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Archives for June 2017

Expansion Primer: Calgary Flames

June 12, 2017 at 3:05 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

We’re continuing to break down each team’s situation as it pertains to the 2017 NHL Expansion Draft, coming up next week: which players are eligible, and which will likely warrant protection or may be on the block. Each team is required to submit their protection lists by 4pm CDT on June 17th. The full rules on eligibility can be found here, and CapFriendly has provided a handy expansion tool to make your own lists.

The Calgary Flames came into this season with a new head coach, a new starting goaltender and a familiar goal: get back to the playoffs. They’d missed in 2015-16 for the sixth time in seven seasons, but had added a good young player in Matthew Tkachuk who would provide more than anyone expected of him as a teenager, and had signed the duo of Johnny Gaudreau and Sean Monahan long-term.

The goaltending tandem of Brian Elliott and Chad Johnson had what you would call a roller coaster season, struggling at times before catching fire to get the team into the playoffs. As with any up there must come a down, and down it came in the first round as Elliott posted just an .880 save percentage and was yanked after just one goal in the deciding fourth game. The Flames will lick their wounds and try to find a different option in net this summer, while being at little risk of losing anything of value in the expansion draft.

Eligible Players (Non-UFA)

Forwards:

Johnny Gaudreau, Sean Monahan, Troy Brouwer, Michael Frolik, Mikael Backlund, Matt Stajan, Lance Bouma, Emile Poirier, Hunter Shinkaruk, Freddie Hamilton, Sam Bennett, Alex Chiasson, Micheal Ferland, Linden Vey, Curtis Lazar

Defensemen:

Mark Giordano, Dougie Hamilton, T.J. Brodie, Matt Bartkowski, Ryan Culkin, Tyler Wotherspoon, Brett Kulak

Goaltenders:

Tom McCollum

Notable Exemptions

Matthew Tkachuk, Daniel Pribyl, Dillon Dube, Josh Healey, Nick Schneider, Tyler Parsons, Jon Gillies, Oliver Kylington

Key Decisions

The Flames have put themselves in a fairly enviable position when it comes to the expansion draft, making savvy moves like signing Matt Bartkowski during the season to fill the defensive exposure requirements. Recently, GM Brad Treliving spoke about the difficulties some teams will have when deciding on their protection lists, and how Vegas will be hard-pressed to find NHL-caliber centers in the draft. That problem is emulated perhaps best by the expected protection on the Flames. They will likely choose the 7-3-1 protection scheme, allowing them to keep their depth down the middle. Troy Brouwer

Up front, the Flames have just a few decisions to make on the back end of their list, as their five-man core (including three centers, Monahan, Mikael Backlund and Sam Bennett) are easy to point out. In the final two spots, the team will juggle some combination of Troy Brouwer, Curtis Lazar and Micheal Ferland, with the latter two likely earning the slots. Leaving Brouwer exposed is a tough decision to make just one year removed from signing him to an $18MM contract, but after a career-worst 25 points this season his contract may be all the protection he needs. After all, Treliving believes the Golden Knights will be acquiring assets instead of building a team, and Brouwer holds much less value than either of the other two young forwards.

Lazar, acquired at the deadline is another (part-time) center that will be unavailable to Vegas, even though he scored just four points in 37 games this season. The Flames gave up a second-round pick to get him from the Ottawa Senators, and still have big plans for his future in Calgary. The 22-year old was the 17th-overall pick in 2013, and will need a new contract this summer.

Ferland, a former fifth-round pick who has overcome a tremendous amount of personal struggle to even be in the NHL, found success alongside Gaudreau and Monahan at times and showed promise to become similar to what Brouwer has been throughout his career; a physical middle-six winger capable of adding some secondary scoring. While his 25 points are nothing to write home about, he is only 25 years old and showed that he may be capable of a 20-goal season at some point in his career.

There is the possibility Calgary could surprise and protect one of Hunter Shinkaruk or Alex Chiasson, both of whom are former high picks (24th and 38th respectively) that have shown either potential or performance at times throughout their career and are still young enough to contribute to Vegas. Both are long-shots, but could present some value for the Golden Knights if left available.

Matt BartkowskiOn defense, there isn’t much debate on the three who will be protected. Mark Giordano, Dougie Hamilton and T.J. Brodie are easy choices, and the reason Bartkowski was acquired in the first place. None of the other potential unprotected defensemen fulfill the requirement of a player who is signed through 2017-18 and played either 40 games this season or 70 the last two combined.

In net, the team actually only has Tom McCollum among non-UFA goaltenders, and signed him earlier in the year in order to fulfill the goaltending requirements. That means they could potentially re-sign Johnson or Elliott before the draft, or acquire another goaltender that would need protection. Marc-Andre Fleury, who has waived his no-trade clause in order to go to Vegas but is still an option for Calgary, as are several of the elite backups around the league. The Flames could go after Antti Raanta, Philipp Grubauer, Aaron Dell or Calvin Pickard in order to provide some value to a team afraid of losing them for nothing, but with such a strong goaltending pipeline may look to the free agent market instead for a shorter term option.

The Flames do have one interesting name when it comes to a free agent Vegas may be interested in: Michael Stone. The 27-year old defenseman is right-handed and has logged big minutes for Arizona in the past. His two-way game fit in quite well with the Flames, but they’ll have to wait to re-sign him until after the draft which gives Vegas an opportunity to talk with him in their exclusive window. If the Golden Knights thinks a long-term deal with Stone is worth more than one of the forward cast-offs, perhaps he is a target for them next week.

It’s worth mentioning that Linden Vey, who may have deserved protection a few years ago is set to play in the KHL next season and will likely be off the radar of both the Flames and Golden Knights. Calgary is expected to qualify him in order to retain his rights for the time being, but will not get to see him in the lineup this year.

Projected Protection List

F Johnny Gaudreau
F Sean Monahan
F Michael Frolik
F Mikael Backlund
F Sam Bennett
F Micheal Ferland
F Curtis Lazar

D Mark Giordano
D Dougie Hamilton
D T.J. Brodie

G Chad Johnson

The Flames are in a good spot for the next few days, able to calmly assess the goaltending market and perhaps help a team out of a jam by taking an asset off their hands. When one of the worst things the team can lose is an overpaid 31-year old year old winger with three years left on his deal, you know you’ve done good work setting yourself up for the draft. It will be interesting to see which forwards fill out the last few spots, and even more interesting to see who Vegas decides to go with for their selection. Will it be a veteran player who can add leadership to an expansion franchise, or a lottery ticket from the minors who could develop into something under the right coaching?

In all, the team can look ahead to a summer filled with tougher tasks like RFA negotiations, rebuilding the bottom half of their defense and finding an answer in net. Some of those may be answered in the next few days, but more likely will stretch into July. With ample cap space and several vacant positions, Calgary will be one of the most interesting teams to follow in free agency.

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Brad Treliving| Calgary Flames| Expansion| Free Agency| Vegas Golden Knights Expansion Primer

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Jordan Weal, Flyers Agree On Term; Still Working On Salary

June 12, 2017 at 1:49 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

According to Sam Carchidi of the Philadelphia Inquirer Jordan Weal and the Flyers have agreed on the term of his next contract, but are still working out the salary structure. This comes as a positive move from last week, when the two sides hadn’t spoken in several days and GM Ron Hextall said he had “no idea” if they were close to a deal.

Though Weal is just 25, he’s set to become a Group VI free agent this summer due to the fact that he’s played less than 80 career NHL games. Since being drafted in 2010, Weal has only suited up for 37 career games but showed off his potential this season with 12 points in 23 contests. Weal put up another dominating season in the AHL when he wasn’t with the Flyers, scoring 47 points in 43 games. The two-time 100+ point scorer in junior was selected in the third round by the Los Angeles Kings, only to be dealt to the Flyers as part of the package to acquire Luke Schenn and Vincent Lecavalier.

Weal clearly has talent, but likely doesn’t want to sign long-term and sell off free agent years for what is expected to be a relatively low salary. That said, it’s clear why the two found an easier match in terms of years, as Philadelphia would hardly want to commit long-term to such an unknown. The salary is interesting though, as Weal would certainly have suitors around the league, including the Vegas Golden Knights should he get to free agency. After playing only on two-way deals so far in his career, his camp is likely demanding the deal be one-way with at least some indication that he’ll be given a chance on the NHL roster this season.

Philadelphia Flyers Jordan Weal

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Marc-Andre Fleury Waives No-Movement Clause, Will Be Exposed In Expansion Draft

June 12, 2017 at 1:22 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 6 Comments

According to Renaud Lavoie of TVA Sports, Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury has waived his no-movement clause and will be exposed in the upcoming expansion draft. Lavoie reports that the goaltender actually accepted a request waive it in February, before the trade deadline had passed in the NHL. It has long been expected that the Penguins had worked out an agreement with Fleury, since they otherwise risked losing Matt Murray to the Golden Knights. Marc-Andre Fleury

This news comes less than 24 hours after Fleury won his second straight Stanley Cup and third of his career with the Penguins. Though he did not play in the clinching game either of the past two seasons, his play in the first few rounds of this year’s run was outstanding and an integral part of the team’s Cup pursuit. After Murray was injured in warm up of the first game, Fleury stepped in and posted a .924 save percentage in 15 games, including two shutouts. His time in Pittsburgh looks likely to come to an end after 691 regular season and 115 playoff contests with a 437-266-68 combined record.

At 32, Fleury has two seasons remaining on his current contract at an annual salary of $5.75MM. Though he could easily play those two seasons out as the starting goaltender for the Golden Knights, some—including Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet—think that he may be flipped to another team after the draft. Fleury has previously been linked as a potential target for the Calgary Flames, who will be looking for a new goaltender this summer to improve their chances in the post season. It would be hard to imagine Vegas making the playoffs in the next two seasons, making Fleury’s impact in Sin City minimal.

Until the official selections are released, there is no guarantee that Vegas will even take Fleury. Though he does seem like a solid asset to add through the draft, the Penguins have several other interesting names who will be left unprotected. As our Seth Lawrence examined in the Penguins’ Expansion Primer, players like Ian Cole and Bryan Rust are at risk of being exposed and also provide solid value for the Golden Knights. It’s interesting to note that according to Lavoie, Fleury waived it only for purposes of the draft and Vegas, so he still holds the clause in respect to other teams around the league. That means he (as of now) still can’t be traded prior to the draft in order to extract some value for the Penguins.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Expansion| Newsstand| Pittsburgh Penguins Marc-Andre Fleury

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Deadline Approaches To Ask Players To Waive No-Movement Clauses

June 12, 2017 at 11:57 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

On the heels of yesterday’s report that both Keith Yandle and Dion Phaneuf had been asked to waive their no-movement clauses in order to be exposed for the upcoming expansion draft, speculation is running rampant around the league on who else will be asked. Below is the full list of players who currently require protection due to their clauses. The deadline to submit a request to a player is 4pm CDT today, while the player must inform the team of his decision by the same time on Friday June 16th. Because the Stanley Cup Finals ended last night, Nashville and Pittsburgh will not receive an extension and will need to submit their requests at the same time as every other team.

Elliotte Friedman was on Sportsnet radio today and mentioned that the Anaheim Ducks have spoken with Kevin Bieksa about possibly waiving his clause, something examined at length in our recent Ducks Expansion Primer.

Anaheim (4)
Kevin Bieksa — Expected to be asked.
Ryan Getzlaf
Ryan Kesler
Corey Perry

Arizona (1)
Alex Goligoski

Boston (4)
David Backes
Patrice Bergeron
Zdeno Chara
David Krejci

Read more

Buffalo (1)
Kyle Okposo

Carolina (1)
Jordan Staal

Columbus (4)
Sergei Bobrovsky
Brandon Dubinsky
Nick Foligno
Scott Hartnell — Was not asked to waive.

Chicago (8)
Artem Anisimov
Corey Crawford
Niklas Hjalmarsson
Marian Hossa
Patrick Kane
Duncan Keith
Brent Seabrook
Jonathan Toews

Colorado (2)
Francois Beauchemin
Erik Johnson

Dallas (3)
Jamie Benn
Jason Spezza
Ben Bishop

Detroit (1)
Frans Nielsen

Edmonton (3)
Milan Lucic
Andrej Sekera
Cam Talbot

Florida (1)
Keith Yandle — Conflicting reports. George Richards of Miami Herald reports that he has not been asked.

Los Angeles (1)
Anze Kopitar

Minnesota (4)
Mikko Koivu
Zach Parise
Jason Pominville
Ryan Suter

Montreal (2)
Jeff Petry
Carey Price

Nashville (1)
Pekka Rinne

N.Y. Islanders (3)
Johnny Boychuk
Andrew Ladd
John Tavares

N.Y. Rangers (4)
Dan Girardi
Henrik Lundqvist
Rick Nash
Marc Staal

Ottawa (1)
Dion Phaneuf — Asked to waive.

Philadelphia (2)
Claude Giroux
Valtteri Filppula

Pittsburgh (5)
Sidney Crosby
Marc-Andre Fleury — Waived.
Phil Kessel
Kris Letang
Evgeni Malkin

Tampa Bay (3)
Ryan Callahan — Not expected to be asked.
Victor Hedman
Steven Stamkos

Vancouver (3)
Loui Eriksson
Daniel Sedin
Henrik Sedin

Winnipeg (2)
Dustin Byfuglien
Toby Enstrom

Expansion Alex Goligoski| Andrej Sekera| Andrew Ladd| Anze Kopitar| Artem Anisimov| Brandon Dubinsky| Brent Seabrook| Cam Talbot| Carey Price| Claude Giroux| Corey Crawford| Corey Perry| Dan Girardi| Daniel Sedin| David Backes| David Krejci| Dion Phaneuf| Duncan Keith| Dustin Byfuglien| Elliotte Friedman| Erik Johnson| Evgeni Malkin| Francois Beauchemin| Frans Nielsen| Henrik Lundqvist| Henrik Sedin| Jamie Benn| Jason Pominville| Jason Spezza| Jeff Petry| John Tavares| Johnny Boychuk| Jonathan Toews| Jordan Staal| Keith Yandle| Kevin Bieksa| Kris Letang| Kyle Okposo| Loui Eriksson| Marc Staal| Marc-Andre Fleury| Marian Hossa| Mikko Koivu| Milan Lucic| Niklas Hjalmarsson| Patrice Bergeron| Patrick Kane| Pekka Rinne| Phil Kessel

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Talks Progressing Between Alexander Radulov, Montreal Canadiens

June 12, 2017 at 11:12 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

According to Eric Engels of Sportsnet, the negotiations between Alexander Radulov and Montreal Canadiens are currently ongoing with positivity from both sides. Engels speculates a contract of four to five years in length, and worth between $6-6.5MM per season. Radulov is coming off a one-year deal worth $5.75MM and would enter the market as one of the top available free agents should he reach July 1st. An extension, even if agreed upon, would not be announced until after the expansion draft as the team currently does not need to protect the Russian forward.

Radulov’s “show me” season went off without much of a hitch this season, returning from the KHL to post 54 points in 76 games. Generally considered one of the Canadiens’ top-two offensive threats, finding a way to get him under a long-term extension is an important part of their offseason plan. Signing any 30-year old to a five-year extension is a risky proposition, and this is no different. If his production falters as he enters the latter part of his career, a $6MM cap-hit could potentially strangle the Canadiens’ salary structure in the future. That said, the team only currently has two forwards signed past 2018-19, giving them a lot of flexibility moving forward.

With extensions for Carey Price and Max Pacioretty due the next two offseasons, Montreal is a sort of interesting crossroads in their development. All three players, including Radulov will be over 30 when signing their next deals, and will join Shea Weber in taking up huge chunks of cap space. Though they are excellent players and can clearly be the core to a playoff contender, they could find themselves in trouble down the road with several players in their mid-30s earning substantial paychecks. Even though they seem to be in a good situation cap-wise currently, that could quickly change with a few contracts or steep declines in performance.

Montreal Canadiens Alexander Radulov

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Andrew Barroway Now Sole Owner Of Coyotes

June 12, 2017 at 10:14 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

According to Crag Morgan of Arizona Sports, Andrew Barroway completed his buyout and is now sole owner of the Arizona Coyotes franchise. Back in March, it was reported that Barroway had been given the opportunity to buy the shares of the minority owners, and had until June 6th to submit an offer. He did just that, and is now completely in control of the Coyotes organization.

Just this morning, John Shannon of Sportsnet reported on Twitter that the team was considering a partnership with the Phoenix Suns on a new arena deal, though Morgan’s report that “any talk of a partnership with the Suns is still considered premature” throws some cold water on that idea. Somehow, the team needs to find a new arena after their move to Glendale has been regarded as somewhat of a disaster. Earlier this year NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman wrote in a letter to Arizona legislators a clear message:

For the past 15 years, a succession of ownership groups and the League have tried everything imaginable to make the Glendale location financially sustainable. Our combined efforts have all yielded the same result—a consistent economic loss. The simple truth? The Arizona Coyotes must have a new arena location to succeed. The Coyotes cannot and will not remain in Glendale.

Barroway and whoever he installs as the new team President and CEO—Anthony LeBlanc will be finished at the end of the month along with the rest of the minority owners—will have a new arena at the top of their to-do list, with a return to downtown Phoenix the expected result.

Utah Mammoth

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New York Rangers Hire AHL Coach

June 12, 2017 at 9:04 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Just a few weeks after firing Ken Gernander as the Hartford Wolf Pack head coach, AGM Chris Drury and the New York Rangers have found a new man for the job. The team announced that Keith McCambridge will be the sixth head coach in the history of the team, promoted from his role as assistant last season. Drury was promoted to General Manager of the Wolf Pack at the same time as the firing, making this the first hire of his tenure.

McCambridge has several years of experience as a head coach in the AHL, previously working with the St. John’s IceCaps and Manitoba Moose. In 2013-14 he took the IceCaps all the way to the Calder Cup final, eventually losing to the Texas Stars. The long-time minor league player was drafted in the eighth round by the Calgary Flames, but never made it to the NHL.

The hiring is an interesting one, as the Wolf Pack finished dead last in the AHL this season. Many expected a new face to be brought in to give the team a fresh outlook, but instead they will promote from within and hope McCambridge can use his past experience to turn the team around. As always, AHL success is determined mostly by the players the NHL club provides for them, and with the Rangers not selecting a player in the first round for several years, the Wolf Pack have suffered.

AHL| New York Rangers

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Final Draft Order Set

June 12, 2017 at 8:45 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 8 Comments

After the 2017 Stanley Cup was awarded last night to the Pittsburgh Penguins, the full order in which teams will select at the upcoming Entry Draft is set. Round one will go on June 23rd, with the remaining rounds being completed the next day. Below is the order as of now for the first round.

  1. New Jersey Devils
  2. Philadelphia Flyers
  3. Dallas Stars
  4. Colorado Avalanche
  5. Vancouver Canucks
  6. Vegas Golden Knights
  7. Arizona Coyotes
  8. Buffalo Sabres
  9. Detroit Rd Wings
  10. Florida Panthers
  11. Los Angeles Kings
  12. Carolina Hurricanes
  13. Winnipeg Jets
  14. Tampa Bay Lightning
  15. New York Islanders
  16. Calgary Flames
  17. Toronto Maple Leafs
  18. Boston Bruins
  19. San Jose Sharks
  20. St. Louis Blues
  21. New York Rangers
  22. Edmonton Oilers
  23. Arizona Coyotes (from Minnesota)
  24. Columbus Blue Jackets
  25. Montreal Canadiens
  26. Chicago Blackhawks
  27. St. Louis Blues (from Washington)
  28. Ottawa Senators
  29. Dallas Stars (from Anaheim)
  30. Nashville Predators
  31. Pittsburgh Penguins

It is important to note that the Golden Knights will pick third in each subsequent round, regardless of where they finished in the draft lottery. This is to try to give the expansion team a bit of an advantage heading into their first season. The wheeling and dealing will ramp up this week, and several of these picks will likely be in play.

Uncategorized NHL Entry Draft

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Panthers Hire Bob Boughner As Head Coach

June 12, 2017 at 8:06 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Monday: As McKenzie expected, the hiring was made official on Monday morning. Boughner will join the team on a four-year contract.

Saturday: The Florida Panthers are closing in on a deal to name Bob Boughner as their new head coach, reports TSN’s Bob McKenzie (Twitter link).  In a separate tweet, McKenzie adds that the hiring should be made official on Monday.  The team had requested permission to interview him back in early May.

The 46 year old Boughner has spent the last two seasons as an assistant in San Jose.  His only other previous NHL coaching experience came as an assistant with Columbus back in 2010-11.  He does, however, have experience as a head coach at the junior level as the bench boss for Windsor of the OHL for eight seasons (2006-07 to 2009-10 and 2011-12 to 2014-15).

Boughner was a long-time stay-at-home defenseman over parts of 12 NHL seasons, recording 15 goals and 57 assists along with 1,382 penalty minutes in 630 games with Buffalo, Calgary, Carolina, Colorado, Nashville, and Pittsburgh.

The coaching situation in Florida has been in flux since early this past season when Gerard Gallant was let go by then-GM Tom Rowe who put himself behind the bench.  That didn’t work out as intended as the team posted a .475 points percentage under Rowe which was actually worse than the .548 they had under Gallant while they wound up sixth in the Atlantic Division.  Accordingly, Rowe was reassigned following the season with team president Dale Tallon re-assuming managerial duties.  Now it will fall on Boughner’s shoulders to get this team back to where they were two seasons ago when they surprised many with a first place finish in the Atlantic..

McKenzie adds (via Twitter) that the Panthers also had interest in Nashville assistant Phil Housley but that clearly isn’t the case now.  TSN’s Pierre LeBrun tweets that Buffalo, who also is on the market for a head coach, had interviewed Boughner as well.

Bob Boughner| Florida Panthers| Newsstand

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Pittsburgh Penguins Win The 2017 Stanley Cup

June 11, 2017 at 10:01 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 37 Comments

After a back-and-forth battle and a goaltending showcase for the ages, the Pittsburgh Penguins finally broke a 0-0 tie with the Nashville Predators with 1:35 remaining in the third period of Game Six on Sunday night and added a empty netter with seconds left to take a 2-0 win and capture the 2017 Stanley Cup title. The Penguins successfully defended their 2016 championship to become the first team since the Detroit Red Wings in 1997 and 1998 to win back-to-back titles. It is the first time in the salary cap era of NHL hockey that any team has won consecutive Stanley Cups.

On their road to another championship, the Penguins entered as the #2 seed out of the Atlantic Division and wiped out the upstart Columbus Blue Jackets in just five games. Pittsburgh then took on the top-seeded Washington Capitals, knocking out the President’s Trophy-winners for the second straight season, in a hard-fought seven-game series. The Ottawa Senators, out of the Atlantic Division, also took the Penguins to a Game Seven in the Eastern Conference final, but again the Penguins were victorious. The Stanley Cup Final was a face-off against an unexpected opponent, a Nashville Predators team that had entered as the second wild card team in the Western Conference and the 16th-seed overall, but swept the powerhouse Chicago Blackhawks and beat both the St. Louis Blues and Anaheim Ducks in six games. The performance of the Predators and the enthusiasm of the city of Nashville should not be understated and will likely be how many remember the 2017 playoffs. However, the Penguins were too much for the Predators, outscoring Nashville 17-4 in their four wins, including a shutout in the series-clinching win on the road.

The Conn Smythe Trophy, awarded to the MVP of the Stanley Cup playoffs, was given to Sidney Crosby. The captain of the team and the NHL’s leading scorer, Crosby notched 8 goals and 19 assists on his way to the title. Crosby became just the third player to ever win back-to-back Conn Smythe Trophy’s, joining Bernie Parent and Penguins owner Mario Lemieux. Other standouts of the playoff run include Crosby’s partner in crime, Evgeni Malkin, who outscored the captain by one point to lead all postseason scorers with ten goals and 18 assists. Both goalies, veteran Marc-Andre Fleury and rookie Matt Murray were phenomenal, with Fleury winning nine games while Murray was sidelined, and the youngster taking over to win the final seven and take home his second Stanley Cup despite still being a rookie. Murray posted a .931 save percentage and 1.87 goals against average in 10 appearance as he continues to develop a legacy as a clutch performer. Chris Kunitz lifted the Stanley Cup for the fourth time, the most among active players, while on the flip side trade deadline acquisition Ron Hainsey, who at 35 years old had never even played in the postseason, made the most of his first appearance. Justin Schultz was incredible as the surrogate leader of the defense for the sidelined Kris Letang, as he fought through injuries himself and posted 12 points during the Cup run. And who could forget rookie Jake Guentzel, who led the team with 13 goals, including an amazing five game-winners. In an ironic twist, Patric Hornqvist the final pick of the NHL Draft by the Nashville Predators in the same year that Crosby went #1, got the game winning goal to deny his former franchise their first ever Stanley Cup.

The frightening part for NHL fans is that, unlike their dynastic rivals in Chicago among others, the Penguins should remain largely intact heading into 2017-18. Fleury will likely be gone, but is no longer the starter anyway. Several veteran defenseman and bottom-six forwards could go as well, but Pittsburgh will for the most part return at full strength in October as they look to keep this incredible streak going. Crosby is still just 29 years old and he and the Penguins are far from finished. Congratulations to the 2017 Stanley Cup champs from the staff at PHR.

NHL| Nashville Predators| Pittsburgh Penguins Chris Kunitz| Evgeni Malkin| Jake Guentzel| Justin Schultz| Kris Letang| Marc-Andre Fleury| Mario Lemieux| Matt Murray (b. 1994)| Sidney Crosby

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