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Archives for December 2020

NHL, Canadian Teams Receive Government Permission For All-Canadian Division

December 25, 2020 at 2:08 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 37 Comments

December 25: The five Canadian provinces and the federal government have officially given the NHL the green light to go ahead with their plans for the upcoming season, reports TVA Sports’ Renaud Lavoie.  No adjustments or delays in the schedule will be required.

December 24: The NHL has seemingly made agreements with each province to allow the Canadian teams to stay north of the border for the upcoming season. NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly told Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic the following:

On the basis of our discussions in the past week, as well as our exchange of correspondence over the last 24 hours, we believe we are aligned and in agreement on the conditions on which each of our Canadian franchises can begin play in their own buildings for the start of the 2020-21 NHL season.

Darren Dreger of TSN meanwhile reports that both the league and the NHLPA will accept additional testing if necessary and will use certain players for public service announcements. The league will not need to change any of the schedule that was released yesterday, according to Chris Johnston of Sportsnet.

December 17: Though there seems to be some momentum towards an NHL season, a new obstacle may get in the way. Chris Johnston of Sportsnet is reporting that if the league cannot make agreements with each of the five Canadian provinces that house NHL teams, there is a possibility of moving all of them south of the border for a shortened season and holding every game in the United States. Frank Seravalli of TSN has heard the same thing. The league could be floating the idea, perhaps in an attempt to put pressure on the provincial governments.

Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic reports that if the seven Canadian teams do have to move their operations to the U.S., there would no longer be an All-Canadian division, and more realignment would be required.

Other sports have already experienced a situation like this. In the summer, the Toronto Blue Jays were not allowed to play home games in Canada, meaning they had to move to Buffalo for their shortened season. The NBA’s Toronto Raptors are preparing to start their season in Tampa after moving their entire training camp and preseason south.

Obviously, the difference is that those teams, the Blue Jays and Raptors, are the sole Canadian teams in each of their respective leagues. They had no one to play that wouldn’t have to cross the U.S.-Canada border, meaning a regular season made little sense. In the NHL’s plan, the seven Canadian teams would only play each other, reducing the need to cross the federal border altogether.

That doesn’t mean it would limit travel all that much though, as those seven teams still stretch across most of the country and would need to be moving large groups of people across provincial borders. That isn’t ideal, and as Public Health Agency of Canada spokesperson Andre Gagnon told Johnston, “the resumption of sports events in Canada must be undertaken in adherence to Canada’s measures to mitigate the importation and spread of COVID-19.”

If they do need to move to the U.S. there will likely be several markets willing to welcome them in, though moving seven franchises all at once is a lot different than finding a home for the Blue Jays (which was already difficult enough). Bruce Garrioch of Postmedia tweets that Kansas City, Milwaukee, Austin, and Orlando could be potential hosts, though speculation on that front could be endless at this point.

NHL

37 comments

Blue Jackets Sign Michael Del Zotto To PTO

December 25, 2020 at 1:55 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

If defenseman Michael Del Zotto wants to play in the NHL this coming season, he’ll have to earn a contract via the tryout route to do it.  The Blue Jackets announced (Twitter link) that they’ve inked the veteran to a PTO agreement with an invitation to training camp.

The 30-year-old spent last season with Anaheim, his second stint with the team after they moved him to St. Louis before the 2019 trade deadline.  Del Zotto was originally expected to be in a reserve role but he still managed to play in 49 games with the Ducks last season and held his own, putting up 15 points (2-13-15) while logging 18:43 per night.  Early in his career, he was more of an offensive-minded blueliner but has only surpassed the 20-point mark twice over the past seven seasons.

Columbus has seen a bit of turnover on their back end this offseason with Ryan Murray being traded to New Jersey and Markus Nutivaara getting dealt to Florida with no one being brought in to replace either of them.  However, their top six appears to be set which means Del Zotto will likely be contending with the likes of Gabriel Carlsson, Gavin Bayreuther, and Adam Clendening for the seventh spot on the depth chart.

Del Zotto may benefit from the recent creation of taxi squads for the upcoming season.  Even if he isn’t able to crack their opening roster, he’s someone that could still skate with the team and be used in a pinch whenever injuries strike.  With training camps on the horizon, he certainly won’t be the only experienced veteran that is forced to turn to this option in the coming days.

Columbus Blue Jackets Michael Del Zotto

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2020 Year In Review: January

December 25, 2020 at 1:41 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

2020 has certainly been a unique year away from the rink.  However, it’s also a year that has featured several big trades and free agent signings, coaching changes, and much more.  Over the coming days, PHR will take a look back at the top stories from around the game on a month-by-month basis.  We begin with a look back at January.

Shero Fired: Less than a month after he traded Taylor Hall to Arizona, the Devils decided to make a change in direction with the firing of general manager Ray Shero.  He had been with the team since May of 2015 with his biggest move being the acquisition of Hall from Edmonton back in 2016.  However, the team never really progressed and won just one playoff game during his tenure.  Tom Fitzgerald took over on an interim basis and took the team through the trade deadline and into the offseason (before eventually getting the full-time position).

Montreal Additions: The Canadiens made a couple of moves to try to keep themselves in the playoff race.  They added Ilya Kovalchuk on a one-year, pro-rated league minimum deal after he was released by Los Angeles the month before.  He made an immediate impact and they were able to flip him just six weeks later for a third-round pick.  They also picked up Marco Scandella from Buffalo for a fourth-round pick; Buffalo then took that saved cap room to add Michael Frolik from Buffalo.  Montreal fell out of the race and sent Scandella to St. Louis with 50% retention for second and fourth rounders.  (Meanwhile, Frolik signed with the Canadiens earlier this week.)

Extensions: Capitals center Nicklas Backstrom elected to represent himself in contract extension negotiations and was able to negotiate a sizable raise, upping his AAV from $6.7MM to $9.2MM while securing a five-year deal at the age of 32.  The contract also contains a full no-move clause in the first three years of the deal before converting to a 15-team no-trade clause in the final two seasons.  The veteran has spent the entirety of his 13-year NHL career with Washington and has averaged close to a point per game over that span with 927 in 956 career NHL games.  He sits second in all-time franchise scoring, only behind frequent linemate Alex Ovechkin who is ahead by 351 points.

Meanwhile, Calgary also locked up an important part of their back end, inking Rasmus Andersson to a six-year extension that carries a cap hit of $4.55MM.  The 24-year-old has just two full NHL seasons under his belt (including the pandemic-shortened 2019-20 campaign) so the deal does carry some risk but he has already established himself as a top-four defender.  With Travis Hamonic (unsigned) and T.J. Brodie (Toronto) leaving in free agency, Andersson should have an opportunity to take on an even bigger workload this upcoming season.

Shesterkin Promoted: Normally, players getting recalled from the minors wouldn’t qualify as major news but the impact that Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin had after being promoted certainly represents an exception.  He didn’t waste much time taking over the number one role and helped lead a big second half turnaround that all of a sudden had them in the hunt for a Wild Card spot and climbing before things were shut down in March.  He posted a .932 SV% with a 2.52 GAA while winning 10 of 12 starts and if he can even come close to that performance this coming season, the Rangers could make some noise in the tight East division.

Coaching Changes: A pair of teams opted to make changes behind the bench but didn’t bother with going with an interim replacement until the end of the season.  The Predators parted ways with Peter Laviolette and replaced him with former New Jersey bench boss John Hynes who had been let go by New Jersey a month earlier.  Meanwhile, Vegas let their inaugural head coach in Gerard Gallant go with former San Jose head coach Peter DeBoer (who also had been let go in December) taking over.  Both teams posted better winning percentages following the changes but the Golden Knights, in particular, really took off as they lost just five of 22 games in regulation with DeBoer behind the bench while also making it to the Western Conference Final.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Year In Review 2020

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Danil Yurtaykin Clears Unconditional Waivers

December 25, 2020 at 11:43 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Friday: Yurtakin cleared waivers, CapFriendly reports, paving the way for the Sharks to release him.

Thursday: The San Jose Sharks have placed Danil Yurtaykin on unconditional waivers for the purpose of a contract termination, according to CapFriendly. Yurtaykin had one year remaining on his entry-level contract but will become an unrestricted free agent tomorrow.

Signed out of the KHL in 2019, Yurtaykin played in four games for the Sharks during the 2019-20 campaign but spent most of his time in the minor leagues with the San Jose Barracuda. The 23-year-old winger was never drafted, but caught the eye of scouts when he scored 10 goals and 19 points for Yaroslavl Lokomotiv in 2018-19.

Since he wasn’t expected to be a full-time member of the Sharks NHL roster, terminating his contract makes a lot of sense for Yurtaykin. The AHL season is still clouded in uncertainty and he hasn’t played a competitive game since March. This will allow him to return to the KHL if he chooses, getting his hockey career back on track. Down the line, remember the name as a potential option for another NHL club.

San Jose Sharks| Waivers

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Minor Transactions: 12/24/20

December 24, 2020 at 7:25 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

’Twas the month before hockey and all over the Earth,
Fans are excited for a new season’s birth;
There was quite a delay to the new league year,
’Til the NHL announced that it was practically here;
Of course, before we get started in just a few weeks,
Rosters are in need of numerous tweaks;
And as teams maneuver a salary cap squeeze,
Free agents also continue to find work overseas;
So stay tuned for some moves before the return to play;
From the NHL to KHL to NCAA;
Here are the minor transactions that were made today:

  • Free agent goaltender Ivan Nalimov has decided to remain in Europe for another season. The Chicago Blackhawks prospect, if you can still call him that at 26 years old, has previously expressed an interest in making the jump to North America. In fact, at one point he had requested that Chicago trade his rights to a team willing to give him an opportunity. Yet, for whatever reason, Nalimov will stay in the KHL for another year, signing a one-year contract with Dinamo Riga. The Blackhawks own Nalimov’s NHL rights in perpetuity, but if they weren’t willing to give him a chance this season without much talent and experience in net themselves, it seems unlikely that the two sides will ever get together.
  • The New Jersey Devils are on a more strict timeline to make a decision on prospect forward Nikita Popugaev. The 2017 fourth-round pick, whose skill is clear but whose work ethic is suspect, spent last season on an AHL contract with the Binghamton Devils but played exclusively in the ECHL with the Adirondack Thunder. He returned to Russia this off-season and signed with the KHL’s Dinamo Moscow. However, after a brief demotion, he has now been traded to Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk, the team announced. The Devils have until June 1st to decide if they want to sign Popugaev or lose his rights and a change of scenery mid-season won’t make that evaluation any easier.
  • The Edmonton Oilers face a similar situation with forward Bogdan Yakimov. Yakimov, a 2013 third-round pick, spent parts of two season in the Oilers’ organization shortly after being drafted, but only saw one NHL game. He has spent the past five seasons, including this year, back in the KHL. His current contract expires at the end of this season and his NHL rights expire on his 27th birthday in October, so both sides have limited time to decide if they are interested in a second chance. Potentially helping the cause is Yakimov’s inability to stay put in the KHL. For the second time already this year, Yakimov has been traded, as HK Sochi announced that they have acquired Yakimov from SKA St. Petersburg, who had only added him in a deal with Severstal Cherepovets in May. Yakimov’s size and two-way focus may be better appreciated back in North America and the promise of some consistency, even if that comes in Bakersfield instead of Edmonton, may appeal to the veteran center.
  • The University of Minnesota has gained a major commitment in U.S. National Team Development Program defenseman Ryan Chesley. The U-17 standout announced that he will join the Gophers when he begins his NCAA career. A 2022 NHL Draft prospect, Chesley still has another year with the USNTDP to go before he likely enrolls at Minnesota. In that time, his prospect stock could continue to climb; the 16-year-old is a right-shot defenseman with decent size scoring at better than a point-per-game pace this year, checking a number of major boxes for NHL scouts.

Chicago Blackhawks| Edmonton Oilers| KHL| New Jersey Devils| Transactions Bogdan Yakimov

1 comment

Cam York Named Captain Of Team USA

December 24, 2020 at 3:32 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 5 Comments

The World Junior Championship is set to start tomorrow and Team USA Now has a captain to lead them into battle against Russia in their first game. Philadelphia Flyers prospect Cam York has been given the “C” and he will be joined by alternates Cole Caufield and Alex Turcotte. Head coach Nate Leaman explained what an honor it is to be named captain:

It says a lot about this leadership group being voted in by their teammates. It’s a tremendous honor to be named captains and represent your country. This isn’t our team, this is their team. I believe our locker room is filled with leaders, and to be successful each guy will need to step up and be a leader in their own way, whether wearing a letter or not.

York, 19, was the 14th overall pick of the 2019 draft, selected by Philadelphia out of the USNTDP. He’s currently at the University of Michigan, where he earned conference All-Rookie honors last season and has five points in eight games this year. The smooth-skating defenseman was part of the U.S. team that disappointed a year ago but is back for revenge this time around.

Caufield, one of the most-hyped prospects in college hockey, returns to the tournament after scoring just a single goal last year. The undersized forward is an incredible sniper that is able to put the puck in the net in a thousand different ways and will be extremely difficult to contain at the event. Selected 15th overall by the Montreal Canadiens in 2019, he could be operating at the sidewall of an NHL powerplay before long.

Turcotte, the highest drafted of the three, went fifth overall to the Los Angeles Kings in 2019 and was a teammate of Caufield at Wisconsin last season. The 19-year-old signed his entry-level contract in March and will attempt to make the Kings out of training camp this year, but first has his eye on gold at the upcoming tournament.

Even though they were denied access to some top names, the U.S. squad looks extremely dangerous this time around. Caufield was named player of the match in the team’s exhibition game against Finland earlier this week when they won 3-2, with Trevor Zegras dazzling with his playmaking once again.

Los Angeles Kings| Montreal Canadiens| Philadelphia Flyers| Prospects| Team USA Alex Turcotte| Cole Caufield

5 comments

IIHF Provides WJC COVID-19 Update

December 24, 2020 at 12:01 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The IIHF has provided another update on their COVID-19 testing and for one team, it is not good news. Another German player has tested positive and will remain in quarantine until January 4. Only ten players and eight staff members from Germany were released from quarantine today, joining the six players who had previously been released.

This is catastrophic news for any hope the Germans had of competing in the round-robin, given they’ll now be taking on Finland and Canada with a reduced lineup. As Bob McKenzie of TSN tweets, the team is expected to have just two goalies, five defensemen, and nine forwards available for those two games. Even past that they will not have a full complement, certainly reducing their chance of toppling the hockey giants in the group.

There were no further positive tests among any of the other teams. Games start tomorrow with Switzerland and Slovakia kicking things off before the weakened German squad tries to upset Finland. Team USA’s first game is against the Russians, while Canada will not only get to face Germany without their full group but on a back-to-back as well Saturday evening.

IIHF Bob McKenzie

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Anthony Cirelli Re-Signs With Tampa Bay Lightning

December 24, 2020 at 11:49 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 18 Comments

The Tampa Bay Lightning have signed their last key restricted free agent, inking Anthony Cirelli to a three-year contract. The deal will carry an average annual value of $4.8MM and keeps Cirelli under contract through the 2022-23 season. Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic tweets out the full details, noting that it is the exact same deal that Mikhail Sergachev signed earlier this offseason:

  • 2020-21: $900K salary + $1.5MM signing bonus
  • 2021-22 $3.3MM salary + $1.5MM signing bonus
  • 2022-23: $7.2MM salary

When the Lightning walked to the podium to select Cirelli in the middle of the third round back in 2015, they never could have imagined what he would turn into five years later. At that point, he had only one year of OHL hockey under his belt, and though the Oshawa Generals were successful, he certainly wasn’t the one most fans were watching. Michael Dal Colle, the fifth-overall pick from 2014 was on that team and led the Generals all the way to the Memorial Cup, scoring 31 points in 21 playoff games. Cirelli scored only two goals in the playoffs for Oshawa, but he was already showing the elite work ethic and defensive ability that would become his calling card.

When Dal Colle was traded to the Kingston Frontenacs partway through the 2015-16 season, it was Cirelli who took over the captain’s “C” for Oshawa. He would also get his first taste of AHL action at the end of that season, suiting up three times for the Syracuse Crunch. Cirelli would then go on to win another OHL Championship and a World Junior silver medal in 2016-17, never losing that shutdown defensive mindset in the process.

Now, just two full seasons into his NHL career, everything he did for Oshawa (and Erie, and then Syracuse) he is doing for the Lightning. The 23-year-old center is one of the very best defensive players in the entire league, allowing almost no production from opponents when he is on the ice. He’s married that defensive acumen with improving offensive ability that resulted in 44 points in 68 games this season. Though his offense took a backseat to the superstar forwards on Tampa Bay in the playoffs, there’s little doubt how valuable Cirelli is to the team.

At a $4.8MM cap hit, he’ll continue to be a key part of the team’s lineup for the next three years. That number already likely doesn’t live up to the value Cirelli brings and if his development continues it could be a laughably low amount very soon. The bridge deal will also leave him as a restricted free agent one last time, meaning the Lightning will have a chance to ink a big, long-term deal with Cirelli in 2023.

How can they fit another high cap hit in? Nikita Kucherov’s injury is providing some relief, but this number is high enough that the Lightning will likely need to make another move before the season begins. CapFriendly tweeted out several explanations of how they’re even allowed to file a contract like this, which takes Tampa Bay nearly $12MM over the cap ceiling for the time being. Their projected cap hit is nearly $2.2MM over the $91MM that the team will be allowed to build assuming Kucherov goes on long-term injured reserve, meaning either some creative moves or a trade will be necessary in the coming weeks.

Still, even if it costs the Lightning one of their other bloated contracts, getting Cirelli locked up at a reasonable number is some strong work from GM Julien BriseBois. The team’s younger core of Kucherov, Cirelli, Sergachev, Brayden Point, and Andrei Vasilevskiy are now all locked in for at least the next two seasons, with the veteran stars—including Victor Hedman, who only turned 30 a few days ago—all still on workable numbers.

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Tampa Bay Lightning Anthony Cirelli

18 comments

Dawson Mercer Agrees To Terms With New Jersey Devils

December 24, 2020 at 10:06 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

Though he can’t actually sign because he’s locked away in the World Junior Championship bubble, Dawson Mercer has agreed to terms on his three-year entry-level contract with the New Jersey Devils.

Mercer, the 18th overall pick this fall, is a returning player for Canada at the WJC after winning gold with the team last year. He wasn’t able to register a single point during that tournament, but he should be asked to do much more this time around (especially now that Kirby Dach has been ruled out). The Chicoutimi Sagueneens star has seven points in five QMJHL games this season and will likely return to junior after the tournament ends.

A shifty, dynamic playmaker, the 19-year-old winger should be able to transition to the professional level easily if given offensive minutes and powerplay time. There doesn’t need to be any rush for that though as he focuses on winning a second gold medal and then (hopefully) completing his junior season. The entry-level deal will not actually kick in this season, sliding forward instead as long as he doesn’t play in seven NHL games.

New Jersey Devils

1 comment

Minor Transactions: 12/23/20

December 23, 2020 at 7:39 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

There has been a flurry of NHL action of late with a number of UFA signings and RFA extensions, among other moves. However, it doesn’t stop there. Between loan recalls, overseas contracts, and college commitments, it has been another busy day for minor moves as the NHL inches closer to joining the other leagues worldwide currently enjoying the 2020-21 season.

  • The San Jose Sharks have recalled goaltender Josef Korenar from his loan to HC Ocelari Trinec, the Czech club announced. The 22-year-old keeper had a down season in 2019-20 after excelling as an AHL rookie the year before, but his play could be trending up after posting an 8-2 record and strong numbers in the Czech Extraliga. With an uninspiring veteran duo of Martin Jones and Devan Dubnyk ahead of him, it would not be a surprise to see the Sharks call on Korenar to make his NHL debut this season, especially if he can return to form.
  • The Boston Bruins have also made a loan recall, bringing back forward Robert Lantosi from HK Nitra of the Slovakian Extraliga, according to the team. While Lantosi may not seem like a top AHL option for the Bruins, he continues to impress with every opportunity. The 25-year-old played with the Providence Bruins on a minor league deal last season but earned an entry-level contract with 31 points in 50 games. He followed that up with a point-per-game pace through 18 games with Nitra on loan. Especially with the taxi squad as a new option, Lantosi could be a dark horse candidate to debut with the Bruins this season.
  • Even as the free agent market starts to pick back up, some North American players are still signing overseas in order to get their season started instead of waiting and hoping for an NHL contract. Netminder Jared Coreau has joined that list, signing a one-year deal with the IceHL’s Bratislava Capitals, per a team announcement. The former Detroit Red Wings prospect has bounced around the AHL over the past few years without much in the way of results, leading to move overseas in hopes of rediscovering his game.
  • Veteran forward Lance Bouma is in the same boat. After spending last season with the AHL’s Ontario Reign, Bouma is heading back to Europe, this time signing with the SHL’s IK Oskarshamn, the team announced. After seven seasons with the Calgary Flames, including four as a regular player, and another with the Chicago Blackhawks, Bouma has been out of the NHL since 2017-18 and hopes a strong season in Sweden may get him back on the radar.
  • Tristan Mullin, formerly a top scorer for Cornell University, has finalized his transfer to the University of Vermont and will join the team in the spring semester, according to insider Mark Divver. The senior forward has recorded 20+ points in back-to-back seasons and with pro size and speed could draw NHL interest.
  • Max Smolinski, son of former NHLer Bryan Smolinski, has committed to play his college hockey at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, he announced today. The young puck-moving defenseman is expected to join RPI for the 2022-23 season. Smolinski is 2021 NHL Draft-eligible and hopes to impress scouts in his first season with the USHL’s Lincoln Stars.

AHL| Boston Bruins| Calgary Flames| Loan| SHL| San Jose Sharks| Transactions Jared Coreau| Lance Bouma

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