carlo Colaiacovo Has Received Two Offers From KHL

September 8, 2016 at 10:42 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

According to Igor Eronko of Sport-Express, long-time NHL defender Carlo Colaiacovo has received at least two offers from KHL squads, Ak Bars Kazan and Sibir Novosibirsk.  No word has come on whether Colaiacovo would welcome a move to the Russian league, though with his injury plagued career and dwindling effectiveness, perhaps they would represent his best option.

Despite making his NHL debut in 2002-03 and being regarded as a effective second or third pairing defenseman, Colaiacovo has only played in 470 games in his career. He’s only played in 70 games in a single season once, dressing for 73 contests in 2008-09.

Once a promising prospect in the Toronto system after being drafted 17th overall, Colaiacovo was part of the deal that swapped Alex Steen for Lee Stempniak during that season. In St. Louis, he showed that he could be effective, posting 26 or more points in three consecutive seasons.  Should he join the KHL, perhaps his body can hold up more easily to the rigors of their shorter 60 game season.

Injury| KHL Alex Steen

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Snapshots: Duchene, Weise, Hronek

September 8, 2016 at 10:10 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

When the Colorado Avalanche were stunned by head coach Patrick Roy walking away from the organization on August 11th, many pointed to a perceived rift between Roy and superstar forward Matt Duchene over some of the exuberant celebrations he performed after scoring goals. One goal in particular, scored in a 5-1 loss to St. Louis on April 4th, prompted much scrutiny from the media after Roy said “Are you kidding me? What is that? It’s not the (reaction) that we want from our guys. Not at all.”

In Mike Zeisberger’s new column in the Toronto Sun, he gets Duchene to set the record straight about their feud:

At the end of the day it wasn’t anything against me. He was just trying to set a precedent for the team and make an example of me. He expected me to be a leader and at that moment I let him down. We had a great chat the next day and right then everything was fine. It was blown out of proportion in the media. It was really nothing after that.

Zeisberger reiterates that Duchene’s main message is that there was no feud between the two, and that Roy called him just hours after he had made his decision to leave. It’s not, then, a problem with the 25-year old sniper that made the hall of fame goaltender leave the team.

  • In a piece by Sam Carchidi of The Inquirer, Dale Weise opens up about the mid-season trade to the Chicago Blackhawks and how excited he is about his new deal with the Philadelphia Flyers. “Going to Chicago was a disaster because I played like five minutes a night.It’s pretty tough to do anything when you play so little. It was a new experience for me.” says Weise, who had no goals in fifteen games with the Hawks down the stretch. He signed a four-year, $9.4 million deal with the Flyers this offseason, and thinks he “can play on any line and any role” with them this year.
  • Dan Wakiji for the Detroit Red Wings team site writes about Filip Hronek (the Wings’ second-round pick this year) and his journey in hockey thus far. Taken 53rd overall, Hronek has very little experience on the North American ice, but will get some this season; he’s heading to Saginaw to join the OHL.  Only weighing 163 pounds currently, Hronek’s biggest challenge will be getting stronger and tougher in his own end.

Chicago Blackhawks| Colorado Avalanche| Detroit Red Wings| OHL| Patrick Roy| Philadelphia Flyers| Snapshots Matt Duchene

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Florida Panthers Invite Adam Pardy On PTO

September 8, 2016 at 9:08 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

According to Harvey Fialkov of the Sun Sentinal, Adam Pardy will be attending Florida Panthers camp on a professional tryout. The team of course will be without top blueliner Aaron Ekblad for part of camp as he plays for team North America at the World Cup of Hockey.

While it would be pretty surprising to see Pardy crack the roster following training camp, he will provide veteran competition for the younger players, as well as a toughness and edge lacking on the Panthers back end since their trade of Erik Gudbranson to the Vancouver Canucks. Pardy has 52 points across an NHL career that has seen him hit the ice 338 times for five different teams. Last year he got into just 23 games, split between the Oilers and Jets.

For the Panthers, they’ve already done their offseason shopping and indeed Fialkov reports that Pardy’s addition is probably the last before camp opens. By locking up their young core and signing some key free agents, Florida has positioned themselves well to compete for the Stanley Cup for the foreseeable future.

Florida Panthers| Team North America Aaron Ekblad| World Cup

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Captaincy Notes: Fisher, Pavelski, Vacancies

September 7, 2016 at 8:41 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

Mike Fisher is set to become the next captain of the Nashville Predators, according to recent reports. The team has scheduled an afternoon press conference on Thursday, and Adam Vignan of The Tennessean says he has been told that the “major announcement” is that of the 2016-17 captains, with Fisher atop the list. An alternate with the Ottawa Senators and then immediately with the Predators following his trade, Fisher was always the most likely candidate. Vignan points out that Fisher is one of just four players on the current roster over the age of 30, and as a veteran presence on a young team, it is a natural fit for his locker room presence to translate to his captaincy. A veteran of over 1,000 NHL game and a complete two-way player, Fisher is the perfect example for Nashville’s young, impressionable players to work toward. Shea Weber himself said that he “knew” who his replacement would be at captain, so it seems as though Fisher will be universally accepted in his new role. Although no news has leaked as to who Fisher’s alternates will be, many have suspected that Weber’s true replacement, P.K. Subban, may be a top candidate.

In other captain news:

  • John Tortorella has named Joe Pavelski the captain of Team USA for the upcoming World Cup of Hockey. The San Jose Sharks forward will be assisted by alternates Patrick Kane of the Chicago Blackhawks and Ryan Suter of the Minnesota Wild. Pavelski has been on a leadership role of late, taking over as the captain of San Jose last season after a captain-less 2014-15 campaign featured a locker room power struggle between a young core and older veterans, including former Sharks captains Joe Thornton and Patrick Marleau. For the same reason coach Peter DeBoer named Pavelski captain, Tortorella did as well, and that is his impeccable locker room presence and chemistry with his teammates. Kane will be somewhat new to captaincy, even as an alternate, as Jonathan Toews (a Team Canada alternate), Duncan Keith, and Brent Seabrook have the official leadership roles locked up in Chicago. Suter meanwhile, has been an alternate captain on Team USA before, at the 2010 Winter Olympics, and serves in the same role with the Wild under Mikko Koivu (the captain of Team Finland).
  • With the captain vacancy filled in Nashville, there are now just four openings remaining across the NHL. There has been much speculation that Connor McDavid will take over in Edmonton, but what of Carolina, Florida, and Toronto? It seems likely that alternate Jordan Staal will follow in his brother’s footsteps and take over the leadership role for the Hurricanes, though the dark horse candidate may just be the rare goalie captain in Cam Ward, who has spent his entire career in Carolina. If you don’t think that matters, look around the league. 20 captains and at least 32 alternates are lifelong members of their respective teams. By that logic, young Florida stars Aaron Ekblad and Jonathan Huberdeau, both recently extended long-term, look to be prime candidates. However, Jussi Jokinen and Derek MacKenzie served as alternates last season and may need to make up for the lost leadership of the departed Willie Mitchell, Brian Campbell, and Dave Bolland. Up in Toronto, well, your guess is as good as any. Veterans Brooks Laich and Joffrey Lupul are good veteran leaders, but neither is guaranteed ice time. Auston Matthews is the future, but it’s hard to see anyone being named captain without playing a single game. It could be that the Leafs wait to name a captain, but if they do want one in place prior to puck drop on the 2016-17, James van Riemsdyk seems like the best choice as of now.

Nashville Predators| Team USA World Cup

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Snapshots: Lokomotiv Yaroslavl, Dailey, Trouba

September 7, 2016 at 7:15 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

Today is the five-year anniversary of the tragic plane crash of the flight carrying the KHL team Lokomotiv Yaroslavl. Pilot error and subsequent technical failures caused the plane to crash shortly after take-off from the airport in Yaroslavl, Russia, on its way to their KHL season opener in Mink, Belarus on Wednesday, September 7th, 2011. All of the team’s players and coaches on board the flight perished, along with eight crew members for a total of 44 fatalities. Among the victims were three-time NHL All-Star forward and Lady Byng Award winner Pavol Demitra, 1996 first round pick and long-time Anaheim Mighty Duck Ruslan Salei, 2006 Stanley Cup-winning center Josef Vasicek, bruising NHL defensemen Karel Rachunek and Karlis Skrastins, and Devils prospect Alexander Vasyunov , not to mention Canadian head coach Brad McCrimmon and assistants Igor Korolev and Alexander Karpovtsev, all of whom had successful NHL careers. The team was forced to cancel its KHL season and the country of Russia and the entire hockey world mourned. On this day, the KHL has vowed to never hold another game, in memory of the those lost. Teams, players, and media members around the globe have remembered the tragedy today, and although Lokomotiv has luckily rebuilt their organization into a perennial playoff team, the 2011 team will never be forgotten.

  • In other sad news today, the Philadelphia Flyers announced that former defenseman Bob Dailey has passed away at the age of 63 after a battle with cancer. Not one to lose a battle on the boards during his playing days, Dailey was one of the biggest and strongest players around in the 70’s and 80’s. A dominant force with the Vancouver Canucks and later Flyers, Dailey was a a big, talented blue liner who had a knack for finding the back of the net or the stick of an opportune teammate. In 1977-78 with Philly, Dailey had 21 goals and 36 assists for a career-high 57 points, as well as a +45 rating, second only to Bobby Clarke on the Flyers. His loss has been mourned by many throughout the world of hockey today.
  • Some happy news may be on its way for Jets fans, as Darren Dreger reported on TSN 1290 in Winnipeg today that rumors of Jacob Trouba’s displeasure have been greatly exaggerated. While Dreger consented that not much is going on between parties, he refuted all rumors that the young RFA defenseman is unhappy in Winnipeg or unwilling to sign there. In fact, Dreger simply says that both sides want to keep all of the negotiations out of the public eye. It seems as though a resolution will be hammered out eventually, but Jets fans can rest easy if they don’t hear too much about it until the pen meets the paper on an extension.

KHL| Philadelphia Flyers| Vancouver Canucks| Winnipeg Jets

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Canucks Hire Malhotra As Development Coach

September 7, 2016 at 5:42 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

If Manny Malhotra wishes it, so it shall be. Just three days after a report that the recently retired Malhotra would like to get into coaching, a former team, the Vancouver Canucks, has made it happen. The team announced today that the veteran of 16 NHL seasons will put that experience to work in his new role as a development coach.

In this capacity, Malhotra will work with the coaching staff at home practices, focusing on specialized skill development, such as face-offs. He will also travel frequently, working on the same development skills with Canucks prospects. Malhotra, a multi-faceted player with strong hockey sense, is likely to develop himself; the higher ranks of coaching don’t seem like too far of a reach. Almost immediately after retiring, it was reported that he had reached out to Vancouver GM Jim Benning, and the team itself reported that Malhotra met with coach Willie Desjardins, who understood the situation, saying that  the “only reason you get into coaching is because you can’t play anymore”.

Malhotra has been highly valued by the Canucks organization before. In 2010, the team signed the then-31-year-old to the most expensive deal of his career, a three-year, $7.5MM pact on the first day of free agency. He had a strong first season, with 30 points in 72 games to go along with his trademark two-way game, but his numbers fell off in 2011-12, and injuries limited him to just nine games in 2012-13. After taking one-year deals with the Carolina Hurricanes and Montreal Canadiens in each of the following two seasons with little success, Malhotra instead stepped into a leadership role with the AHL’s Lake Erie Monsters (now Cleveland) last season, and helped to propel the team to a Calder Cup championship. Prior to his time in Vancouver, Malhotra spent the prime of his career with the Monster’s parent club, the Columbus Blue Jackets. In 344 games over five seasons with the team, he accounted for 145 points and was a face of the franchise. Malhotra’s career started with the New York Rangers, before he was traded to the Dallas Stars, but it really didn’t take off until he got to the Blue Jackets. During his time in Columbus, San Jose and Vancouver, Malhotra became known as one of the best defensive centers in the game, and he will now bring that two-way expertise to his role as a development coach.

Coaches| Columbus Blue Jackets| Vancouver Canucks

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Hurricanes Bring Back Michael Leighton

September 7, 2016 at 4:05 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

One of the few veteran goalies left on the free agent market has found a landing spot, as Michael Leighton has agreed to terms with the Carolina Hurricanes, the team announced. The 35-year-old returns to Raleigh for a second stint with the Canes, after spending parts of three seasons with the team from 2007 to 2010. His new deal is for just one year and is a two-way contract, paying him $700K at the NHL level.

As implied with the two-way stipulation, Leighton is likely to spend a significant portion of the 2016-17 season at the AHL level with Carolina’s affiliate, the Charlotte Checkers. Having re-signed Cam Ward this summer to go along with Eddie Lack, the rebuilding Hurricanes perhaps have no greater depth than at goalie. However, another experienced keeper at a cheap price tag has never hurt anyone before, and Leighton will provide welcome veteran guidance and knowledge to two top-end Carolina goalie prospects: returning Checkers goalie Daniel Altshuller and 2014 second-round pick and impending rookie Alex Nedeljkovic.

Should Leighton be called upon to play in the NHL this season, he will certainly bring a long career’s worth of experience with him. The all-time leader in AHL shutouts, as well as ninth in wins, the majority of the journeyman’s pro hockey days have been spent in the minors. A sixth-round pick of the Chicago Blackhawks in 1999, Leighton made his pro debut with the AHL’s Norfolk Admirals in 2001-2002, before getting a few games in with the NHL squad the next season. In 2003-04, Leighton actually led the Blackhawks in appearances in net, splitting time with the likes of Craig Anderson and Jocelyn Thibault. However, he was outplayed by the pair and found himself back in the AHL for part of the season as well. The Hawks traded him to the Buffalo Sabres prior to the 2005-06 season, though he never played for the team. He did not see NHL action again until 2006-07, in which he played one game for the Nashville Predators and five for the Philadelphia Flyers, after a mid-season waiver claim. He was put on waivers yet again that season, and ended up in Montreal, another team with which he never got into a game.

Carolina traded for Leighton at the 2007 NHL draft, hoping to add some depth behind their young, breakout goalie Ward. Unable to challenge veteran backups like John Grahame and Manny Legace, nevertheless steal starts from Ward, Leighton played in just 29 games with the Hurricanes in three seasons. He was claimed by the Flyers in 2009, joining the team for the second time, and found his first real taste of NHL success. If not for his early season struggles as backup in Carolina, Leighton would have posted a career-high .918 save percentage and 2.48 goals against average in 27 games with Philadelphia. However, the 2010 emergence of Sergei Bobrovsky forced Leighton back down to the AHL. He stayed with the Flyers organization, but only played in two NHL games in the next three years, before being traded to the Columbus Blue Jackets as part of the deal for Steve Mason, where ironically he was again blocked from NHL play time by Bobrovsky. After a year overseas in the KHL, Leighton returned to North America on a two-way deal with the Chicago Blackhawks, the team that drafted him, in 2014-15. He made the first (and only) start of his second stint with the team this past April, allowing just one goal after relieving Scott Darling in a rout by the Dallas Stars.

While Leighton’s NHL career isn’t exactly Hall of Fame-caliber, he has been unbelievably successful and consistent in the AHL and KHL. If called upon by the Hurricanes, he is a reliable veteran choice, and if not, he will be a value signing simply by what he will be able to impart on Carolina’s future net minders.

Carolina Hurricanes

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Five Questions: Colorado Avalanche

September 7, 2016 at 2:59 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

After missing the postseason party for the second consecutive year in 2015-16, it was expected in some circles that the Avalanche would be active this offseason in attempting to upgrade their roster. Instead, aside from a couple of minor free agent signings, all was relatively quiet in Colorado this summer until the abrupt resignation of VP of Hockey Operations/Head Coach Patrick Roy. The Avalanche would eventually settle on young, up-and-coming head coaching candidate Jared Bednar to replace Roy behind the bench.

Mike Chambers of The Denver Post was gracious enough to take time out of his schedule and answer some questions for Pro Hockey Rumors about the Avalanche’s offseason and their chances to compete for a playoff spot in 2016-17.

PHR: With the benefit of hindsight, perhaps it’s fair to wonder about discord existing in the Avalanche front office entering the summer. As someone who has covered the team on a daily basis, were you surprised by Patrick Roy’s resignation or did you have a sense that there may have been some issues behind the scenes which could lead to a change of this nature?

MC: The timing of Roy’s resignation put the organization in a bind. I don’t believe that was Roy’s intention but it’s obvious he was unhappy about his diminished role in player personnel. He made that clear in his news release and you could see he didn’t have a major voice at the draft in June, and the Avs didn’t make the splash Roy wanted in free agency. To answer your question, I was surprised at the timing of Roy’s resignation but, knowing his personality, he wasn’t going to continue if he didn’t steer the ship. He wanted more and Joe Sakic obviously grew into his GM role by leaning more on his assistant GMs Craig Billington and Chris MacFarland.

PHR: After leading Lake Erie to a Calder Cup championship, Jared Bednar was widely considered one of the top, up-and-coming head coaching prospects in the game. That being said, the timing of his hire probably doesn’t do him any favors; particularly as it pertains to his assistant coaching staff. What direction do you think he goes; does he retain Roy’s assistants in full or will he make some changes?

(Note: The questions were submitted prior to Bednar officially confirming he was retaining all of the team’s assistant coaches.)

MC: Bednar will retain Tim Army (power play), Dave Farrish (penalty kill) and Francois Allaire (goalies) — plus defensive specialist Nolan Pratt, whom the Avs hired from Bednar’s staff in July. Army and Farrish might have different roles and we certainly believe Bednar and Pratt will spearhead the new systems. It’s not a complete new staff but close, and that’s perhaps what this team needed.

PHR: Trade rumors involving some of the team’s core young players have persisted since early in the 2015-16 season. How close did the Avalanche actually get to making a blockbuster type of deal at any point?

MC: I believe that was a big part of the Sakic-Roy split. Roy told us he wanted to sign a marquee free-agent defensemen in July and I believe he was the executive wanting to move major parts such as Matt Duchene, Tyson Barrie and Gabe Landeskog. In the end, I believe Sakic and his other support staff chose to stick with the core. Not pulling the trigger on a blockbuster deal was probably not what Roy wanted.

PHR: Does the new coach and presumably a fresh approach on the ice mean management is content with the core and willing to ride out the season with that group intact or do you think a poor start could lead to drastic changes in player personnel prior to the 2017 trade deadline?

MC: Drastic changes. If this team doesn’t improve with a new bench boss I think Sakic makes major roster changes. Nobody is expecting a huge improvement on the blue line but if this team evens out its shots for/against the forward core has the ability to score in bunches.

PHR: The Central may well be the toughest division in the NHL. How would you handicap Colorado’s chances to qualify for a postseason berth and if they do get in, are they capable as currently constructed of making a long run?

MC: The Avs have made the playoffs just three times in the last 10 years, but twice a rookie coach has led them to the postseason: Joe Sacco in 2009-2010 and Roy in 2013-14. Bednar’s arrival gives this team a fresh start, but Colorado will be hard-pressed to keep up with Dallas, St. Louis, Nashville and Chicago. Anything can happen in the playoffs and I do believe this roster is capable of getting there.

Mike Chambers has been a writer for The Denver Post since 1994 and has covered both the NCAA’s Denver University Pioneers and the Colorado Avalanche for much of that time. For a full bio, click here. To stay up-to-date on all things Avalanche, follow Mike on Twitter by clicking here. Pro Hockey Rumors would like to extend our sincere gratitude to Mike for taking the time to answer our questions. 

Coaches| Colorado Avalanche| Free Agency| Joe Sakic| Players Matt Duchene

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