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Archives for June 2017

Nashville Predators Sign Joonas Lyytinen To ELC

June 19, 2017 at 2:00 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Nashville Predators care not for your transaction freeze. The team has announced they’ve signed Joonas Lyytinen to a two-year entry level contract. Because the deal starts next season, they can announce it today without filing it with the league. No financial details were released.

Lyytinen was the Predators’ fifth-round selection in 2014 and has played the last several years in the Finnish Liiga. The 22-year old defenseman put up 24 points in 54 games this season, logging big minutes for KalPa Kuopio throughout the season and into the playoffs. As noted in the press release, Lyytinen was a teammate of Predators’ goaltender Juuse Saros at the 2015 World Juniors, though that squad did not receive a medal in the tournament.

The extremely undersized defenseman has been listed as light as 150-lbs at times, though more current measurements have him somewhere around 160. Even though the NHL has a place for smaller, mobile defensemen, playing at that weight would be a concern for anyone. If Lyytinen can ever make it to the NHL, he’ll have to prove that his skating ability and puck retrieval skills are strong enough to make up for what he’ll always lack in strength. It’s worked for him so far in Finland, but will be interesting to see how it plays out in North America.

Nashville Predators| Transactions

0 comments

Last Day For Side-Dealing, Vegas Will Pick Roster Tomorrow

June 19, 2017 at 12:23 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Vegas Golden Knights GM George McPhee met with media today and spoke about how the process is going now that the NHL movement freeze is on and he’s under the gun to select his expansion team. McPhee announced that this is the last day he’ll be working on side deals with teams, and said he would pick the final expansion roster tomorrow. There have already been reports of as many as seven deals completed with Vegas, though as McPhee said today “nothing is final until it’s final.”

Though deals to protect certain players off their own roster have likely already been hashed out, with the release of the protection lists teams are likely calling to see if they can pull off a post-draft trade with Vegas in order to get a certain player from around the league. It will be interesting to see how many players Vegas flips after the draft in order to get more selections in the upcoming entry draft, or young assets they can use to build. A player like James Neal, who is of little use to the Golden Knights on a one-year deal would likely bring back at least a first-round pick now or at next year’s trade deadline.

All eyes are on McPhee and his staff as they try and build the best organization possible in the next few days. After already seeing some excellent players go unprotected, it is starting to look like a playoff push may be in the cards for Vegas within the first few years of their existence. With Marc-Andre Fleury likely the pick from Pittsburgh, they’ll have a chance to have at least some Stanley Cup experience in the room right away. The roster will be announced during the NHL Awards on Wednesday, June 21st.

Expansion| George McPhee| Vegas Golden Knights

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Snapshots: Top-93, Healy, Vegas Deals

June 19, 2017 at 11:52 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

TSN has released their final ranking for the 2017 Entry Draft, and Nico Hischier has finally overtaken Nolan Patrick at the very top. Bob McKenzie who compiles the list based on a survey of 10 working scouts, writes that Patrick now only received four votes for the top spot, with Cale Makar even getting a single #1 vote.

That’s a much different ranking than earlier in the season when Patrick was the unanimous selection, and shows the volatility this year’s draft board. Even at #1 there is no consensus, and there are dozens of players who could go in the top-10. With such different boards around the league, there may be quite a bit of movement in the first round as teams target who they want.

  • Former NHL goaltender Glenn Healy has been named Executive Director of the NHL Alumni Association. Healy has worked with the NHLPA in the past and had been working as the interim Director for the NHLAA. He’ll lose the interim tag now and got a ringing endorsement from Wayne Gretzky himself, saying that Healy “is the right guy to lead us into the future.”
  • Scott Cullen of TSN believes there is at least seven side deals completed with Vegas in order to protect extra players or have a particular player selected. That would explain some of the interesting choices in yesterday’s protection list reveal, such as Minnesota and Anaheim leaving top flight defenders available. The Islanders, Penguins, Blackhawks, and Blue Jackets are also expected to have deals already in place, though nothing will be official until the expansion selections come out on Wednesday night.

Expansion| NHLPA| Snapshots Bob McKenzie| Cale Makar| Nico Hischier| Nolan Patrick

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Latest On Alexander Radulov’s Free Agency

June 19, 2017 at 10:18 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

While the hockey world focuses on the expansion draft and upcoming entry draft, many fans in Montreal are turning their attention to next season and the possibility of an Alexander Radulov return to the Canadiens. The pending unrestricted free agent has been expected to re-sign with the Habs for some time, though things have gone silent in recent weeks as the team focused on other things. Today when speaking to TSN 690, Bob McKenzie explained that the two sides could still be pretty far away from each other in regards to contract length.

I’m sure that initially [Radulov] was looking for a home run; six, seven, eight years. Take your pick from one of those numbers, and I’m sure the Montreal Canadiens are saying ’not a chance in the world we’re going any longer–we’d like two but we know that’s not possible.’

Because Vegas is in a unique position, they’ve already got [Vadim] Shipachyov the 30-year old Russian center that they signed. They don’t have cap issues, they don’t have to worry as much about the dollars and cents…they’re in a unique position to maybe give Radulov more years and more money than the Montreal Canadiens could.

Signing Radulov would mean that Vegas forfeits their selection from the Montreal Canadiens, but after dealing away Nathan Beaulieu and protecting most of their core players, it could be an easy choice for the Golden Knights. McKenzie also points out that Montreal signing Radulov even for three years would hinge quite a bit on a potential Carey Price extension. Price hits the open market next summer, and could be looking at the biggest contract of all-time among goaltenders. After adding Jonathan Drouin on a six-year deal, money could get very tight for Montreal in a hurry.

It also will hinge on what happens with Alex Galchenyuk, who is up for a new contract but may have played his final game in Montreal. There has been much speculation about a possible trade for the young forward, especially after Drouin was acquired. Paying Galchenyuk a similar $5-6MM long-term deal would essentially eat up a third of the cap space Montreal has remaining, and they still need to make at least one addition to their defense corps. Radulov may fit for next season in that scenario, but going forward would be even tighter.

Expansion| Free Agency| Montreal Canadiens| Vegas Golden Knights Alexander Radulov| Bob McKenzie| Carey Price| Nathan Beaulieu

1 comment

Kris Russell, Karl Alzner Among First Players Linked To Vegas Free Agent Window

June 19, 2017 at 8:58 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

After yesterday’s release of the protection lists for each team, a 72-hour window opened for Vegas to make their expansion selections. With it, another window opened in which the team can speak with pending unrestricted free agents and unprotected restricted free agents. If signed before Wednesday’s deadline, Vegas would forfeit the selection from that player’s team.

As expected, the Golden Knights will be well connected to all the free agents and it has started with the mention of a pair of defenders. Pierre LeBrun of TSN reports that the Vegas front office has reached out to the Kris Russell camp, and Darren Dreger of TSN speculates that Karl Alzner will be another target. Though LeBrun is quick to point out that nothing is close with Russell, he is definitely one of the more interesting names given how clearly interested Edmonton has been in re-signing him.

The Oilers didn’t give the Golden Knights many interesting options in the draft, with most expecting a pick of Griffin Reinhart or Jujhar Khaira. Signing Russell, who in different circles has been considered both extremely effective and unbelievably overrated would give them a solid base of experience and leadership on what should be a fairly young team. The Oilers, hoping to re-sign Russell have other big names to get under contract this summer including Leon Draisaitl who will be a restricted free agent this summer.

As for Alzner, the defensive specialist from Washington has been the target of some of the same criticism as a weak possession player whose impact is more in terms of minutes played than effectiveness. Some see him as a rock that you can put on the ice for 20 minutes a night and not worry about, while others think his limited offensive upside has him projected as more of bottom-pairing player going forward. The Capitals, unable to re-sign him even if they wanted to due to cap restraints, would welcome his signing with the Golden Knights in order to protect some of their other young players.

Nate Schmidt, who showed off his elite skating ability and potential as a top-4 puck mover in the playoffs was left unprotected, while top-backup Philipp Grubauer has long been considered a potential Golden Knights’ pick. That’s not to even mention Kevin Shattenkirk, T.J. Oshie and Justin Williams, all of whom are also free agents and could be targeted by Vegas. While Alzner obviously has some ties to GM George McPhee from his days in Washington, it would seem backwards for the team to give up the chance at selecting one of the Capitals’ players just to bring him aboard.

Expansion| Vegas Golden Knights Karl Alzner| Kris Russell

2 comments

Matej Stransky Signs In KHL

June 19, 2017 at 8:41 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

After being rumored to be close to a deal with Severstal Cherepovets recently, the team announced that they had acquired Matej Stransky from CSKA Moscow and signed him to a two-year contract. The Dallas Stars prospect was a restricted free agent this summer.

Stransky has played four seasons with the Texas Stars of the AHL, developing into a powerful scoring threat for the minor league squad. With 27 goals this season, the 23-year old easily paced the Stars and he looked like he could have a chance in the NHL before long. His play has matured since being selected in the sixth round of the 2011 draft, coming out of the WHL where he had dominated for the Saskatoon Blades.

The Czech-born forward is actually a pretty substantial loss for Texas, who already struggled this season and missed the playoffs for only the second time in their history. Dallas too will now have to watch his development from abroad and hope that in two seasons they can coax him back to North America. The team will likely qualify him to retain his rights, and try to bring him back as a 25-year old.

Dallas Stars| KHL

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Vegas Storming 1st Round Of Draft

June 18, 2017 at 8:57 pm CDT | by Seth Lawrence 9 Comments

The Vegas Golden Knights are in an odd position, where they control a strong negotiating position over teams who don’t want to lose valuable roster players. Vegas is under no obligation to comply with any requests, and can essentially extort other teams for maximum return. If Anaheim wants to protect Josh Manson, for example, Vegas will play hardball. They will do so for two reasons: first, the better the player, the more important he will be to a future Knights team, and two, they have no incentive not to take that player for anything less than an optimal return. GM George McPhee is already looking to have a better competitive jump-start than any previous NHL expansion team by a significant margin. And it doesn’t look as though he will opt out of choosing the best available players for anything short of a ransom. Some teams might be desperate enough to do so.

Vegas is already assumed to have three picks, and could easily snag more. They have their own pick at #6, and are believed to have side-deals with Columbus and the New York Islanders in order to acquire the #24 and #15 picks, respectively. Anaheim is definitely in discussions to keep Manson and possibly even Sami Vatanen, who they desperately tried to trade for value before Saturday’s roster freeze. It’s quite conceivable that picks are in play there, but Anaheim no longer has its 2017 first after trading it to Dallas for Patrick Eaves.

Other teams who will be desperate to keep players include Nashville, who would lose James Neal, Chicago, who have exposed Trevor van Riemsdyk, and San Jose, who could lose one of Paul Martin or David Schlemko. If those teams, or any other organization, really want to hang onto particular players, there’s a very real possibility they will need to surrender a top pick.

For historical reference, only one team has ever drafted with 5 first-round picks – the 1974 Montreal Canadiens. The last team who had 4 first-round picks was the 1999 New York Islanders, when they selected Tim Connolly at #5. If Vegas could amass yet another first round pick, or even two, it would put them in an incredibly enviable position headed into the Entry Draft. The importance of flash and showmanship is rarely overlooked in the City of Lights, and the team looks to continue that philosophy by embracing the saga that the expansion draft has become.

CHL| Expansion| George McPhee| NHL| New York Islanders| Players| Vegas Golden Knights David Schlemko| James Neal| Josh Manson| Patrick Eaves| Sami Vatanen

9 comments

Mrazek Exposed Due To “Attitude”

June 18, 2017 at 8:00 pm CDT | by Seth Lawrence 4 Comments

In one of the more surprising exposures of an action-packed Sunday, Petr Mrazek was left un-shielded by the Red Wings in favor of his senior backup Jimmy Howard. The reason why is even more surprising.

Howard ($5.292 MM) earns more than Mrazek (4.0 MM), and has an extra year on his contract. More shocking is the difference in age – Howard is 33 whereas Mrazek is only 25, still young for a goaltender in development. Howard has started far fewer games the last two seasons, only 24 in 2016-17. He did perform statistically well and rebounded with a .927 save percentage, whilst Mrazek posted a .908. Still, when Mrazek was on the list of those exposed, many assumed Detroit GM Ken Holland had negotiated a side-deal with Vegas to protect the tender. Not the case, apparently.

According to Holland, “I’m not spending any future assets to hang onto players”, which is as cut-and-dry a response as we’ve seen. Ansar Khan of Michigan Live states that the Wings passed on Mrazek in their expansion list due to a combination of “performance and attitude”. He even went so far as to claim that Mrazek is believed by some in the organization to be “too cocky for his own good”. The article even mentions Mrazek’s alleged unhappiness with the inability of Holland to trade Howard after the 2015-16 season.

Mrazek certainly had a better season in 2015-16, and contract negotiations did drag on for quite some time before the parties settled on a two-year deal. Mrazek was one of the most surprising goalies in that year, helping sneak the team in for their 25th consecutive playoff berth behind a mediocre defense. At the age of 23, it looked certain that the era of Howard in Hockeytown was nearing a close. After his pitfalls through 50 starts last season, management obviously decided that risking Mrazek would not hurt the team in a sizable way. If any trades were attempted to deal Mrazek, they were apparently quite unsuccessful.

Regardless of how toxic the relationship between the parties is, these sentiments might scare Vegas off of placing a claim. They certainly have a plethora of other options available around the league to tend net or flip for picks. Detroit certainly won’t be hurting for goaltending now that Jared Coreau has led the Grand Rapids Griffins to an AHL championship and is ready for prime-time. But if off-ice issues truly are a concern, and Vegas doesn’t select Mrazek, Detroit could have a very tense situation on their hands next season.

AHL| Detroit Red Wings| Expansion| Players Jared Coreau| Jimmy Howard| Petr Mrazek

4 comments

Islanders’ Perplexing Side-Deal With Vegas

June 18, 2017 at 7:03 pm CDT | by Seth Lawrence 2 Comments

As I briefly mentioned in a previous article, the New York Islanders decided to travel a very perplexing road with their protection list. They shielded only 3 forwards, and protected 5 defensemen, allowing a whole host of forwards to be claimed.  These include Brock Nelson, Ryan Strome, Casey Cizikas, Nikolai Kulemin, and Josh Bailey at the upper end of the spectrum. Defenseman Calvin de Haan, who has reportedly has had difficulty coming to a deal with management on a new contract, is also left at Vegas’ disposal

What complicates matters is that Arthur Staple of Newsday has been insinuating that the Islanders have a deal in place to protect Nelson, Strome, and de Haan, while others, such as Darren Dreger, believes the deal only applies to forwards.  NHL Numbers stated today that the protection agreement would protect only Bailey and Cizikas, which is easily the most disastrous deal of the group. From a pure value standpoint, Nelson, de Haan and Strome have far more value than either player. Staple believed yesterday evening that the Islanders were going to trade their 15th overall selection in order to push Vegas in a favorable direction. Even still, it doesn’t explain the particulars of the players protected.

John Tavares is an obvious keeper, and Andrew Ladd helped the offense in a big way after a rocky start. Anders Lee is coming off a phenomenal 34 goal season in only his 3rd full outing. The defense revolves around Nick Leddy and Travis Hamonic, and despite his steps backward Johnny Boychuk is a big minute eater for the team. You could have made a case for Ryan Pulock over Boychuk, and made that quite convincingly, but it seemed inevitable that team would lose a defender no matter what. Boychuk did have an NMC, which complicated that matter. Considering that the team was 17th in goals against this past season, that wasn’t exactly a worst-case scenario.

Instead of taking the orthodox 4-4 route and protecting Nelson or Strome as well as Pulock or de Haan, or protecting all but one forward in a 7-3 scheme, the Islanders chose instead to protect a relative no-name in Adam Pelech. Pelech had a solid season, to be sure, but he is a bottom-pairing defenseman and doesn’t project as a difference maker. By opting to leave these players exposed, they take a large aspect of the decision making out of their own hands. GM Garth Snow sacrificed a first round pick and a certain degree of autonomy to protect two forwards, when they could instead have done that on their own. If the end goal was to entice Vegas into selecting Thomas Hickey, they could have done so without the bizarre protection structure. This isn’t even delving into the insanity of surrendering a first-round selection to protect one mid-level player over another.

All in all, the Islanders and GM Garth Snow have stolen the show today for most bewildering decision. Unless the deal with Vegas is far more encompassing than it appears at the moment, they are looking to lose a solid contributor and a 1st-round pick when both could have been avoided.

 

The original article incorrectly linked Dylan Strome.

Garth Snow| Minnesota Wild| NHL| New York Islanders| Players Andrew Ladd| Calvin de Haan| Casey Cizikas| Dylan Strome| John Tavares| Johnny Boychuk| Nick Leddy| Ryan Pulock| Travis Hamonic

2 comments

Tortorella, Blue Jackets Discuss Extension

June 18, 2017 at 6:04 pm CDT | by Seth Lawrence 4 Comments

Aaron Portzline of the Columbus Dispatch reports that Jackets’ head coach John Tortorella has spoken with Columbus management about an extension. The Blue Jackets’ 108 point season in 2016-17 shocked nearly everyone, setting the franchise record for most points in a season. They also had the second longest winning streak in NHL history, at 14-0-0, before settling back into a more pedestrian clip. They were felled by the eventual champions from Pittsburgh in an incredibly disadvantageous divisional matchup in the first round. Still, Tortorella turned the team around to see 16 more wins overall while guiding the growth of many standouts, such as rookie Zach Werenski and sudden goal-scoring force Cam Atkinson.

Tortorella coached the 2003-04 Tampa Bay Lightning to a Game 7 victory over the Calgary Flames in the Stanley Cup Final to earn his only championship behind the bench. He coached for 4 seasons with the New York Rangers and 1 disappointing season in Vancouver before landing in Columbus. Tortorella is league-renowned for his abrasive demeanor in press conferences and preaching a hard-nosed style of play. There is a solid chance Tortorella takes home the Jack Adams at the NHL Awards – he is nominated alongside Toronto’s Mike Babcock and Edmonton’s Todd McLellan.

If Tortorella were extended, it is unclear for how many years the contract would be. His current deal expires at the end of the 2017-18 season, and he is still being compensated by the Canucks after his termination there. Portzline suggests that a contract could be in excess of $2 MM.

Calgary Flames| Columbus Blue Jackets| Jarmo Kekalainen| John Tortorella| NHL| New York Rangers| Tampa Bay Lightning| Vancouver Canucks Cam Atkinson| NHL Awards| Zach Werenski

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