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Archives for July 2020

West Notes: Canucks, Galchenyuk, DeMelo

July 18, 2020 at 2:55 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Back at the trade deadline, teams were asking the Canucks for either defenseman Brogan Rafferty or center Adam Gaudette to take Loui Eriksson’s contract off Vancouver’s hands, reports Rick Dhaliwal of TSN 1040 and The Athletic (audio link).  Eriksson still has two years left on his contract after this one and while his salary dips (only $8MM is owed over the next two seasons), his $6MM cap hit is even more of an issue now with the salary cap levelling off for 2020-21.  If the cost to get out of the contract was a promising youngster back then, it certainly stands to reason that the price to escape from Eriksson’s contract is only going to be higher now with many more other teams soon facing cap crunches of their own.

Elsewhere out West:

  • Wild forward Alex Galchenyuk was quietly off to a decent start with Minnesota before the pandemic hit. He had been shifted back to center and put up three goals and four assists in 14 games before things were shut down.  In doing so, he may have restored a bit of value heading into free agency but he told Jace Frederick of the Pioneer Press that he’s not thinking about the open market at this time.  However, he indicated that he’s hopeful to remain in Minnesota for next season.  Having said that, he’ll quite likely be looking at a considerable dip from his current $4.9MM AAV considering he only had 24 points in 59 games between the Wild and Penguins this season.
  • Jets defenseman Dylan DeMelo wound up playing an important role with Winnipeg after being acquired from Ottawa, logging more than 21 minutes a night before the shutdown. Despite his limited experience with the team (just ten games), he told Postmedia’s Ted Wyman that he could see himself re-signing with the team this offseason.  The 27-year-old is currently on a bargain salary of just $900K and even with the flattened cap, he’s well-positioned to earn a nice raise on the open market.

Minnesota Wild| Vancouver Canucks| Winnipeg Jets Adam Gaudette| Alex Galchenyuk| Dylan DeMelo| Loui Eriksson

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Maple Leafs Sign Teemu Kivihalme To A Two-Year Extension

July 18, 2020 at 1:51 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The Maple Leafs will be keeping one of their depth defensemen in the fold for a while yet as they announced that they’ve signed Teemu Kivihalme to a two-year, two-way contract.  The deal will carry a $725K AAV which means the NHL salary for both seasons will be at the league minimum – $700K in 2020-21 and $750K in 2021-22.

The 25-year-old was actually drafted by Nashville back in 2013 (140th overall) but he never signed with them.  Instead, after three seasons at Colorado College, he opted to turn pro in Finland and spent two years with Karpat of the SM-liiga.  The second of those seasons saw him pick up 30 points in 60 games which got him on the radar for several NHL teams including Toronto as they signed him in May of 2019.

This season, Kivihalme played exclusively in the AHL with the Marlies, picking up four goals and 14 assists in 55 games.  While those numbers don’t jump off the table by any means, he impressed enough in his own end to earn an invitation to Toronto’s ongoing training camp with a chance for him to earn a spot on their roster for the NHL’s return in August.  If that doesn’t happen though, he’ll at least be armed with the security of a two-year deal, one that will see him become an unrestricted free agent at its expiration.

Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions

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Offseason Keys: San Jose Sharks

July 18, 2020 at 1:40 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 4 Comments

The offseason has arrived for at least seven teams that were not invited to take part in the play-in round that’s slated to begin in early August.  With that in mind, our Offseason Keys series is underway for the teams that are on the outside looking in.  Next up is a look at San Jose.

There was some cause for optimism for the Sharks heading into the season.  They were coming off an appearance in the Western Conference Final and managed to keep Erik Karlsson in the fold.  Things seemed to be looking up.  Things didn’t play out as they expected and that would be putting it lightly.  Pretty much every player struggled while an in-season coaching change didn’t move the needle and the end result was narrowly avoiding 30th overall.  And of course, they don’t have their first-rounder this year to make matters worse as that went to Ottawa in the Karlsson trade.  Their salary cap situation doesn’t give them a lot of wiggle room but here are some of the things San Jose needs to take care of this summer.

Coaching Decision

After they got off to a 15-16-2 start under Peter DeBoer, GM Doug Wilson decided to make a change behind the bench.  Bob Boughner, who had just been brought back for a second stint as an assistant coach, was promoted to the top job on an interim basis.  Things didn’t get much better on his watch as they limped to a 14-20-3 record before the pandemic scrapped the rest of the season.

Now, Wilson needs to make a decision on Boughner to either lift the interim tag or bring someone else in to take over.  Three months ago, Wilson stated that there would be a thorough review and that Boughner had the upper hand in the process at the time.  Is more than 14 weeks enough to conduct that review and make a decision?  For a moment, it seemed like they were leaning towards keeping the status quo but Wilson poured cold water on that on Thursday, telling Curtis Pashelka of The Mercury News that no decisions have been made yet.

Fortunately for the Sharks, they’re not really competing against anyone for coaches at the moment.  All other head coaching jobs are either filled or held by teams that are still playing which gives them even more time to work with.  There are several veteran candidates out there that are worthy of consideration in Gerard Gallant, Peter Laviolette, Mike Babcock, and John Stevens so there are plenty of options to choose from if they decide to go in another direction.

Is Boughner the right one for the job?  Eventually, Wilson will need to answer that question but at this point, it certainly seems like the answer is going to be yes.

Fix The Goaltending Situation

Despite getting as deep as they did in the playoffs, goaltending was a concern for San Jose for most of the year.  Martin Jones was coming off the worst season of his career as was Aaron Dell.  Nevertheless, the duo remained intact for 2019-20 and the results between the pipes weren’t much better.  Jones posted a save percentage of just .896 for the second straight season, a mark that backups need to be better than let alone starters.  Dell didn’t play at the level he had in his first two years but at least was a bit better although still below average.  This is why only a handful of teams allowed more goals before the season was shut down.

Needless to say, improvements need to be made.  The big question is how?  Jones still has five years left on his contract with a $5.75MM AAV.  At the time the deal was signed, it had a chance to be bargain but now it’s a problem.  With the flattened salary cap, finding a team to take that deal on is going to be tricky without taking another big contract back.  Unless that big contract is another goalie though, there isn’t a feasible trade option out there as a high-priced skater in return for Jones would price them out of the starting goalie market.  A buyout doesn’t seem likely either.

As for Dell, he’s slated to become an unrestricted free agent but he was only making $1.9MM on his expiring deal.  That’s enough to shop around for a veteran replacement but the top backups are going to be commanding more than that and they already have more than $66MM in commitments to just 13 players for next season, per CapFriendly.  A higher-end backup, while ideal, may be a luxury they simply can’t afford.  San Jose has high hopes for undrafted free agent Alexei Melnichuk but asking him to step in and play a big role right away would be risky despite his impressive showing in limited KHL action.

Their cap situation is going to make things tricky but if the Sharks plan on turning things around, Wilson is going to need to find a way to swap out starters or, at the very least, bring in a more prominent backup that can compete for more playing time.

Bank For Labanc

Last offseason, Labanc decided to take a team-friendly one-year, $1MM deal with the hopes that there would be more wiggle room next summer at a time where he’d have arbitration rights and ideally more leverage as a result.  For a variety of reasons, that plan hasn’t exactly worked out.

Labanc’s numbers dipped considerably this season to just 14 goals and 19 assists in 70 games.  For context, he had more assists (39) one year ago than he had points (33) in 2019-20.  Granted, pretty much everyone had a down year but that’s not a winning argument in an arbitration hearing.

The 24-year-old still should be in for a decent-sized raise but the change in salary cap projections due to the pandemic is going to hurt.  There was a case to be made that he’d be looking for a deal that might seem pricey now but more reasonable after a few more cap increases; lots of teams have done those in recent years and enough have worked out to make it a reasonable strategy.  But that’s off the table now as any increases over the next few years are going to be incremental at best.

At this point, another short-term deal (perhaps even another one-year pact) makes the most sense.  It gives Labanc a chance to rebuild his value and it would save them a bit of cap room in the interim.  The latter element was also a factor a year ago but at that time, he was looking to boost his value, not build it back up.  From San Jose’s perspective, as much as they like him, committing a long-term deal now may price them out of filling other holes so they’ll have that to consider as they map out their offseason plans.

It’s safe to say that Labanc’s plan last offseason didn’t quite work out as planned but unfortunately for him, the solution may be to try the same thing again.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Offseason Keys 2020| San Jose Sharks Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Devils UFA Julian Melchiori Signs In The KHL

July 18, 2020 at 12:25 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

After spending the last three seasons exclusively in the minors, Devils defenseman Julian Melchiori has decided not to wait for another crack at the NHL free agent market.  Instead, he has decided to head overseas as Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk of the KHL announced (Twitter link) that they have signed Melchiori to a one-year contract.

The 28-year-old spent most of this season on a minor league deal with New Jersey but did well enough that the Devils converted Melchiori to an NHL contract just before the trade deadline to give them the option to recall him down the stretch.  However, the pandemic put an end to those plans.  Overall, he played in 61 games with Binghamton this season, picking up a career-best 17 points (6-11-17).

Melchiori has played in parts of three NHL seasons over his career with Winnipeg, the franchise that drafted him back in the third round (87th overall) back when they were in Atlanta.  But with just 30 games with the Jets being all of his experience over eight professional seasons, his decision to take a guaranteed deal overseas seems like a sound one over testing the NHL market a few months from now.

KHL| New Jersey Devils Julian Melchiori

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Capitals Notes: Holtby, McMichael, Restart

July 18, 2020 at 10:44 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Heading into the season, it looked like it could very well be Braden Holtby’s final season with Washington.  Ilya Samsonov, their goalie of the future, had arrived and with expansion looming, keeping both carried some risk.  Nicklas Backstrom’s in-season extension further increased the likelihood of Holtby leaving and now the flattened salary cap has done the same.  Despite that, the goaltender told reporters, including J.J. Regan of NBC Sports Washington, that he’s still holding out faint hope of a return:

My focus right now is to win a championship and moving forward, is to find the next best place to win a championship with. Hopefully, it is here. Hopefully, everything works out but you never know.

Holtby is coming off his worst statistical season of his career (.897 SV%, 3.11 GAA) which certainly doesn’t bolster his leverage heading into what looks to be a deflated market.  However, with a handful of other teams on the lookout for starting goaltenders, he still should be able to land a good contract but unless he’s willing to take a sizable discount, it probably won’t be with the Capitals.

More from Washington:

  • With Lars Eller planning to leave the team to be with his wife for the birth of their second child early next month, head coach Todd Reirden told Samantha Pell of The Washington Post that 2019 first-round pick Connor McMichael is among those being considered to fill that spot in the lineup. There would certainly be some risk to having McMichael make his NHL debut in a playoff situation (or during seeding games at a minimum) but the upside is certainly there.  He had a dominant season in the OHL, recording 47 goals and 55 assists in just 52 games with London so he should be able to hold his own at the very least.  If he does play, he’ll be subject to the usual games played threshold to not burn a year of his contract but by the time he gets to that tenth game, Eller should be back.
  • Washington is one of the teams that really benefitted from the stoppage, suggests Matthew Paras of The Washington Times. The Capitals had lost 10 of 15 games before the pandemic arrived while the mini training camp also allows them to get Ilya Kovalchuk and Brendan Dillon integrated into the lineup, something they didn’t get much of a chance to do after both were brought in near the trade deadline.

Washington Capitals Braden Holtby| Connor McMichael

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David Pastrnak Held Out Of Bruins Practice Due To COVID Exposure

July 17, 2020 at 8:32 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 7 Comments

League-leading goal-scorer David Pastrnak has missed his second straight day of practice with the Boston Bruins after missing the early part of the week due a league-mandated quarantine period for players returning from Europe. While Pastrnak himself has tested negative for COVID-19, as it turns out he is back in quarantine after coming into contact with an individual who had tested positive, according to The Athletic’s Fluto Shinzawa.

Pastrnak, as well as fellow European returner Ondrej Kase, missed Monday and Tuesday while in quarantine but returned Wednesday to re-join the team. However, head  coach Bruce Cassidy announced on Thursday that the duo had been labeled “unfit to participate” and would be out for an indeterminate amount of time. It has since been clarified that Pastrnak was not permitted to practice with the team due to contact with a positive COVID-19 individual. It is unclear whether Kase has been missing for the same reason.

Meanwhile, the two worked out together privately at a local rink Friday. The team certainly hopes that the pair will be at full speed by the time they depart for Toronto to begin round robin play, whether they are able to resume group practice soon or  not. Pastrnak is obviously one of the more dangerous scoring forwards in the league and a crucial part of Boston’s offensive attack, while Kase was acquired from the Anaheim ahead of the trade deadline for a hefty price and is expected to be a key piece moving forward. Kase was quiet through six games with the Bruins before the league suspended play, but the hope is that he will be the fit at right wing alongside David Krejci that the team has been searching for.

Boston Bruins| Bruce Cassidy David Krejci| David Pastrnak| Ondrej Kase

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Markus Granlund Officially Signs In KHL

July 17, 2020 at 5:01 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

When the Edmonton Oilers announced their Phase 3 training camp roster last week, there were several veteran names left off. Mike Green was among them after opting out of the return to play format, while Markus Granlund was another.

It was easy to see why the latter wasn’t included. Granlund had been sent to the minors in March before the season was suspended and didn’t look like he had much of a future with the organization. That idea was furthered when reports surfaced at the end of May that Granlund would be signing in the KHL after his contract with the Oilers expired, but at that time it appeared as though he would still be available for the club should the 2019-20 season resume.

Now that he has been left off of the roster, Granlund has indeed signed a contract with Salavat Yulaev Ufa in the KHL. The deal is for two seasons and may effectively mark the end of the 27-year old’s NHL career.

Granlund at one point actually looked like quite an impressive prospect. A second-round pick of the Calgary Flames in 2011, he put up huge numbers playing in Finland before eventually making the jump to North America. In the minor leagues, Granlund quickly became a star, tallying 25 goals and 46 points in 52 games as a rookie for the Abbotsford Heat. The NHL wasn’t quite as kind however and that promising young prospect was shipped to Vancouver in 2016 for Hunter Shinkaruk.

While he did have a 19-goal campaign for the Canucks, Granlund never has really fulfilled his potential on a consistent basis. In 2019-20 he split the year between the NHL and AHL, recording only four points in his 34 games for the Oilers.

He will be an unrestricted free agent again after this two-year pact expires, but it is hard to believe Granlund will ever be an impact player in the NHL again.

Edmonton Oilers| KHL Markus Granlund

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Snapshots: Jones, BCHL, Fleury

July 17, 2020 at 2:28 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

Edmonton Oilers defenseman Caleb Jones has confirmed he tested positive for COVID-19, telling reporters today that he did not experience many symptoms and has since recovered. Jones doesn’t know how exactly he contracted the virus. He had been deemed “unfit to play” on the first few days of Oilers training camp but joined his teammates today.

Jones is looking to continue on an impressive season with the team, where he made the leap full-time from the minor leagues and recorded nine points in 43 games. The 23-year old has steadily improved since his selection in the 2015 draft (117th overall) and looks poised to be a part of the Oilers blueline for years to come.

  • The BCHL, one of the top leagues for junior-aged players in Canada who wish to keep their NCAA eligibility, is planning on starting its season on December 1. Training camps will actually be permitted to start as early as September 8, but the regular season will be delayed considerably. Jay O’Brien, a Philadelphia Flyers first-round pick from 2018, was one of the highest-profile players in the BCHL last season after leaving Providence College. O’Brien was waiting out a transfer year before joining Boston University for the 2020-21 season, and recorded 66 points in 46 games for the Trail Smoke Eaters.
  • Marc-Andre Fleury was back on the ice for the Vegas Golden Knights today after missing the first three days of camp due to “maintenance.” Head coach Peter DeBoer told reporters that the absence did not have to do with a positive COVID-19 test. Fleury, 35, is one of the most experienced goaltenders in the league and has played in 142 playoff contests (winning the Stanley Cup three times) but will have to battle Robin Lehner for the chance to play this summer.

Edmonton Oilers| Snapshots| Vegas Golden Knights Marc-Andre Fleury

2 comments

Philadelphia Flyers Loan Maksim Sushko To KHL

July 17, 2020 at 1:01 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Like the New Jersey Devils and Edmonton Oilers before them, the Philadelphia Flyers have decided to send one of their prospects over to the KHL. Maksim Sushko has been loaned to Dynamo Minsk, giving him the chance to play right away instead of waiting for the eventual 2020-21 season here in North America.

Sushko, 21, was a fourth-round pick of the Flyers in 2017 and spent the 2019-20 season with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms. The Belarussian winger recorded 11 goals an 21 points in those 53 AHL contests and will now continue his development overseas.

This option, of sending a player to the KHL to get him into game action, will likely be taken by several teams around the league as they try to figure out how to best serve their prospects. Sushko will still be under contract with the Flyers through the end of the 2021-22 season and can be recalled if the AHL season does get underway. In fact, this may actually give him a leg up on the rest of the AHL competition whenever that training camp does get underway.

KHL| Loan| Philadelphia Flyers| Prospects

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2020 Vezina Trophy Finalists Announced

July 17, 2020 at 11:34 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 9 Comments

The NHL continues to release the finalists for the major regular season awards, this time announcing the nominees for the Vezina Trophy. The award is given to the best goaltender in the NHL and is voted on by the league’s general managers.

The finalists are Andrei Vasilevskiy of the Tampa Bay Lightning, Connor Hellebuyck of the Winnipeg Jets and Tuukka Rask of the Boston Bruins.

Vasilevskiy took home the award last season after putting up a .925 save percentage in 53 games, but couldn’t maintain quite the same level this time around. His save percentage dropped to .917, though he led the league in wins for the third consecutive season with 35. The Russian goaltender has had just about as much success as anyone to start his career, recording 159 regular season wins in his first 260 games. Amazingly, that already puts him 118th all-time despite not turning 26 for another week. A three-time Vezina finalist, he’ll likely be in the conversation for a while longer.

Hellebuyck meanwhile is only a little over a year older than Vasilevskiy and has experienced his own prolonged success to start his career. He led the NHL in starts this season with 58, putting the Jets on his back for long stretches when they were trying to patch a defensive corps together with spare parts. His .922 may not lead the league, but his 1,656 saves do as did his six shutouts. Hellebuyck could potentially be a candidate for the Hart Trophy as one of the most valuable players in the league given where the Jets would be without him.

Rask, 33, is an aging veteran compared to the two other finalists, but he is not slowing down in terms of performance. The Bruins netminder has benefited from having a strong backup the last few years and played just 41 games this season, but posted an incredible .929 save percentage in those appearances. After raising his career save percentage to .922, Rask is now third all-time behind only Dominik Hasek and Johnny Bower (among goaltenders with recorded shot totals). He already won the Jennings Trophy as part of the goaltending duo with the lowest goals against average, and took home the Vezina in 2014.

Boston Bruins| Tampa Bay Lightning| Winnipeg Jets Andrei Vasilevskiy| Connor Hellebuyck| Tuukka Rask

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