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Archives for September 2019

East Notes: Nassau, Adams, Neuvirth, Point

September 23, 2019 at 4:08 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

The New York Islanders have moved an additional seven games from Barclays Center to Nassau Coliseum during the upcoming season, taking the total to 28 of the team’s home games. That announcement comes just following the ceremony to break ground at the new Belmont Park arena today, at which Governor Andrew Cuomo kicked off the $1.3 billion redevelopment.

The new arena is expected to be ready for the 2021-22 season and will hold 19,000 people. After years of uncertainty, the Islanders organization is finally getting some structure and stability off the ice and will try to emulate that once again on it under head coach Barry Trotz and GM Lou Lamoriello.

  • The Buffalo Sabres have promoted former NHL forward Kevyn Adams to senior vice president of business administration, according to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. The position isn’t associated with the hockey operations department, but will keep Adams in the organization after serving as GM of the Harbor Center previously. Adams played 607 games in the NHL over a lengthy career that included winning a Stanley Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes in 2006. He retired in 2008 and also served as an assistant coach with the Sabres in the past.
  • The Toronto Maple Leafs are headed to Montreal to take on the Canadiens this evening, but one player who was supposed to make the trip won’t be going. Michal Neuvirth was scheduled to play part of the game as he continues to battle with Michael Hutchinson for the Maple Leafs backup role, but will be replaced by prospect Joseph Woll. Head coach Mike Babcock told reporters including Kristen Shilton of TSN that Neuvirth “wasn’t feeling up to playing” tonight, after missing time recently with minor injuries. Minor injuries could seemingly be permanently discussed when it comes to Neuvirth, who hasn’t been able to stay consistently healthy throughout his career and now finds himself missing crucial time in his pursuit of a roster spot. The 31-year old goaltender is just on a professional tryout with the Maple Leafs, with cuts coming in the next few days for the team.
  • Though he finally signed today, Brayden Point won’t be on the Tampa Bay Lightning roster anytime soon. GM Julien BriseBois told reporters on a conference call that Point had hip surgery earlier this summer and is not expected to be back in the lineup until late October. While it’s obviously bad news that he won’t be ready for opening day, this may actually give the young forward enough time to get his game right after missing most of training camp already. The Lightning will have to make due without him for now and hope he can come back at full-strength in a few weeks.

Buffalo Sabres| New York Islanders| Schedule| Snapshots| Tampa Bay Lightning| Toronto Maple Leafs Brayden Point| Elliotte Friedman| Michal Neuvirth

3 comments

Dallas Stars Sign Thomas Harley

September 23, 2019 at 3:07 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Dallas Stars have signed Thomas Harley to a three-year entry-level contract, inking the young defenseman after selecting him 18th overall just a few months ago. Harley has actually still not been cut from training camp by the Stars, though he is expected to play for the Mississauga Steelheads of the OHL this season.

Harley, 18, recorded an outstanding season in 2018-19 with the Steelheads in his second year of junior hockey, scoring 11 goals and 58 points in 68 games. The smooth-skating defenseman can impact the game in several different ways, including an aggressive gap control style of defense that limits zone entries and can break a cycle. That kind of all-around play is exactly what the Stars have already discovered in Miro Heiskanen, and Harley carries some of the same traits as his potential future teammate. Not only did he perform well for Mississauga, but Harley also stood out on the international stage with Canada at the U18 World Juniors and was named the OHL Scholastic Player of the Year, an award given to the player who best combines success on the ice with success in school.

If he is sent back to junior for this season, Harley’s contract would slide forward and not kick in this season. That could actually happen in 2020-21 as well, though with the poise he has already shown at training camp he could compete for a roster spot before long.

Dallas Stars Thomas Harley

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Tampa Bay Lightning Sign Brayden Point

September 23, 2019 at 12:10 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 21 Comments

The Tampa Bay Lightning have signed restricted free agent Brayden Point to a three-year contract, ending the long negotiation in time for him to get on the ice before the season begins. Point’s new contract will carry an average annual value of $6.75MM. GM Julien BriseBois explained his excitement for the deal:

We are very pleased to re-sign Brayden today. He is the consummate professional with an unwavering commitment to team success, growing as a player and improving every day. It is that mindset that makes him an outstanding role model, teammate and person, on and off the ice. We look forward to getting Brayden back on the ice with his Lightning teammates as soon as possible.

A three-year bridge deal continues the Tampa Bay tradition with their top players, and provides them with a chance to get some incredible excess value over the next few seasons. The Lightning have previously signed Nikita Kucherov and Andrei Vasilevskiy to similar three-year deals that turned out extremely well for the team before locking them into long-term contract extensions as they approached free agency for the second time. That’s likely the same plan they have for Point, as this contract will leave him an RFA in 2022 though a $9MM qualifying offer will give Point a potential avenue to get to unrestricted free agency. Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic provides the full breakdown:

  • 2019-20: $1.9MM salary + $4.25MM signing bonus
  • 2020-21: $2.5MM salary + $3.5MM signing bonus
  • 2021-22: $9.0MM salary

Even though they only lock him in for three years at this price, a $6.75MM salary seems incredibly reasonable for a player of Point’s talents. The 23-year old center has transformed himself into one of the most dynamic two-way centers in the league, scoring 41 goals and 92 points last season while also being nominated for the Selke Trophy as one of the league’s best defensive forwards. A third-round pick in 2014 that had questions around his skating and upside at the professional level, Point has improved dramatically every season and now has 91 goals and 198 points in 229 career regular season games.

This new salary does make Point the third-highest paid forward on the Lightning behind Kucherov and Steven Stamkos, but leaves the Lightning with some wiggle room under the cap. The team now projects to have about $1.7MM in cap space with a 23-man roster, something that seemed impossible at the start of the offseason. Tampa Bay recorded one of the best regular seasons in NHL history last year and will head into 2019-20 with a very similar group. Though Anton Stralman, J.T. Miller and Dan Girardi are gone, the team replaced them with names like Kevin Shattenkirk, Patrick Maroon and Luke Schenne. The fact that many of the team’s other role players have been retained is a testament to how well the front office has navigated the cap over the last several years.

That difficult path won’t end now though. With Point’s deal in place and an extension for Vasilevskiy kicking in for 2020-21, the team will once again be facing a severe cap crunch. With that in mind, there will be even more pressure to perform this year and find more postseason success than they had in 2019.

With another RFA off the board, the focus now turns to Matthew Tkachuk, Mikko Rantanen, Patrik Laine and Kyle Connor to get contracts finalized before the season starts. Given Point’s status as arguably the best (or at least most valuable thanks to his position) of that group, this deal should help provide a template for potential bridge deals in other cities. Mitch Marner, who signed a six-year $65MM deal recently, may give the other end of the spectrum and provide a template for a long-term deal.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Newsstand| Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions Brayden Point

21 comments

Waivers: 09/23/19

September 23, 2019 at 11:16 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 4 Comments

With AHL training camps getting underway, many players will be put on waivers over the next several days. We’ll keep track of all of them right here:

Buffalo Sabres

F Jean-Sebastien Dea

Calgary Flames

F Byron Froese
F Justin Kirkland
F Buddy Robinson
F Rinat Valiev
D Andrew Nielsen

Carolina Hurricanes

F Brian Gibbons
D Kyle Wood
D Alex Lintuniemi
D Roland McKeown
D Fredrik Claesson

Colorado Avalanche

D Anton Lindholm
D Mark Alt

Columbus Blue Jackets

F Zac Dalpe
F Markus Hannikainen
F Ryan MacInnis
D Adam Clendening

Los Angeles Kings

F Martin Frk

Minnesota Wild

F Kyle Rau
D Matt Bartkowski
F Luke Johnson

Pittsburgh Penguins

F Andrew Agozzino
F Joseph Blandisi
F Joseph Cramarossa
F Thomas Di Pauli
F Ryan Haggerty
D Kevin Czuczman
D David Warsofsky

San Jose Sharks

D Trevor Carrick
G Antoine Bibeau

AHL| Calgary Flames| Columbus Blue Jackets| Pittsburgh Penguins| Waivers Adam Clendening| Andrew Agozzino| Buddy Robinson| Byron Froese| Joseph Blandisi| Joseph Cramarossa| Kevin Czuczman| Markus Hannikainen

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Training Camp Cuts: 09/23/19

September 23, 2019 at 10:36 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Like always, we’ll keep track of all the training camp cuts right here. Keep checking back to see the updated list:

Anaheim Ducks (per team release)

F Alex Dostie (to San Diego, AHL)
F Brent Gates Jr. (to San Diego, AHL)
F Luke Gazdic (to San Diego, AHL)
F Johno May (to San Diego, AHL)
F Antoine Morand (to San Diego, AHL)
F Conor Riley (to San Diego, AHL)
F Deven Sideroff (to San Diego, AHL)
F Corey Tropp (to San Diego, AHL)
D Dawson Davidson (to San Diego, AHL)
D Scott Moldenhauer (to San Diego, AHL)
D Steven Ruggiero (to San Diego, AHL)
G Roman Durny (to San Diego, AHL)
G Olle Eriksson Ek (to San Diego, AHL)
F Chase Wouters (to Saskatoon, WHL)
D Matthew Hill (to Barrie, OHL)
G Lukas Dostal (to Ilves, Liiga)

Arizona Coyotes (per team release)

F Beau Bennett (to Tucson, AHL)
F Andy Miele (to Tucson, AHL)
D Dysin Mayo (to Tucson, AHL)
D Robbie Russo (to Tucson, AHL)

Calgary Flames (per team release)

F Byron Froese (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Justin Kirkland (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Buddy Robinson (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Rinat Valiev (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
D Andrew Nielsen (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Glenn Gawdin (to Stockton, AHL)
F Ryan Lomberg (to Stockton, AHL)
F Luke Philp (to Stockton, AHL)
F Matthew Phillips (to Stockton, AHL)
F Martin Pospisil (to Stockton, AHL)
F Adam Ruzicka (to Stockton, AHL)
F Eetu Tuulola (to Stockton, AHL)
D Robert Hamilton (to Stockton, AHL)
D Zac Leslie (to Stockton, AHL)
D Corey Schueneman (to Stockton, AHL)
D Alexander Yelesin (to Stockton, AHL)
G Tyler Parsons (to Stockton, AHL)
G Artyom Zagidulin (to Stockton, AHL)
F Jacob Pelletier (to Moncton, QMJHL)
D Alexandre Grenier (released from PTO)

Chicago Blackhawks (per team release)

F Jacob Nilsson (to Rockford, AHL)
F Philip Holm (to Rockford, AHL)

Columbus Blue Jackets (per team release)

F Zac Dalpe (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Markus Hannikainen (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Ryan MacInnis (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
D Adam Clendening (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
D Doyle Somerby (to Cleveland, AHL)
G Veini Vevilainen (to Cleveland, AHL)

Florida Panthers (per team release)

D Ethan Prow (to Springfield, AHL)
D Thomas Schemitsch (to Springfield, AHL)
G Philippe Desrosiers (to Springfield, AHL)

Nashville Predators (per team release)

F Colin Blackwell (to Milwaukee, AHL)
F Laurent Dauphin (to Milwaukee, AHL)
F Anthony Richard (to Milwaukee, AHL)
D Alexandre Carrier (to Milwaukee, AHL)
D Matt Donovan (to Milwaukee, AHL)
G Troy Grosenick (to Milwaukee, AHL)

New York Rangers (per team release)

F Connor Brickley (to Hartford, AHL)
F Timothy Gettinger (to Hartford, AHL)
F Nick Jones (to Hartford, AHL)
F Dawson Leedahl (to Hartford, AHL)
D Sean Day (to Hartford, AHL)

Pittsburgh Penguins (per team release)

F Andrew Agozzino (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Joseph Blandisi (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Joseph Cramarossa (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Thomas Di Pauli (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Ryan Haggerty (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
D Kevin Czuczman (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
D David Warsofsky (placed on waivers before AHL assignment)
F Justin Almeida (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)
F Anthony Angello (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)
F Kasper Bjorkqvist (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)
F Sam Lafferty (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)
F Jake Lucchini (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)
F Sam Miletic (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)
F Oula Palve (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)
D Niclas Almari (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)
D Pierre-Olivier Joseph (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)
G Emil Larmi (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)
F Nathan Legare (to Baie-Comeau, QMJHL)
F Samuel Poulin (to Sherbrooke, QMJHL)

San Jose Sharks (per team release)

F Joakim Blichfield (to San Jose, AHL)
F Ivan Chekhovich (to San Jose, AHL)
F Sasha Chmelevski (to San Jose, AHL)
D Nick DeSimone (to San Jose, AHL)
F Noah Gregor (to San Jose, AHL)
D Thomas Gregoire (to San Jose, AHL)
F Artem Ivanyuzhenkov (to San Jose, AHL)
F Jayden Halbgewachs (to San Jose, AHL)
F Joel Kellman (to San Jose, AHL)
D Nikolai Knyzhov (to San Jose, AHL)
G Joseph Korenar (to San Jose, AHL)
F Ivan Kosorenkov (to San Jose, AHL)
F Tristan Langan (to San Jose, AHL)
F Maxim Letunov (to San Jose, AHL)
D Keaton Middleton (to San Jose, AHL)
F Jeremy Roy (to San Jose, AHL)
G Zach Sawchenko (to San Jose, AHL)
G Andrew Shortridge (to San Jose, AHL)
F Marcus Vela (to San Jose, AHL)san
F Jeffrey Viel (to San Jose, AHL)
F Evan Weinger (to San Jose, AHL)
F Vladislav Kotkov (to Chicoutimi, QMJHL)
D Tony Sund (to TPS, Liiga)

Vancouver Canucks (per team release)

F Reid Boucher (to Utica, AHL)
F Francis Perron (to Utica, AHL)
D Ashton Sautner (to Utica, AHL)
G Zane McIntyre (to Utica, AHL)

AHL| Calgary Flames| Chicago Blackhawks| Columbus Blue Jackets| Florida Panthers| Nashville Predators| New York Rangers| Pittsburgh Penguins| QMJHL| Utah Mammoth| Vancouver Canucks Adam Clendening| Andrew Agozzino| Beau Bennett| Buddy Robinson| Byron Froese| Connor Brickley| Doyle Somerby| Joseph Blandisi| Joseph Cramarossa| Kevin Czuczman| Laurent Dauphin| Markus Hannikainen| Philip Holm| Pierre-Olivier Joseph| Reid Boucher| Rinat Valiev| Ryan MacInnis| Sam Lafferty| Sam Miletic| Troy Grosenick| Zac Dalpe| Zane McIntyre

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Minor Transactions: 09/23/19

September 23, 2019 at 9:10 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Minor league training camps open this week and their NHL affiliates will be sending players down to compete for jobs in the AHL. With that in mind, there will likely be several more minor transactions coming across the wire. Like always, we’ll keep an eye on all the minor league, college and European moves right here:

  • All of the players from yesterday have cleared waivers and can be assigned to the minor leagues.
  • The Manitoba Moose have agreed to terms with Griffen Outhouse on a one-year AHL contract. The 21-year old goaltender played last season for the Victoria Royals of the WHL where he posted a .913 save percentage in 46 appearances. Outhouse had actually committed to the University of Alberta for this season, but it seems now that he’ll be making the leap to professional hockey instead. The team has also brought in 11 other players on tryouts.
  • Shamil Shmakov will be playing for a different USHL team this season, after being acquired by the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders. The Russian goaltender was selected by the Colorado Avalanche in 2018 and posted strong numbers again last season in the MHL. His first taste of North American hockey should give the Avalanche an idea of whether or not he will ever be worth signing, given they only invested a seventh-round pick.

AHL| Colorado Avalanche| SHL| Transactions| USHL| WHL

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Five Key Stories: 9/16/19 – 9/22/19

September 23, 2019 at 8:05 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

With training camps in full swing, there was plenty of important news around the league including some big news away from the ice.  Here are the top stories from the past seven days.

NHLPA Declines Opt-Out: Roughly three weeks ago, the NHL decided to decline to use their reopener on the CBA which pushed the spotlight to the NHLPA.  While escrow is a big concern for the players, they’ve opted to decline their reopener as well.  This means that instead of the CBA expiring in September of 2020, it will now do so in September of 2022.  In the meantime, talks are expected to continue regarding extending the current agreement, a move that may be made with a few tweaks along the way with regards to escrow and potential Olympic participation.

Big Money For Chabot: The Senators have taken significant criticism when it has come to their spending in recent years, particularly this season where the cap hits of three forwards that are already done for the year (meaning insurance will fit most of the bill) surpass that of their entire defense corps.  However, owner Eugene Melnyk has promised to spend when the time is right and the team made a big step in that direction as they inked defenseman Thomas Chabot to an eight-year, $64MM contract.  It is the richest contract ever handed out by the Senators while also serving as the richest second contract given to a defenseman.

Byfuglien Pondering Future: Winnipeg’s announcement that defenseman Dustin Byfuglien was taking a leave of absence at the start of training camp raised some eyebrows but at the time, head coach Paul Maurice called it “nothing sinister”.  While the reason for it ultimately isn’t sinister, it’s still a big shocker as Byfuglien is pondering whether he wants to continue playing or not.  The 34-year-old battled multiple ankle injuries and a concussion last season but when healthy, he is a significant factor on the Jets’ back end, one that has taken several hits already over the offseason.  The team has suspended Byfuglien for failure to report to camp, giving them the ability to remove him off their cap if he still isn’t with them when the season gets underway.  If he does ultimately decide to walk away from the remaining $14MM on his deal (spanning the next two seasons), expect Winnipeg to quickly turn around and try to acquire a replacement.

RFA Signings: Not surprisingly, several restricted free agents agreed to new deals.  The Flyers locked up winger Travis Konecny to a six-year, $33MM deal.  The 22-year-old has scored 24 goals in each of the last two seasons and the deal buys Philadelphia two extra years of team control.  Meanwhile, Vancouver was able to agree to terms on a three-year bridge deal with winger Brock Boeser that carries a $5.875MM AAV.  Their salary cap situation largely forced their hand in this direction but it’s worth noting that the final year salary is $7.5MM which will serve as his qualifying offer three years from now.  Boston also got a deal done with their lone remaining RFA as defenseman Brandon Carlo received a two-year, $5.7MM deal that is also back-loaded with a $3.5MM second-year salary that will be his qualifier amount in 2021.

Girardi Retires: Veteran defenseman Dan Girardi has decided to call it a career.  The veteran made a significant impact at the defensive end over his career with his physicality and shot-blocking prowess as he recorded over 2,000 career blocks in his 927 games played between the Rangers and Lightning while making the playoffs in all but one of his 13 seasons.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Uncategorized Week In Review

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Eric Gryba Announces Retirement

September 22, 2019 at 8:56 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

Veteran defenseman Eric Gryba was cut by Calgary back on Thursday and as it turns out, that will be the final stint of his career as the blueliner announced his retirement on Twitter, releasing the following statement:

I’m hanging up the skates! I am proud of the career I was able to put together and couldn’t be more grateful of all the support I received along the way. I am excited for my next chapter and all the challenges that are to come.

The 31-year-old spent last season with the Devils where he played predominantly for their AHL affiliate in Albany.  He did, however, get into ten games with New Jersey which extended his NHL career to seven seasons between the Devils, Oilers, and Senators who drafted him back in the third round (66th overall) back in 2006.

While Gryba was never a big offensive producer during his 289 career NHL games (he collected seven goals and 36 assists), he provided plenty of physicality from the back end, averaging nearly 2.7 hits per game while adding 368 penalty minutes.  He also got into 254 games in the minors, meaning that his career spanned over 500 professional games which is a pretty good run for a third-round selection.

Retirement Eric Gryba

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PHR Originals: 9/16/19 – 9/22/19

September 22, 2019 at 7:54 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Here is a rundown of the original content over the past seven days here at PHR.

Our look around the salary cap situation continues as we started our look at the Atlantic Division.  Zach broke down the situation for Boston while I did the same for Buffalo, Detroit, and Florida.  Despite missing the playoffs last year, both the Sabres and Panthers find themselves fairly close to the Upper Limit heading into the season.

There are five high-quality remaining restricted free agents around the league in Brayden Point (Tampa Bay), Mikko Rantanen (Colorado), Matthew Tkachuk (Calgary), plus Kyle Connor and Patrik Laine (Winnipeg).  At this point, it’s starting to look likely that at least one of these will carry over into the season.  Which player is most likely to remain unsigned when the puck gets dropped to start the regular season?  Make your prediction here.

Gavin held his weekly Thursday chat.  Topics included Jared Spurgeon’s long-term extension, the Dustin Byfuglien situation in Winnipeg, a prediction on Chris Kreider’s future with the Rangers, a projection for what top pick Jack Hughes does this season, a discussion on Carolina’s stockpiling of defensemen, and more.

Our 2007 redraft series continues as we wrap up the selections in the teens.  Winger Carl Hagelin went to the Rangers with the 17th selection while Lars Eller dropped five spots from his original draft slot but still wound up with the team that initially drafted him in St. Louis.  Anaheim is now on the clock and will undoubtedly wind up with a pick that had more NHL success than their actual selection.  Make your pick for them here.

Uncategorized Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Salary Cap Deep Dive: Florida Panthers

September 22, 2019 at 6:50 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

Navigating the salary cap is one of the more important tasks for any GM. Teams that can avert total cap chaos by walking the tightrope of inking players to deals that match their value (or compensate for future value without breaking the bank) remain successful. Those that don’t see struggles and front office changes.

PHR will look at every NHL team and give a thorough look at their cap situation heading into the 2019-20 season. This will focus more on those players who are integral parts of the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL. All cap figures are courtesy of CapFriendly.

Florida Panthers

Current Cap Hit: $80,718,669 (under the $81.5MM Upper Limit)

Entry-Level Contracts

F Henrik Borgstrom (one year, $925K)

Potential Bonuses

Borgstrom: $850K

Borgstrom’s first full professional season had some ups and downs.  While he was quite productive in the minors, it didn’t translate to much success in the NHL.  He’s still likely to have a somewhat limited role for the upcoming season and will have even less leverage than most RFAs coming off entry-level deals as he won’t be eligible for an offer sheet.  Unless he lights it up this season, a short-term contract will be likely for him.

One Year Remaining, Non-Entry-Level

D Josh Brown ($675K, RFA)
F Evgenii Dadonov ($4MM, UFA)
F Jayce Hawryluk ($874K, RFA)
F Mike Hoffman ($5.188MM, UFA)
F Denis Malgin ($750K, RFA)
D Ian McCoshen ($700K, RFA)
G Samuel Montembeault ($709K, RFA)
D Mark Pysyk ($2.733MM, UFA)
D MacKenzie Weegar ($1.6MM, RFA)

Hoffman made a significant impact after being acquired from San Jose (which is technically true as he was a Shark for all of about two hours).  He led the team in goals with 36 and was an elite threat on the power play where he tallied 17 of those.  Those are elements that will excite a lot of teams if he gets to free agency where he could command a six-year deal or longer at more than $7MM per season.  Dadonov’s deal was a risky one given his lack of success in his first NHL stint but it has proven to be quite the bargain as he has picked up 135 points over the first two seasons.  As he’s more of a playmaker than a scorer, he shouldn’t land as rich of a deal as Hoffman will but he’s still looking at a significant raise on a long-term contract.  Hawryluk and Malgin both saw time in the minors last season but are waiver-eligible this time around which should help secure them a full-time spot.  Despite that, both should have limited roles which means that they should be looking at one-year deals at or near their qualifying offers next summer.

Pysyk was acquired in 2016 with the hopes that he could become a top-four defender.  He has held down that role at times but is better suited as a third-pairing option that can move up when injuries arise.  Between that and a general lack of offense, he shouldn’t be able to garner too much of a raise on the open market.  Weegar has carved out a regular role on the third pairing but while he’ll have arbitration eligibility next summer, he’ll also need a lot more production (or will need to lock down a top-four spot) to get a significant raise.  McCoshen and Brown will be battling for spot minutes and are waiver-eligible which means a trip to the minors isn’t likely.  However, they’ll need to take on a full-time spot in order to get anything notable beyond their qualifying offers.

Montembeault is currently slotted to be the backup but it’s possible that the team looks to the waiver wire before the preseason is over as well.  If he’s with the big club, he should be able to surpass the $1MM mark a year from now but with who their new starter is, playing time will be limited.

Two Years Remaining

F Colton Sceviour ($1.2MM, UFA)

Sceviour was retained to provide some offense from the bottom six but injuries didn’t help his cause last season.  He’s likely to be no more than a depth player over the final two years so he won’t be looking at much of a raise in 2021.

Three Years Remaining

F Noel Acciari ($1.667MM, UFA)
F Aleksander Barkov ($5.9MM, UFA)
D Anton Stralman ($5.5MM, UFA)
F Vincent Trocheck ($4.75MM, UFA)
F Frank Vatrano ($2.533MM, UFA)

Barkov has emerged as one of the top centers in the league and is making what a lot of second liners are starting to get.  Forget a small raise, it’s possible that with a higher cap in three years’ time, Barkov could be pushing to double his current price tag.  Trocheck is coming off an injury-riddled season but prior to that had established himself as a strong second line pivot.  If he continues his progression, there may very well be teams that want to take a run at making him a number one center which would have him in line for a significant pay increase as well.  Vatrano had a breakout year as a reliable secondary scorer but it was his first time scoring at that rate.  Maintaining that level of production would make him a lot more attractive on the open market where his price tag could jump past the $4MM mark.  Acciari was brought in to give them a stronger fourth line and while some teams are opting for cheaper depth options, a good showing with his new team would help his case towards another multi-year deal.  However, given what Barkov and Trocheck are going to cost, that deal may not come with Florida.

Stralman is another player who battled injuries a year ago although it didn’t stop him from getting one of the more surprising deals of the summer.  He’s being asked to stabilize the defense but even if he does that, it’s hard to see him getting close to that at the age of 36.

Four Or More Years Remaining

G Sergei Bobrovsky ($10MM through 2025-26)
F Brett Connolly ($3.5MM through 2022-23)
D Aaron Ekblad ($7.5MM through 2025-26)
F Jonathan Huberdeau ($5.9MM through 2022-23)
D Keith Yandle ($6.35MM through 2022-23)

Huberdeau hasn’t gotten the attention that Barkov has but he has blossomed into a quality top liner and is coming off a year where he blew past his previous career high in points by 23.  That makes it tough to peg his future value.  If he stays near the 90-point mark, something along the lines of Artemi Panarin’s contract could be possible.  But if he goes back to the 60-70 point range, that should put him more in the $7.5MM range.  Connolly had a strong year in Washington and got the long-term security he had been coveting.  He’ll hold a similar role with the Panthers this season with a chance to move up depending on what happens with Hoffman and Dadonov a year from now which would really affect his market value.

Ekblad’s deal was a record-breaker at the time (only to be broken this week) but he hasn’t quite lived up to it offensively just yet.  He’s still only 23 though and there’s still lots of time for him to improve.  Yandle remains one of the top offensive threats from the back end in the league although he will likely start to drop off at that end in the coming years.  If that happens, it could be a bit of an anchor deal in the final year.

Bobrovsky signed the biggest contract for a goalie on the open market in league history.  (Carey Price has a higher cap hit but signed before testing the market.)  He’s coming off an up-and-down season that saw him post a save percentage during the regular season that was basically just league average.  However, he was much better in the postseason and played a key role in their surprising upset over Tampa Bay.  However, he’s now 31 and has seven years on his deal so while he should provide them with a significant improvement over their goaltending the last couple of seasons, the last few years may not be particularly pretty.  But by then, their top goalie prospect in Spencer Knight should be NHL-ready.

Buyouts

G Scott Darling ($1.233MM in 2019-20, $2.333MM in 2020-21, $1.183MM in 2021-22 and 2022-23)

Retained Salary Transactions

D Jason Demers ($562.5K through 2020-21)

Salary Cap Recapture

G Roberto Luongo ($1.094MM through 2021-22)

Still To Sign

None

Best Value: Barkov
Worst Value: Bobrovsky

Looking Ahead

The Panthers haven’t been known as a high-spending team but that’s going to change in a hurry as this level of spending is going to need to be maintained to keep this core intact for the long haul.  They’ll be hard-pressed to keep both Hoffman and Dadonov next summer while keeping Barkov and Trocheck three years from now will also be challenging.  Get used to seeing Florida near the top of the chart when it comes to spending around the league as they’re going to be there for a while.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Florida Panthers| Salary Cap Deep Dive 2019

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