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Archives for February 2018

Canadian Juniors Could Change Approach To Foreign Goalies

February 28, 2018 at 8:15 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 3 Comments

In 2013, the Canadian Hockey League (CHL), the overarching body in major junior hockey that governs the Ontario Hockey League (OHL), Western Hockey League (WHL), and Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), decided to ban teams from drafting European goalies. The CHL holds an annual Import Draft in which all 60 teams across the three leagues are given two chances to draft foreign talent in an attempt to fill their two import slots on the roster for the following season. Sometimes the players who are drafted come over and other times they don’t. However, five years ago, CHL president David Branch and company decided to no longer take the risk of bringing in foreign keeper who could then in turn block young North American goalies by not allowing teams to select them in the import draft. While the idea was to protect the development and value of homegrown products, the result was a weaker product across the CHL and a more difficult time for their business partners in the NHL to evaluate foreign goalies.

In fairness, the decision was made after a stretch of dominant play by European keepers at the major junior level. In 2010-11, the top save percentage in both the OHL and QMJHL belonged to imports: Petr Mrazek and Christopher Gibson. Not long before, Michal Neuvirth was one of the OHL’s best as well. In the mid-2000’s, Ondrej Pavelec controlled the QMJHL, leading the league in goals against average in back-to-back seasons among other accomplishments, and is arguably still the league’s best goaltender in history.

This isn’t to say that Canadian and American goalies didn’t also flourish at that time as well, which calls the decision back into question. This was always a concern of quality over quantity, as the vast majority of teams still employed a North American starter and often a local backup or two as well. The CHL may have been concerned with the talent of some foreign prospects overshadowing Canada’s best, but they could never have honestly argued there was a lack of opportunity due to imported players. Top 2018 draft-eligible CHL prospects Andrei Svechnikov and Filip Zadina are both imports, yet they would never ban forwards.

Nevertheless, the CHL made a decision which clearly hurt their own competition level by excluding some of the top junior-level goaltending talent in the world without any evidence that it was truly hurting their domestic counterparts. Now, years later, the league is rethinking that decision. John Matisz of the Toronto Sun reports that the league is considering lifting the ban on foreign goalies, and for good reason. The ban has simply made it harder for NHL team to evaluate European keepers – with foreign leagues often dominated by older, experienced players, while the top young skaters come overseas – but hasn’t stopped them from being drafted into the pros at the same rate as CHL goalies. Meanwhile, top prospects such as Ukko-Pekka Luukonen (Buffalo), Filip Gustavsson (Ottawa), and 2018-eligible Jakub Skarek still reside overseas, but could surely benefit nearly any team in the CHL. The major juniors face little risk that a reversal would harm them in any way.

Interesting enough though, it may still be in European goalies’ best interests to remain in Europe and for NHL teams to focus on those who stay and face older, professional talent. The list of foreign goaltenders who played major junior in Canada and remain in the NHL – Mrazek, Neuvirth, Pavelec, Peter Budaj, Philipp Grubauer, Jaroslav Halak, Anton Khudobin, Marek Langhamer, Robin Lehner, and the most recent CHL import star, Oscar Dansk – all have one thing in common: they aren’t bona fide starters. Meanwhile, the likes of Sergei Bobrovsky, Henrik Lundqvist, Pekka Rinne, Tuukka Rask, and Andrei Vasilevskiy avoided North America until turning pro, and it worked out much better for them. With a new class of European goalies likely to join the CHL sooner rather than later, we’ll see if that trend continues.

CHL| OHL| Prospects| QMJHL| WHL Andrei Svechnikov| Andrei Vasilevskiy| Anton Khudobin| Christopher Gibson| Henrik Lundqvist| Jaroslav Halak| Louis Domingue| Marek Langhamer| Michal Neuvirth| Ondrej Pavelec| Oscar Dansk| Pekka Rinne| Peter Budaj| Petr Mrazek| Philipp Grubauer

3 comments

Expansion Notes: Seattle Ownership, Bettman, Vancouver

February 28, 2018 at 7:08 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 2 Comments

The NHL-to-Seattle movement is in full swing, and ESPN’s Emily Kaplan recently caught up with hopeful owners Jerry Bruckheimer, David Bonderman, and Tim Leiweke and talked about everything from the remodeling of KeyArena, to branding, to even acquiring an NBA franchise down the road. For now, the trio are just invested in being the ownership group of the league’s 32nd team (literally, as they paid a $10MM down payment along with their application paperwork earlier in the month). The next step is a season ticket drive, about which Bruckheimer told Kaplan “there’s a lot of momentum working in our direction”. Should the ticket drive prove successful, the NHL is likely to accept the bid and begin planning the next stage of NHL expansion. That would of course include another Expansion Draft. The Seattle ownership group has to be hopeful after seeing the success of the Vegas Golden Knights this season, and Bonderman told Kaplan “The commissioner has been consistent in saying it’s the same kind of process and procedures that they used in Vegas, and we’re going to hold them to that”.

  • Well, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman spoke about that exact topic today, telling TSN’s Farhan Lalji that the process would be exactly the same for Seattle as it was for Vegas. The expansion process was unlike any seen in professional sports before, allowing the existing NHL teams to only protect a maximum of 11 players from their roster. While first- and second-year players were exempt, Vegas GM George McPhee still had several valuable players to pick as well as several vulnerable teams to manipulate. The resulting roster did not blow anyone away, but proved to be the perfect fit for head coach Gerard Gallant’s system and the Knights are now contenders in their inaugural season. The Seattle ownership group is a ways away from naming a GM or coach, but they’ll have to make strong selections if they wish to maximize the entry draft process like Bill Foley and the Golden Knights did.
  • The other decision that may still be a ways away but will nonetheless draw major attention and speculation is the team name. The name, logo, and colors of any sports team is a huge factor and the reveal of the Golden Knights was a major, televised event. So when is the earliest we could find out the Seattle moniker and see some colors and logos? How about the 2019 NHL Draft? The league announced today that the Vancouver Canucks will host the draft in 2019. What better time to reveal the first details about Seattle than at a key league event hosted by the team that will eventually be their natural geographic rival to kick off the league year prior to their planned induction ahead of the 2020-21 season. It hardly seems like a coincidence that Vancouver was chosen to host this specific draft, the last in which they will be the only NHL team from the Pacific Northwest. Bettman and company are thinking ahead. Stay tuned.

Expansion| George McPhee| Gerard Gallant| Seattle| Vancouver Canucks| Vegas Golden Knights Gary Bettman| NHL Entry Draft

2 comments

Injury Notes: Penguins, Blue Jackets, Bruins

February 28, 2018 at 6:00 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

The Pittsburgh Penguins could be without rookie forward Zach Aston-Reese long-term. Actually, head coach Mike Sullivan described the injury as “longer-term”, though he refrained from putting any specific timeline on his return. He did say that Aston-Reese suffered an upper-body injury in practice, which is why he missed last night’s game, a 3-2 loss to the New Jersey Devils, and will presumably miss many more. While the Penguins made a splash with their acquisition of center Derick Brassard at the trade deadline, Aston-Reese has been a point-per-game player since being recalled to Pittsburgh, spending ample time beside Sidney Crosby. Fortunately for the two-time defending Cup champs, they are also deep at wing and should have no trouble making up for the loss of Aston-Reese in their top-nine.

  • While the Penguins lose a man to injury, the rival Blue Jackets add one. Columbus announced today that captain Nick Foligno has been activated from injured reserve. Foligno missed more than a week with a lower body injury suffered against the Penguins back on the 18th. However, he’s returning to the lineup sooner than expected. The Blue Jackets are thankful for Foligno’s quick bounce back; not only are they looking to solidify their playoff position, but they also lost forward Josh Anderson to long-term injury recently. Fortunately, Foligno’s return and the additions of Thomas Vanek and Mark Letestu at the trade deadline make for a timely situation to replace Anderson.
  • Speaking of trade deadline injury replacements, the Bruins could not be happier with how their additions played in the absence of Patrice Bergeron last night. When a player of Bergeron’s caliber goes down, the team always suffers. Bergeron will be out at least two weeks with a fractured foot and it showed right away last night on the defensive side of the match-up, as Boston surrendered three easy first period goals to the Carolina Hurricanes. However, it was Rick Nash and Tommy Wingels leading the charge to a comeback victory. The pair of new Bruins combined for two goals and an assist in 32 minutes of ice time as Boston won 4-3.

Boston Bruins| Columbus Blue Jackets| Don Sweeney| Injury| Jarmo Kekalainen| Jim Rutherford| Mike Sullivan| Pittsburgh Penguins Derick Brassard| Josh Anderson| Mark Letestu| Nick Foligno| Patrice Bergeron| Rick Nash| Sidney Crosby| Thomas Vanek| Tommy Wingels| Zach Aston-Reese

1 comment

Snapshots: Pacioretty, McDonagh, Hynes

February 28, 2018 at 4:53 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 7 Comments

In Elliotte Friedman’s latest 31 Thoughts column on Sportsnet, the insider details all the rumors and whispers he heard on trade deadline day. Among them was a long piece on Max Pacioretty, and how the Montreal Canadiens never found a deal on him because of the high value Marc Bergevin put on his captain.

Among the contenders for Pacioretty’s services were Los Angeles, who were asked for Tyler Toffoli and Gabe Vilardi as part of a package, Minnesota, who Friedman believes were asked for Charlie Coyle, and Florida who had to decline when the Canadiens asked for Vincent Trocheck. It’s clear that Montreal is not interested in just futures, but players who can jump right into their lineup in 2018-19 to help turn the ship around.

  • Interestingly, Friedman also notes a possible discussion between Florida, Minnesota and New York that would have ended with Ryan McDonagh in Sunrise. While they weren’t involved in any of the day’s really big moves, you can be sure that the Panthers and Wild had their phones ringing on Monday.
  • Though it was originally believed that John Hynes’ contract was set to run out at the end of the season, Friedman reports that the New Jersey Devils actually have another option year with their head coach that he believes they will pick up. Hynes has helped turn the Devils into a legitimate playoff contender in the Metropolitan Division, less than a year after winning the draft lottery and selecting Nico Hischier first-overall.

Florida Panthers| John Hynes| Marc Bergevin| Minnesota Wild| Montreal Canadiens| New Jersey Devils| Snapshots Charlie Coyle| Elliotte Friedman| Gabe Vilardi| Max Pacioretty| Nico Hischier

7 comments

Vancouver Officially Announces 2019 NHL Entry Draft

February 28, 2018 at 3:34 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

After being rumored for the last week, the Vancouver Canucks made it official today and announced that they will be hosting the NHL Entry Draft on June 21-22, 2019. In the announcement, that was rejoiced by media members across the continent—Vancouver is a beloved city for visitors—NHL commissioner Gary Bettman explained why the NHL is heading west next year:

Returning the Draft to Vancouver allows the entire NHL family to meaningfully participate in a highlight of the Canucks’ 50-year anniversary celebration. The 2019 NHL Draft will provide another memorable moment for the Canucks and their fans while shining the spotlight on one of the world’s most scenic cities and serving as the starting point for so many NHL careers.

The Canucks have been part of the league since 1970, and have previously hosted the draft on two occasions. 1990, when a talented and feisty kid from the OHL named Owen Nolan was selected first-overall by the Quebec Nordiques, and 2006, when the St. Louis Blues decided to take big American defenseman Erik Johnson over several high-profile centers.

The 2019 draft is shaping up to be an excellent group, with Jack Hughes trying to fend off players like Bowen Byram and Dylan Cozens for the top spot. Vancouver, who are in the midst of a rebuild, could have another shot at the draft lottery next season, which would make the draft even more exciting for the Canucks and their fans.

Vancouver Canucks Gary Bettman| NHL Entry Draft

2 comments

Aaron Dell Signs Two-Year Extension With San Jose Sharks

February 28, 2018 at 12:23 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

In what will surely make the goalie market quite different this summer, the San Jose Sharks have signed Aaron Dell to a two-year extension worth a total of $3.8MM. Dell was scheduled to become an unrestricted free agent on July 1st. The salary breakdown is as follows:

  • 2018-19: $2.2MM
  • 2019-20: $1.6MM

Aaron DellDespite having just 45 NHL appearances under his belt at age-28, Dell has played well enough that he could have been considered a starting option on the open market. The free agent signing out of the University of North Dakota was leading the league in several categories at one point this season, and now has a .912 save percentage through 25 appearances.

Earning just $675K on a two-way deal, Dell is one of the most cost-effective goaltenders in the entire league this season. With starter Martin Jones is starting a six-year, $34.5MM extension next season, the Sharks could have a solid tandem locked up for at least two years. Though there was no guarantee he would get looks as a starter on the open market, he’s giving up the chance to become a #1 somewhere else.

With his play the last two seasons, Dell had set himself up to follow the footsteps of goaltenders like Scott Darling and go from relative obscurity as a backup to starting goaltender. We discussed the dangers of such a pursuit earlier this year, but the Sharks re-signing him means no team will have to make that tough decision. Instead, he’ll be able to continue working as one of the more reliable backups in the league, and try to help the Sharks to another Stanley Cup Finals appearance.

Kevin Kurz of The Athletic first reported that the deal was close.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

San Jose Sharks| Transactions Aaron Dell

2 comments

Vancouver Canucks Sign Alex Biega To Two-Year Extension

February 28, 2018 at 10:32 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

The Vancouver Canucks didn’t move any of their top defensemen (sorry, Philip Holm) at the trade deadline, instead actually handing out an extension to Erik Gudbranson to keep him off the open market this summer. They’ve now done the same thing for one of their lesser-known commodities, as the team announced a two-year extension for Alex Biega that carries an annual average value of $825K.

Originally selected by the Buffalo Sabres in 2006, Biega would play four years at Harvard before starting his professional career in the AHL. After a few years in the Buffalo system without a chance at the NHL, he became a Group VI free agent and signed with Vancouver. Now with 125 NHL games under his system, he’s become a solid part-time player for the Canucks capable of logging minutes on the bottom pairing.

With extensions for Gudbranson and Biega, the Canucks would have six NHL defensemen already under contract for the 2018-19 season, with Derrick Pouliot and Troy Stecher looking for new contracts as restricted free agents. With many hoping that top prospect Olli Juolevi will also make the jump to the NHL next season, it could lead to an interesting offseason of trade talk surrounding the Canucks’ blue line. Chris Tanev and Alexander Edler are usually the focus of that speculation, though Ben Hutton has also drawn interest from around the league this season.

Biega, 29, is currently earning just $750K for the Canucks, and with just 31 games under his belt wasn’t able to negotiate much more than that. Vancouver has a fair amount of cap space with Henrik and Daniel Sedin’s contracts expiring, but could have a lot of money sunk into their defense corps if Pouliot and Stecher get long-term deals. It could force their hand in terms of a trade, which could make draft day extra intriguing for Canucks fans.

Rick Dhaliwal of News 1130 was first to report that the team is close to an extension.

Transactions| Vancouver Canucks Alex Biega

3 comments

Late To The Party: The Post-Deadline Trade

February 28, 2018 at 10:10 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

When people think of the trade deadline in the NHL, it often conjures the impression of the last chance to improve your team before the end of the season. If you don’t make a deal on February 26th (or whenever the deadline falls in a given year) you’ll have to wait until the draft to make a big splash.

The thing is, that’s not true.

The NHL trade deadline is poorly named, as it is actually not a deadline to make trades at all. Instead, that is the last day in which a traded player is eligible to suit up for his new team in the playoffs. It is not a beginning of a transaction freeze at all. Any team can make any trade today, though those players won’t be eligible for any postseason games.

Since 2005-06, the first year of the modern cap era of the NHL, there have been nine trades after the playoff eligibility deadline. They are as follows:

2007 –  Trade Deadline February 27:

March 1:

Minnesota Wild receive Aaron Voros
New Jersey Devils receive 2008 seventh-round pick

2008 – Trade Deadline February 26:

February 28:

Columbus Blue Jackets receive Nate DiCasmirro
Arizona Coyotes receive Steven Goertzen

April 7:

Arizona Coyotes receive Cory Urquhart
Montreal Canadiens receive Olivier Latendresse

2009 – Trade Deadline March 4:

March 6:

San Jose Sharks receive Kyle McLaren
Philadelphia Flyers receive 2009 sixth-round pick

March 10:

Toronto Maple Leafs receive Jay Rosehill
Tampa Bay Lightning receive future considerations

2011 – Trade Deadline February 28:

March 1:

Columbus Blue Jackets receive Petr Kalus
Minnesota Wild receive future considerations

2012 – Trade Deadline February 27:

March 20:

New York Islanders receive Yuri Alexandrov
Boston Bruins receive future considerations

2016 – Trade Deadline February 29:

March 7:

Carolina Hurricanes receive Dane Fox
Vancouver Canucks receive future considerations

2017 – Trade Deadline March 1:

March 6:

Ottawa Senators receive Brandon Gormley
New Jersey Devils receive future considerations

Definitely not the most impactful moves of the last decade. That makes sense, because teams looking to buy are all trying to get to the playoffs and want their full team available to them if they do make it. Sellers aren’t looking to swap around contracts until they have a clearer picture of what their team looks like next season.

Interestingly though, there may be some incentive for post-deadline trades this year.

Take Edmonton for instance, who have been looking for a running mate for Connor McDavid and need to inject some speed into the lineup. If Ottawa takes your call, why not continue discussions over Mike Hoffman down the stretch to see if something can be worked out? Though the Senators know that they’d have several teams interested if the put Hoffman on the market at the draft, if the Oilers meet the asking price right now why not pull the trigger?

There is also an argument for some teams that are still in a playoff race to make a move. The Pittsburgh Penguins just lost their starting goaltender to a concussion, an injury that rarely comes with a definitive recovery timetable. Though Tristan Jarry and Casey DeSmith have been impressive in their rookie campaigns, perhaps Pittsburgh would be interested in adding a veteran goaltender just to help them over the next 20 games. After all, the Penguins aren’t even guaranteed a playoff spot at this point, and could drastically change their seeding with a poor stretch.

Even Boston, who are battling with Toronto and Tampa Bay for seeding in the Atlantic Division just lost arguably their best player for a few weeks. If the Bruins are set on a run at the Presidents’ Trophy and a top seed in the East, some more center depth could help even if it is only for 22 games.

All of these moves are long-shots, but there is an argument to be made for each of them. Post-deadline trades are rare, but they could have a huge impact if teams would be more open to them. Sure, they can’t suit up for the playoffs. But if you don’t make it without them, neither can the rest of your squad.

Uncategorized Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Evening Notes: Flames, Hammond, Valiev, Blues

February 27, 2018 at 8:56 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

While the Flames had a pretty quiet trade deadline day with their only pickups being depth moves (winger Chris Stewart off waivers from Minnesota and center Nick Shore in a trade with Ottawa), Postmedia’s Eric Francis reports that Calgary had kicked the tires on several prominent forwards.  He notes that Canadiens winger Brendan Gallagher was among those the team inquired about, a group that also included Montreal’s Max Pacioretty, Ottawa’s Mike Hoffman, and Evander Kane, who was eventually moved to San Jose.

GM Brad Treliving acknowledged that he also looked into the goaltending market but that the potential moves “just didn’t make any sense”.  With Mike Smith out with a groin injury, the Flames are currently running with rookies David Rittich and Jon Gillies as they look to hold onto a playoff spot in the tightly-contested Pacific Division.

Other notes from around the league:

  • It turns out Penguins goalie Matt Murray isn’t the only goalie to be diagnosed with a concussion after the deadline. BSN Denver’s AJ Haefele reports (Twitter link) that Avalanche netminder Andrew Hammond is now in concussion protocol, joining Jonathan Bernier in that situation.  As a result, Spencer Martin has been recalled from San Antonio of the AHL.
  • Defenseman Rinat Valiev was part of the swap over the weekend between Montreal and Toronto that saw Tomas Plekanec head to the Maple Leafs. The blueliner acknowledged to LNH.com’s Anthony Marcotte that he had requested to be traded.  Toronto has had several other young rearguards move ahead of Valiev on the depth chart over the last little while so his preference was to head to a team that didn’t have as many players potentially blocking his path to an NHL roster spot.
  • While on the surface, the Blues’ trade of center Paul Stastny yesterday suggests that St. Louis was in selling mode, GM Doug Armstrong told reporters, including Jim Thomas of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, that he was involved in trade talks that would have seen the first-round pick they acquired in that swap flipped for a more proven player. However, they weren’t able to find a match, nor were they willing to part with their top prospects to bring in someone that would help for just the next 12-18 months so instead, they will look to try to get back on track without any additions outside the organization.

Calgary Flames| Colorado Avalanche| Montreal Canadiens| St. Louis Blues| Toronto Maple Leafs Andrew Hammond| Rinat Valiev

2 comments

Metropolitan Notes: Flyers, Johnson, Anderson, Penguins

February 27, 2018 at 7:48 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The Flyers were quiet yesterday in terms of activity with their lone move of the day being the waiver claim of Johnny Oduya from Ottawa.  GM Ron Hextall told reporters, including Dave Isaac of the Courier-Post, that their position in the standings wasn’t going to dictate how aggressive they were going to be:

“Because we’re a point out of the division lead, we’re not going to make a deal that makes us a little better right now but we give up two young assets, a good young player, a draft pick.  We’re not going to make deals to go essentially all-in for one year.”

Hextall also stated that they were looking into a couple of things but that he wasn’t prepared to overpay for a rental upgrade.   Instead, Philly will look inwards for their post-deadline upgrades.  Winger Wayne Simmonds is out for another seven-to-ten days while netminder Brian Elliott is expected to return at some point before the postseason as well which should only be a boost for the currently-surging Flyers.

More from the Metropolitan:

  • Considering his trade request earlier in the year and the fact that Columbus acquired Ian Cole early on Monday, it came as somewhat of a surprise that the Blue Jackets didn’t deal defenseman Jack Johnson by the trade deadline. Despite that, both Johnson and GM Jarmo Kekalainen acknowledged to George Richards of the Columbus Dispatch that there could still be a chance that the rearguard chooses to stick around after the season.  Johnson’s ice time has gone up since his request to be moved and at one point last week, talks were held regarding a possible contract extension although talks didn’t progress particularly far.
  • Still with the Blue Jackets, the verdict is in regarding Josh Anderson’s injury and the news isn’t great. The team announced (Twitter link) that the winger will miss approximately the next four weeks as a result of a knee sprain sustained on Monday against Washington.  That should immediately free up a spot for the recently-acquired Thomas Vanek without disrupting the rest of the lineup.
  • The Penguins made a strong push to acquire Wild center Matt Cullen, notes Jason Mackey of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. However, Minnesota set a considerable asking price, one that GM Jim Rutherford wasn’t willing to pay for a player who would have been more of a luxury instead of filling a need.  Mackey adds that Pittsburgh had also set a very high asking price on top prospect Daniel Sprong, who could see time with the Pens down the stretch.

Columbus Blue Jackets| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Ron Hextall Daniel Sprong| Jack Johnson| Josh Archibald| Matt Cullen

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