Teammate Reveals T.J. Oshie Was Out With A Concussion

When T.J. Oshie was held out of the last four games with an “upper-body injury”, many believed it to be an aggravation of the shoulder problems he had dealt with  earlier this season. Last night in a post-game interview for NHL Tonight (h/t Isabelle Khurshudyan of the Washington Post for pointing it out), teammate Justin Williams let it slip that Oshie had suffered a concussion the last time the Capitals had faced the Philadelphia Flyers. This led to some animosity between the two clubs, and Williams fighting with Nick Cousins early in the game.

Oshie is no stranger to head injuries, having suffered a concussion in 2014 that kept him out of the lineup for two weeks. He even once joked that the Columbus goal-cannon almost “gives you a concussion every time, especially if you’ve had concussions in the past.” He’s taken head shots before too, though the time Marco Scandella hit him in 2014 he returned to the game after a period.

The Capitals’ winger returned to action last night against those same Flyers, playing over 19 minutes in his first game back. Obviously over the concussion symptoms, it will be something to watch for the rest of the season as players are often more susceptible after suffering multiple brain injuries. It will also be interesting to see if he immediately returns to his high-level of performance from this season, which has brought about 43 points in 51 games.

This comes at a time when the league is embroiled in a lawsuit surrounding the protection and care of their current and former athletes in regards to head injuries. Rick Westhead of TSN has covered this story from the beginning, with his latest entry surrounding the battle between the league and Dr. Bennet Omalu, a neuropathologist that was integral in the NFL’s battle with CTE; Omalu’s story was also adapted into the Hollywood film Concussion, released in 2015.

Ondrej Pavelec Reportedly Done For Season

Ondrej Pavelec‘s trying season is now over.

Despite last week’s reports that he was expected to start sometime during the Jets’ current six-game home stand, things have changed quickly in Manitoba. Ken Wiebe of the Winnipeg Sun is reporting that Pavelec will have season-ending surgery on Monday. He has not played in nearly a month, last suiting up for a 4-2 loss against Minnesota on February 7. Pavelec is 4-4-0 in eight appearances this season.

The season got off to a tough start for Pavelec, who was waived and assigned to the AHL at the end of training camp. In 18 games with the Manitoba Moose, Pavelec had eight wins with a 0.917 SV% and 2.78 GAA. He was recalled in mid-January and played eight of the next nine games, but has not made any appearances since leaving that Wild-Jets game on February 7. The Jets placed him on injured reserve (IR) with a lower-body injury on Valentine’s Day. Pavelec was initially expected to miss about a week.

If this is it for Pavelec’s season, then it’s also the end of his long tenure with the Thrashers/ Jets organization. A pending-UFA, Pavelec was selected 41st overall by Atlanta in 2005, and has played parts of 10 seasons with the franchise. In 379 appearances, Pavelec has a record of 152-158-47 with a 0.907 SV% and 2.87 GAA. He also posted 17 shutouts. After making 57 starts in 2013-14, he’s slowly lost the starting role to a combination of Connor Hellebuyck and Michael Hutchinson.

Snapshots: Offsides, Chayka, Eriksson

As we reported yesterday, the GM Meetings have begun in Florida with many things on the agenda. One of them, the definition of an offside play, is one of the most splintering. While some believe that you shouldn’t mess with a rule that has existed for a long time, others realize that if video review is going to continue to take upwards of five minutes just to result in an inconclusive call, something needs to be done. Yesterday, we wrote that there may be a solution changing the definition of possession, but as Dan Rosen of NHL.com writes it may be a different change on the table.

The league is considering going to an NFL-like blue line “plane” which the player just has to have a part of his body in to be considered onside. Currently, because the rule limits a player to having a skate blade on it, it’s often impossible for the referees to determine during the review. If it was just a part of his body—like the ball crossing the goal-line—it would be much easier to tell, and hopefully reduce the review times.

  • John Chayka has been doing things a bit differently than his peers, but doesn’t want to be called a trailblazer. As Rosen writes in another fantastic piece for NHL.com, the league’s youngest GM thinks leaning towards his analytical approach is just the next step in the pursuit of reliable information. He knew, Rosen writes, that young forward Christian Dvorak would turn it around at some point because of the amount of time he had the puck on his stick even when he was struggling. After scoring just 13 points in the first half, Dvorak has 11 in his past 16 games. At just 27-years old, Chayka definitely has a concrete plan when rebuilding the Coyotes, and believes the team can compete in just two years.
  • Loui Eriksson left last night’s Vancouver Canuck game with a lower-body injury, but head coach Willie Desjardins liked the way his players stepped up. If Eriksson is held out for a few games, it will be another great chance for the young Nikolay Goldobin to move up in the lineup and make an impact right away. While Mikael Granlund has shown all season he’s deserved of his role on the top line, Goldobin could potentially stake a claim to the top-six as early as next season.
  • The Minnesota Wild have assigned Tyler Graovac to the AHL today as they get completely healthy. The young forward has played 49 games for the club this season, registering eight points. Though just 23-years old, Graovac has already far surpassed his expectations as a seventh-round pick. While he’s likely never going to be a key contributor to Minnesota’s forward group, he could play a role as they look for a deep playoff run this season.

Tampa Bay Lightning Recall Yanni Gourde

In preparation for a three-game home-stand starting tonight against the New York Rangers, the Tampa Bay Lightning have recalled forward Yanni Gourde from Syracuse of the AHL. It would seem as though this is not an emergency recall due to any injury, and thus will take one of Tampa Bay’s four remaining call ups.

Gourde has spent time with the Lightning earlier this season, getting into two games at the end of 2016. Playing less than 10 minutes in each contest, the 25-year old forward was held pointless. He’s been an excellent scoring threat in the AHL since working his way through the East Coast league and finding a relatively permanent home in the Lightning organization. With 46 points in 55 games, he’s close to the top of the Crunch roster in scoring and has been a big part of their North Division-leading 68 points.

With the Lightning suddenly finding themselves back in the playoff hunt, they needed some insurance in case anyone were to injure themselves in warmup or couldn’t participate for some reason. The team is just three points out of a playoff spot after winning five of their past seven games. The Rangers will be a tough test, but with New York reeling after a beat-down against Montreal, perhaps the Lightning can take advantage of their apparent need to insert toughness into the lineup. If they can keep pace, it’s only a matter of time until they get captain Steven Stamkos back, as he’s expected to re-join practice at some point this week.

Senators Considering Logo Change

In an article today by the Ottawa Citizen’s Ken Warren, he reports that the Ottawa Senators may soon be donning a new jersey. Warren reveals that new Senators President and CEO, Tom Anselmi, is in favor of making the Sens’ current alternate logo, the stylized “O”, their primary logo. Anselmi feels that fans have embraced the “O” logo, and he personally believes that the alternate design is a better-looking jersey. With the Senators enjoying their 25th anniversary in 2017, Anselmi stated that the time is now for a re-branding.

This would be the second logo change for Ottawa in less than a decade. The team moved from their old two-dimensional profile Senator logo to their current three-dimensional Senator logo in 2008, and the new logo was met with high regard from fans as opposed the very old-fashioned logo they previously used. However, the change that Anselmi is describing is a much larger transition, going from a logo with the team’s actual mascot to a simple letter. Several NHL teams have a single letter as their primary logo: the Boston Bruins, Calgary Flames, Colorado Avalanche, Dallas Stars, Montreal Canadiens, and now Vegas Golden Knights. However, the Flames, Avalanche, Stars, and Knights use a stylized design that relates to the team mascot and the Bruins and Habs have two of the most iconic logos in all of sports. The Ottawa “O” is just that, the letter “O”. Would fans embrace that simplistic logo as the primary brand of their franchise?

Many might be questioning why the Senators need to choose one logo or the other when the “O” is already the alternate jersey logo. However, the announcement earlier this year that there will be no alternate jerseys next year complicates the situation. With Adidas taking over the production of NHL jerseys in 2017-18, teams have agreed to drop their third jerseys to make the switch easier. As part of the change, several teams have announced jersey makeovers, and Ottawa could be next. If Anselmi wants the “O” logo to celebrate the Senators anniversary in the first half of next season, his only choice is to make a total switch in his primary logo.

Expansion Draft Issues: Post-Trade Deadline

Last month, we looked at several teams facing some tough situations in regards to the upcoming NHL Expansion Draft and offered potential solutions to how they could address their needs for forwards, defensemen and goalies at the NHL Trade Deadline. With March 1st over and done with, many of those squads have solved their problems with signings or acquisitions.

Calgary Flames

Problem: Defense

Status: Solved

The Flames solved their problem of otherwise having to expose Mark Giordano, T.J. Brodieor Dougie Hamilton with the ingenious signing of Matt Bartkowskithe only defenseman on the planet who was both free to acquire and automatically eligible for exposure in the draft. It’s a good thing they signed him too, since they ended up trading away their best fall-back option, young defenseman Jyrki Jokipakka.

Carolina Hurricanes

Problem: Defense

Status: Unsolved

It was a pretty quiet deadline in Raleigh, as the ‘Canes shipped out Ron Hainsey and Viktor Stalberg and then called it a day. What they didn’t do was acquire another body on the blue line to help solve their lack of a defenseman to expose. Carolina is still facing the problem of All-Star Justin Faulk being the only defenseman on the roster currently meeting the criteria for mandated exposure, due to the majority of their defensemen being too young to be eligible altogether. There is no way that Faulk is there for the taking by Vegas, but GM Ron Francis is left with only two choices: extend impending RFA Klas Dahlbeck or extend impending UFA Matt Tennyson and make sure he plays in seven more games this season, as he’s currently short of the 40-game mark.

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Upcoming Agenda At The Florida GM Meetings

Tomorrow marks the start of the annual GM meetings in the NHL, where for three days leaders of the league’s teams will get together and discuss how to make the game better. As Sportnet’s John Shannon reports, there are several things being discussed at the meetings and we’ll go through some of the more important points.

Coach’s Challenge

The lengthy offside challenges this season have been a cause of much debate, as some have taken as long as 10 minutes to determine the call. Though the theory of the rule is good—that is, getting the correct call in all situations—the implementation leaves something to be desired. When the play is extremely close as it has been at several times this season, many fans, players and coaches would just as well have it ruled on the ice instead of watching the referee’s examine a small screen for several minutes, effectively interrupting any flow of the game that has been established.

As Shannon points out, the issue being discussed though isn’t with the length of the review. Instead, it likely has to do with when a coach can initiate a challenge, and how many he has during the game. Currently, a coach can only challenge offside plays resulting in a goal, and interference with the goaltender that results in a goal.

Defining Offside

Going hand-in-hand with the challenge discussion is the definition of the play itself. Since so many of the calls have been inconclusive because of the reading that it’s not offside until it touches his stick inside the blueline, the league is likely considering a change that would include some sort of “possession” reading. If the player carries it across, but isn’t actually in contact with the puck it could still be ruled offside. Many traditionalists may hate this interpretation should it come to pass, but it likely would help the referees make a determination on the replays more easily.

Bye Weeks

This has been another hot-button topic this year, as teams have done extremely poorly coming out of their mandated rest period. Because of the perception that a team coming off the rest is at a disadvantage to one in the swing of playing every other day, the league has been considering moving to a two-week system where half of the league breaks at a time. Coming out of the break, everyone would be playing another squad that had the same bye-week for their first game back. The problem is, obviously, what to do with 31 teams in this scenario.

Shootout

An interesting inclusion at the end of Shannon’s list, is that of the shootout. While some (many) fans want it abolished all together, Shannon notes that they may be considering a change that would allow a team to choose anyone after the third shooter. It’s this way in international events, and have resulted in some extremely memorable moments like T.J. Oshie at the Olympics, or the battle between Jonathan Toews and Peter Mueller at the World Juniors.

Should the league move to this method, it does (slightly) strengthen the idea of having a shootout specialist on your bench. While there is obviously no room for someone who can only perform in the shootout, teams already carry forwards who see less than 10 minutes of ice time a game. Should a young player show excellent skills in the shootout, it’s not unfathomable that a team could bring him up a little sooner as a sort of secret weapon.

Snapshots: DeBrincat, Hansen, Eberle

The Chicago Blackhawks have another one coming. For a team that has drafted near the end of the first round for the past decade, they have re-filled their prospect cupboards quite effectively. Even without a first round pick last season, the Blackhawks look like they’ve struck gold with their top selection. Alex DeBrincat scored twice again today for the Erie Otters and broke 60 goals for the first time in his junior career.

DeBrincat is currently on a 17-game goal streak, and is a lock to lead the OHL in scoring this season. This from a player who was cut from the Team USA World Junior squad late last year, and had to wait until 39th overall to hear his name last summer. While it’s not certain that he’ll be able to duplicate his scoring touch at higher levels, his skill, creativity and shot have dominated the OHL since the moment he stepped on the ice. In three seasons, DeBrincat has scored 324 points in 185 games including 119 (60G, 59A) this season.

  • While Nikolay Goldobin is scoring breakaway goals in Vancouver, the San Jose Sharks are still waiting for their big deadline acquisition to join them on the ice. Jannik Hansen has been held up by work visa issues since the deadline, and still won’t join the team in Minnesota tonight according to Kent Youngblood of the Mercury News. He’s also not expected to play tomorrow night against the Winnipeg Jets, but should be ready to go on Thursday when the Sharks return home.
  • Tim Campbell of NHL.com discusses the Edmonton Oilers and their new line of Jordan Eberle, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Milan Lucic in his latest column. The trio has found instant success, and Eberle is feeling like it has actually been an excellent season for him, despite the lack of goal scoring. As Campbell points out, the 26-year old winger has an extremely low shooting percentage this year at just 8.8% but still has 14 goals and 39 points this season. If it came up to a more regular percentage of 12.5%—which is still much lower than his career mark—he’d have his fourth straight 20-goal season already. The Oilers can’t wait to see what he has in store for the playoffs, as Eberle was once known as one of the most “clutch” performers in hockey from his time at the World Juniors. In 56 career international contests—which includes five appearances in the World Championships—Eberle has recorded 70 points.

Robbie Russo Recalled By Detroit Red Wings

Ansar Khan of MLive has some Detroit Red Wings news for us today; the team has recalled Robbie Russo from Grand Rapids after Ryan Sproul went down last night against the Edmonton Oilers. Sproul was already ruled out for Tuesday’s game in Toronto before being re-evaluated today.

Russo would be making his NHL debut should he figure into the lineup against the Maple Leafs, after two very good AHL campaigns. The former Notre Dame standout has 70 points in 127 career AHL games and still likely has more offensive ability in his game. Selected in the fourth round of the 2011 draft, he hasn’t been the most reliable player in his own end but drives possession with quick passes.

For Detroit, taking a look at young Griffins players might be all that’s left for this season. Though they currently sit second last in the Eastern conference, they’ve played two more games than the last place Carolina Hurricanes but only lead them by one point. They seem destined for a top-5 pick in the upcoming draft, unless something drastic happens at the lottery. After selling assets off at the trade deadline, the Red Wings will try to rebuild quickly in order to compete for the playoffs as soon as possible. While Russo likely isn’t a part of that competitive NHL future, he’s at least worth a look down the stretch of a lost season.

San Jose Sharks Recall Joakim Ryan From AHL

The San Jose Sharks reached into their defensive depth and recalled Joakim Ryan from the AHL early Sunday afternoon. The team will play the next two games on the road and may need some insurance while heading to Minnesota and Winnipeg.

Ryan is in the middle of his second straight outstanding season in the minors since coming out of Cornell in 2015. The small defender has 63 points in 121 games in his AHL career, moving the puck quickly and effectively all season long. Selected in the seventh round of the 2012 entry draft, the 23-year old look like he’ll at least take on a part-time role in the NHL one day.

The Sharks sit first in the Pacific Division but have the Edmonton Oilers nipping at their heels. Their matchup tonight in Minnesota is one to watch, as it very likely could be the Western Conference final this season. If Ryan gets into the lineup (which is still doubtful), he’ll have a tough time transitioning from AHL wingers to one of the deepest forward groups in the NHL.