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Archives for November 2018

Philadelphia Flyers Granted Permission To Interview Bill Zito, Dave Nonis

November 30, 2018 at 9:16 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Though several reports have now surfaced that list former Minnesota Wild GM Chuck Fletcher as the front runner, the Philadelphia Flyers will not rush the interview process for their vacant GM spot. Today, Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic reports that the Flyers have received permission to speak with Bill Zito, who currently serves as the assistant GM for the Columbus Blue Jackets. Bob McKenzie of TSN adds that the team has also received permission to speak with Dave Nonis, who is working with the Anaheim Ducks organization.

Zito, 54, has been around the NHL for decades, first as one of the most powerful player agents in the world and now in management with the Blue Jackets for the last several years. His work in both roles had been widely praised, and he has been a candidate for several job openings around the league the last few offseasons. He was GM of the Lake Erie Monsters (now Cleveland Monsters) when they won the Calder Cup in 2016, and has overseen the development of several key players for the Blue Jackets roster. There seems to be little doubt that he will eventually get an NHL team of his own to run. Zito will interview this weekend with Philadelphia president Paul Holmgren.

Nonis on the other hand is a veteran GM that has been given the keys to both the Vancouver Canucks and Toronto Maple Leafs in the past. While neither of those teams finished where Nonis was trying to push them, he still is a respected member of the hockey executive community and could very well be put into a GM role once again. The 52-year old may also be the most available of the three listed candidates, given that he is only serving as a consultant for Anaheim.

Columbus Blue Jackets| Philadelphia Flyers

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Is There A Market For Karl Alzner?

November 29, 2018 at 8:29 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 7 Comments

It’s been a brutal 17 months for Montreal Canadiens defenseman Karl Alzner. Well, the first few months after Alzner signed a five-year, $23.125MM contract on July 1st, 2017 were probably okay. Once he actually took the ice with the Habs last season though, it was all downhill. Alzner had capitalized on a weak free agent market – one in which even we here at PHR considered him the third best name – which had inflated his value far beyond what it should have been. Alzner was a solid defenseman for many years for the Washington Capitals, consistently healthy and capable of eating significant minutes. However, he lacked much in the way of offense and in retrospect his defensive abilities were amplified by the copious talent around him on the eventual Stanley Cup champions. Transitioning to a weaker roster in Montreal, Alzner was exposed when asked to play a key role on the Habs’ blue line. Carrying the puck more often, Alzer became a turnover machine. Facing tougher assignments, he was far less effective on defense and took a career high in penalties. And per usual, he contributed just twelve points and was a non-factor on offense.

Entering this season, Alzner and Canadiens fans alike hoped that he could turn it around and return to the shutdown player they felt they had signed for top dollar. However, the organization and coaching staff had other plans. Alzner was a healthy scratch in season opener and to date has only played in eight games with a major drop-off in ice time. Alzner was placed on waivers and subsequently cleared earlier this week and it was fair to wonder whether he had played his last game in Montreal just over a season into his five-year deal. That became much more probable yesterday, when the Canadiens gave Alzner and his agent permission to seek a trade.

Yet, permission to seek a trade is not the same as having concrete interest and willing suitors. Although the Habs have little reason not to accept any deal brought to them – barring an unreasonable amount of retained salary requested – that is just one side of a trade which obviously needs multiple teams. But is there even a market for Alzner? Two years ago, there was ample interest in him on the free agent market, but after a year in which he was exposed as having a game dependent on the talent of the players around him, he’s no longer the prize he once was. Then there’s also the matter of his contract, a relative albatross of four more years at $4.65MM. His stock is the lowest it has ever been, while his price is at it’s highest. That’s a tough combination to sell to a team. Alzner went untouched on waivers, meaning any team interested in acquiring him would also expect the Canadiens to retain some salary or otherwise add another piece to the deal.

Clearly, Alzner is not a player that can do much to help a rebuilding team. His cost also makes him a difficult addition for any team close to the salary cap ceiling. This leaves a narrow group of potential suitors who have talented rosters but are in comfortable salary cap shape and have a long-term need for a defensive blue liner. Any come to mind? It’s not a common occurrence, at least not currently. The Toronto Maple Leafs, although dealing with the William Nylander saga and long-term salary cap planning as is, would make some sense. The team is likely to lose Ron Hainsey and Jake Gardiner to free agency this summer and could use a long-term physical presence on the blue line at the right price. Their preference would certainly be to add a right-handed defenseman, but might not be picky if they feel Alzner would excel in their system. Barry Trotz’ new uber-conservative New York Islanders could also be a fit for Alzner, as they could stand to upgrade their blue line depth and have the existing talent to ease Alzner into his natural stay-at-home role. Alzner would seem to be a perfect fit for the Isles’ current system that emphasizes physicality and patient pace. The Columbus Blue Jackets and Minnesota Wild have fallen short of the ultimate goal despite strong recent campaigns and have the cap space to add a luxury piece like Alzner, who would be a bottom-pair defender for either team, albeit a needed depth addition. Finally, there are the Chicago Blackhawks who, despite shedding salary this summer, refrained from using their newfound cap space. Chicago had interest in Alzner when he was a free agent in 2017, considered by many the favorite to land the physical defender. The team could still use more talent and especially more shutdown play on the back end. However, with one of hockey’s worst contracts in Brent Seabrook already on the roster, could they really risk adding a similarly disappointing and overpaid defenseman in Alzner?

Those are just five teams who could potentially have interest in Alzner. There could be more, if some teams feel that Alzner’s play in Montreal has been a misrepresentation of his ability. Yet, there also could easily be less, as Alzner has done nothing in the past year plus to prove that he is anything more than a replacement level checking defenseman. Given his contract status, Alzner may find it difficult to match up with a new team and put together a successful trade out of Montreal. It is certainly a possibility, but the only team Alzner is likely going to be playing for in the near future is the AHL’s Laval Rocket.

AHL| Barry Trotz| Chicago Blackhawks| Columbus Blue Jackets| Free Agency| Minnesota Wild| Montreal Canadiens| New York Islanders| Penalties| Players| Toronto Maple Leafs| Waivers| Washington Capitals Brent Seabrook| Jake Gardiner| Karl Alzner| Salary Cap

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Snapshots: Couture, Matthews, Thomas

November 29, 2018 at 6:36 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 4 Comments

The San Jose Sharks entered the 2018-19 season with high expectations after their off-season blockbuster acquisition of Erik Karlsson. One of the best teams in all of sports over the past decade or so never to win a title, the Sharks have been the epitome of consistency, but have been unable to land that elusive Stanley Cup title. With Karlsson in the mix on a roster that is deep and talented in all areas, many felt this could finally be the season than San Jose puts it all together. More than a quarter of the way through the season, those expectations have yet to be met. The Sharks have been a fine team – their 29 points places them second in the Pacific Division – but in no way are they running away with a conference championship. At least one player on the team is fed up with the poor effort: star forward Logan Couture. After a third straight loss last night, Couture told the Canadian Press that things need to change:

“My personal opinion, I don’t think we’re close. We show spurts and signs that we’re capable (of playing with the best in the league) but we haven’t put together an effort against a top-quality team. … We gotta figure it out soon. I’m a believer that it takes time. (But) I’m a believer that it doesn’t take 26 games.”

Couture, who signed a long-term deal this off-season, is the centerpiece of the Sharks’ offense for the foreseeable future. Couture has as much right as anyone on the team to criticize their efforts, seeing as he has done his part so far with 25 points in 26 games. While Couture did not name names, it is easy to point at Karlsson, last year’s big acquisition, Evander Kane, and a lackluster bottom-six as those that need to step up if the Sharks wish to play to their potential. Perhaps Couture being open and honest about the team’s disappointing results that will flip a switch and turn this team into the true contender they should be.

  • It was Auston Matthews and the Toronto Maple Leafs who took down the Sharks last night and the young superstar played very well in his return to the lineup. Even in the midst of the final days of the William Nylander drama, Toronto continues to win and remain focused on the present. But what if their struggles to sign Nylander are just the beginning? The Leafs face quite the cap crunch moving forward and there is concern that a Nylander signing could eventually push out either Matthews or Mitch Marner. Fox Sports’ Andy Strickland relays word from sources around the league that Matthews could be a prime target for an offer sheet this off-season. Although rare, due to their financial cost and draft pick cost, a maximum offer sheet isn’t out of the realm of possibility for a young player of Matthews’ caliber. Strickland asks what the Leafs could possibly do, with so many RFA’s and a defense in need of rebuilding this summer, if a team was to offer Matthews a contract worth $14MM per season? Such a situation seems far-fetched, but may be more grounded in reality than we know. It would be yet another difficult obstacle for the Maple Leafs who are truly having trouble with having so much talent on their roster.
  • The Boston Bruins retired Rick Middleton’s number tonight, making him the eleventh member of an illustrious group of all-time greats. The question now turns to who could be next to join the Bruins’ stars in the rafters? Of their recently retired players, the one who truly sticks out is two-time Vezina Trophy winner and Stanley Cup hero Tim Thomas. Although Thomas’ career was not a long one, he was one of the top goaltenders in the NHL for several years and is arguably the most clutch postseason keeper in NHL history, with the league’s all-time best playoff save percentage. The Athletic’s Fluto Shinzawa asked one of the Bruins’ retired numbers, and the team’s current president, Cam Neely, for his thoughts on Thomas’ case, but he didn’t seem optimistic about the odds. Neely points to longevity as working against Thomas, but did not rule him out completely. “There’s no question, that team in ’11, what it meant to Bruins fans and New England. Timmy, what he did in that playoffs, not just in the finals but all of the series, was pretty impressive”, but Neely added “I don’t want to rule anything out, but you look at some of the guys up there, they have a bigger sample size of what they did throughout their career in Boston.” It seems that Thomas, who was a star in his own right but simply over a short period of time, faces an uphill battle to have his No. 30 retired. Instead, current long-time players Patrice Bergeron and Zdeno Chara are likely next up to be immortalized by the Bruins.

Boston Bruins| Dallas Stars| NHL| Players| RFA| San Jose Sharks| Snapshots| Toronto Maple Leafs Auston Matthews| Erik Karlsson| Evander Kane| Logan Couture| Mitch Marner| Patrice Bergeron

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PHR Live Chat Transcript: 11/29/18

November 29, 2018 at 5:04 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

Click here to read a transcript of this week’s live chat with PHR’s Gavin Lee.

Uncategorized Live Chats

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Haydn Fleury Placed On Injured Reserve, Clark Bishop Recalled

November 29, 2018 at 4:20 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Despite already potentially creating some roster room by placing Scott Darling and Valentin Zykov on waivers today, the Carolina Hurricanes have moved Haydn Fleury to injured reserve as he continues to deal with a concussion. Fleury suffered the injury on November 23rd, and will likely be placed retroactively to that date. In the meantime, the team has recalled forward Clark Bishop for the third time this season.

The move is interesting because the team would have had room to recall Bishop anyway tomorrow, meaning there are likely other recalls in the works after Darling and Zykov either clear or are claimed. One would expect the Hurricanes to bring up an extra defenseman for their game tomorrow, given the fact that they now only have six on the active roster. Among the candidates for that recall are Trevor Carrick who was with the team recently, or perhaps even Roland McKeown who hasn’t played with the Hurricanes yet this season but showed well in his short 10-game debut during 2017-18.

Regardless, for now this at least means a return to the NHL for Bishop, who will replace Zykov as the team’s 13th forward. The fifth-round pick is still looking for his first NHL point, after having gone scoreless in his first seven games this season. Not a huge offensive presence at even the junior level, Bishop won’t be expected to contribute much at that end of the rink.

Carolina Hurricanes| Injury Haydn Fleury

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Latest On William Nylander, Toronto Maple Leafs

November 29, 2018 at 2:31 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

It’s hard to get through a day of hockey radio right now without hearing multiple takes on the ongoing negotiations between William Nylander and the Toronto Maple Leafs, but with just over 48 hours left before the December 1st deadline, there should be a conclusion of some sort very soon. The last unsigned restricted free agent must be under contract with an NHL team before 4pm on Saturday or will be forced to sit out the entire season, something that neither side can possibly hope for at this point. Still, there has been little reported about an impending deal between the two sides since Chris Johnston of Sportsnet told viewers of Hockey Night In Canada that they were “believed to be rather close” to a deal that could pay Nylander around $6.9MM on a long-term deal.

Today, with nothing bubbling up about an imminent contract, Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic reported that Toronto has circled back with interested teams and instructed them to submit a sort of final trade offer. That due diligence is required in a situation like this, in which Toronto could be left holding a valuable asset as the clock strikes a figurative midnight on Saturday. It certainly doesn’t mean that Nylander will be traded in the next two days, but does perhaps lend credence to the idea that there will be a conclusion one way or the other.

For his part, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet believes that whether or not a trade or contract happens in the next few days, Nylander will not play for the Maple Leafs after the 2017-18 season, instead being traded by the draft even if he is under contract. It is important to remember that Nylander cannot be given a no-trade clause in negotiations until his free agent years, which would prevent him from forcing the Maple Leafs into corner over the next few months. Regardless of the length of the contract signed, the team could decide to move on from him at any point over the next several years.

That’s not what the Maple Leafs are planning on doing however, if you believe head coach Mike Babcock. Today, speaking to reporters including Johnston, Babcock explained that the organization believes Nylander will be with the club for a long time:

We think Willy’s going to be here and we think Willy’s going to be here a long time. We think Willy’s going to be a career Leaf.

According to Kristen Shilton of TSN, Babcock told people looking from the outside of the negotiations to not “confuse opinion with fact,” once again reminding many that there is little known about the actual inner workings of the dialogue. The Maple Leafs have never publicly shamed Nylander for his current position, and in fact he’s gotten quite a bit of support from his teammates over the first quarter of the season. The team obviously wants him back playing, but at this point nothing is certain.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Mike Babcock| Toronto Maple Leafs Elliotte Friedman| William Nylander

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Minor Transactions: 11/29/18

November 29, 2018 at 1:30 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Eight games grace the NHL schedule tonight, including a prime Atlantic Division matchup between the Buffalo Sabres and Tampa Bay Lightning. The Sabres are looking for their 11th consecutive win, while the Lightning will try to leapfrog Buffalo and Toronto for first place in the division. As teams prepare for the night’s action, we’ll keep track of all the minor moves around the league.

  • The Laval Rocket have released Ryan Sproul from his professional tryout contract, the second such transaction of the young defenseman’s season. Sproul was originally on a PTO with the Toronto Marlies, but played just one game for them before moving over to the Montreal Canadiens’ AHL affiliate. In 11 games for Laval, Sproul—a second-round pick of the Detroit Red Wings in 2011—registered five points.
  • Landon Bow is on his way back to the minor leagues, reassigned by the Dallas Stars today. Bow made his NHL debut earlier this month but with Ben Bishop close to a return will no longer be needed at that level. The 23-year old goaltender will return to the AHL and try to continue developing in order to push for a roster spot in the future.
  • The Calgary Flames have decided that it’s better for young forward Dillon Dube to get lots of playing time in the minor leagues instead of watching games from the bench or press box in the NHL. The 20-year old was given just eight minutes of ice time in Calgary’s recent overtime loss to the Dallas Stars, and has now been sent to the AHL. A second round pick from 2016, Dube has a bright future in Calgary and needs time to continue to refine his game at both ends of the rink.
  • Similarly, the Boston Bruins have sent Anders Bjork back to the AHL after getting just over nine minutes on Monday night. The former Notre Dame standout has just 15 points in 50 games since turning pro, and will try to get a reset in the minor leagues to unlock some of that offensive potential.
  • The Colorado Avalanche have brought in reinforcements on the blue line in the form of veteran defender Mark Alt. A free agent addition this summer, Alt has been serving as the captain of the AHL’s Colorado Eagles this season, but the team announced today that he is on his way up to the bigs. In a corresponding move, rookie forward Sheldon Dries has been reassigned to the AHL. Dries has registered four points in 15 games with the Avs so far this season and has fit in well with the NHL club.

AHL| Montreal Canadiens| Transactions Ryan Sproul

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Victor Mete Assigned To AHL’s Laval Rocket

November 29, 2018 at 11:29 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

After wowing as a rookie last season, Victor Mete has struggled to find the same kind of success this year for the Montreal Canadiens and has seen his ice time decreased dramatically. Today, that NHL ice time is completely gone as the Canadiens decided to assign Mete to the minor leagues. The young defenseman will get a chance to continue his development at the lower level, while Montreal inserts players like Brett Kulak into the NHL lineup.

Playing just 12:21 on Tuesday night, the second-lowest total of his young career since November of last season, the writing was on the wall on how the Canadiens were planning on deploying their defense corps going forward. The organization has big plans for Mete down the line, but with Shea Weber’s recent return the team is leaning heavily on their veteran options to turn around their recent struggles and get them back into the race for an Atlantic Division playoff spot. Mete meanwhile will likely log huge minutes for the Rocket, and his absence opens up a roster spot for the imminent return of Paul Byron.

Laval now has several defenders with recent NHL experience, as Mete joins the recently demoted Karl Alzner along with Brett Lernout on the blue line. That group will try to turn around the early struggles of the Rocket in their second season, off to an 8-12-2 start. The team released Ryan Sproul from his professional tryout today, opening up some additional playing time for Mete and the veteran Alzner, who scored a goal in his debut.

AHL| Montreal Canadiens Brett Kulak| Victor Mete

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New Jersey Devils Recall Michael McLeod

November 29, 2018 at 11:12 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

While the rest of the league was busy with the flurry of waiver activity, the New Jersey Devils have made their own interesting add. Team beat reporter Amanda Stein tweets that the Devils have recalled top prospect Michael McLeod from the minor leagues, and will join the team in Washington today. A roster spot was opened when Jean-Sebastien Dea was reclaimed by the Pittsburgh Penguins, to McLeod’s benefit. The team has also lost young forward Joey Anderson, who Stein reports has a broken ankle and underwent surgery this week.

It’s hard to know what exactly to expect from McLeod at the NHL level, given the discrepancy between his draft pedigree and performance since selection. The blazing fast two-way center was picked 12th overall by New Jersey in 2016, but failed to really take a huge step forward offensively in either of his following two junior seasons. He was a big part of the Mississauga Steelheads team of course, but there wasn’t that dominating presence that most top picks have after their draft. In the AHL it has been much of the same story in his short career. Promising, solid two-way play, but a lack of real dynamic offense. McLeod has three goals and 10 points in 21 games this season for the Binghamton Devils.

There may be a case to argue for McLeod actually being better suited to the NHL game. His skating ability should certainly allow him to keep up with the advanced pace at the higher level, and his responsible defensive skills should make him versatile enough to stay a lineup even if he isn’t producing. It’s that offensive upside that will really determine where McLeod lands on the New Jersey long-term depth chart though, especially with another defensively-minded option in Pavel Zacha having trouble registering points.

New Jersey Devils Michael McLeod

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Calvin Pickard, Jean-Sebastien Dea Claimed Off Waivers

November 29, 2018 at 11:03 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

With the Arizona Coyotes dealing with some health concerns in net, they’ve decided to claim goaltender Calvin Pickard off waivers from the Philadelphia Flyers. The Pittsburgh Penguins meanwhile have reclaimed Jean-Sebastien Dea off waivers from the New Jersey Devils. Dea has been immediately sent to the minor leagues, meaning the Penguins were the only team who put in a claim.

Pickard is off to his fourth team since the end of the 2016-17 season, when he finished the year as the starting goaltender for the Colorado Avalanche. He was then selected in the expansion draft by the Vegas Golden Knights, only to be traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs before ever playing a regular season game for Vegas. In Toronto, he spent nearly the entire 2017-18 season in the minor leagues, winning a Calder Cup as a backup to Garret Sparks, before eventually being waived just prior to the start of this year.

In Philadelphia, his numbers have not been up to the level he showed in Colorado and was obviously not the long-term solution for the Flyers. He’s no more the solution in Arizona though, as he is an obvious short-term solution while Antti Raanta and Darcy Kuemper try to get healthy. Adin Hill will make the next start for Arizona, just his fifth of his career. That forced GM John Chayka to go out and acquire some more experience, something that Pickard brings even if there hasn’t been a lot of success lately.

Pittsburgh meanwhile will get Dea back after watching him score five points in 20 games for the Devils this year. The undrafted forward was a project of the Pittsburgh development system for the last few seasons, and will now re-enter that organization after getting his feet wet at the NHL level. Though it was obviously not planned, this was actually not the worst outcome for the Penguins if they felt they couldn’t afford to give Dea that short opportunity themselves. The 24-year old now has some additional NHL games under his belt, and can attempt to improve his game even further in the minor leagues.

New Jersey Devils| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Utah Mammoth| Waivers Calvin Pickard| Jean-Sebastien Dea

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