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Archives for July 2018

Golden Knights Re-Sign Tomas Nosek

July 18, 2018 at 10:40 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Wednesday: Vegas has officially announced the contract, confirming the salary details as reported.

Tuesday: The Vegas Golden Knights have avoided arbitration with winger Tomas Nosek; CapFriendly reports (Twitter link) that Nosek has signed a one-year, $962.5K contract.  He had previously been scheduled for an arbitration hearing on July 30th.

Nosek came to Vegas via the expansion draft and after being predominantly a minor leaguer in Detroit’s system the previous two years, he worked his way into a largely-regular role last season.  All in all, the 25-year-old played in 67 regular season games, scoring seven times while adding eight assists.  He followed that up with an even better showing in the playoffs, scoring four goals in just 17 postseason contests as the Golden Knights made it all the way to the Stanley Cup Final before being eliminated by Washington.

Next season, it’s likely that Nosek will reprise his role as a fourth liner and penalty killer for Vegas.  For a salary under $1MM, that’s pretty good value for the Golden Knights.

With the signing, Vegas has just shy of $14MM in cap room to work with, per CapFriendly.  They have three remaining restricted free agents on their NHL roster to re-sign in center William Karlsson, defenseman Shea Theodore, and winger William Carrier.  Of that group, only Karlsson is eligible for arbitration with a hearing scheduled for August 4th.

Vegas Golden Knights Tomas Nosek

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Winnipeg Jets, Jacob Trouba Submit Arbitration Figures

July 18, 2018 at 9:12 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 5 Comments

After Chris Tierney re-signed with the San Jose Sharks, the only arbitration hearing on the books for Friday July 20th is now Jacob Trouba of the Winnipeg Jets. Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports that the two sides have submitted quite different salary figures, with the Jets filing for $4MM and Trouba’s camp asking for $7MM. If an agreement isn’t reached before the hearing, the two sides will actually have a bit more time before the arbitrator rewards a contract. Several players in the past have settled after the hearing, but before a decision was reached. Unlike MLB arbitration, an awarded salary does not need to be one figure or the other and can land somewhere in the middle.

The discrepancy between the two figures is large, but also not unexpected for a player of Trouba’s skill. The 24-year old defenseman already has five NHL seasons under his belt, including a shortened 2016-17 due to a holdout that lasted into November of that year. The two sides couldn’t come to an agreement on his contract at that point, and Trouba had reportedly asked for a trade given his role on the team. Winnipeg already has two excellent right-handed defensemen in Dustin Byfuglien and Tyler Myers, and Trouba felt as though he could handle a bigger role even as a young player.

He got his wish that season as Myers dealt with injury and Trouba would end up logging nearly 25 minutes a night playing in all situations. That number dropped back down in 2017-18, but it’s not like Trouba isn’t utilized. He still averaged the second-most minutes on the team behind Byfuglien and scored at a good pace while healthy. That health was a concern though, as the young defenseman only suited up for 55 games and has now failed to play all 82 in any of his five seasons. In fact, he’s averaging just 65 games per season thanks to previous injuries and his contract issues, which certainly won’t help his arbitration case.

Still, Trouba is obviously an extremely talented player and deserves to be paid well. If an arbitration settlement is need he’ll likely come in somewhere between the two figures, but it will almost certainly be a one-year contract. Because Trouba filed for player-elected arbitration, the Jets get to make the decision on whether the awarded contract will be for one or two seasons. If they pick two, it would carry him to unrestricted free agency in 2020 and allow him to test the market. A one-year deal would give them another chance to sign him to a long-term deal and buy out some of those UFA seasons.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Arbitration| Winnipeg Jets Elliotte Friedman| Jacob Trouba

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Chris Tierney Re-Signs With San Jose Sharks

July 18, 2018 at 9:08 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The San Jose Sharks were just 48 hours away from going to an arbitration hearing with Chris Tierney, but have found some common ground and a new contract. According to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet, the two sides have settled on a two-year contract that carries an average annual value of $2,937,500.

Tierney, 24, is coming off his best season as a professional after scoring 17 goals and 40 points with the Sharks last season. Originally selected in the second round six years ago, he’s developed into an effective all-situations center for San Jose and saw his ice time increase to 16 minutes a night this season. With Joe Thornton coming back on a one-year deal, Tierney will likely be asked once again to center the third line for the Sharks and continue to give them excellent penalty killing and secondary scoring.

Interestingly, the two-year contract will leave Tierney as a restricted free agent at its conclusion in the summer of 2020. That leaves the Sharks with some time to decide whether he’s a long-term fit for the club, and gives him a chance to prove that he’s more than just a bottom-six player. If Tierney continues to trend upwards offensively, his next contract could be quite lucrative as it would be buying out almost exclusively unrestricted free agent years. Even if he sits at around 40 points for the next two seasons, that will be enough to land him an impressive contract given his position and relative youth.

For now, his sub-$3MM deal will fit nicely in for a team that missed out on some of the summer’s big names. After failing to convince John Tavares to come to the west coast, the team brought back Thornton on a $5MM deal and signed Logan Couture to a long-term extension. With Tierney—their final restricted free agent—now signed, the team still has almost $4.4MM in cap space to make an addition through trade if they choose. Whether that comes this summer or during the season isn’t clear, but the team has set themselves up to be players in almost any trade talks that may arise.

Arbitration| San Jose Sharks Chris Tierney| Elliotte Friedman

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Snapshots: Blackhawks, Chynoweth, Sharangovich, Army

July 17, 2018 at 8:47 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 10 Comments

While many have expected the Blackhawks to make a splash following last week’s trade of Marian Hossa, that may not necessarily be the case.  Speaking with reporters, including Mark Lazerus of the Chicago Sun-Times, GM Stan Bowman alluded to the possibility that instead of adding more help this summer, they are comfortable carrying their cap room into the season:

“It’s an option if we can find the right player or the right situation.  We certainly have more options than we did before. I wouldn’t say we have to do something. Having cap space is an asset in and of itself, so things will come along maybe in the summer, maybe in the beginning part of the year.”

The Blackhawks have been linked to several notable players this summer including Carolina winger Jeff Skinner and defenseman Justin Faulk plus Montreal winger Max Pacioretty but clearly, they haven’t been able to find the right trade just yet.

Elsewhere around the league:

  • The Hurricanes announced that they have hired Dean Chynoweth as an assistant coach. He replaces Steve Smith, who resigned to join Buffalo’s coaching staff last week.  Chynoweth spent last season as an associate coach with Vancouver of the WHL but has three seasons of NHL experience behind the bench with the Islanders from 2009-10 to 2011-12.  He rounds out a new-look coaching staff with Rod Brind’Amour taking over for Bill Peters as head coach and Jeff Daniels, who was hired as their other assistant earlier this summer.
  • The Devils have inked center Yegor Sharangovich to an entry-level deal, his agent Dan Milstein announced (via Twitter). The 20-year-old was New Jersey’s fifth-round pick (141st overall) in last month’s draft.  Sharangovich spent last season with Dinamo Minsk of the KHL, collecting four goals and eight assists in 47 regular season games while finishing second on Team Belarus in scoring at the World Juniors.  He also suited up in seven games for Belarus at the World Championships.
  • The Wild are expected to name Tim Army as their new AHL head coach, Mark Divver of the Providence Journal reports (Twitter link). He served as an assistant with AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton last season but also has 15 years of NHL coaching experience under his belt between Anaheim, Washington, and Colorado.

Carolina Hurricanes| Chicago Blackhawks| Minnesota Wild| New Jersey Devils| Snapshots

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West Notes: Oilers, Kunin, Trouba

July 17, 2018 at 6:14 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

While Edmonton moved quickly to shore up their goaltending position with the addition of Mikko Koskinen on a one-year, $2.5MM deal, Postmedia’s David Staples argues that the Oilers would have been better off waiting and doing something in the regular free agency period instead.  More prominent and proven players such as Carter Hutton and Jaroslav Halak signed for similar amounts ($2.75MM each) while others like Petr Mrazek and Robin Lehner came in a fair bit cheaper ($1.5MM apiece) and have logged big workloads as well.

While it’s certainly possible that Koskinen has some legitimate upside, it’s fair to suggest that they could have benefitted from a more proven option like Halak or Hutton.  They wouldn’t have taken one-year deals like Koskinen but having that extra insurance with starter Cam Talbot being a pending UFA wouldn’t have hurt.  Had the Oilers gone with a cheaper option, it would have freed up some more cap flexibility which could have come in play with RFA defenseman Darnell Nurse instead of forcing them into a bridge deal.  We’ll soon see how Koskinen fares but in early hindsight, they may have been better off waiting instead of acting quite quickly to lock him up in May.

More from the West:

  • Wild winger Luke Kunin is hoping to skate later this week for the first time since undergoing surgery to repair a torn ACL in early April, reports Dane Mizutani of the Pioneer Press. The 20-year-old sustained the injury back in March but had to wait until the swelling went down before going under the knife.  While Kunin is hopeful that he will be ready for training camp, recoveries from ACL tears can often take closer to six months to recover which would put his availability for the start of next season in question.  If he does get the green light from team doctors by then, he has a very good chance of cracking Minnesota’s opening night lineup.
  • The Jets are expected to elect a one-year arbitration award for defenseman Jacob Trouba if the two sides are unable to come to terms before Friday, notes Postmedia’s Ken Wiebe. This was the expected outcome since a two-year pact would take him to unrestricted free agency.  Since it was Trouba who filed, Winnipeg gets to pick the term instead of the other way around.

Edmonton Oilers| Minnesota Wild| Winnipeg Jets Jacob Trouba| Luke Kunin

1 comment

New York Islanders Agree To Terms With Ryan Pulock

July 17, 2018 at 5:37 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

5:37 PM: CapFriendly reports (Twitter link) that the deal will carry a $2MM AAV with Pulock receiving $1.35MM in 2018-19 and $2.65MM in 2019-20.  The significant difference between the two years is particularly noteworthy since the $2.65MM figure and not the AAV will represent his qualifying offer in June of 2020.

8:31 AM: The New York Islanders have come to terms with one of their remaining restricted free agents, signing Ryan Pulock to a two-year contract. Pulock finally broke out and became a full-time NHL player last season, but was not eligible for salary arbitration. He will still be a restricted free agent at the end of the deal. No financial details have been released yet.

Pulock, 23, was originally selected 15th overall in 2013 but struggled to find much NHL playing time before the 2017-18 season. He’d shown off his goal scoring ability from the blue line in the minor leagues, but was stuck behind a veteran group in New York that included right-handed options like Johnny Boychuk and Travis Hamonic. When Hamonic was sent to the Calgary Flames last offseason though, an opportunity presented itself for Pulock to show what he could do at the NHL level. In 68 games Pulock scored 32 points and was arguably the Islanders best two-way defenseman, contributing offensively while quickly and effectively getting the puck out of his own end. For such a young and inexperienced player he wasn’t sheltered by head coach Doug Weight, and logged more average ice time than veteran Thomas Hickey, who was also re-signed this offseason.

Under new coach Barry Trotz, Pulock should experience even more growth and responsibility this season and try to follow the development path set by others before him. John Carlson for example was a young offensively minded defenseman with a career-high of 37 points when Trotz came to Washington in 2014. He immediately posted a 55-point season and became one of the Capitals’ stars on the blue line. In his final year under Trotz this season, Carlson set new career-highs with 15 goals and 68 points. Though some of that production also has to do with then-assistant coach Todd Reirden, Pulock will try to be the next right-handed weapon to put up career numbers under Trotz.

While that comparison may seem unfair, Pulock does have some incredible offensive tools that look ready to be unleashed if he’s given a regular spot with New York. The team will have to find new ways of creating scoring chances now that John Tavares has left town, and the new wave of talent led by Mathew Barzal and Pulock will be the driving force behind them. After a solid rookie season, we could see a huge step forward in 2018-19 if Pulock is given the chance.

New York Islanders Ryan Pulock

2 comments

Remaining 2018 Arbitration Dates

July 17, 2018 at 4:45 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

As usual, arbitration hearings scheduled for later this month have been getting cancelled every day as teams lock up their restricted free agents. Hearings are scheduled each year between July 20th and August 4th, but we’ve already seen 18 players that filed for player-elected salary arbitration reach a settlement with their respective teams. Those players are listed below, with their contract details:

Elias Lindholm (CGY) – 6 years, $4.85MM AAV
Trevor van Riemsdyk (CAR) – 2 years, $2.3MM AAV
Matthew Nieto (COL) – 2 years, $1.98MM AAV
Devin Shore (DAL) – 2 years, $2.3MM AAV
Joel Armia (MTL) – 1 year, $1.85MM AAV
Phillip Danault (MTL) – 3 years, $3.08MM AAV
Blake Coleman (NJD) – 3 years, $1.8MM AAV
Stefan Noesen (NJD) – 1 year, $1.73MM AAV
Jimmy Vesey (NYR) – 2 years, $2.28MM AAV
Taylor Leier (PHI) – 1 year, $720K AAV
Alex Lyon (PHI) – 2 years, $750K AAV
Jamie Oleksiak (PIT) – 3 years, $2.14MM AAV
Dmitrij Jaskin (STL) – 1 year, $1.1MM AAV
Oskar Sundqvist (STL) – 1 year, $700K AAV
Colin Miller (VGK) – 4 years, $3.88MM AAV
Liam O’Brien (WSH) – 1 year, $650K AAV
Connor Hellebuyck (WPG) – 6 years, $6.17MM AAV
Tomas Nosek (VGK) – 1 year, $962.5K AAV

The remaining arbitration schedule looks like this:

July 20

Chris Tierney (SJS)
Jacob Trouba (WPG)

July 22

Adam Lowry (WPG)

July 23

Brett Kulak (CGY)
Mathew Dumba (MIN)

July 24

Brandon Montour (ANA)

July 25

Joel Edmundson (STL)
Brandon Tanev (WPG)

July 27

Mark Jankowski (CGY)

July 28

David Rittich (CGY)
Jason Zucker (MIN)

July 29

Troy Stecher (VAN)

July 30

Garnet Hathaway (CGY)
MacKenzie Weegar (FLA)
Marko Dano (WPG)

July 31

Brady Skjei (NYR)

August 1

Cody Ceci (OTT)
Gemel Smith (DAL)

August 2

Miikka Salomaki (NSH)
Kevin Hayes (NYR)

August 3

Mattias Janmark (DAL)
Mark Stone (OTT)
Brock Nelson (NYI)

August 4

Ryan Spooner (NYR)
Patrik Nemeth (DAL)
William Karlsson (VGK)

Arbitration Adam Lowry| Alex Lyon| Blake Coleman| Brady Skjei| Brandon Montour| Brandon Tanev| Brett Kulak| Brock Nelson| Chris Tierney| Cody Ceci| Colin Miller| Connor Hellebuyck| David Rittich| Devin Shore| Dmitrij Jaskin| Elias Lindholm| Garnet Hathaway| Gemel Smith| Jacob Trouba| Jamie Oleksiak| Jason Zucker| Jimmy Vesey| Joel Armia| Joel Edmundson| Kevin Hayes| Mark Stone| Marko Dano| Mattias Janmark| Miikka Salomaki| Oskar Sundqvist| Patrik Nemeth| Phillip Danault

3 comments

Anaheim Ducks Re-Sign Three Players

July 17, 2018 at 2:50 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Anaheim Ducks have reached new contracts with three of their restricted free agents, signing Kalle Kossila, Kevin Roy and Andy Welinski to one-year two-way contracts. Eric Stephens of The Athletic has the financial breakdown of each contract:

  • Kossila: $650K NHL/$125K AHL
  • Welinski: $690K NHL/$125K AHL
  • Roy: $874K NHL/$70K AHL

It’s fitting that these three were announced at the same time, given how similar each of their circumstances are. All three are now 25 years old—in fact were all born within a six week span in 1993—and split last season between the minor leagues and NHL, with only Kossila having made his debut in a previous year. Roy was up for the longest period, suiting up for 25 games and recording seven points including six goals. The trio though were the life blood of the San Diego Gulls of the AHL, registering a combined 125 points on the year.

While they may each play some in the NHL this year, there isn’t a guaranteed role for any of them. Kossila may have the best chance given his experience at center and the still cloudy situation regarding Ryan Kesler, but none should expect to play a full season with the Ducks. Instead, they all represent valuable depth for a club that is expecting to compete once again.

Each of the three failed to qualify for Group VI unrestricted free agency this summer given that they have just two professional seasons under their belts, but all three are headed for that status next offseason. If any of them fail to reach a total of 80 games played in the NHL by the end of the year, they’ll be able to choose their next destination from the free agent market.

Anaheim Ducks Kalle Kossila| Kevin Roy

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Jimmy Vesey Re-Signs With New York Rangers

July 17, 2018 at 2:48 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

The New York Rangers have avoided arbitration with one of their restricted free agents, signing Jimmy Vesey to a two-year contract worth a total of $4.55MM. Vesey was scheduled for an arbitration hearing on July 30th, which will no longer be necessary.

Vesey, 25, probably has more name recognition than most middle-six wingers in the league that are coming off back-to-back seasons with fewer than 30 points. That’s because of the saga that unfolded in the summer of 2016, when Vesey told the Nashville Predators he wouldn’t sign with them coming out of college. Even after trading a third-round pick for his rights the Buffalo Sabres couldn’t convince him to sign, and Vesey eventually became an unrestricted free agent. Despite connections to the Boston Bruins and Toronto Maple Leafs, a then 23-year old Vesey decided to sign with the New York Rangers and was immediately inserted into their lineup.

In the two years since exiting Harvard following his Hobey Baker-winning season, Vesey has scored 33 goals and 55 points in 159 games. While that is fine production for a player that cost the Rangers nothing but an entry-level contract, it’s not quite what people were expecting when he was one of the most talked about stories of the 2016 offseason. There’s an obvious knack for goal scoring in Vesey, but there hasn’t been a consistent enough offensive or defensive presence to really consider him a key member in the Rangers’ quick rebuild. Instead he presents as a secondary scoring threat that is valuable and now reasonably priced at an average annual value of $2.275MM.

If Vesey is to really live up to the hype that surrounded him two summers ago, he’ll have to do it quickly before several younger prospects really make their mark and start demanding minutes with their on-ice play. Filip Chytil and Lias Andersson both received a taste of NHL action last year but could be full-time options for the team this season, while others like Brett Howden and Vitali Kravtsov aren’t far behind. Vesey will be an unrestricted free agent once again at the end of this two-year deal, meaning if he doesn’t show enough to justify a long-term contract this season he could find himself on the trade block at some point.

Arbitration| New York Rangers Jimmy Vesey

3 comments

Evan Bouchard Signs Entry-Level Contract With Edmonton Oilers

July 17, 2018 at 2:03 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Edmonton Oilers have inked their first-round selection, signing defenseman Evan Bouchard to a three-year entry-level contract. Bouchard could potentially see that contract slide forward if he fails to play in 10 games for the Oilers this season.

Rated as one of the very best prospects available in the draft, Bouchard took an unexpected tumble down to 10th-overall where the Oilers eventually selected him. While some believed he would be the second defenseman off the board after first-overall pick Rasmus Dahlin, he instead watched as Quinn Hughes and Adam Boqvist were picked by Vancouver and Chicago respectively at picks seven and eight. The Oilers, who desperately wanted to pick a defenseman this season, happily snapped up Bouchard and could potentially insert him into their lineup without much wait.

Playing for the London Knights of the OHL the last three seasons, Bouchard has developed into an elite two-way defensive prospect who recorded 87 points in his most recent season. On the ice for incredible amounts of time each night, Bouchard was involved in nearly everything the Knights did in 2017-18 and led the team in scoring by more than 30 points. The fact that he is 6’2″, right-handed and can skate well enough to keep up with the NHL pace only adds to the package that Bouchard brings, and makes him an almost perfect fit for the Oilers going forward.

Still, it’s not guaranteed that he will join the club for the entire season. Last year the Oilers kept first-round pick Kailer Yamamoto with them until early November before sending him back to the junior ranks, and a similar path could be followed with Bouchard. Since Yamamoto played just nine games in the NHL his entry-level contract will slide forward a season, giving the team another inexpensive year for one of their top prospects. Cheap seasons for productive NHL players are incredibly valuable in today’s NHL, especially for the Oilers who have to continually worry about the salary cap due to their huge commitments to Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl. If they don’t believe that Bouchard is ready to make a real impact for the entire year, putting him back in London would allow them to push that contract back a year.

The argument against that obviously is whether Bouchard has anything left to learn at the OHL level. As one of the best players in the league already last season there are some who believe going back would only stagnate his development, especially given he was already probably at the limit of what a player can handle in terms of ice time. There aren’t more minutes to be had for Bouchard, though there could potentially be a new partner to work with. Boqvist, the previously mentioned Blackhawks prospect, is expected to join the Knights for the 2018-19 season and is an elite offensive defenseman in his own right. Though both are right-handed, there could still be plenty of opportunities to use the two together. Perhaps playing excellent minutes with another top talent would be beneficial to Bouchard, and with both on the blue line the team would surely compete for the OHL championship and perhaps even a Memorial Cup.

Edmonton Oilers

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