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Archives for 2017

Snapshots: Bertuzzi, Leivo, Officiating, McDonald

September 23, 2017 at 3:57 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 6 Comments

Red Wings winger Tyler Bertuzzi will be out three-to-four weeks due to tendon inflammation in his wrist, GM Ken Holland told reporters including MLive’s Ansar Khan.  That will keep him out of the lineup for the first week or two of the season which should give converted defenseman Luke Witkowski a bit more of an edge on a lineup spot on the wing.

Bertuzzi will likely be headed for season-opening injured reserve which will allow them to prorate his cap hit.  Bertuzzi spent 50 days on the NHL roster last season (playing seven games with Detroit) so he will carry a discounted cap hit of nearly $184K on the Red Wings’ books once the season gets underway.

Other news and notes from around the league:

  • The Leafs received at least one serious trade inquiry for winger Josh Leivo but placed a high asking price despite his status as a seldom-used player, reports Sportsnet’s Chris Johnston. It’s evident that the team still values him having protected Leivo from Vegas in expansion but Toronto’s winger depth is comparable to last season if not stronger.  As a result, the 24-year-old is likely to be on the outside looking in at a regular spot in the lineup once again which means there’s a good chance he’ll draw more trade interest in the coming weeks.
  • While the NHL continues to crack down on faceoff and slashing violations, the league sent a memo to its officials on Friday to ask them to scale back the calls a little bit, reports Sportsnet’s John Shannon (Twitter link). Penalties for both of these are up substantially through the opening week of the preseason.  TVA Sports’ Renaud Lavoie clarified via Twitter that the toe on the line standard is what will be relaxed at the faceoff dot.
  • Flyers winger Colin McDonald will be out an undisclosed number of weeks due to a lower-body injury, notes Andrew Kulp of CSN Philly. McDonald spent the bulk of last season with AHL Lehigh Valley but was with Philadelphia for a handful of games as well.  Accordingly, he will head on SOIR and count on their cap at a discounted rate similar to Bertuzzi in Detroit although his reduced charge checks in at a little over $14K.

Detroit Red Wings| Philadelphia Flyers| Snapshots| Toronto Maple Leafs Josh Leivo| Tyler Bertuzzi

6 comments

2017-18 Primer: Montreal Canadiens

September 23, 2017 at 2:48 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

With the NHL season now just a couple of weeks away, we continue our look at what each team has done this summer and what to watch for in the year to come.  Today, we focus on the Montreal Canadiens.

Last Season: 47-26-9 record (103 points), first in Atlantic Division (lost in the first round to the New York Rangers)

Remaining Cap Space: $8.4MM per CapFriendly

Key Additions: D Karl Alzner (free agency, Washington), F Jonathan Drouin (trade with Tampa Bay), F Ales Hemsky (free agency, Dallas), D Jakub Jerabek (free agency, Vityaz Podolsk, KHL), D David Schlemko (trade with Vegas), D Mark Streit (free agency, Pittsburgh)

Key Departures: D Nathan Beaulieu (trade with Buffalo), D Alexei Emelin (expansion, Vegas) F Brian Flynn (free agency, Dallas), F Dwight King (free agency, Yekaterinburg, KHL), D Andrei Markov (free agency, Kazan Ak-Bars, KHL), D Nikita Nesterov (free agency, CSKA Moscow, KHL), F Steve Ott (retirement), F Alexander Radulov (free agency, Dallas), D Mikhail Sergachev (trade with Tampa Bay)

[Related: Canadiens Depth Chart From Roster Resource]

Player To Watch: F Jonathan Drouin – The Canadiens have lacked a high-end local talent for quite a while now which is something that Drouin is expected to change as he takes on a top-line role with the team.  GM Marc Bergevin wasted little time signing him, handing him a six-year, $33MM contract mere hours after acquiring him so expectations are high.

Jonathan DrouinAt the time the trade was made, the belief was that Montreal would be able to retain Radulov and that Drouin would be able to augment a forward group that has had their difficulties scoring with consistency.  With Radulov out of the picture though and no other prominent forwards being brought in, the 22-year-old will now be asked to not only equal Radulov’s production but build on it.

On top of that, the team is experimenting with him at center, a position he hasn’t played with any sort of regularity since his days in junior.  Montreal’s weakness down the middle is well-known and is exacerbated by Alex Galchenyuk playing on the wing to start once again and it appears that they will be asking Drouin to try to help fix that issue as well.

Drouin has stated that he welcomes the spotlight as he plays for his hometown team.  He better get used to it in a hurry as he stands to be a focal point of Montreal’s attack right away.

Key Storyline: While most teams see a bit of turnover on their back end each season, it’s rare for a team to see as much change over the course of a calendar year as Montreal has.  Although he has only been with the Canadiens for one season, Shea Weber is already the second-longest tenured defender with the team (Streit has more games played with them but last suited up for Montreal in 2008 so that doesn’t really count).

Over the course of just over twelve months, Bergevin has completely overhauled their defense corps, including parting ways with their top three left-shooting options in the span of about a month this summer.  While they have brought in plenty of depth, they haven’t brought anyone in to fill Markov’s role which creates another big concern heading into the season.

Alzner is expected to anchor the second unit which leaves the team without a proven option to play alongside Weber on their top unit.  They have a collection of depth players who are better served in lesser roles while Jerabek and prospect Victor Mete (who has been paired with Weber in the preseason) aren’t ready to take on top minutes right away.

While they may be inclined to go with what they have to start the season, it wouldn’t be surprising if Montreal winds up needing to trade for another proven defender at some point.  If nothing else, with more than $8MM in cap space to work with head into the year, making the finances work on such a deal shouldn’t be a problem at the very least.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Montreal Canadiens Jonathan Drouin

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Tom Wilson Suspended For Two Preseason Games

September 23, 2017 at 2:44 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 6 Comments

2:44 PM: Wilson has been suspended for two preseason games, the Department of Player Safety announced.

11:17 AM: To the surprise of many, including head coach Barry Trotz, Washington Capital’s grinder Tom Wilson will have a hearing regarding an interference call in last night’s preseason game against the St. Louis Blues. In a quick turnaround, the NHL Department of Player Safety announced their appointment with Wilson this morning for a hearing later today. It is a fast response, with the potential to be forceful as well, when it comes to Wilson, who is starting to get a reputation as one of the league’s biggest thugs.

The hit in question, as you can see, was a hard check on St. Louis 2017 first-round pick Robert Thomas. Thomas was chasing the puck, which drew the interference call, when Wilson swung in an hit him with a shoulder to the upper body. Wilson leaves his feet to make contact, which Player Safety will surely call attention to. Thomas was not injured on the play and Wilson quickly fought Dmitrij Jaskin and then served his penalty and with the pace of the game, no one gave much of a second thought to the ordeal. The Washington Post’s Isabelle Khurshudyan even reports that Trotz had planned to use Wilson in tonight’s game. However, the league, and new Head of Player Safety and former enforcer himself George Parros, would like to take a closer look at Wilson’s most recent incident.

Amazingly, if Wilson is suspended for the hit, it will be the first suspension of his NHL career. Wilson has had his fair share of hearing, two ending in substantial fines, but has never missed any time. However, the timing of this hearing could mean that his lucky streak is about to end. With the main focus of the NHL this season clearly being a desire to clean up play and reduce injuries, a statement suspension for a guy too often on the wrong side of dirty plays would seem to fit the narrative.

Barry Trotz| St. Louis Blues| Suspensions Dmitrij Jaskin| Tom Wilson

6 comments

Saturday’s Waiver Placements

September 23, 2017 at 1:37 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The second day of waivers yielded even more players hitting the wire than on Friday.  TVA Sports’ Renaud Lavoie reports (Twitter link) that the following 18 players were placed on waivers:

Buffalo Sabres
F Kevin Porter

Carolina Hurricanes
F Patrick Brown
D Brendan Kichton
F Andrew Miller
F Dennis Robertson
D Philip Samuelsson

Edmonton Oilers
G Eddie Pasquale

Nashville Predators
D Andrew O’Brien
D Petter Granberg
F Pierre-Cedric Labrie
G Anders Lindback
F Trevor Smith

New York Islanders
G Christopher Gibson
G Kristers Gudlevskis
D Seth Helgeson
F Connor Jones

Tampa Bay Lightning
D Mat Bodie
G Michael Leighton

Teams will have an opportunity to claim these players until 11:00 AM on Sunday morning.  All 17 players that were waived yesterday, headed by Montreal defenseman Zach Redmond, successfully cleared waivers.  The majority of those players have already officially been cut today and sent to their respective minor league camps.

Transactions| Waivers

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Rangers Notes: Andersson, Chytil, Desharnais, Buchnevich

September 23, 2017 at 12:26 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

It’s rare that a pair of first rounders picked by the same from the latest draft crack the NHL roster right away but that could be the case for the Rangers.  Head coach Alain Vigneault told reporters, including Justin Tasch of the New York Daily News, that both Lias Andersson (7th overall) and Filip Chytil (21st overall) could both break camp with the team to start the season.  New York hasn’t really replaced Derek Stepan down the middle and both youngsters are natural centers.  There will also be an opening on the roster for a few weeks thanks to winger Jesper Fast’s hip surgery this summer that will have him out for the first few weeks of the season.  Andersson and Chytil can each play nine NHL games before burning the first year of their contracts.

More from Manhattan:

  • The team signed David Desharnais with the idea that he can hold down the third line center spot despite struggling considerably last season, notes Brett Cyrgalis of the New York Post. Although he is only two years removed from a 48 point campaign, he managed just 14 in 49 games between Montreal and Edmonton last year.  From a depth perspective, the team may be better off starting with him as a fourth liner that can move up when injuries arise or someone struggles since he wasn’t able to hold down a full-time top-nine spot in 2016-17 with either team.
  • The back issues that plagued rookie winger Pavel Buchnevich in his rookie season are a thing of the past, writes Newsday’s Steve Zipay. The Russian got off to a strong start despite playing through the pain but by the time the second half rolled around, he spent most of his time on the fourth line or in the press box.  If he’s able to hold down a top-nine spot on the wing, that could also free the team up to try J.T. Miller down the middle as well.

New York Rangers David Desharnais| Pavel Buchnevich

1 comment

Poll: The Fate Of The Remaining RFA’s

September 23, 2017 at 10:31 am CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

Notable players have begun to be cut from training camps and placed on waivers as the season draws closer, under two weeks away now. Yet, two restricted free agents still have yet to even sign a new contract, nevertheless compete in camp. Columbus’ Josh Anderson and Detroit’s Andreas Athanasiou still remain unsigned long after agreements were reached in more difficult RFA cases like those of David Pastrnak and Sam Bennett. Not only do the pair still not have contracts for the coming year, but seemingly no progress has been made recently either.

After it was reported more than a week ago that there was a “vast gap” in negotiations between Anderson and the Blue Jackets, a recent update stated that “no progress” had been made since then either. The newest piece of information has Anderson traveling to Switzerland, where he could potentially meet with several NLA teams. Anderson has also spoken about the possibility of starring for Team Canada at the Olympics. Anderson scored 17 goals for Columbus last year, which would be quite a lot of production for a team chasing a division title to lose.

Athanasiou is beyond overseas speculation; he has several hard offers on the table from KHL clubs. While “talks continue” between the two sides, there has been no concrete news for days. The “Riley Sheahan-to-Pittsburgh” rumor, that is supposedly contingent on an agreement with Athanasiou, has obviously not happened either, as it has been all quiet from both the Red Wings and their talented, young player. Athanasiou scored 29 points in 64 games for the struggling Wings last year. Can a team lacking much game-breaking talent afford to lose such a player?

There are a lot of different ways that this could all end up. Either or both could simply sign with their current teams, whether it be in the coming weeks or early in the season like several 2016 cases. Either one could be traded to a team with greater need and greater ability to sign them to a deal that comes closer to their desired term and salary. Or, the nuclear option, both have expressed and interest (read: threatened) in going overseas and could pull the trigger if their team will not sign or trade them. Take a crack at the poll below and sort through a variety of endings to these RFA sagas:

Columbus Blue Jackets| Detroit Red Wings| Jarmo Kekalainen| KHL| Ken Holland| NLA| Olympics| RFA Andreas Athanasiou| Josh Anderson

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Training Camp Cuts: 9/23/17

September 23, 2017 at 9:30 am CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

The more than fifty cuts made from training camps around the league yesterday was only the beginning. Weekend or not, expect the announcements to keep flooding in, and we’ll keep track of it all right here:

Anaheim Ducks

F Stu Bickel – San Diego (AHL)
F Maxime Comtois – Victoriaville (QMJHL)
F Alex Dostie – San Diego (AHL)
G Olle Eriksson Ek – Farjestad BK (SWE U20)
F Nic Kerdiles – San Diego (AHL)
D Brady Lyle – North Bay (OHL), released from ATO
F Antoine Morand – Acadie-Bathurst (QMJHL)
F Julius Nattinen – San Diego (AHL)
F Kyle Olson – Tri-City (WHL)
F Austin Ortega – San Diego (AHL)
D Turner Ottenbreit – Seattle (WHL), released from ATO
G Angus Redmond – San Diego (AHL)
F Kevin Roy – San Diego (AHL)
F Zach Saar – San Diego (AHL)
F Deven Sideroff – San Diego (AHL)
F Tyler Soy – San Diego (AHL)
D Jeff Schultz – San Diego (AHL)
D Keaton Thompson – San Diego (AHL)

Buffalo Sabres

F Eric Cornel – Rochester (AHL)
F Vaclav Karabacek – Rochester (AHL)
G Jason Kasdorf – Rochester (AHL)
G Jonas Johansson – Rochester (AHL)
D Brycen Martin – Rochester (AHL)
F Steve Moses – Rochester (AHL)
D Casey Nelson – Rochester (AHL)
F Kevin Porter – Rochester (AHL)
F Cliff Pu – London (OHL)
D Devante Stephens – Rochester (AHL)
G Adam Wilcox – Rochester (AHL)

Calgary Flames

F Austin Carroll – Stockton (AHL)
D Josh Healey – Stockton (AHL)
D Oliver Kylington – Stockton (AHL)
F Andrew Mangiapane – Stockton (AHL)
D Adam Ollas Mattsson – Stockton (AHL)
G Tyler Parsons – Stockton (AHL)
D Colby Robak – Stockton (AHL)

Carolina Hurricanes

F Clark Bishop – Charlotte (AHL)
G Callum Booth – Charlotte (AHL)
F Warren Foegele – Charlotte (AHL)
D Tyler Ganly – Charlotte (AHL)
F Gregory Hofmann – HC Lugano (NLA)
D Keenan Kanzig – Charlotte (AHL)
F Steven Lorentz – Charlotte (AHL)
G Alex Nedeljkovic – Charlotte (AHL)
F Andrew Poturalski – Charlotte (AHL)
F Nick Schilkey – Charlotte (AHL)
F Spencer Smallman – Charlotte (AHL)
F Sergey Tolchinsky – Charlotte (AHL)
D Josh Wesley – Charlotte (AHL)

Chicago Blackhawks

D Kyle Baun – Rockford (AHL) (cleared waivers)
G Jeff Glass – Rockford (AHL) (cleared waivers)

Dallas Stars

F Travis Morin – released from PTO, will attend AHL camp
F Greg Rallo – released from PTO, will attend AHL camp

Minnesota Wild

D Zach Palmquist – Iowa (AHL) (cleared waivers)

Montreal Canadiens

D Zach Redmond – Laval (AHL) (cleared waivers)

Nashville Predators

D Frederic Allard – Milwaukee (AHL)
F Derek Army – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
F Bobby Butler – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
F Tyler Kelleher – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
F Justin Kirkland – Milwaukee (AHL)
D Joonas Lyytinen – Milwaukee (AHL)
D T.J. Melancon – Milwaukee (AHL)
F Angelo Miceli – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
F Trevor Mingoia – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
F Tyler Moy – Milwaukee (AHL)
D Trevor Murphy – Milwaukee (AHL)
G Matt O’Connor – Milwaukee (AHL)
D Jimmy Oligny – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
G Jake Paterson – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
F Stephen Perfetto – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
D Rick Pinkston – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
F Anthony Richard – Milwaukee (AHL)

New York Islanders

D Sebastian Aho – Bridgeport (AHL)
F Casey Bailey – released from PTO
D Kyle Burroughs – Bridgeport (AHL)
F Michael Dal Colle – Bridgeport (AHL)
F Scott Eansor – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
F Tanner Fritz – Bridgeport (AHL)
F Ben Holmstrom – released from PTO
F Ross Johnston – Bridgeport (AHL)
F Jeff Kubiak – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
D Kane LaFranchise – Bridgeport (AHL)
G Eamon McAdam – Bridgeport (AHL)
F Kyle Schempp – Bridgeport (AHL)
F Travis St. Denis – released from PTO, will report to AHL camp
F John Stevens – Bridgeport (AHL)
D Devon Toews – Bridgeport (AHL)
F Yannick Turcotte – released from ATO
D Mitchell Vande Sompel – Bridgeport (AHL)
D Parker Wotherspoon – Bridgeport (AHL)

New York Rangers

D Alexei Bereglazov – Hartford (AHL)
G Alexandar Georgiev – Hartford (AHL)
D John Gilmour – Hartford (AHL)
F Ryan Gropp – Hartford (AHL)
G Chris Nell – Hartford (AHL)
D Vince Pedrie – Hartford (AHL)
F Malte Stromwall – Hartford (AHL)
F Adam Tambellini – Hartford (AHL)

Philadelphia Flyers

D Mark Alt – Lehigh Valley (AHL) (cleared waivers)
D T.J. Brennan – Lehigh Valley (AHL) (cleared waivers)
F Greg Carey – Lehigh Valley (AHL) (cleared waivers)
F Corban Knight – Lehigh Valley (AHL) (cleared waivers)
G Alex Lyon – Lehigh Valley (AHL)
D Will O’Neill – Lehigh Valley (AHL) (cleared waivers)
F Phil Varone – Lehigh Valley (AHL) (cleared waivers)

Ottawa Senators

G Chris Driedger – Belleville (AHL)
G Marcus Hogberg – Belleville (AHL)
G Danny Taylor – Belleville (AHL) (cleared waivers)
D Erik Burgdoerfer – Belleville (AHL) (cleared waivers)
D Cody Donaghey – Belleville (AHL)
D Andreas Englund – Belleville (AHL)
D Macoy Erkamps – Belleville (AHL)
D Christian Jaros – Belleville (AHL)
D Patrick Sieloff – Belleville (AHL) (cleared waivers)
F Chris DiDomenico – Belleville (AHL) (cleared waivers)
F Vincent Dunn – Belleville (AHL)
F Gabriel Gagne – Belleville (AHL)
F Nick Paul – Belleville (AHL)
F Francis Perron – Belleville (AHL)
F Ben Sexton – Belleville (AHL) (cleared waivers)
F Kyle Flanagan – released from PTO (Belleville)
D Jordan Murray – released from PTO (Belleville)
F Jack Rodewald – released from PTO (Belleville)
D Charles-David Beaudoin – released from PTO
F Brendan Woods – released from PTO
F Drake Batherson – Cape Breton (QMJHL)
F Parker Kelly – Prince Albert (WHL)

Tampa Bay Lightning

F Shane Conacher – Released from PTO
F Alex Gallant – Syracuse (AHL)
F Kevin Lynch – Released from PTO (Syracuse)
F Otto Somppi – Halifax (QMJHL)
F Carter Verhaeghe – Syracuse (AHL)
D Mat Bodie – Syracuse (AHL)
D Reid McNeil – Released from PTO (Syracuse)
D Matt Spencer – Syracuse (AHL)
G Connor Ingram – Syracuse (AHL)
G Michael Leighton – Syracuse (AHL)

AHL| Anaheim Ducks| Buffalo Sabres| Calgary Flames| Carolina Hurricanes| Chicago Blackhawks| Dallas Stars| Minnesota Wild| Montreal Canadiens| Nashville Predators| New York Islanders| New York Rangers| Ottawa Senators| Philadelphia Flyers| Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions| Waivers

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Snapshots: Khudobin, Fast, Hanzal

September 22, 2017 at 8:56 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

One of the battles in Boston’s training camp is for the backup goalie position.  Veteran Anton Khudobin is the incumbent but is coming off an inconsistent season that saw him post just a .904 save percentage, well below the league average in 2016-17.  Accordingly, some have wondered if youngster Zane McIntyre could push for the number two job with the Bruins but head coach Bruce Cassidy told CSN New England’s Joe Haggerty that Khudobin remains the favorite for the job.

“He’s in very good shape and he’s practiced well, so he’s got a leg up on the other [goalies] based on his experience.  We know that going in, but he’s going to get pushed. Zane was good in a game, and Malcolm [Subban] let in a couple where he could have been more aggressive. But it was a first game, so right now they all look good. That’s a good problem to have if they all push each other, but to get direct to the point Anton has done nothing to lose that backup spot.”

If McIntyre isn’t able to supplant Khudobin for the backup role with the Bruins, he will be able to go down to Providence without going through waivers as he’s exempt for this season.  The same can’t be said for Malcolm Subban, who would have to hit the wire before heading to the AHL.

Elsewhere around the league:

  • Rangers winger Jesper Fast is progressing well in his recovery from offseason hip surgery, notes Matt Calamia on the Rangers’ team site. Head coach Alain Vigneault said that the team is targeting late October for his return to the lineup which would actually put him ahead of schedule from the five months he was expected to miss when he went under the knife in early June.  The 25-year-old has six goals and 15 assists in 68 games with New York last season and will push for a bottom-six role when he returns to the lineup.
  • Stars center Martin Hanzal is expected to start skating with the Stars on Saturday, reports Mark Stepneski of Stars Inside Edge. The 30-year-old has been out since the start of training camp with an ankle injury.  While Dallas has a surplus of centers, head coach Ken Hitchcock suggested earlier this month that it won’t be Hanzal who shifts positions and that it might be Jason Spezza who spends time on the wing instead.

Boston Bruins| Dallas Stars| New York Rangers| Snapshots Anton Khudobin| Jesper Fast| Martin Hanzal

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Central Notes: Parise, Hossa, Wilson

September 22, 2017 at 7:51 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 4 Comments

Although Wild forward Zach Parise took part in practice on Friday for the first time in training camp, his back troubles are something that he and the team will be monitoring throughout the course of the season, notes Dane Mizutani of the Pioneer Press.  Head coach Bruce Boudreau is hopeful to get Parise into a game before the exhibition schedule comes to a close.

The fact that Parise believes this situation is going to have to be watched throughout the season has to be somewhat concerning, not only for this year but possibly beyond if it continues to linger.  He is the highest paid forward on the Wild with a cap hit checking in at just over $7.5MM while he has eight years remaining on his contract.

More from the Central:

  • It turns out that Joffrey Lupul isn’t the only player that the league is reviewing the medical status for. James Mirtle of The Athletic reports that Blackhawks winger Marian Hossa is also being looked at.  The team announced back in June that Hossa would miss all of 2017-18 due to a progressive skin disorder.  Placing Hossa (and Lupul) on long-term injury reverse allows both Chicago and Toronto to get back into cap compliance but the league will be taking a closer look before effectively approving their placements.  Considering the potential impact on the salary cap, it would seem likely that this will be addressed before the regular season gets underway.
  • Colin Wilson’s time with the Predators came to an end this summer when he was dealt to Colorado. He noted to AJ Haefele of BSN Denver that it was a situation where “both parties decided to move on”.  Wilson is coming off of a 35 point season with Nashville but has largely been viewed as an underachiever the past few seasons whose cap hit of nearly $4MM was too high for what he brought to the lineup.  That should change this season as he will be counted on to play a big role with the Avalanche and will likely start inside their top six.

Chicago Blackhawks| Colorado Avalanche| Minnesota Wild Colin Wilson| Marian Hossa| Zach Parise

4 comments

Salary Cap Deep Dive: Calgary Flames

September 22, 2017 at 6:47 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

Navigating the Salary Cap is probably one of the more important tasks for any general manager to have. Teams that can avert total cap chaos by walking the tightrope of inking players to deals that match their value (or compensate for future value without breaking the bank) remain successful. Those that don’t see struggles and front office changes.

PHR will look at every NHL team and give a thorough look at their cap situation heading into the 2017-18 season. This will focus more on those players who are integral parts of the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL. All cap figures are courtesy of CapFriendly.

Calgary Flames

Current Cap Hit: $69,784,210 (under the $75MM Upper Limit)

Entry-Level Contracts

F Matthew Tkachuk (Two years remaining, $925K)

Potential Bonuses

Tkachuk: $850K

It wasn’t known right away last year if Tkachuk would be NHL ready after being drafted but he put that talk to rest pretty quickly with a very productive rookie campaign.  He is already a top-six forward and if he progresses into a top-liner by the end of his contract, he could find himself in the range of six years and $33MM that several notable players have signed coming off of their entry-level pacts.

One Year Remaining, Non-Entry-Level

F Mikael Backlund ($3.575MM, UFA)
D Matt Bartkowski ($613K, UFA)
G Eddie Lack ($1.375MM, UFA)*
F Matt Stajan ($3.125MM, UFA)
F Kris Versteeg ($1.75MM, UFA)

* – Carolina is retaining $1.375MM on Lack’s contract.

The Flames have already publicly expressed an interest in keeping Backlund, their first rounder back in 2007.  His game has really taken off over the past two seasons and he has now slid into a full-time top-six role.  As a result, he’s in line for a sizable raise on his next contract given the demand for impact centers on the open market.  Stajan has become more of a depth player in recent years and while he will likely earn another contract, it will be for considerably less than his current one.  Versteeg impressed after coming over late in training camp last year but still was only able to garner a one-year deal, albeit at a decent raise.  While on the surface it would seem like a similar season would position himself to get more interest in the summer, he hasn’t had a lot of suitors in the past.

Bartkowski was able to get the extra year on his contract thanks to expansion and will now battle for the seventh spot on the depth chart.  As a result, his next deal shouldn’t be too much higher a year from now.  As for Lack, he will serve as the backup and will be looking to restore some value after a particularly rough season with the Hurricanes.  Top reserve netminders are starting to land bigger contracts (such as the one he’s currently on) and a good year from him would position Lack to sign at least a comparable deal next offseason.

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Two Years Remaining

F Sam Bennett ($1.95MM, RFA)
F Micheal Ferland ($1.75MM, UFA)
F Curtis Lazar ($950K, RFA)
G Mike Smith ($4.25MM, UFA)*

* – Arizona is retaining 25% of Smith’s contract.

Bennett unsurprisingly signed a bridge deal coming off a so-so sophomore campaign.  The Flames still view him as a top-six center down the road and if they’re unable to re-sign Backlund, he could find himself in that spot a year from now.  This is a contract where both sides are hoping that Bennett vastly outperforms it and earns himself a big money, long-term pact as a result.  If that doesn’t happen, he could find himself as a strong change-of-scenery candidate by the time the two years are up.

Ferland showed some offensive touch last season and plays a very physical style.  Those two elements will be attractive when he’s eligible for free agency so assuming he can hover around the 15-goal mark, his next deal should be a fair bit pricier.  Lazar had a disastrous 2016-17 season which is why Calgary was able to lock him up this cheap.  He still has some upside and could make this a bargain by the time it’s all said and done if he can hold down a regular role but on the flipside, a poor training camp and start to the season could have him on waivers before too long.

After Brian Elliott and Chad Johnson didn’t get the job done last year, the Flames are hoping that Smith, who had comparable numbers behind a lesser defense in Arizona, will be able to help them take that next step forward.  If Smith can rebound with the aid of one of the strong back ends in the league, the contract could wind up being a bit of a bargain but if he struggles, they’ll likely be shopping for a new starter next summer once again.

Three Years Remaining

D T.J. Brodie ($4.6504MM, UFA)
F Troy Brouwer ($4.5MM, UFA)
F Michael Frolik ($4.3MM, UFA)
D Travis Hamonic ($3.857MM, UFA)
D Michael Stone ($3.5MM, UFA)

Brouwer’s first season with Calgary did not go particularly well.  He wound up with the lowest full-season point total of his career despite spending a significant portion of the season in their top six.  He’ll probably get another chance in there at some point due to a lack of right-wing depth but if he falters early on, GM Brad Treliving will be looking to move him out.  However, he has a full no-trade clause this season.  Frolik has been remarkably consistent, averaging 0.50 to 0.54 points per game over the past four seasons and provides the Flames with good secondary production.  He won’t be a strong value contract for the money he’s making but if he can maintain that level of scoring, the deal won’t be a negative one either.

Brodie struggled out of the gate last season but rebounded well while maintaining a spot on the top pairing.  Whenever you can get a top-two defender at that price (with quality production from the point as well), it’s a bargain deal.  Hamonic was acquired from the Islanders where he’ll be asked to play in a second pairing role.  They paid a steep price to get him in terms of the acquisition cost but he’s only a year removed from being a top-two defender for the Islanders.  He has the potential to really deepen their back end and take some pressure off of the top pairing and having someone that can do that making under $4MM is another bargain.  Stone didn’t fare too well in Arizona but his play picked up after being dealt to Calgary.  He’s pricey for the role he’ll start in (on the third pairing) but he’s capable of moving up when needed and is a nice luxury to have while they have the cap space.

Four Or More Years Remaining

F Johnny Gaudreau ($6.75MM through 2021-22)
D Mark Giordano ($6.75MM through 2021-22)
F Sean Monahan ($6.325MM through 2022-23)

Dec 4, 2015; Calgary, Alberta, CAN; Calgary Flames left wing Johnny Gaudreau (13) jumps on center Jiri Hudler (24) and center Sean Monahan (23) to celebrate Hudler's  goal to tie the game in the third period with  against the Boston Bruins at Scotiabank Saddledome. Flames won 5-4 in overtime. Mandatory Credit: Candice Ward-USA TODAY SportsTreliving didn’t go the bridge route with his two top forwards last year and instead bypassed the bridge contract for the long-term deal right away.  While both players saw their production dip a little bit in 2016-17 in the first year of their new contracts, Gaudreau and Monahan still finished first and second respectively in scoring for the Flames and are locked in as front-line fixtures for years to come.  It’s also noteworthy that Gaudreau’s deal came in at the same rate as Giordano as that likely sets their internal contract ceiling for the foreseeable future.

Speaking of Giordano, his scoring numbers dropped considerably last season but his all-around game remained strong.  As long as he can play at the level of a top pairing blueliner, the Flames will get good value out of this contract but he turns 34 before the season starts and has five years remaining.  At some point, he is going to drop down the depth chart and make this a tougher deal to carry on the books but that is still probably a few years away at least.

Buyouts

F Lance Bouma ($667K in 2017-18, $767K in 2018-19)
D Ryan Murphy ($100K in 2017-18, $138K in 2018-19)
F Mason Raymond ($1.05MM in 2017-18)

Retained Salary Transactions

None

Still To Sign

None

Best Value: Brodie
Worst Value: Brouwer

Looking Ahead

While many expect their provincial counterparts to have to make some cap-related trades in the near future, the Flames shouldn’t find themselves in that same situation any time soon.  Their expected big pay raises are staggered a little bit (Backlund next summer, Tkachuk the one after that with maybe Bennett fitting here as well) and there aren’t any real cap-crippling contracts on the books.  (Brouwer’s isn’t a good deal but it’s short enough that they could plausibly buy him out if it came to it.)  Calgary has arguably the deepest defense corps in the league (Nashville would give them a run here) and they’ll be able to afford it for a while yet.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Calgary Flames Salary Cap Deep Dive

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