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Archives for July 2018

Arizona Coyotes Hire Lindsay Hofford As Assistant General Manager

July 24, 2018 at 4:30 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Arizona Coyotes have hired Lindsay Hofford as their new Assistant General Manager and Director of Scouting, ending his tenure as an amateur scout with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Hofford has been a well-known name in the CHL for many years in various roles, developing waves of talent that have gone on to the professional ranks. Coyotes GM John Chayka released a statement following the hiring:

I believe the most important part of my role is to recruit talented people. Lindsay is a best in class talent evaluator that will be an asset to our entire organization and complement the existing infrastructure we have in place.

As the press release explains, a huge number of NHL players have worked with Hofford in the past during his time with the London Knights and Lethbridge Hurricanes, and he should have a huge impact on the Coyotes development system going forward. The team already had a positive tilt towards OHL players in the draft, most recently exemplified by their selection of Barrett Hayton with the 2018 fifth-overall pick, and will now gain even more insight into the league.

It’s obvious that Chayka is willing to look outside the normal group of NHL front office executives for his team, and it seems necessary when building a team without the resources that some of his competitors wave about. The Coyotes have slowly built a solid prospect core that should be maturing in the next few seasons, and could be a wildcard for the playoffs as soon as this season. Hofford will be tasked with continuing to build that pipeline and supply Arizona with talented young players who they can take advantage of in the NHL before they become too expensive.

CHL| Utah Mammoth

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Toronto Maple Leafs Have Discussed Contract With Jake Gardiner

July 24, 2018 at 3:05 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 14 Comments

The Toronto Maple Leafs added a huge contract to their salary structure this summer, signing John Tavares to a seven-year, $77MM deal on July 1st. That sent Maple Leafs fans everywhere scrambling to CapFriendly to see if the team could afford to re-sign their young forward core—Auston Matthews, William Nylander and Mitch Marner—to long-term extensions when the time comes, but there’s another player who could be affected by so much money going to Tavares. Jake Gardiner is heading into the final year of his current contract and is coming off the best season of his career with 52 points. The conversation on TSN radio today with guest James Mirtle of The Athletic turned to the future for Gardiner with Toronto:

I think that this new management with [Kyle] Dubas and Brandon Pridham and Laurence Gilman is going to try and not lose good players for nothing in free agency. That would mean deciding right now whether you want to sign Jake Gardiner to a contract extension or moving him and getting something back…

…I think at the very least you explore what does he want in a contract extension and are you comfortable with that, and then you also explore what is he available for in the market. If you can get something of equal value to Jake Gardiner–which might be a difficult trade to make, but if you can–then I think you’ve got to think about it. You don’t want to be taking key pieces of your team, and regardless of how poorly he played in the playoffs he is a key piece of their team, you don’t want to keep losing those for nothing. 

Mirtle of course is referencing the three other key forwards that the Maple Leafs let walk into free agency this summer, losing Tyler Bozak, James van Riemsdyk and Leo Komarov to big multi-year contracts elsewhere around the league. Though it wasn’t clear if the Maple Leafs ever had much intention of bringing any of them back, signing Tavares basically guaranteed that they wouldn’t be able to. That might not be the same situation for Gardiner, as the team needs to pay someone to play defense on their team and have relied on the 28-year old to log big minutes for them. Mirtle gives another nugget of information late in the interview, reporting that the two sides have in fact met to discuss a potential extension.

I know that Gardiner’s agent Pat Brisson–the same agent as Tavares–has met with Kyle Dubas and talked about Jake Gardiner’s contract. So it’s on their radar. I’m sure that management just wants to know what he’s asking for and they can make the decision on whether they want to meet that price or not. 

Again, it’s not clear if the Maple Leafs have any intention of offering Gardiner an extension or would be willing to let him walk into free agency next summer. The talented but sometimes frustrating defenseman has a penchant for both incredible breakout passes and defensive zone miscues, but has been one of the most consistent offensive producers in the league the last few seasons. Scheduled to turn 29 just a few days after he becomes an unrestricted free agent, there will be plenty of teams willing to pay for his offensive production and live with some of the struggles he can have in his own end. It’s hard to find consistent points from the blue line, and Gardiner has proven he can reliably run a powerplay and contribute at even-strength.

Still, that Tavares contract makes any extension for the Maple Leafs more difficult. Though they currently look to have more than $30MM in cap space for the 2019-20 season, much of that will be eaten up by the contracts for those three aforementioned young players including a potential $10MM+ cap hit for Matthews. Even past those three, Kasperi Kapanen and Andreas Johnsson will be looking for new deals after their first full NHL seasons and the team will have to find a replacement of some sort for Ron Hainsey as his deal is also set to expire. If Gardiner is looking for a long-term big money deal, it may not be in the cards for Toronto.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Free Agency| Toronto Maple Leafs Jake Gardiner

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Brooks Orpik Signs With Washington Capitals

July 24, 2018 at 2:46 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 7 Comments

After being traded and bought out earlier this summer, Brooks Orpik is heading back to the Washington Capitals. The team announced a one-year $1MM contract for the veteran defenseman, which will also carry up to $500K in performance bonuses.  Renaud Lavoie of TVA Sports reports that Orpik will receive $250K once he plays in 20 games and another $250K when he reaches the 40-game plateau.

Orpik, 37, was deemed too expensive to keep around on his previous contract and was attached to the Philipp Grubauer trade with the Colorado Avalanche. That limited the return for the Capitals to just a second-round pick, but also removed Orpik’s $5.5MM contract from the books. That was extremely important given that the Capitals needed to re-sign John Carlson, Michal Kempny and Tom Wilson (among others) this offseason, and may not have been able to fit everyone in under the salary cap. Avalanche GM Joe Sakic was immediately clear that he would either trade Orpik somewhere he was wanted or buy him out to allow him to search for another opportunity, since Colorado didn’t have plans to use him as they continue to get younger and more skilled.

The buyout, which was the eventual course of action, means that Colorado is paying Orpik $1.5MM this year and next to not play for their team and will incur a cap penalty of $2.5MM this season. That doesn’t both them, but was an impossibility for the Capitals while still having enough space to sign everyone else. Another impossibility would be re-signing Orpik after the buyout had they done it themselves, as it is prohibited by the CBA. Not when it’s another team who completes it though, meaning Orpik was free to return to the team that he won a Stanley Cup just this season. With his potential $1.5MM salary this season should he hit all of his performance bonuses, Orpik actually isn’t losing a single dollar from the $4.5MM he was supposed to be paid for 2018-19.

His role with Washington though may be greatly diminished. Though Orpik was a key player for the team in their magical Stanley Cup run, the team obviously has intentions of using Madison Bowey and Christian Djoos more going forward, and with Kempny in town for the whole season there will already be a lack of available minutes. Even past that, Orpik had clearly lost a step during the season and posted some of the poorest possession statistics in the entire league. What he will bring though is a ton of experience and the ability to move in and out of the lineup when necessary. The veteran of 982 regular season games and two Stanley Cups will no doubt play a role in the Capitals encore performance, but it might just be that of a part-time player.

Washington Capitals Brooks Orpik

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Tucker Poolman, Marko Dano Re-Sign With Winnipeg Jets

July 24, 2018 at 2:44 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

The Winnipeg Jets have locked up one of their depth defensemen, signing Tucker Poolman to a three-year contract. The deal will carry an average annual value of $775K and take Poolman right through to unrestricted free agency in 2021. The team has also re-signed Marko Dano to a one-year $800K contract, crossing out another one of their arbitration eligible restricted free agents. Dano was scheduled for an arbitration hearing on July 30th, but will now not need to travel to Toronto for the meeting.

Though Poolman and Dano both had to get new contracts, the Jets still have a remarkable number of restricted free agents left to sign this summer. Josh Morrissey, Nicolas Kerdiles, J.C. Lipon, Nic Petan and Eric Comrie are all still sitting without contracts. None of those four are scheduled for arbitration though, giving the team some respite from the ticking clock that the hearings brought.

The 25-year old Poolman only played in 24 games with the Jets this season, but also wasn’t given the opportunity to develop in the minor leagues. The former University of North Dakota standout served as the extra man on many nights, something that he may have to suffer through again in 2018-19. When Morrissey is signed, the Jets will have eight defensemen signed to one-way contracts, with Poolman earning the lowest amount of the group. Perhaps he’s fine with the role he’s been given though, as a three-year deal is longer than many expected. It actually buys out a year of unrestricted free agency, but gives Poolman barely a raise on the minimum NHL salary.

For Dano, this may be one of his last chances to prove that he’s an NHL regular. After being selected in the first round by the Columbus Blue Jackets five years ago, Dano has failed to secure a full-time spot in three different organizations and played only 23 games for the Jets last season. He’ll turn 24 this November and with 45 points in 130 career games, there may not be another one-way contract waiting for him in free agency next summer.

Arbitration| Free Agency| Schedule| Winnipeg Jets Marko Dano| Tucker Poolman

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Matvei Guskov Signs With London Knights

July 24, 2018 at 1:52 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

It’s never too early to start keeping tabs on the top prospects for the 2019 NHL Entry Draft, and now teams around the league will be able to get a much closer look at one of the very best. Matvei Guskov, who could potentially go in the first handful of selections next June, has signed with the London Knights of the OHL for the 2018-19 season, according to agent Dan Milstein of Gold Star Hockey. Guskov fell to 42nd in the recent CHL import draft because of doubts he would come to North American this season, but is an incredibly skilled center prospect that should find success quickly in the junior ranks.

This comes after the Knights also convinced Chicago Blackhawks top prospect Adam Boqvist to sign for this season, giving them another elite weapon on the blue line. Evan Bouchard, the team’s captain will also be back after being selected 10th overall by the Edmonton Oilers, unless his training camp is good enough to earn him a spot in the NHL right away. The Knights are notorious for getting players to sign with them unexpectedly, and have developed countless NHL players throughout the years.

CHL| London Knights| OHL| Prospects Matvei Guskov| NHL Entry Draft

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USA Hockey Announces Summer Showcase Rosters

July 24, 2018 at 1:33 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

The World Juniors are still several months away, but we’ll get a look at those players vying for spots this weekend at the 2018 World Junior Summer Showcase. The tournament begins on Saturday in Kamloops, British Columbia and runs through August 4th, pitting teams from around the world against each other as a warm up for the winter tournament. USA Hockey will submit two teams as usual, and today announced the rosters for each along with the coaching staffs.

Team Blue will be led by Scott Sandelin and Chris Clark, who currently work for the University of Minnesota-Duluth and Columbus Blue Jackets respectively. Their roster will feature some exceptional talents including returning names like Brady Tkachuk and Dylan Samberg. The full Blue roster is as follows:

F Evan Barratt (CHI, 90th overall, 2017)
F Sasha Chmelevski (SJS, 185th overall, 2017)
F Logan Cockerill (NYI, 201st overall, 2017)
F Paul Cotter (VGK, 115th overall, 2018)
F Sean Dhooghe (undrafted)
F Jon Gruden (OTT, 95th overall, 2018)
F Logan Hutsko (FLA, 89th overall, 2018)
F Brandon Kruse (VGK, 135th overall, 2018)
F Jacob McGrew (SJS, 159th overall, 2017)
F Ryan Poehling (MTL, 25th overall, 2017)
F Brady Tkachuk (OTT, 4th overall, 2018)
F Jake Wise (CHI, 69th overall, 2018)

D Josh Ess (CHI, 215th overall, 2017)
D David Farrance (NSH, 92nd overall, 2017)
D K’Andre Miller (NYR, 22nd overall, 2018)
D Tommy Miller (undrafted)
D Alec Regula (DET, 67th overall, 2018)
D Dylan Samberg (WPG, 43rd overall, 2017)
D Reilly Walsh (NJD, 81st overall, 2017)

G Kyle Keyser (BOS, free agent)
G Keith Petruzzelli (DET, 88th overall 2017)

Team White will be led by Steve Miller and Pat Mikesch, who currently work with Ohio State University and the Green Bay Gamblers respectively. Their club may be even more exciting as it includes potential 2019 first overall pick Jack Hughes along with his brother Quinn Hughes and plenty of other high-end talents. The full roster is as follows:

F Noah Cates (PHI, 137th overall, 2017)
F Cole Coskey (undrafted)
F Jack Drury (CAR, 42nd overall, 2018)
F Joel Farabee (PHI, 14th overall, 2018)
F Curtis Hall (BOS, 119th overall, 2018)
F Jack Hughes (2019 eligible)
F Ivan Lodnia (MIN, 85th overall, 2017)
F Grant Mismash (NSH, 61st overall, 2017)
F Josh Norris (SJS, 19th overall, 2017)
F Jay O’Brien (PHI, 19th overall, 2018)
F Jason Robertson (DAL, 39th overall, 2017)
F Oliver Wahlstrom (NYI, 11th overall, 2018)

D Matt Anderson (undrafted)
D Mikey Anderson (LAK, 103rd overall, 2017)
D Quinn Hughes (VAN, 7th overall, 2018)
D Joey Keane (NYR, 88th overall, 2018)
D Phil Kemp (EDM, 208th overall, 2017)
D Ben Mirageas (NYI, 77th overall, 2017)
D Mattias Samuelsson (BUF, 32nd overall, 2018)

G Spencer Knight (2019 eligible)
G Cayden Primeau (MTL, 199th overall, 2017)

Uncategorized Brady Tkachuk| Jason Robertson| Mattias Samuelsson| Oliver Wahlstrom| Quinn Hughes| World Juniors

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Brandon Montour Settles With Anaheim Ducks

July 24, 2018 at 11:53 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Brandon Montour has reached a two-year contract settlement with the Anaheim Ducks. Montour was in Toronto for his arbitration hearing today, but will not have to wait for a contract to be awarded. Eric Stephens of The Athletic reports the deal will be worth an average annual value of $3,387,500. Montour will still be a restricted free agent at the conclusion of the contract in 2020.

Montour, 24, is a very important part of the Ducks’ defense corps now that Shea Theodore and Sami Vatanen have been sent elsewhere in the last 13 months. Suddenly a system that was overflowing for top-four options is just one injury away from installing an unproven prospect or lackluster veteran into an important spot, something the team will try to avoid at all costs this year. Luke Schenn and Andrej Sustr were brought in to replace outgoing veterans Kevin Bieksa and Francois Beauchemin, but neither should be asked for more than bottom-pairing minutes this season. That means Montour, along with Cam Fowler, Hampus Lindholm and Josh Manson will need to take the lion’s share of the work all season long.

The Ducks do have some young players who could have an impact before long, as Jacob Larsson, Marcus Pettersson and Josh Mahura all look to have solid upside. But it’s Montour and the others that will be given every opportunity to show that they are among the league’s best and carry an Anaheim team back to the playoffs. Signing a two-year bridge deal works for both sides, as the Ducks are given a chance to keep evaluating Montour at a reduced cost, while the player can prove he’s deserving of a huge contract in the summer of 2020. Montour will have just one year of restricted free agency remaining when this contract ends, meaning any long-term deal would be quite expensive.

In fact, this deal gives the young right-handed defender a chance to really develop into an elite offensive option before needing his next contract. Montour already recorded 32 points in his first full season with the Ducks, and could easily put up even more than that now that Vatanen will be gone for the whole season. A natural powerplay quarterback, Montour should split the man-advantage duties with Fowler this season. That kind of production, especially from a right-handed defenseman, is widely sought after on the open market. John Carlson, a player who has only twice broken the 40-point mark in a season—the most recent of which being his 68-point 2017-18 campaign—was just given an eight-year $64MM contract extension by the Washington Capitals. While comparing Montour to Carlson directly may be a little unfair, it gives an obvious example of how healthy the market is for puck-moving defensemen on the right side.

The deal leaves the Ducks with plenty of cap space for next season, though they’re certainly not finished this summer. Ondrej Kase and Nick Ritchie are both still restricted free agents in need of contracts, though neither was eligible for arbitration. The pair should take up a big chunk of the projected $8.7MM remaining cap space, though there may be enough left for a potential trade. While the Ducks have a ton of talent on the roster, their depth is running a bit thin at almost every position. Sustr and Schenn aren’t legitimate top-four options, while Kalle Kossila or Carter Rowney may be their best options for the third-line pivot position if Ryan Kesler can’t start the season. Neither of those are good situations for a team that’s looking to do damage in the postseason.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Anaheim Ducks| Arbitration Brandon Montour

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Joel Edmundson Avoids Arbitration, Re-Signs With St. Louis Blues

July 24, 2018 at 8:44 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The St. Louis Blues have avoided arbitration with Joel Edmundson, agreeing to terms with the defenseman on a one-year $3MM deal. Edmundson had a hearing scheduled for tomorrow, but won’t need to make the trip to Toronto. Edmundson will still be a restricted free agent at the end of the deal, and can start negotiating a long-term extension in January.

The 25-year old defenseman has grown from a second-round lottery ticket into a key part of the Blues defense corps over the last few seasons, logging nearly 21 minutes a night in 2017-18. That growth led to a career-high 17 points last season in 69 games, while averaging more than two minutes a night on the penalty kill and seeing virtually no powerplay time. That kind of responsibility should continue for Edmundson, especially given the other aging left-handed options for St. Louis.

Jay Bouwmeester, who has been a rock for the Blues for so many years, saw his ice time dwindle and injuries hold him to just 35 games last season. Though he’s expected to be ready for training camp despite undergoing hip surgery just a few months ago, Bouwmeester can’t be a long-term option for the Blues as he enters the final year of his current contract. He’ll turn 35 before the season begins and should see his role diminished even further this season. Carl Gunnarsson played 63 games for the Blues last season but is easily replaceable and also entering the final season of his current deal. It seems unlikely that either will be retained next summer for anything more than a one-year deal, giving Edmundson and others like Vince Dunn the chance to really put their stamp on the team.

Edmundson especially could set himself up for a big payday with a good season. Next summer he’ll be just one year away from unrestricted free agency, meaning any long-term contract will be buying out nearly exclusively UFA seasons. Every time that happens the cap hit goes up, which is also likely the reason for a one-year deal being the settling point this time around. The Blues have just over $1MM left in cap space and still have Jordan Schmaltz to re-sign, meaning there wasn’t enough space to pay Edmundson what he’d get on a longer deal. It seems extremely likely then that he’ll be extended in early 2019, and take his place as the top left-handed option for the Blues.

Arbitration| St. Louis Blues Joel Edmundson

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The Contract Each Team Would Most Like To Trade: Part I

July 23, 2018 at 8:09 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 17 Comments

Nearly every team has one of those players: a top talent they were excited to sign and never thought could do anything but help them. In hindsight, history shows that more often than not, expensive, long-term free agent contracts don’t work out. It may look good at first (or it may look bad right away to the outside observer), but players struggle to make their value last throughout a lengthy contract. Those contracts come back to bite teams and are hard to get rid of. As teams begin to finalize their rosters at this point in the off-season, many are struggling to make everyone fit under the salary cap and are regretting these past signings that exasperate a cap crunch that can be tough for even a mistake-free club. Here are the contracts that each team would most like to trade, from Anaheim to Dallas:

Anaheim Ducks: Corey Perry – three years, $25.875MM remaining

Corey Perry is no doubt a fan favorite in Anaheim. The big winger is a career Duck who has always played with an edge and a knack for finding the back of the net. However, the former 50-goal scorer has just 19 and 17 in the past two years respectively to the tune of $8.625MM per year. His lack of speed is apparent to even the most inexperienced hockey fan and he has drawn criticism from both GM Bob Murray and coach Randy Carlyle for the drop-off in his skating ability and production. The Ducks aren’t quite up against the salary cap just yet, but have three restricted free agents still unsigned and some big decisions on the horizon. Things are about to get tight in Anaheim and, as much as Ducks fans may not want to hear it, trading Perry away in the right deal would be the easiest solution.

Arizona Coyotes: None

The Coyotes trade for bad contracts, as the perennial salary cap floor dwellers rarely sign or acquire an expensive, long-term deal with an actual asset who may not be worth it.

Boston Bruins: David Backes – three years, $18MM remaining

On July 1st, 2016, it was leaked that Boston would sign David Backes to a one-year, $6MM contract and the Bruins were praised for bringing the veteran forward in as a hired gun. That celebration was short-lived, as the report was soon corrected to being a five-year deal with the same yearly salary and many questioned adding a 32-year-old with 727 games to his credit on a contract of that length and value. Two years later, the doubters have been proven right for the most part. Backes has not been bad in Boston (71 points in 131 games) and injuries have certainly affected his game, but it appears that his 50-point upside and Selke-caliber high-energy play are a thing of the past. Backes doesn’t have a defined role with the Bruins going forward and, as a team that doesn’t need the extra leadership and locker room presence and does need as much cap space as it can get, Boston would be better off if Backes were elsewhere.

Buffalo Sabres: Zach Bogosian – two years, $10.286MM remaining

The Sabres are finally trending in the right direction and have even used other teams’ bad salary cap situations to bring in some nice players this off-season. Buffalo themselves are in fine shape with the cap. However, there is still one contract that is bringing them down and that is Zach Bogosian. If Bogosian was fully healthy, his cap hit of just over $5.1MM would not be too bad. The 28-year-old defenseman has been a very capable two-way player in his career. Unfortunately, he just hasn’t been healthy enough during his time in Buffalo to be worth that salary. Bogosian played in only 18 games last year due to injury – and when he did play it showed that he wasn’t 100% – and has never topped 64 games in a season with the Sabres. The team has several young defenseman that could use as much ice time as possible and a beat up Bogosian isn’t helping anyone in Buffalo. Chances are the Sabres could still get a good return for the rearguard if he does show signs of being back at full-strength.

Calgary Flames: Troy Brouwer – two years, $9MM remaining

Calgary is in a really difficult salary cap situation with little space as is and five restricted free agent situations still to sort out. The team simply can afford to be paying Brouwer $4.5MM in each of the next two years for what he brings to the table. Many were skeptical of the Brouwer contract when signed and they were correct. The veteran power forward has only 25 and 22 points respectively in his first two years in Calgary, including just six goals last season, and at 32 years old he is unlikely to improve. Brouwer has even lost some of his trademark physical edge and recorded a career-low average time on ice last season when he was simply a non-factor in most games. With multiple players filing for salary arbitration, the Flames have been awarded an extra buyout period and it would not come as a shock to see Brouwer fall victim to it.

Carolina Hurricanes: Scott Darling – three years, $12.45MM remaining

The argument here is not that the Hurricanes should trade Darling because they need the cap space but that they should trade Darling because they need a better starting goaltender. Carolina is in fine salary cap shape, but so long as Darling is making more than $4MM per year, the team is likely to stick with him as the top guy. They have already committed to giving him another chance as the starter next season. Unfortunately, Darling’s first season in Raleigh hardly convinced anyone that this contract would work out. Moving from backup to starter, Darling seemed to crumble under the pressure even behind a stout defense, posting an .888 save percentage and 3.18 GAA as one of the worst keepers in the NHL. Perhaps his play will improve in year two, but the Hurricanes can’t be happy with the early results.

Chicago Blackhawks: Brent Seabrook – six years, $41.25MM remaining

When the Blackhawks made Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews the highest paid players in the league back in 2014, who would have figured that a different contract would be causing the team problems? Brent Seabrook’s eight-year, $55MM extension is already a nightmare for Chicago with the bulk of the contract still to come. Seabrook is a fine defenseman, but that doesn’t cut it when you’re paid like one of the top defenseman in the league, but your play is slipping and your team is finishing last in the division. This past season especially, it was clear that Seabrook has lost a step. Both his scoring and checking have diminished and he no longer resembles the player who was regularly posting 40+ points and garnering Norris Trophy votes. Seabrook will turn 34 later this season and it seems guaranteed that this contract only gets worse unless the team finds some way to trade him.

Colorado Avalanche: Erik Johnson – five years, $30MM remaining

The Avalanche have one of the lowest payrolls in the league with superstar Nathan MacKinnon locked up long-term at a reasonable rate. Their distance from the cap ceiling this season makes egregious contracts with just one year remaining – like streaky starter Semyon Varlamov and invisible forward Colin Wilson – somewhat tolerable. However, several major contributors are set to be restricted free agents after next season, Colorado will need to add another goaltender, and could still stand to add another difference-maker up front. Things could get tighter for the Avs moving forward and the one contract that could become a problem is Erik Johnson. Johnson eats up minutes and plays a defensively sound game, but the veteran defenseman is injury prone and does not create enough offense to warrant a $6MM cap hit. If the Avalanche were offered a reasonable deal for Johnson today they may not take it, but this time next year that same deal will be far more attractive.

Columbus Blue Jackets: Brandon Dubinsky – three years, $17.55MM remaining

The Blue Jackets pay Brandon Dubinsky like a second-line center and last season got fourth-line production from the veteran. Yes, Dubinsky has had his fair share of injuries, but a consistent 40+ point scorer dropping to just 16 points on the year was alarming. Columbus is no longer a small market team still figuring things out; the Jackets are a contender and like most contenders are close to the salary cap limit. The team can’t afford to have Dubinsky continuing to produce at this level while costing them $5.85MM against the cap. They hope that he bounces back this year, but even a slow start could have Columbus taking their best offer.

Dallas Stars: Martin Hanzal – two years, $9.5MM remaining

It may be too early to judge last summer’s Martin Hanzal contract, but if Dallas was offered a re-do right now, they would take it. Hanzal’s first season with the Stars was a disaster. Injuries limited him to just 38 games and even when active he contributed only ten points –  a 22-point pace over a full season – and somehow finished with the second-lowest plus/minus rating on the team. If Hanzal gets healthy, which is a big if, he could return to form next season, but if not the Stars could be quick to deal him away. The team desperately needs to bounce back from a devastating slump that cost them a playoff spot and have been rumored to be interested in big (expensive) names all off-season. That plan doesn’t mix well with a $4.75MM player who brought almost nothing to the team last year.

Keep an eye out for Part II of this three-part series coming soon…

 

Anaheim Ducks| Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| Calgary Flames| Carolina Hurricanes| Chicago Blackhawks| Colorado Avalanche| Columbus Blue Jackets| Dallas Stars| Injury| Utah Mammoth Brandon Dubinsky| Brent Seabrook| Colin Wilson| Corey Perry| David Backes| Erik Johnson| Martin Hanzal| Salary Cap

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Calgary Flames, Brett Kulak Await Arbitration Decision

July 23, 2018 at 6:15 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

Almost unbelievably, given recent history, another salary arbitration case has gone to hearing today without a contract resolution. The Calgary Flames, defenseman Brett Kulak, and their respective representatives sat down with the arbitrator this morning and Postmedia’s Wes Gilbertson says that the parties emerged from the meeting a few hours ago. The two sides now have an approximate 48-hour window to reach an extension settlement on their own terms. Once the formal decision is made on Wednesday, the awarded contract will be final.

Similar to the Jacob Trouba case – the decision handed down yesterday – it seems like the Flames and Kulak are content to await the arbitrator’s judgement, though. Calgary considers Kulak to be a replacement-level, fringe NHL player. They established that when they filed at the minimum $650K for a two-way contract in their arbitration brief and then enforced it when they placed Kulak on waivers on Friday. Kulak and his reps feel that he has established himself as a regular in the league and is deserving of a one-way deal worth more than $1MM. There is a convincing case to be made on both sides and countless comparable contracts to cite, but there doesn’t seem to be much of a middle ground when even the nature of the contract is in dispute, nevertheless salary and term. It’s been all quiet on both sides in recent days and the next 48 hours seem likely to go unused.

The Flames may also be preoccupied with two more upcoming arbitration cases and willing to take what they get from the arbitrator rather than spend time continuing negotiations with Kulak’s side. Calgary faces forward Mark Jankowski on Friday and goaltender David Rittich on Saturday, two players likely to play a larger role for the Flames this season and beyond than Kulak. Such a busy arbitration schedule is far from the norm for Calgary; beat writer Darren Haynes points out that the Flames have reached the hearing stage of salary arbitration with just one player – Lance Bouma in 2015 – in the last ten years. If nothing changes, they are less than a week away from quadrupling that total.

Arbitration| Calgary Flames| Waivers Brett Kulak| David Rittich| Jacob Trouba| Lance Bouma

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