Blue Jackets RFA Tim Berni Likely To Play In Switzerland This Season
There are two remaining unsigned restricted free agents across the NHL – Ottawa center Shane Pinto and Columbus defenseman Tim Berni. While talks are ongoing with the former, it doesn’t appear as if the latter will be signing with the Blue Jackets. Instead, Aaron Portzline of The Athletic reports (subscription link) that the blueliner is expected to play in his native Switzerland this season.
The 23-year-old played a regular role in Columbus for a good chunk of last season due to injuries, suiting up in 59 games, third-most among their defenders. Although he didn’t do much offensively with just three points in those contests, Berni logged just shy of 17 minutes a night and averaged a little over two hits per game. That had him hoping that he’d be able to get more than his qualifying offer, a price tag that was actually a dip on his $925K AAV from his entry-level deal as it checked in at just over $874K.
However, earning a roster spot with the Blue Jackets this season was going to be much more difficult. The team added Ivan Provorov and Damon Severson over the summer while Zach Werenski and Jake Bean are coming back from long-term injuries. Between that and the other pieces they brought back from last season, Berni was thought to be on the outside looking in. To his credit, he attended camp on a tryout agreement – a move rarely seen for RFAs – but was cut earlier this week.
With that cut happening, Berni has two options. Sign a two-way deal with Columbus and get run through waivers to go to AHL Cleveland or head overseas. It appears he’s choosing the latter, allowing him to play at home for the upcoming season. Having qualified him in the summer, the Blue Jackets will continue to hold his rights.
Minor Transactions: 10/7/23
With the preseason coming to an end tonight, today’s transactions are largely highlighted by teams recalling players to give them one final look while giving a regular some extra rest heading into the season. We’ll run down today’s minor moves here.
- The Maple Leafs announced the recalls of forwards Nicholas Abruzzese, Max Ellis, Roni Hirvonen, Logan Shaw, and Ryan Tverberg, defensemen Tommy Miller, Topi Niemela, and Marshall Rifai, plus goaltender Dennis Hildeby from AHL Toronto. The majority of those players are expected to suit up tonight in Detroit.
- The Blackhawks have recalled forwards Dave Gust, Brett Seney, and Mike Hardman from Rockford of the AHL, reports Mark Lazerus of The Athletic. The three have already cleared waivers in training camp and these temporary promotions won’t count against their 10-game/30-day clock before they’d need to pass through again.
- The Senators announced they’ve recalled forwards Tarun Fizer, Zack Ostapchuk, and Egor Sokolov along with Dillon Heatherington, Jacob Larsson, and Nikolas Matinpalo from AHL Belleville. All six are expected to be in the lineup against Montreal tonight.
- Veteran Paul Thompson has announced his retirement at the age of 34. The forward played in 24 career NHL contests between Florida and New Jersey where he had three assists. Thompson spent the bulk of his time at the AHL level, making 697 appearances over parts of 13 seasons.
This post will be updated throughout the day.
West Notes: Kaliyev, Sharks, Avalanche, McDonald
The NHL’s Department of Player Safety announced that Kings winger Arthur Kaliyev would have a disciplinary hearing today for his kneeing of Anaheim’s Chase De Leo on Tuesday night. He received a minor penalty for kneeing on the play while De Leo did not return. If it’s decided that supplemental discipline is warranted, the league could opt to suspend Kaliyev solely for preseason games, regular season ones, or a combination of both.
Elsewhere in the Western Conference:
- Sharks center Mikael Granlund was injured just before training camp began but Curtis Pashelka of The Mercury News reports that the veteran appears to be on track to be ready to play in the season opener. The 31-year-old saw his production drop last year, going from 64 points to 41, resulting in him being a salary matcher in the Erik Karlsson trade. With Logan Couture’s availability for the season opener still in question, having Granlund – who can play down the middle – available would certainly help.
- Also from Pashelka’s piece, winger Kevin Labanc could return as soon as Thursday as he works his way back from an upper-body issue that came up last week against Anaheim. The 27-year-old gave San Jose some secondary scoring last season with 15 goals and 18 assists but that’s still not the type of production they’re expecting on a $4.75MM per year deal, one that runs through the end of this season.
- Avalanche winger Mikko Rantanen is listed as day-to-day with a lower-body injury, relays Peter Baugh of The Athletic (Twitter link). However, head coach Jared Bednar indicated that Rantanen should be ready to go for the start of the regular season next week. Meanwhile, center Ben Meyers, who is battling for a fourth-line spot with the Avs, is also listed as day-to-day.
- The Stars announced that they’ve recalled winger Kyle McDonald from AHL Texas. The 21-year-old was cut back on Monday but now will get another opportunity to make an impression on the big club. McDonald had 52 points in 43 games with OHL North Bay last season and this will be his first year at the professional level.
Salary Cap Deep Dive: Ottawa Senators
Navigating the salary cap is one of the more important tasks for any GM. Teams that can avoid 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 2023-24 season. This will focus more on players who are regulars on the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL. All cap figures are courtesy of CapFriendly.
Ottawa Senators
Current Cap Hit: $83,379,047 (under the $83.5MM Upper Limit)
Entry-Level Contracts
D Jake Sanderson (one year, $925K)
Potential Bonuses
Sanderson: $1.85MM
We’ll get more in depth on Sanderson’s deal later on but this deal has $850K in ‘A’ bonuses, four valued at $212.5K each. He hit all four last year (All-Rookie team, blocks, ATOI, and assists) and while the first one is no longer available, he has a decent chance of maxing them out again or at least coming very close.
Signed Through 2023-24, Non-Entry-Level
D Erik Brannstrom ($2MM, RFA)
F Parker Kelly ($762.5K, UFA)
F Dominik Kubalik ($2.5MM, UFA)
F Vladimir Tarasenko ($5MM, UFA)
Tarasenko’s market never really materialized as he was hoping for as even after an agent change, the price tag came in lower than expected with just a one-year term. He didn’t repeat his better than a point-per-game effort from 2021-22 but still produced nicely at a top-six level. This contract is certainly fair for a 50-point player with a track record suggesting he’s capable of more. While it has created the crunch they find themselves in, it’s not a bad value agreement. We’ll see if going this route winds up propelling him into a longer-term deal next summer.
Kubalik came over from Detroit as part of the Alex DeBrincat trade. He had a career year last season although he slowed down as the year went on. If he can get a fifth season of at least 15 goals under his belt, he could position himself for at least a small raise on another multi-year deal. Kelly was a serviceable fourth liner last season, showing he can kill penalties and play with some physicality. The offense needs to come around, however, if he wants to move off the minimum salary.
Brannstrom established himself as a regular last season but his offensive game, one that made him a first-round pick by Vegas several years ago, hasn’t come around just yet. Additionally, his playing time dipped by over three and a half minutes per game as he went from a part-time spot in the top four to a full-time spot on the bottom pair. It’s fair to say that the Sens still see some upside in him as evidenced by this contract but another season like this could have him approaching non-tender territory since he’ll be eligible for salary arbitration. Speculatively, this could be a deal they wind up trying to move to open up cap room.
Signed Through 2024-25
D Jakob Chychrun ($4.6MM, UFA)
G Anton Forsberg ($2.75MM, UFA)
F Claude Giroux ($6.5MM, UFA)
D Travis Hamonic ($1.1MM, UFA)
F Mark Kastelic ($835K, RFA)
Giroux showed last season that he can still be a top-line player, posting his best showing since the 2018-19 campaign while giving Ottawa a strong return on that first year. He’ll be 37 when his next contract comes due, however, so the expectation will be that he either goes year-to-year at that point or takes a discounted two-year deal as players in his situation often do. Kastelic had a limited role last season but was effective on the fourth line, earning himself his first one-way deal in the process. As is the case with Kelly, he’ll need to show a bit more offensively to get past the $1MM mark (when he’ll also have arbitration rights) in 2025.
Chychrun came over in a late-season trade from Arizona and really helped to stabilize a relatively inexperienced back end. He hasn’t been able to match his 2020-21 breakout showing offensively with the Coyotes and if that holds up, that will hold back his earnings upside somewhat. Despite that, if he can stay healthy, his next deal could push into the $7MM range. Hamonic took a sizable cut compared to his previous contract to stay in Ottawa although that was going to happen no matter where he wound up. He’s effective in a limited role and this price point works for the Senators.
Forsberg took a step back last season with his on-ice performance while dealing with injury issues that limited him to just 28 appearances. Now set as the backup after GM Pierre Dorion turned to free agency to shore up his goaltending, that workload might be closer to his new normal. It’s a tier below the top backups which is around where he should slot in. He’ll need more years like his 2021-22 showing if he wants to get to upper-end backup money.
Signed Through 2025-26
F Mathieu Joseph ($2.95MM, UFA)
F Zack MacEwen ($775K, UFA)
Joseph showed lots of promise down the stretch in 2022 when Ottawa acquired him, resulting in this contract. Unfortunately for them, he struggled mightily last season, scoring just three times in 56 games which is hardly what anyone was expecting. This is the contract that the Sens are believed to be trying to move right now although in this cap environment, that’s much easier said than done. MacEwen accepted a rare three-year, minimum-salary deal this summer, one that guarantees him a one-way deal throughout. He’s projected to be on the fourth line or as a reserve forward if and when they can carry extra players so it’ll be difficult for them not to get a reasonable return.
Minor Transactions: 10/4/23
With play overseas in several leagues already underway and AHL camps just getting going, there continue to be plenty of signings across the hockey world. We run through some of the NHL-related ones here.
- UFA center Nate Schnarr has signed a one-year deal with Pelicans in Finland, per a team release. The 24-year-old started the season in Montreal’s system before being moved at the trade deadline to Los Angeles but was non-tendered this summer after putting up just nine points in 45 AHL contests. He had attended training camp this year with Columbus but was cut late month.
- Another player who was cut by the Blue Jackets in camp is also heading overseas, defenseman Nicolas Meloche. Salavat Yulaev of the KHL announced that they’ve inked the 26-year-old to a one-year deal. Meloche played 50 NHL contests with San Jose in 2021-22 but cleared waivers early in camp last year with Calgary, resulting in him spending all of last season at the AHL level where he had 21 points in 64 games.
- Former NHL blueliner Yohann Auvitu is on the move again as he has inked a one-year deal plus an option with Vitkovice in Czechia, per a club release. The 34-year-old saw time at the NHL level with both Edmonton and New Jersey but has moved around frequently since then, spending time in Russia, Sweden, Finland, and Switzerland.
- Kings prospect Kaleb Lawrence is on the move in the OHL as Ottawa announced that they’ve acquired the 20-year-old forward from Owen Sound. Standing 6’7, Lawrence was a seventh-round pick in 2022 (215th overall) after a season in which he played just two games. Last year, he was much healthier, putting up 37 points in 50 games with the Attack. Los Angeles has until June 1, 2024, to sign Lawrence to an entry-level deal so there will be some extra pressure on him as he enters his overage year.
- Anaheim’s AHL affiliate in San Diego announced the signing of Ben King to a one-year deal. The 21-year-old was a fourth-round pick by the Ducks in 2022 (107th overall) but has exhausted his WHL eligibility. After putting up 105 points in 2021-22, King’s production dipped to just 35 points in 30 games last season with Red Deer. Anaheim has until June 1, 2024, to ink him to an NHL contract.
Training Camp Cuts: 9/30/23
With AHL camps set to start in the coming days, there will be some more cuts coming across the NHL today. We’ll keep track of those moves here:
Anaheim Ducks (via team Twitter)
G Gage Alexander (to San Diego, AHL)
F Davis Codd (to San Diego, AHL)
F Ben King (to San Diego, AHL)
F Blake McLaughlin (to San Diego, AHL)
D Luka Profaca (to San Diego, AHL)
G Tomas Suchanek (to San Diego, AHL)
D Nick Wolff (to San Diego, AHL)
Arizona Coyotes (via team Twitter)
D Maveric Lamoureux (to Drummondville, QMJHL)
Buffalo Sabres (via team Twitter)
D Vsevolod Komarov (to Quebec, QMJHL)
Edmonton Oilers (via team release)
D Noel Hoefenmayer (to Bakersfield, AHL)
D Alex Peters (released from PTO, to Bakersfield, AHL)
G Olivier Rodrigue (to Bakersfield, AHL)
F Carter Savoie (to Bakersfield, AHL)
Montreal Canadiens (via team release)
F Owen Beck (to Peterborough, OHL)
D Tobie Bisson (to Laval, AHL)
F Gabriel Bourque (to Laval, AHL)
F Jared Davidson (to Laval, AHL)
D Stanislav Demin (to Laval, AHL)
F Isaac Dufort (to Laval, AHL)
G Zachary Emond (to Laval, AHL)
D Olivier Galipeau (to Laval, AHL)
F Brandon Gignac (to Laval, AHL)
D Noah Laaouan (to Laval, AHL)
F Nathan Legare (to Laval, AHL)
G Strauss Mann (to Laval, AHL)
F Riley McKay (to Laval, AHL)
F Filip Mesar (to Laval, AHL)
F Jan Mysak (to Laval, AHL)
F Jakov Novak (to Laval, AHL)
D Christopher Ortiz (to Laval, AHL)
D/F John Parker-Jones (to Laval, AHL)
F Joshua Roy (to Laval, AHL)
F Xavier Simoneau (to Laval, AHL)
F Ty Smilanic (to Laval, AHL)
D Jayden Struble (to Laval, AHL)
D Miguel Tourigny (to Laval, AHL)
F Alex-Olivier Voyer (to Laval, AHL)
G Joe Vrbetic (to Laval, AHL)
F Nolan Yaremko (to Laval, AHL)
New York Rangers (via team release)
F Alex Belzile (to Hartford, AHL)
F Anton Blidh (to Hartford, AHL)
F Turner Elson (to Hartford, AHL)
D Connor Mackey (to Hartford, AHL)
F Riley Nash (to Hartford, AHL)
F Adam Sykora (to Hartford, AHL)
Philadelphia Flyers (via team release)
F Jordy Bellerive (released from PTO, to Lehigh Valley, AHL)
F Elliot Desnoyers (to Lehigh Valley, AHL)
F Jacob Gaucher (released from PTO, to Lehigh Valley, AHL)
D Helge Grans (to Lehigh Valley, AHL)
St. Louis Blues (via team release)
F Adam Gaudette (to Springfield, AHL)
Tampa Bay Lightning (via team release)
G Ben Gaudreau (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Bennett MacArthur (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Cole Koepke (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Daniel Walcott (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Daniel Walker (to Syracuse, AHL)
D Declan Carlile (to Syracuse, AHL)
D Devante Stephens (to Syracuse, AHL)
D Emil Lilleberg (to Syracuse, AHL)
G Evan Fitzpatrick (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Felix Robert (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Gabriel Dumont (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Gabriel Szturc (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Gage Goncalves (to Syracuse, AHL)
G Hugo Alnefelt (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Ilya Usau (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Jack Finley (to Syracuse, AHL)
D Jack Thompson (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Jaydon Dureau (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Joe Carroll (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Logan Brown (to Syracuse, AHL)
D Louka Henault (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Lucas Edmonds (to Syracuse, AHL)
D Maxwell Crozier (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Maxim Groshev (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Mitchell Chaffee (to Syracuse, AHL)
D Philippe Myers (to Syracuse, AHL)
D Roman Schmidt (to Syracuse, AHL)
D Sean Day (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Shawn Element (to Syracuse, AHL)
F Tristan Allard (to Syracuse, AHL)
Vegas Golden Knights (via team release)
D Layton Ahac (to Henderson, AHL)
F Tyler Benson (to Henderson, AHL)
D Jake Bischoff (to Henderson, AHL)
F Jakub Brabenec (to Henderson, AHL)
D Daniil Chayka (to Henderson, AHL)
D Lukas Cormier (to Henderson, AHL)
F Adam Cracknell (to Henderson, AHL)
F Jakub Demek (to Henderson, AHL)
F Mason Morelli (to Henderson, AHL)
G Jiri Patera (to Henderson, AHL)
D Christoffer Sedoff (to Henderson, AHL)
G Jesper Vikman (to Henderson, AHL)
Winnipeg Jets (via team release)
F Brad Lambert (to Manitoba, AHL)
F Daniel Torgersson (to Manitoba, AHL)
F Nikita Chibrikov (to Manitoba, AHL)
D Simon Lundmark (to Manitoba, AHL)
D Dmitri Kuzmin (to Manitoba, AHL)
D Artemi Kniazev (to Manitoba, AHL)
D Tyrel Bauer (to Manitoba, AHL)
D Dean Stewart (released from PTO, to Manitoba, AHL)
G Oskari Salminen (to Manitoba, AHL)
G Thomas Milic (to Manitoba, AHL)
This post will be updated throughout the day.
PHR Mailbag: Calder Trophy, CHL-NHL Agreement, Bonuses, Hellebuyck, Goalies, Primeau, PWHL
Topics in this edition of the PHR Mailbag include the Calder Trophy battle for Rookie of the Year, a look at potential bonuses available for players on entry-level deals, and much more. If your question doesn’t appear here, check back in last weekend’s mailbag.
DevilShark: Review of Luke Hughes’ Calder chances, please! Convince me he is not next to Bedard as a top-two favorite or, if you agree, explain why he doesn’t seem to be on anyone’s radar for this award. Thanks!
Cyclone: Hypothetical… If Bedard underwhelms, Hughes, Cooley, or Fantilli for the Calder?
The reason Hughes isn’t on the radar for the Calder is that his name isn’t Connor Bedard. It’s really as simple as that; it’s him versus the field. If Bedard stays healthy, it’s his award to lose.
Should he be second? I don’t think I’d have him there, to be honest. This isn’t a bad thing in reality but the fact he’s on a good team will hurt him. He’s not going to be getting top power play time, not with Dougie Hamilton in the fold. I’m not sure he plays higher than fourth at even strength at the start of the year, barring injuries. That’s not going to give him prime opportunities to rack up the points.
Logan Cooley will have that opportunity in Arizona. He could be their top center right away. Adam Fantilli might get that chance in Columbus. More minutes should lead to more power play time and scoring opportunities. The Calder Trophy is often numbers-dependent and while Hughes should be a very important piece for the Devils this season, I’m not sure he’ll put up enough numbers to really get him near the top of the radar.
I feel like there’s one other player that warrants a mention here, Buffalo’s Devon Levi. If the Sabres finally snap their playoff drought and he’s the number one goalie that helps get them to the postseason, I think there’s a good chance he’ll appear pretty high on some ballots as well.
KRB: The CHL and NHL have a rule that 18-and 19-year-olds drafted out of juniors can’t play in a North American professional league unless it’s the NHL. I understand why the rule was put in place: to keep professional leagues like the AHL and ECHL from stripping Canadian juniors of high-end talent. But the rule can hurt some players, for example, Shane Wright. Do you see this rule continuing, or do you think perhaps they may grant “exceptional status” to certain 18-and 19-year-olds to play in professional minor leagues, similar to that granted to 15-year-olds like Connor Bedard, to play in major juniors?
I do see this rule continuing for the foreseeable future. As unpopular as it might be, the presence of those top players in major junior helps make those leagues as strong as they are from a competition perspective. If they’re out of the league and the competition level goes down, it’s going to be harder to attract the top players that have NCAA or USHL options as well.
Those top players also help drive revenues. While there are a handful of big teams across Canada, many CHL squads are in smaller cities where the profit margins are small. Fewer star players means less merchandise, ticket sales, etc. That would also be quite detrimental to the league.
I’ve wondered about what an exemption could look like. In my mind, it’d have to be limited to one 19-year-old player per team at a time (an exception being if a prospect on an AHL exemption gets traded to a team that is already using it). And if the team uses it, the developmental fee paid is substantially higher. Instead of it being paid out as part of the pool the CHL receives now from the NHL, the team using the exemption has to pay two or three times that amount to at least help offset some of the financial element. But still, I don’t see it happening. I’m not sure it could be done by “exceptional status” though as those cases are judged case-by-case; there won’t be any set criteria. Anything that is judged as it pertains to an NHL team could carry the appearance of bias.
I’m honestly a bit surprised Wright was granted an exemption even though there was a logical case for it. I suspect he will be the last to get one for a while.
Zakis: What are the ‘A’ and ‘B’ bonuses for ELC’s based on position?
Let’s start with the A bonuses. For forwards, it’s the following categories:
1) Top six among forwards in ATOI, minimum 42 GP
2) 20 goals
3) 35 assists
4) 60 points
5) 0.73 points per game, minimum 42 GP
6) Top three among forwards in plus/minus, minimum 42 GP
7) Makes the All-Rookie Team
8) Selected to the All-Star Game
9) All-Star Game MVP
For defense, it’s the following:
1) Top four among defensemen in ATOI, minimum 42 GP
2) 10 goals
3) 25 assists
4) 40 points
5) 0.49 points per game, minimum 42 GP
6) Top three among defensemen in plus/minus, minimum 42 GP
7) Top two among defensemen in blocked shots, minimum 42 GP
8) Makes the All-Rookie Team
9) Selected to the All-Star Game
10) All-Star Game MVP
And for goalies:
1) 1,800 minutes played
2) GAA is equal to or below the median GAA of all goalies who play 25 or more games
3) SV% is equal to or above the median SV% of all goalies who play 25 or more games
4) 20 wins, minimum 30 minutes played in each victory
5) Shutouts are equal to or above the median number of shutouts of all goalies who play 25 or more games
6) Makes the All-Rookie Team
7) Selected to the All-Star Game
8) All-Star Game MVP
Individual games played bonuses can also be negotiated. The maximum ‘A’ bonuses in a deal are capped at $1MM, or $250K per bonus for deals signed since 2022. Before that, the limits were $850K and $212.5K, respectively.
The ‘B’ bonuses I’m not going to go into as much detail here as it’s basically four pages in the CBA. Here’s the quick version. Bonuses can be negotiated based on end-of-season awards. For forwards, there are potential amounts for finishing in the top ten in goals, assists, points, or points per game (minimum 42 GP). For defense, it’s those four plus ATOI. For goalies, it’s top five in GAA, SV%, or wins (minimum 25 games played). The value of any of these can’t exceed $2.5MM, previously $2MM. These ones aren’t anywhere near as common as ‘A’ bonuses and generally, only the top few picks get them.
Unclemike1526: The Blackhawks have immensely upgraded their forward group since last year. Their defensemen will go as far as Korchinski, Vlasic, Allan, and Kaiser will take them. The obvious weakness is G where Soderblom, Commesso, and Stauber are untested and Mrazek is just plain horrible. What do you think the odds are Davidson speeds up the rebuild by trading for Hellebuyck? He’s supposedly on the market and the Hawks are probably one of the few teams that have both the Prospect, Draft, and Salary Cap Capital to get a deal done. I think Davidson could get a deal done for just about anyone they want. The Hawks could take on half of Mrazek’s contract back as it’s an expiring deal and would give the Jets something to maybe flip at the deadline for something anyway to add to the kitty. Thoughts?
You’re correct in identifying that Chicago is one of the few teams that could afford Connor Hellebuyck’s contract now and have the capital to make a compelling offer. But there are two key issues with the idea of the Blackhawks making a move for him.
First, the addition of Hellebuyck to the Blackhawks doesn’t really expedite the rebuild. Instead of being a really bad non-playoff team, they’d be a non-playoff team with good goaltending. If Chicago was only a goalie away from being a playoff-caliber squad, I’d say this makes sense for them. But they’re nowhere close to pushing for a postseason spot so why trade assets for a rental goalie that doesn’t get you to the playoffs?
Second, Winnipeg has no intention of throwing in the towel this season. At least not yet. That’s why Hellebuyck is still there. So a package of some futures and Petr Mrazek isn’t going to move the needle for them. They want someone who can help them win now and Mrazek isn’t that netminder.
I could see a scenario where Chicago goes after Hellebuyck next summer in free agency. At that point, their cap space is a big asset and maybe a year of Bedard helps up interest in Chicago as a market across the league. He still might not get them to the playoffs right away but at that point, he’s only costing money, not other assets. But in terms of trading for him now, no, I don’t think that would be a wise move for them.
pawtucket: Has Vegas’ recent Cup win using four goalies set the future of the position? Are NHL goalies going to be treated like running backs in the NFL (where teams are starting to roster 4-5 on cheaper contracts as they are replaceable) and will we see their contracts affected in a similar way?
For the Golden Knights, last season felt like they were a victim of circumstance more than a legitimate strategy to go with extra goalies. Part of the reason they went and got Adin Hill in camp last year was the Robin Lehner injury that they didn’t necessarily trust Laurent Brossoit who had struggled considerably in his first season with the team. Then, when more injuries arose, they opted to bring in Jonathan Quick as insurance.
But in a perfect world, their tandem last year would have just been Hill and Logan Thompson with Brossoit waiting in the wings as an experienced third option. That is the trend I think we’ll start to see more of. The value for third-string netminders went up a lot this summer as teams see the value of having an experienced option that has had some success in their system. Vegas showed that a team can have success going four deep into their goaltenders but I don’t expect teams will be trying to duplicate that exact strategy.
Latest On Shane Pinto’s Contract Talks
With the Senators not being able to afford even a two-year bridge deal for Shane Pinto, some had wondered if they might try a lower-cost one-year offer for the unsigned middleman. Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports that Ottawa did attempt to go that route this week and it was not received well by Pinto’s camp with the offer coming in the $1MM range.
Even that offer would be difficult for them to afford as they currently have a little over $120K in cap space, per CapFriendly with a projected 21-player roster. That doesn’t leave them much in the way of wiggle room to re-sign Pinto or to try to sign veteran Josh Bailey who is in camp on a PTO agreement.
Pinto doesn’t have much in the way of leverage here as he is ineligible to sign an offer sheet as he doesn’t have enough service time for one having not met the games played criteria in each of his first two seasons. That basically means his options are to hold out until he gets a contract he wants or ask for a trade, an option that he doesn’t have any interest in pursuing at this time, Friedman reports.
The 22-year-old’s first full NHL season was a strong one as he netted 20 goals along with 15 assists while averaging just shy of 16 minutes a night. He also won a little over 52% of his faceoffs. That has the Sens rightly viewing Pinto as an important part of their future.
On the surface, there are three mid-tier contracts that would appear to be candidates to be dealt to open up cap space. Winger Mathieu Joseph has been the one most speculated about but with three years left on his deal at $2.95MM and the fact he’s coming off a season that saw him score just three goals in 56 games, the price for teams to take on the contract would be high.
Meanwhile, winger Dominik Kubalik is in the final year of his contract with a $2.5MM cap charge that might be easier to offload. He’s also coming off a career season that saw him put up 20 goals and 25 assists with Detroit so there could be some positive trade value although subtracting him from their offense would certainly hurt.
The other contract in that range is defenseman Erik Brannstrom who is on a $2MM deal and will be arbitration-eligible again next summer. When he was first acquired, he was viewed as an important part of their then-rebuild and while he has become a regular player, he hasn’t had the impact they were hoping for. He’s likely earmarked for the third pairing which could make him expendable. But with Pinto’s likely contract to come in the $2.5MM range, moving Brannstrom alone wouldn’t create enough cap space to re-sign Pinto.
With the regular season starting in ten days, pressure is starting to pick up on GM Pierre Dorion to find a solution to this situation. But with only a few teams having cap space, finding a suitable trade to open up cap flexibility to get Pinto signed is going to be easier said than done. For now, the waiting game continues.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.
Alex Killorn Suffers Fractured Finger
Alex Killorn’s regular season start to his time in Anaheim is going to be delayed as the team announced today (Twitter link) that the winger suffered a fractured finger on Wednesday night against San Jose. He is expected to miss the next four to six weeks.
The 34-year-old was one of the top forwards available in free agency and ultimately landed the richest deal when the Ducks gave him a four-year, $25MM agreement. He’s coming off another career year with Tampa Bay, one that saw him record 27 goals and 37 assists in 82 games while adding five points in six playoff contests against Toronto.
While Anaheim isn’t expected to be a playoff contender for a little while as they navigate through their rebuilding process, GM Pat Verbeek saw fit to add some veterans to his roster to help work with their young core. Killorn was expected to be a big part of that and likely would have lined up on the top line on opening night but now, he’ll miss at least the first month of the season.
Killorn will be LTIR-eligible but Anaheim isn’t anywhere close to needing to rely on that. With Trevor Zegras and Jamie Drysdale still unsigned, the Ducks currently have over $16MM in cap space, per CapFriendly. Even when those two sign, they’ll be far enough below the $83.5MM cap to not need to dip into LTIR.
There was some good news on the injury front for the Ducks today, however, as John Gibson was a full participant in practice. He had left Friday’s contest at the midway mark due to an upper-body injury but it appears that the issue was a minor one.
Waivers: 9/30/23
With the start of the NHL season now just ten days away, daily waiver activity will be continuing league-wide. Here is a listing of the players that are on the wire today per various team announcements and TSN’s Chris Johnston (Twitter link).
Buffalo Sabres
G Devin Cooley
F Justin Richards
G Dustin Tokarski
Edmonton Oilers
F Drake Caggiula
F Greg McKegg
Montreal Canadiens
D Nicolas Beaudin
F Lucas Condotta
D Brady Keeper
F Mitchell Stephens
Nashville Predators
F Anthony Angello
D Kevin Gravel
G Troy Grosenick
D Jordan Gross
New York Rangers
Ottawa Senators
F Josh Currie
D Dillon Heatherington
F Garrett Pilon
D Lassi Thomson
While Ottawa’s players were announced as being waived on Friday, it was after the 1 PM CT cut-off which means their waiver clock starts today.
Vegas Golden Knights
F Byron Froese
D/F Mason Geertsen
D Dysin Mayo
F Gage Quinney
F Sheldon Rempal
F Jonas Rondbjerg
Most of the forwards on this list have cleared waivers in the past with Condotta being the lone exception as this is his first time eligible for waivers. He spent most of last season in the minors but scored in his lone NHL appearance. Quinney and Rempal were productive in the minors last season, averaging just shy of a point per game while Caggiula had over 50 points as well.
Among the defensemen, Thomson could be one to keep an eye on for a potential claim. The 23-year-old was the 19th overall pick in 2019 and is still on his entry-level contract. He hasn’t had much success at the NHL level so far but as a young right-shot defender, a rebuilding team or two might be inclined to take a flyer on him.
Mayo logged nearly 21 minutes a night on the back end for Arizona back in 2021-22 but cleared waivers last season and was eventually traded to Vegas in exchange for Shea Weber’s LTIR-eligible contract. He has two years left on a one-way deal worth $950K per season which could scare teams off. Beaudin is a former first-rounder himself back in 2018 (27th overall) but has just 22 NHL games under his belt, none of which came last season between Montreal and Chicago.
Grosenick and Tokarski are no strangers to the waiver wire. Tokarski has cleared all five times while Grosenick has cleared six out of eight times he has been waived over the years. This will be Cooley’s first time on waivers but while he had a decent season in Nashville’s system last season (posting a .909 SV% with AHL Milwaukee), it would be surprising to see him picked up.
Each player will be available to teams until 1 PM CT on Sunday.

