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Archives for February 2017

Trade Candidates: Evander Kane

February 13, 2017 at 8:02 pm CDT | by natebrown 2 Comments

With the trade deadline quickly approaching, we will be profiling several players in the weeks ahead that are likely to be dealt by March 1st.

Evander Kane is one of the game’s gifted talents, but has been a lightning rod for criticism both on and off the ice. From his arrest in Buffalo last July to what Buffalo News scribe Mike Harrington called “shenanigans” in Winnipeg, Kane could be a catch for a team, but come with a “buyer beware” for his past issues.

Contract

Kane is in year five of a six-year, $31.5MM deal. With an AAV of $5.25MM, he would carry a hefty hit for a contender looking to add him.

2016-17

Harrington describes Kane as “an absolute beast.” Though sidelined by injury this season, Kane has played well in the 45 games he’s appeared in. Kane has been complimented for his game by general manager Tim Murray according to a report from WGR 550.  Despite rumors that Vancouver was chasing him back in November, it turned out that he would stay put as Vancouver backed off. With each passing day, the Buffalo forward seems less and less likely to be dealt.

Season Stats

45 GP, 18 G, 10 A, 28 Pts, -9, 79 PIM, 46.9 CF% 18:48 ATOI

Suitors

The cap hit and strong play makes Kane’s value difficult to gauge in terms of where he would land. Buffalo could take some of the salary back, but unless it was a significant return, that seems unlikely. Based on CapFriendly, it would have to be a trade that would offset assets from the other team to balance it financially. The Rangers could be a potential target but with several players due raises next season, it would be too tough financially to massage a deal. Another option? The Blue Jackets, though again, unlikely. While they have the cap room and having another scorer like Kane on the roster would boost their depth in a competitive Metropolitan Division, the logistics of such a trade seem unlikely. The Wild were rumored months ago to be interested, but that chatter never amounted to anything.

Likelihood Of A Trade

Though Kane is playing well and would be an upgrade for any team, it just doesn’t make sense financially for a move and further, why would the Sabres give up on him now? They rode out the storm from last year’s arrest and seeing that this season is already a wash, why not give it one more try next year? The possibility for a trade would be far more likely next season, when the Sabres could wash their hands of the contract, absorb dollars in what would be the final year of his deal, and potentially snag some prospects or a high draft pick in exchange. Until then, it looks like Kane should stay put.

Buffalo Sabres| Columbus Blue Jackets| Minnesota Wild| New York Rangers| Players| Tampa Bay Lightning| Uncategorized Evander Kane

2 comments

Bob McKenzie On Talent Outside The NHL

February 13, 2017 at 6:59 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 5 Comments

In his latest piece, Bob McKenzie of TSN breaks down two players who may be under NHL contract in a few months. First, is Josh Healey who has made an impact on the NCAA ranks in a few different ways. His bone-crushing hits have been felt across the country, with the league even suspending him twice now. One executive that McKenzie quotes says that he “hits too hard for college hockey” and he really does. Even if he’ll never be a top-pairing guy in the NHL, his skating ability and physical presence has basically every team in the league considering signing him when his season at Ohio State finishes.

Healey headlines what is an underwhelming NCAA class, but he will create somewhat of a bidding war regardless. He has attended the summer development camps of the Calgary Flames, Nashville Predators and Edmonton Oilers in the past, and all three should be expected to be in the conversation for him this spring. Other teams—like the defense-strapped Toronto Maple Leafs—will surely have a conversation with him as well.

The other player McKenzie mentions is 25-year old Jakub Jerabek, a Czech defenseman who has been turning heads all year. Though he had several successful years in the Czech men’s league prior to this year, it’s the transition to the KHL and a higher level of competition that has NHL scouts considering him. With 32 points in 56 games and a strong offensive skillset, he’ll likely earn a contract if he chooses to come to North America. As McKenzie notes, at his age he’ll only be able to sign a one-year entry-level contract, like Nikita Zaitsev of the Maple Leafs this past summer.

Calgary Flames| Edmonton Oilers| KHL| NCAA| NHL| Nashville Predators| Players| Toronto Maple Leafs Bob McKenzie

5 comments

Snapshots: Tootoo, Barzal, Parenteau

February 13, 2017 at 6:30 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

It’s not easy to open up about alcoholism and the effect it has on your life and the people around you. Jordin Tootoo has done just that over the past few years, and again to Chris Kuc of the Chicago Tribune. In a stunningly open interview with Kuc that is reminiscent of the piece done by David Pollock of The Hockey News concerning Devin Setoguchi (who cleared waivers today and was sent to the AHL), Tootoo speaks about the past six years of sobriety and how he has changed from a bottle-swigging teenager to a bottle-feeding parent.

A role-model on the ice and off of it, Tootoo has turned from rampant alcoholism onset by the suicide of his brother to clean living and mentoring of younger players of his Inuit background. Those from his hometown of Rankin Inlet in Nunavut, Canada are starting to follow his lead and leave the bottle for a hockey stick instead. The piece is a wonderful look inside a player who has seen pretty much everything in his NHL career, and is now trying to help the Chicago Blackhawks get back to the Stanley Cup finals.

  • The New York Islanders might not have performed exactly as expected this season, but even if they don’t make the playoffs—which, after an excellent stretch is far from certain—they have some bright spots in their future. Kelsey Smith of NHL.com checks in on some of their prospects, including two that received some league honors this week. Mathew Barzal and Ryan Pulock earned player of the week honors in their respective leagues, and the two first-rounders seem like locks to eventually make it to the NHL on a full-time basis. After starring at the World Juniors, Barzal has 54 points (including 46 assists) in just 29 games for the Seattle Thunderbirds of the WHL, while Pulock has 22 points in 27 games from the back-end of the Bridgeport Sound Tigers of the AHL.
  • P.A. Parenteau has found a home in New Jersey after being selected off waivers by the Devils just before the season started. The Islanders had signed the free agent winger prior to the year, but decided he wasn’t cut out for John Tavares’ wing anymore and allowed the Devils to take him for nothing. He’s put up 13 goals and 25 points this year in 53 games and doesn’t want to go anywhere at the deadline. “I want to stay here, they’ve been great to me,” Parenteau told Andrew Gross of The Record, while admitting he understands that his name will surface on March 1st, if not before. Just like last year when Parenteau was in the midst of a 20-goal season for the Toronto Maple Leafs, he’s an expiring contract who can provide goal scoring for almost no money; plenty of teams will be after that at the deadline, if they believe that he is capable of playing a role in their playoff push.

AHL| Chicago Blackhawks| NHL| New Jersey Devils| New York Islanders| Players| RFA| Snapshots| Toronto Maple Leafs| WHL| Waivers Devin Setoguchi| John Tavares| Jordin Tootoo| Mathew Barzal| World Juniors

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Gustav Nyquist Waives Right To In-Person Hearing

February 13, 2017 at 5:30 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

According to the Department of Player Safety, Gustav Nyquist has waived his right to an in-person hearing and instead will conduct a phone interview with the NHL on Wednesday afternoon regarding his vicious high stick on the Minnesota Wild’s Jared Spurgeon.

The NHL had offered Nyquist the in-person hearing to plead his case over the incident that occurred on Sunday afternoon. With it, the NHL likely plans to give out at least a six-game suspension to the Detroit forward. The incident has prompted much discussion around hockey about whether prior offenses or injury sustained on the play should figure into the decision. Nyquist has no record of supplementary discipline, and Spurgeon was able to return to the game, but the incident itself is one of the most egregious in recent memory.

As Michael Russo of the Star Tribune reports, the league retains the right to hand out a six-game ban (or more), despite Nyquist not wishing to appear at the hearing. The Red Wings are set to take on the St. Louis Blues on Wednesday night, and most likely will be without Nyquist’s services.

It will be interesting to see how many games he does in fact receive. Duncan Keith was given a six game ban (which included one playoff game) for his high-stick on Charlie Coyle late last season which had many of the same characteristics—including being retaliatory in nature. The longest suspension given out this season for an on-ice incident has been to Radko Gudas for his late, blindside hit on Austin Czarnik. Gudas recieved six games but had a long history with the NHL Department of Player Safety for borderline offenses.

Minnesota Wild| NHL Gustav Nyquist| Jared Spurgeon

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Atlantic Notes: Maple Leafs, Bruins, Canadiens

February 13, 2017 at 5:08 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

For the Maple Leafs, the past calendar year has been one of wild swings. In the last 12 months (and a few days) the team dealt team captain Dion Phaneuf to Ottawa for cap relief, finished last in the NHL, drafted the future face of the franchise and vaulted themselves into playoff contention. In the last few weeks though the team has held on tight as the roller-coaster has tilted up on two wheels.

The team currently sits tied with Philadelphia for the final Eastern Conference playoff spot, but has had trouble keeping the puck out of their own net in recent weeks. After two back-to-back shutouts over Calgary and Detroit in late January, the team has allowed 30 goals in eight games and gone 2-4-2. Kristen Shilton of TSN reports on their mediocrity and where the team’s mindset is as they try to turn things around. One of the positive notes has been the play of William Nylander, who after an early season demotion to the fourth line has recharged his defensive tanks and become a leader on a shutdown line with Nazem Kadri and Leo Komarov.

The team has no time to settle in though, with a condensed schedule and eight games in the fifteen nights remaining in February. They’ll take on the New York Islanders tomorrow on home ice.

  • The Boston Bruins are 3-0 with their new head coach, getting a boost from the new voice of Bruce Cassidy behind the bench. They tore apart their rival Montreal Canadiens last night 4-0 and have put some space between them and the struggling Maple Leafs. Perhaps the coaching move was the right choice, but they’re in for a tough road trip when they come back off their mandated bye-week. The team will hit the road on the west coast with matchups against San Jose, Anaheim, Los Angeles and Dallas out of the break—a tough schedule for anyone.
  • Montreal could do with a little of that coaching magic, writes Michael Traikos of the National Post. While the Bruins surge, the Canadiens flounder at the top of the Atlantic Division, now only six points ahead of the Ottawa Senators despite having played five more games. For what at one point looked like a lock for the top see in the division, Montreal now faces a tough final stretch of games. Traikos opines that Michel Therrien should be fired like his Boston counterpart, despite still holding onto that top seed. For now he remains with the team an they’ll come out of their break against the Winnipeg Jets on Saturday.
  • Hopefully they will return with some help, says Ken Campbell of The Hockey News. In his latest column, Campbell examines the Canadiens need for some secondary scoring help behind the top duo of Max Pacioretty and Alexander Radulov. After Colorado Avalanche GM Joe Sakic and AGM Chris McFarland were seen in attendance at the Bruins-Habs matchup on Sunday, hope sprung in Montreal about a possible addition of one of the two young players on the Avalanche trade-block. Both Matt Duchene and Gabriel Landeskog would provide a nice punch to the second line for the Habs, though the asking price remains as high as ever.

AHL| Boston Bruins| Colorado Avalanche| Joe Sakic| Joe Sakic| Michel Therrien| Minnesota Wild| Montreal Canadiens| NHL| New York Islanders| Ottawa Senators| Players| Toronto Maple Leafs| Waivers| Winnipeg Jets Alexander Radulov| Devin Setoguchi| Dion Phaneuf| Gabriel Landeskog| Matt Duchene| Max Pacioretty| Nazem Kadri| William Nylander

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Senators Open Extension Talks With Tom Pyatt

February 13, 2017 at 2:51 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

Tom Pyatt’s tenure with the Senators may last beyond this season. General manager Pierre Dorion said today that the front office has explored an extension with the center (via TSN’s Bruce Garrioch on Twitter). Dorion also confirmed that the team had approached goalie Mike Condon regarding a potential extension, which was reported last week.

Pyatt returned to the NHL this season after having spent the previous two years playing for Geneve Servette in Switzerland. The soon-to-be 30-year-old ultimately inked a one-year, two-way contract with Ottawa this past offseason, reuniting him with former coach Guy Boucher. The deal was reportedly worth $800K in the NHL and $200K in the AHL.

The veteran has had a solid campaign during his first season back in the states. In 53 games, Pyatt has scored six goals and collected 11 assists, putting him on pace to break his career-high 19 points. Over the past two seasons in Switzerland, Pyatt compiled 22 goals and 40 assists in 92 games. The center has 298 career regular-season NHL games under his belt and another 26 games of playoff experience.

Condon, who was acquired by the Senators at the beginning of the season, is in the final season of a two-year contract that will see him being paid the league minimum. The goalie has had a solid season, going 16-9-5 with a .912 save percentage and four shutouts.

Dorion noted that if the front office can’t come to an agreement on extensions with Pyatt or Condon, the team still wouldn’t look to trade the impending free agents (via Garrioch on Twitter).

Ottawa Senators| Pierre Dorion Mike Condon| Tom Pyatt

1 comment

GM Stan Bowman Doesn’t Anticipate Major Blackhawks Trade

February 13, 2017 at 1:56 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Blackhawks are used to make deadline deals, but this year may be a bit different. Chicago GM Stan Bowman told TSN’s Pierre LeBrun that he isn’t anticipating any trades prior to the March 1st deadline.

Stan Bowman“No, I don’t think so,” Bowman said. “I’m not saying 100 per cent we’re not going to make a trade, but I’m not expecting to make a significant trade.”

As LeBrun points out, the Blackhawks do have a history of adding pieces for a run at the Cup. In 2015, the team added Antoine Vermette and Kimmo Timonen en route to a Stanley Cup championship, and they added Andrew Ladd, Tomas Fleischmann and Dale Weise prior to last year’s deadline.

However, a lack of action doesn’t mean the Blackhawks don’t view themselves as contenders. Bowman noted that the team only added center Michal Handzus prior to their 2013 Cup run, and we could see a similar approach this season. After all, Chicago is only five points behind first-place Minnesota in the Central division. Furthermore, the team’s cap situation makes it difficult to pull of a deal, and the front office isn’t inclined to give up any of their key players.

“There’s this myth that you have to make a big acquisition or else you’re not trying to win. I think that’s just a fallacy,” said Bowman. “If you don’t make one, it doesn’t mean you don’t want to win. It just means that it wasn’t the right situation for a variety of reasons.”

Of course, Bowman’s declaration doesn’t mean the front office will avoid all potential trades. LeBrun believes the team could still pursue some low-cost rentals, like Stars forward Patrick Eaves. Bowman confirmed this sentiment, noting that the team won’t shy away from any deals.

“Yeah, anything can happen,” Bowman said. “But we’ve had [internal] meetings and that’s not our focus at all as we get ready for the trade deadline.”

Chicago Blackhawks| Stan Bowman

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Wild Recall Alex Tuch, Waive Tyler Graovac

February 13, 2017 at 1:21 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

Despite having the most points in their conference, the Wild have decided to shake up their roster. The team has announced that they’ve recalled top prospect Alex Tuch and winger Zack Mitchell from the Iowa Wild of the AHL. To make room on the roster, the team has placed forward Tyler Graovac on waivers and placed defenseman Jonas Brodin on the injured reserve (retroactive to January 18th).

Alex TuchTuch, who was selected 18th overall in the 2014 draft, will be receiving his second career cup of coffee. The 20-year-old appeared in three games for the Wild earlier this season, averaging a bit under 12 minutes per game. The talented offensive weapon failed to record a goal or assist during his brief cameo, but he has compiled 12 goals and 13 assists in 36 games for Iowa this season. Dane Mizutani of TwinCities.com notes that Tuch was practicing alongside first-liners Eric Staal and Nino Niederreiter during Monday’s practice.

Mitchell, 24, made his NHL debut earlier this season with the Wild, compiling zero points in 10 games. The former undrafted player has spent the past two-plus seasons with Iowa, and he’s compiled eight goals and six assists so far this season.

The team may have placed Graovac on waivers, but Mizutani notes that the squad is assuming that he’ll go unclaimed and ultimately land with Iowa. On the flip side, Jason Brough of Pro Hockey Talk writes that Graovac’s affordable contract (including a $625K cap hit for next season) could be enticing to some teams. The transaction is also an indication that the organization would like Charlie Coyle to get more reps at center.

The 23-year-old has spent much of the season on the Wild’s fourth-line, collecting three goals and one assist in only six games. Prior to this season, the 2011 draft pick has played in five games for the Wild between two seasons.

Brodin has missed the past 12 games as he’s recovered from a fractured finger. The former first-rounder was logging a career-low 19:47 minutes per game, but his offensive production was approaching career-highs. After having never finished with more than 19 points in his previous four seasons, Brodin had already scored three goals and provided 13 assists in 43 games this season.

Minnesota Wild| Transactions Alex Tuch| Jonas Brodin| Tyler Graovac| Zack Mitchell

1 comment

Bruins And Avalanche Talking Trade

February 13, 2017 at 11:44 am CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

After Colorado Avalanche GM Joe Sakic was seen speaking with Boston Bruins GM Don Sweeney during the second period of the Bruins’ 4-0 shutout of the Montreal Canadiens last night, the internet has exploded with speculation of a potential deal in the works. The expectations are not unprecedented; it was reported earlier this season that the Bruins were interested in the captain of the last-place Avs, available winger Gabriel Landeskog. However, they balked at the asking price of a package including impressive rookie defenseman Brandon Carlo and those talks apparently had fallen apart.

They seem to be back on now though. The Boston Globe’s Fluto Shinzawa writes this morning that both executives are under immense pressure and have been in constant communication lately. Sakic’s squad is one of the worst in recent memory, while Sweeney’s team has missed the playoffs two years in a row, despite a deep and talented roster, and just fired the best coach in team history in an effort to get back to the postseason. While many Bruins fans would like to see the team refrain from making any desperate moves, as trading young players has not worked out for them over the last decade (see: Joe Thornton, Kris Versteeg, Blake Wheeler, Tyler Seguin, Johnny Boychuk, Dougie Hamilton, ect.), Boston undoubtedly needs some scoring help, both this year and in the future, as Sweeney said himself recently.

With lots of talent in the system, both up front and on the blue line, Boston has the pieces to make a major trade if they so choose. What they lack, is immediate help at left wing. Brad Marchand and Frank Vatrano have top left side spots locked up long-term, but Matt Beleskey has had a down year after career-highs in 2016-17 and Tim Schaller is not a top-nine option.  Rookie Peter Cehlarik, recently recalled from the AHL’s Providence Bruins where he has been the best player all year long, played great in front of Sakic last night, but is a pass-first player on a team in search of a sniper. Former college star Danton Heinen failed to make a difference in his Boston tryouts earlier this year and 2015 first-rounder Jake DeBrusk has failed to earn his first career call-up yet. The Bruins most promising left wing option in the system may be Marchand clone Jesse Gabrielle or Notre Dame star Anders Bjork.

Thus, the desire to acquire Landeskog, if that is Sweeney’s intention, makes sense. However, the cost could be too high. Shinzawa believes that the likes of Cehlarik, center Ryan Spooner, or defenseman Colin Miller may not be enough for the Avalanche and that they are stuck on the Colorado-native Carlo. The Bruins first instinct to reject even the thought of moving the young blue liner is correct though. At just 20 years old, the 6’5″ Carlo has played major minutes, both regular strength and special teams, all season long and has learned under one of the best, Zdeno Chara. He has size, strength, skating ability, and now experience at a very young age. Would the Bruins really trade a player with the makings of a top-pair defenseman for the next decade? Shinzawa does note that they have top prospect Charlie McAvoy, perhaps the only untouchable in the system, waiting in the wings and three NHL-caliber defenseman on the right side in Colin Miller, Kevan Miller, and Adam McQuaid. However, he acknowledges that the upcoming Expansion Draft may strip them of one of those three. An argument can also be made that Kevan Miller is  top-six defenseman in Boston by necessity, not talent. The Bruins are right to consider McAvoy as a non-starter, but Carlo should be in that group too, and originally was. The Bruins have been on the hunt for a top-pair replacement for Chara as well, as the big man has one year remaining on his contract before he surely retires, and moving Carlo would deny them of what could be the perfect in-house replica. Unless Sweeney had a change of heart, perhaps he is trying to entice Sakic with a combination of a potential replacement for Landeskog on the left side (Spooner, Cehlarik, Beleskey, Heinen), another top defensive prospect like World Junior standouts Jakub Zboril, Jeremy Lauzon, or Ryan Lindgren, and one of a plethora of strong center prospects – another major need for the Avs – like Jakob Forsbacka-Karlsson, Trent Frederic, Ryan Donato, or Ryan Fitzgerald. In fact, Sakic will reportedly take in the Beanpot Tournament final tonight in Boston, featuring Boston University and Harvard, and will get to see Bruins prospects Forsbacka-Karlsson, Donato, McAvoy, and Wiley Sherman in action. Could that ties into the deal?

There are a lot of question marks remaining about the targets of both teams. After all, the Carlo asking price may have Sweeney moving on to other Colorado targets like former Bruin Jarome Iginla, winger Blake Comeau, or rental defenseman Fedor Tyutin.  A deal is far from a sure thing, but the Boston Bruins and Colorado Avalanche are definitely talking trades with about two weeks remaining before the March 1st NHL Trade Deadline. Keep an eye on these two teams moving forward.

Boston Bruins| Colorado Avalanche| Don Sweeney| Joe Sakic Blake Comeau| Brandon Carlo| Colin Miller| Frank Vatrano| Gabriel Landeskog| Matt Beleskey| Peter Cehlarik| Trade Deadline Previews

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Is Michel Therrien On The Hotseat?

February 13, 2017 at 10:04 am CDT | by Mike Furlano 6 Comments

Fresh off a 4-0 loss to longtime rivals the Boston Bruins last night, questions swirl about whether Montreal Canadiens coach Michel Therrien is the right man for the job. And with the Canadiens entering their bye week, the focus will be entirely on management to address the current state of the Canadiens.

After starting the season 13-1-1, the Canadians have slowly let their Atlantic Division lead slip away. That slow decline hastened in February, where the Canadiens have not yet won a game in regulation. They are 1-5-1, with that sole win coming in overtime against the 29th overall Arizona Coyotes. They still sit atop the Atlantic, but the Ottawa Senators—currently 3rd in the Atlantic—actually have a better win percentage due to playing less games.

GM Marc Bergevin made bold moves this summer to realign his team for a playoff run. He traded away P.K. Subban for Shea Weber, and acquired Andrew Shaw and Alexander Radulov. With that level of investment, Bergevin will not be happy with a first-round exit. And if the playoffs started today, the Canadiens would face the New York Rangers (due to the crossover rule), a team with three more points than the Canadiens in the standings.

Further complicating things for coach Therrien is that the three most recent NHL teams to fire their coach are experiencing a drastic improvement. The New York Islanders are 8-2-2 after firing Jack Capuano. The St. Louis Blues are 5-1 after Ken Hitchcock was let go. Closest to home, though, is that the Boston Bruins are 3-0 since firing Claude Julien. Montreal management may feel the need to cut bait with enough time to install a new head coach that can lead the Canadiens to the promised land. Sometimes hastily firing your coach is a short-sighted move, but then again, the 2008-09 Pittsburgh Penguins won the Stanley Cup after firing Therrien right around this time that season.

Marc Bergevin| Michel Therrien| Montreal Canadiens

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