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Archives for November 2018

Philadelphia Flyers Meeting With Chuck Fletcher Regarding GM Role

November 29, 2018 at 10:36 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Philadelphia Flyers have worked quickly to replace their outgoing General Manager after firing Ron Hextall earlier this week, and will meet today with Chuck Fletcher to discuss the role. Darren Dreger of TSN tweets that it “sounds like it’s Fletcher’s job to lose” and notes that the goaltender and center positions will be first on the agenda with whoever is given the job. Fletcher was let go by the Minnesota Wild in the spring after nearly a decade as the team’s GM, and is currently serving as an advisor for the New Jersey Devils.

Fletcher brought a lot of regular season success to the Wild during his tenure there, but is perhaps best remembered by the fact that the team was unable to progress past the second round of the playoffs. Part of that was blamed on never having a true superstar to lead them to the Stanley Cup, though they did have a pair of superstar-level contracts. Fletcher’s biggest move in Minnesota was signing Zach Parise and Ryan Suter to matching 13-year, $98MM contracts in July of 2012, deals that wouldn’t even be allowed under the new CBA. Those contracts, while given to very good players, have essentially hamstrung the organization in terms of what they are able to do in free agency and on the trade market, and tied their fates directly to Parise and Suter’s health and production.

In Philadelphia, it could be argued that they too have a pair of contracts that are limiting the organization. Claude Giroux and Jakub Voracek take up a combined $16.525MM in cap room, and again while very good players—or perhaps in Giroux’s case, superstar indeed—they haven’t been able to push the Flyers over the top. James van Riemsdyk was signed to another massive contract this summer but has been limited offensively, and the team has not been able to find a goaltender anywhere.

If Fletcher does come in, finding an answer down the middle and in net is an obvious first task. But whether he would attempt to solve that problem this season or wait for the summer is unclear. The Flyers are currently tied for last place in the Eastern Conference, but aren’t so far away from a playoff spot that they need to throw in the towel just yet.

Chuck Fletcher| Philadelphia Flyers

0 comments

Carolina Hurricanes Place Scott Darling, Valentin Zykov On Waivers

November 29, 2018 at 10:33 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 7 Comments

With Curtis McElhinney playing well, the Carolina Hurricanes have made a decision on which of their three goaltenders to send to the minor leagues. Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic is reporting that Scott Darling will be placed on waivers today. The goaltender is not at Hurricanes practice today, and will likely be sent to the minor leagues should he clear. The team has also placed Valentin Zykov on waivers, after his conditioning loan ended this week.

Darling, 29, is almost certain to clear given his hefty contract. The former Chicago Blackhawks goaltender signed a four-year, $16.6MM contract with the Hurricanes in 2017, but has basically done nothing to deserve NHL playing time since. In 50 games since inking his big deal, Darling has an .889 save percentage and 3.17 goals against average. His 15-25-8 record is incredibly poor given the team’s overall 48-44-14 mark over the same time frame. Given the fact that McElhinney has taken the net and run with it since being claimed from the Toronto Maple Leafs before the season began, there was little reason to keep Darling on the NHL roster any longer.

If he does clear and reports to the minor leagues, the Hurricanes will save $1.025MM in cap space (prorated) while Darling remains in the AHL, though the team is still on the hook for his entire salary. For a club like Carolina, the cap space doesn’t make much of a difference, meaning this was purely a hockey move to get the best 23-man roster. Darling could potentially find his footing in the minor leagues, or the Hurricanes could try to trade him in order for him to get a fresh start.

Zykov on the other hand is a very interesting waiver addition. The 23-year old forward has just three points in 13 games this season for Carolina, but was a 33-goal man in the AHL just a season ago and was originally selected 37th overall by the Los Angeles Kings. There’s reason to believe that he could still be of use to an NHL club, but his overall body of work with Carolina hasn’t been enough to earn him a full-time role just yet. If someone does take a chance on the young forward, they’d need to keep him and his $675K cap hit in the NHL.

Carolina Hurricanes| Waivers Curtis McElhinney| Scott Darling

7 comments

Florida Panthers Seeking Upgrade In Goal

November 28, 2018 at 7:24 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 5 Comments

Entering the season, the Florida Panthers’ goaltender trio of Roberto Luongo, James Reimer, and Michael Hutchinson seemed like one of the deepest in the league. As the second month of the season wraps up, the Panthers currently hold the second-worst goals against average in the NHL and their play in the net has been the team’s greatest weakness. As a result, The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun reports (subscription required) that, despite their considerable depth, Florida is looking for an upgrade behind the injury-plagued Luongo.

Injuries have limited Luongo, 39, to just nine appearances, but even when healthy he has not looked like himself. Luongo holds a 3.07 GAA and a .902 save percentage that, if the season were to end today, would be his career-low. It could be that Luongo’s play is reflective of his poor health, especially considering his strong performance just last year. However, between his injury issues and inconsistent results, Luongo simply can’t be relied upon as a bona fide starter. Of course, that was the reasoning behind the Panthers initially signing Reimer three years ago. Reimer looked the part in his first season in 2016-17, with perhaps his best NHL campaign. Yet, his numbers tailed off last season as he too struggled with injuries and now this year Reimer looks far from a starting option. The 30-year-old leads the Panthers with 14 appearances, but has just four wins, tied with Luongo despite five more showings. His performance has been bleak, with an .895 save percentage and 3.39 GAA. Yet, the injury concerns and inconsistency of Luongo and Reimer is exactly why Florida signed Hutchinson this summer. That has quickly proven to have been a mistake, as the AHL veteran has been out of his depths in four NHL games, sporting a brutal .839 save percentage and 4.17 GAA. Hutchinson has struggled to even perform at an average level in the minors this season.

Nothing has worked out according to plan in Florida, so the team needs to make a move to improve in net. The problem with that plan, as LeBrun points out, is that Reimer still has two years remaining on his contract at $3.4MM. That contract could prove very difficult to move. Luongo is also signed long-term, with three years remaining, but it appears that the team would prefer to hold on to him despite his current struggles, even if they were able to find a take. As such, a long-term solution in net may be difficult to find, unless the team is also able to move Reimer. Nearly any established goalie signed beyond this season would put too much strain on the Panthers’ payroll, which is already close to $2MM from the salary cap. An expensive rental, such as Detroit’s Jimmy Howard, would also be difficult to manage. Cheap rentals, such as New Jersey’s Eddie Lack, Carolina’s Petr Mrazek, Edmonton’s Al Montoya, and recent waiver placement Calvin Pickard, are readily available, but would be unlikely to shift the status quo substantially. The Panthers could make a play for a young, affordable goalie lacking opportunity, such as Montreal’s Charlie Lindgren, Vancouver’s Thatcher Demko, Los Angeles’ Cal Petersen, or Pittsburgh’s Tristan Jarry, but it would come at a cost. The Panthers may want to upgrade their goalie depth, but such a move won’t come easy for the team this season.

AHL| Florida Panthers| Injury Al Montoya| Cal Petersen| Calvin Pickard| Eddie Lack| James Reimer| Jimmy Howard| Michael Hutchinson| Petr Mrazek| Roberto Luongo| Salary Cap| Thatcher Demko| Trade Rumors| Tristan Jarry

5 comments

Snapshots: Team Canada, Fletcher, Kovar

November 28, 2018 at 6:19 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

Held in the middle of the NHL season, the Spengler Cup in Switzerland is often an afterthought among international events. Yet, Team Canada has put together quite the formidable group to lead their entry into the late December tournament, in pursuit of a fourth consecutive title. Hockey Canada has announced that Sean Burke and Ron Francis will put the Spengler Cup team together as co-GM’s, while Kevin Dineen will lead the selections as the head coach. Not only does that trio have extensive NHL playing careers on their resumes, but each have had success in their off-ice roles as well. Dineen has spent 14 seasons behind an NHL bench, including three as the head coach of the Florida Panthers, and has international coaching experience as well. His assistants, Gordie Dwyer and Mike Kitchen, are no strangers to the job either. Burke, currently a scout for the Montreal Canadiens, is familiar with Team Canada, having served as GM for the 2018 Olympic team, part of the management group for past four IIHF World Championship entries, as well as the GM of the past two Spengler Cup teams. However, it is Francis that sticks out the most. The former Carolina Hurricanes GM is currently considered a candidate for the Philadelphia Flyers’ new vacancy and, should the position remain open through the end of the calendar year, Francis’ efforts to put together a winning Spengler Cup team could be seen as part of his case for the job.

  • Another candidate for the Flyers’ GM vacancy – and perhaps the favorite – is former Minnesota Wild GM Chuck Fletcher. Fletcher was let go by the Wild this off-season and joined the New Jersey Devils as an executive, but is still held in high esteem by most in the game. Many pundits have suggested that he is the front runner for the job and now TSN’s Bob McKenzie reports that the wheels appear to be in motion. The Devils have given the Flyers permission to speak with Fletcher, McKenzie says, and reiterates the sentiment that he would be the preferred hire. Although Minnesota was unable to reach the ultimate goal, Fletcher had the team on a six-season postseason streak when he was dismissed and the Wild, currently with the third-best record in the Western Conference, have a core of veteran and young contributors that was by and large put together by Fletcher. The experienced executive would be a more than capable GM for Philadelphia.
  • The Boston Bruins front office may soon be facing a decision, albeit to a much smaller extent. After he appeared to be weighing a return to Europe, Jan Kovar instead finds himself one step closer to his desired destination – another shot at the NHL. The Bruins announced this morning that Kovar, who has been playing with their AHL affiliate in Providence, was up practicing in Boston today. The question remains whether or not Kovar earns a contract with the Bruins, something that Lee Stempniak was unable to do despite ample practice time with the team. Boston is without Patrice Bergeron, but still has David Krejci and has been getting admirable efforts from rookie Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson and veteran Joakim Nordstrom in his unnatural position. Yet, the team scratched Sean Kuraly in their last game and is still struggling to get secondary scoring. It may be the exact scenario that Kovar needed to get a second chance after quickly flaming out with the New York Islanders earlier this season.

AHL| Boston Bruins| Carolina Hurricanes| Chuck Fletcher| Florida Panthers| IIHF| Minnesota Wild| Montreal Canadiens| New Jersey Devils| New York Islanders| Philadelphia Flyers| Snapshots Bob McKenzie| David Krejci| Jan Kovar| Lee Stempniak| Patrice Bergeron| Sean Kuraly| Spengler Cup| Team Canada

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What Your Team Is Thankful For: Carolina Hurricanes

November 28, 2018 at 4:50 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

As the holiday season approaches, PHR will take a look at what teams are thankful for as the season heads past the one-quarter mark. There also might be a few things your team would like down the road. Let’s take a look at what’s gone well in the early going and what could improve as the season rolls on for the Carolina Hurricanes. 

What are the Hurricanes most thankful for?

Various struggles from the entire Metropolitan Division.

Big things were expected out of the Carolina Hurricanes after some bold moves in the last calendar year, including new ownership, front office and coaching staff. Key players like Jeff Skinner, Elias Lindholm and Noah Hanifin were all shipped out while fresh faces like Andrei Svechnikov and Dougie Hamilton joined the lineup. Even with all of that and a nice five-game point streak to start the year, they finished their first 15 games with a 6-7-2 record caused by many of the same stumbling blocks they’d experienced in the past.

Goaltending wasn’t as good as it needed to be, the solid defensive group was underperforming and the team wasn’t scoring enough despite excellent shot metrics. They’ve since gone on something of a hot streak, winning six of their next nine and head into their last game of November with a 12-9-3 record. That’s not outstanding, but it’s certainly good enough to keep them in the hunt at this point of the season. Every other team in the Metropolitan Division has experienced their own struggles, including the Pittsburgh Penguins who at one point found themselves at the very bottom of the division. Carolina now sits just four points behind the Washington Capitals for top spot, something that would have seemed impossible during the previous dominant Metropolitan years.

Who are the Hurricanes most thankful for?

Curtis McElhinney.

There’s no doubt that Sebastian Aho has been the team’s early MVP, recording 25 points in 24 games to pace the offense while moving to the center ice position without any trouble. Aho is an exceptional talent that looks like he can be a true superstar for the Hurricanes, but he was drafted and developed by the team. Who they’re truly thankful for, is McElhinney who dropped into their laps just before the season started when the Toronto Maple Leafs placed him on waivers.

Though he has looked shaky at times, McElhinney has been everything the Hurricanes could have hoped for when they picked up for free to help out while Scott Darling dealt with injury to start the year. The 35-year old goaltender now has a .930 save percentage through his nine appearances and leads the trio of Carolina goaltenders with a 7-2 record. Seeing how Darling and Petr Mrazek have combined for an .887 save percentage and 5-7-3 record, it’s easy to see where the team would be without McElhinney on the roster.

What would the Hurricanes be even more thankful for?

A resurgent Jordan Staal.

Despite Aho moving to the middle and performing admirably, the center position has still been a struggle for the Hurricanes this season. Victor Rask has only played four games because of a kitchen accident that injured his hand, and Lucas Wallmark can’t seem to find the back of the net to save his life—his 1.9% shooting percentage is one of the worst in the league among regular forwards. Even accepting those issues as flukes that could resolve themselves, the issue of Staal may have the biggest impact.

The 30-year old center has just 11 points in his first 24 games of the season and is on pace for his lowest total (38) in a full season since he was 19. A huge part of that is his lack of powerplay production, where he has just a single assist and no goals despite averaging more than two minutes with the man advantage. It’s not that Staal is a net negative for the Hurricanes, as his defensive ability is still excellent and he’s among the best in the league at faceoffs, but they absolutely need more offensive production from him given his price tag. Staal carries a $6MM cap hit this season, and will continue to do so through the 2022-23 season.

What should be on the Hurricanes’ Holiday Wish List?

Forward help, in one way or another.

Since they’re already carrying three goaltenders, one of whom makes more than $4MM per season and is under contract for another two years, there seems little chance of the Hurricanes making a big splash in net. Accepting that, the best place for them to upgrade would be up front, whether that’s on the wing or at center. The team has been generating more than enough scoring chances through the first quarter of the season, but with the exception of Micheal Ferland and his 11 goals, they haven’t been able to convert nearly enough.

It sounds funny after an offseason in which they sent Jeff Skinner packing—the red-hot Buffalo Sabres forward has 19 goals in 25 games—but Carolina could really use a pure finisher to help them on the powerplay and give their forward group a little more swagger. Svechnikov looks like he might eventually become that, but relying on an 18-year old to take a jump like that in the second half of the season is more than a little risky. They don’t need another Alex Ovechkin—though, they certainly wouldn’t turn one down—but someone to complement their stable of playmakers could go a long way in pushing them further along in the playoff race.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Carolina Hurricanes| Thankful Series 2018-19 Curtis McElhinney| Jordan Staal

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Detroit’s Jimmy Howard Drawing Trade Interest

November 28, 2018 at 2:26 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 16 Comments

The Detroit Red Wings are in the midst of a rebuild. Whether or not they’re willing to admit that fact or continue to try and push for a playoff spot this season, it is clear that the team is not set up for Stanley Cup contention as presently constructed. They do have plenty of good young talent in the NHL and on the way, but there just aren’t enough elite players to really push them into the upper echelon of the Atlantic Division, let alone the Eastern Conference. With that in mind, the Red Wings may very well see this season’s trade deadline as an opportunity to gather more assets for the future and continue building towards an eventual competitive window. One of the players who is already drawing interest from around the league is goaltender Jimmy Howard, who is having another excellent season and is in the final year of his current contract.

Recently, Darren Dreger of TSN reported that the St. Louis Blues had shown interest in the Detroit netminder given the struggles of both Jake Allen and Chad Johnson and today Frank Seravalli of TSN writes that the Pittsburgh Penguins also have interest. Seravalli notes that the Penguins have a first -round pick to “dangle” in front of the Red Wings, something that the Blues do not have after giving it up for Ryan O’Reilly this offseason. Howard comes with a $5.3MM cap hit this season but wouldn’t represent a long-term investment for any acquiring team.

Interestingly, in the same piece Seravalli also lists Penguins goaltender Matt Murray as a potential trade candidate due to his growing injury concerns and struggles this season. If the Penguins were to be pursuing someone like Howard, it would make some sense that they’d need to send one of their young netminders elsewhere. Pittsburgh has Casey DeSmith and Tristan Jarry manning the crease while Murray deals with his latest injury, a tandem that certainly doesn’t have the experience someone like Howard has.

From these reports it doesn’t seem like anything is close, but the fact that the Penguins would show interest in a veteran goaltender is something to keep an eye on. GM Jim Rutherford isn’t shy with in-season moves to improve his club, and Pittsburgh still believes they can compete this year. With the return of Sidney Crosby recently, the Penguins are now 10-8-5 on the season and just three points out of a Metropolitan Division playoff spot.

The Red Wings meanwhile now have Jonathan Bernier under contract through 2020-21 and little reason to not trade Howard before the deadline, unless they plan on re-signing the veteran netminder. The two sides have definitely discussed a multi-year extension, but if Detroit is offered a big enough package in return it will be hard to turn down.

Detroit Red Wings| Pittsburgh Penguins| St. Louis Blues Jimmy Howard| Matt Murray (b. 1994)

16 comments

Eric Martinsson Placed On Unconditional Waivers

November 28, 2018 at 1:00 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Wednesday: Martinsson has cleared waivers and will see his contract terminated.

Tuesday: It’s been an unusually busy season for contract terminations, and the Minnesota Wild are the latest to agree to it with one of their minor league players. The team has placed Eric Martinsson on unconditional waivers for the purpose of a mutual contract termination, which would allow the 26-year old defenseman to return to Sweden and the SHL.

Martinsson was signed in May to a one-year entry-level contract after several successful seasons with the Vaxjo Lakers of the SHL. The mobile defenseman can do a little bit of everything on the ice, and had found early success with the Iowa Wild of the AHL, scoring nine points in 13 games. Unfortunately, that success doesn’t seem to be enough for him especially given the already surfacing reports that several teams in the SHL are chasing him.

Over the last few seasons there has been an increase in the number of contracts handed out to experienced European professionals, as NHL teams try to find overlooked talent without having to trade for or draft it. Martinsson, like the long list of other players who have terminated their deals this year, clearly just haven’t worked out. That strategy is likely going to continue though, as all it costs the NHL organization is a few months or a year of minor league salary while they get a first hand look at the player.

Minnesota Wild| SHL| Waivers

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Calvin Pickard, Jean-Sebastien Dea Placed On Waivers

November 28, 2018 at 11:05 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 10 Comments

Philadelphia Flyers president Paul Holmgren was clear that he would make a change to the team’s goaltending situation if he felt the need even as they continue their search for a new GM, and today did just that. The Flyers have placed Calvin Pickard on waivers, while also sending forward Tyrell Goulbourne back to the minor leagues. According to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet, the New Jersey Devils have also placed Jean-Sebastien Dea on waivers.

Pickard, 26, was claimed off of waivers from the Toronto Maple Leafs just prior to the start of the season and ended up playing 11 games for the Flyers so far. His performance so far hasn’t been good despite a 4-2-2 record, as he has registered an .863 save percentage and is allowing more than four goals per game on average. Part of the problem may be the Flyers defensive structure given Pickard’s career .909 save percentage, but he hasn’t shown much NHL ability at this point.

That’s not to say he doesn’t have some value though, especially to the Maple Leafs who could very likely put in a claim for him. Should they be the only team to do so they would be able to send Pickard directly to the Toronto Marlies, who have had goaltending troubles for much of this season. Pickard won a Calder Cup with the Marlies last season, though he was the backup to Garret Sparks at the time. His contract carries an $800K cap hit, and would be completely buried in the minor leagues if he cleared waivers or ended up with the Marlies.

Dea meanwhile has been playing full-time with the Devils, recording five points in 20 games but became the odd man out when Marcus Johansson returned to practice. The 24-year old Dea has had a lot of success in the minor leagues with the Pittsburgh Penguins since signing out of the QMJHL as an undrafted free agent, but didn’t receive a qualifying offer from that organization in the summer. He then re-signed a one-year two-way deal with the Penguins, before being claimed by the Devils on waivers at the end of September.

New Jersey Devils| Philadelphia Flyers| Waivers Calvin Pickard| Elliotte Friedman| Jean-Sebastien Dea

10 comments

Philadelphia Flyers Fire Chris Pryor, Gord Murphy

November 28, 2018 at 11:01 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

The changes continue for the Philadelphia Flyers, as the team announced today that assistant GM Chris Pryor and assistant coach Gord Murphy have both been fired. Pryor had been promoted to his current position by recently fired GM Ron Hextall in 2016, while Murphy was hired by Hextall in 2014. Team president Paul Holmgren released a statement on the changes:

The Flyers organization has relieved Chris Pryor of his duties as Director of Player Personnel and Assistant General Manager. In addition, in close consultation with Flyers head coach Dave Hakstol, Gord Murphy has been relieved of his duties as assistant coach. I would like to thank Chris for his dedication to the franchise and contributions over the last 20 years. Likewise, we thank Gord Murphy for serving behind the bench for the last five seasons and helping grow and develop our young core of defensemen. We do not anticipate any further personnel moves in the near term.

The fact that the team parted with Pryor is a legitimate surprise, given that he’d been with the club in various roles for two decades and was a huge part of their drafting and development programs. The Flyers have seemingly done quite well in the draft over the last few years, adding names like Nolan Patrick, Ivan Provorov, Travis Sanheim, Travis Konecny, Carter Hart, Morgan Frost and Isaac Ratcliffe. This past June their draft was lauded by many as the team added Joel Farabee, Jay O’Brien and Adam Ginning in the top 50 picks, leading their prospect pipeline to be ranked among the league’s best.

While it’s not clear why exactly these two were let go while Hakstol and others were retained, it certainly had an effect on the team. Sam Carchidi of the Philadelphia Inquirer tweeted that the Flyers locker room was “stunned” by the firing of Murphy, while many other media members expressed shock that Pryor was the one removed from the front office. There are likely more changes coming down the road for Philadelphia, but could be intending on hiring a new GM first. Chuck Fletcher, formerly GM of the Minnesota Wild, appears to be the front runner at this point according to Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic.

Philadelphia Flyers

2 comments

Kevan Miller Suffers Larynx Injury, Out At Least Five Weeks

November 28, 2018 at 10:19 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

The Boston Bruins just cannot get any injury luck. After being struck in the throat by a puck against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Monday night, defenseman Kevan Miller has suffered cartilage damage to his larynx and will be re-evaluated in five weeks. Miller spent the night in a Toronto hospital, but is now back in Boston. Meanwhile, the team has recalled forward Ryan Donato from the minor leagues to take one of the roster spots left vacant by the recent Bruins injuries.

Miller was hit with a John Tavares shot in front of the net, leading to his immediate exit and hospital visit. The Bruins defenseman finished the game with just seven minutes of ice time, in just his fourth game back from injury. Miller has just 11 games under his belt this already frustrating season and now will be out of the lineup for more than a month with a fluke injury.

In his absence—that was compounded by the fact that Zdeno Chara, Charlie McAvoy, Brandon Carlo and Urho Vaakanainen are all still out with injury—rookie Connor Clifton skated nearly 25 minutes in just his sixth NHL game, while Torey Krug and John Moore commanded their usual heavy ice time. The Bruins have been forced to dig deep into their organizational depth for options this season, and will now be tested even further given Miller’s extended absence. Luckily, Carlo practiced in full with the team today and could possibly return in time for the Bruins game tomorrow night.

Boston Bruins| Injury Kevan Miller

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