Waivers: 10/1/22
October 2nd: Per CapFriendly, all players placed on waivers yesterday, October 1st, have cleared (link).
October 1st: It’s expected to be another busy day on the waiver wire today as teams continue to trim down their rosters. We’ll keep track of the players being placed on waivers here.
Edmonton
Montreal
NY Rangers
St. Louis
D Steven Santini
F Nathan Todd
D/F Luke Witkowski
Tampa Bay
D Sean Day
Vegas
F Byron Froese
G Michael Hutchinson
D Brayden Pachal
F Sheldon Rempal
Winnipeg
F Michael Eyssimont
D Leon Gawanke
F Jeff Malott
D Ashton Sautner
All 22 players that were on waivers yesterday cleared.
Urho Vaakanainen Taken To Hospital After Suffering Injury
There was a scary moment partway through the first period in Friday’s preseason contest between the Ducks and Sharks. After setting up a goal, Anaheim defenseman Urho Vaakanainen hit his head into the boards and had to be stretchered off the ice.
The team announced (Twitter link) that the 23-year-old was taken to hospital for evaluation but “has full movement in his extremities and is fully conscious and alert”. Speaking to reporters postgame, head coach Dallas Eakins didn’t have any updates on Vaakanainen’s condition.
Vaakanainen is in his first full season with the Ducks after being acquired near the trade deadline last season as part of the Hampus Lindholm trade. He signed a two-year, $1.7MM contract back in July and was hoping to land a full-time spot in Anaheim’s lineup this season. Unfortunately, it appears those plans are on hold for the time being as the team waits to see how long he’ll be out of the lineup.
Also on the injury front in Anaheim, center Trevor Zegras will be undergoing a second MRI as the team looks to get more information about the upper-body injury he sustained on Wednesday, relays Lisa Dillman of the Orange County Register (Twitter link). Zegras was injured in the second period against Arizona on a hit from Jan Jenik. The imaging is happening today so the team should have an idea of how long the 21-year-old will be out of the lineup in the near future.
Canadiens Extend Jake Allen
Jake Allen will be sticking around with the Canadiens for a little longer as the team announced that they’ve signed the goaltender to a two-year contract extension. The deal will carry an AAV of $3.85MM. Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic reports (Twitter link) that the deal breaks down as follows:
2023-24: $500K signing bonus, $3.9MM salary, partial NTC
2024-25: $1MM signing bonus, $2.3MM salary, partial NTC
The 32-year-old is entering his third season with Montreal after being acquired from St. Louis back in 2020. Barely a month after being acquired, he signed a two-year extension, the last season of which will be played this season with that deal carrying a $2.875MM AAV. At the time, he was being brought in as more of a proven second option behind Carey Price. However, that situation has changed with Price missing most of last season, likely all of this year, and the rest of his playing career being in question and this new contract reflects that change in role.
Last season, Allen played in 35 games with Montreal, posting a 3.30 GAA along with a .905 SV% in what was an injury-mired campaign. He missed time in both concussion and COVID protocols while also dealing with groin trouble on two separate occasions. Now healthy, he should get the bulk of the workload for the Canadiens this season with Samuel Montembeault serving as his backup.
Montreal doesn’t have a true goalie of the future just yet with Cayden Primeau representing the closest option to being NHL-ready. This extension will basically serve as a bridge for the Canadiens to navigate through what’s expected to be a bit of an extended rebuild while also giving them some time to plan to draft or acquire their next starter. It also takes what would have been one of the more intriguing rental veterans off the market as without this deal, Allen would have been a speculative candidate leading up to the trade deadline in March.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.
Injury Updates: Copp, Dellandrea, Talbot, Murphy
Red Wings center Andrew Copp re-aggravated a core muscle injury back in August that was nagging him last season, resulting in surgery at that time. The expected timeline for recovery put his availability for the start of the season in question but the veteran told reporters including Helene St. James of the Detroit Free Press that he feels that he’s ahead of schedule enough to the point where he could be available on October 14th when they take on Montreal. Copp signed a five-year, $28.125MM contract this summer to serve as Detroit’s second-line center following a career year that saw him put up 21 goals and 32 assists in 72 games.
Other injury news from around the NHL:
- Stars forward Ty Dellandrea will be out two-to-three weeks after breaking a bone in his finger during yesterday’s game against Minnesota, relays Matthew DeFranks of the Dallas Morning News. The 13th pick in 2018 spent most of last season with AHL Texas where he did quite well, notching 23 goals and 27 assists in 68 games but this timeline will end his preseason early which doesn’t bode well for his chances of cracking the opening roster. Dellandrea is still waiver-exempt this season.
- Senators goaltender Cam Talbot was originally expected to play the full 60 minutes against Montreal on Saturday but that won’t be the case now as Postmedia’s Bruce Garrioch reports (Twitter link) that the netminder is listed as day-to-day. He took a shot that wound up underneath his equipment at practice on Thursday and the team will give him a few days to recover.
- The Blackhawks will hold defenseman Connor Murphy out of their two games this weekend due to his continuing back soreness, notes Mark Lazerus of The Athletic (Twitter link). However, there doesn’t appear to be much concern that the veteran will be out for long. Murphy logged nearly 22 minutes per game for Chicago last season and should be leaned on for heavy minutes once again in 2022-23.
Kings Forward Jacob Doty Receives Two-Game Suspension
The Department of Player Safety has handed down another suspension, announcing (video link) that Kings forward Jacob Doty has received a two-game suspension for interference on Sharks winger Jeffrey Viel.
The incident occurred midway through the second period in Wednesday’s preseason contest. Doty was assessed a five-minute major penalty along with a game misconduct on the play. Viel, meanwhile, was able to remain in the game.
The league’s ruling states that the suspension is to “be served in the next two consecutive games in which he is eligible to participate for his Club”. In this case, it’s likely the next two preseason games that the 29-year-old won’t be suiting up for. Doty has spent the last three seasons in the Kings’ farm system, primarily playing with AHL Ontario; he had three points and 89 penalty minutes in 41 games with the Reign in 2021-22.
Panthers Sign Kai Schwindt
Kai Schwindt‘s tryout with the Panthers was a successful one as prior to returning him to Mississauga of the OHL, the team announced that they signed the undrafted forward to a three-year, entry-level contract. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. GM Bill Zito released the following statement on the signing:
Kai is a competitive, high-effort individual who is able to use his size and skill effectively. We’re excited to welcome him and watch his continued development within our Panthers organization.
The 18-year-old made his OHL debut last season with the Steelheads after not playing due to the pandemic back in 2020-21. His production and role were somewhat limited as he only managed a dozen goals and five assists in 68 games plus two helpers in nine playoff contests. That resulted in Schwindt going undrafted but he has clearly made an impression through rookie camp and his preseason appearance against Nashville where he scored a goal. They believe that there is more to come and he should be in line for a more prominent role in junior this season.
As Schwindt is heading back to the OHL, he won’t be seeing any NHL action this season. That means that his contract for 2022-23 will slide a year and begin in 2023-24.
Sharks Sign Scott Harrington
Scott Harrington‘s tryout with San Jose was a successful one as the team announced that they’ve signed the 29-year-old to a one-year contract. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed while he is the first player to get upgraded to a full contract from a PTO agreement. GM Mike Grier released the following statement:
Scott came into camp on a tryout, performed well, and earned his contract. He’s a high character person and we are excited to have him join the Sharks.
Harrington spent most of last season with AHL Cleveland, an affiliate of the Blue Jackets, where he got into 50 games, recording three goals and four assists. On the surface, nothing particularly special. However, it’s worth noting that it was his first taste of action in the minors since a pair of appearances in 2016-17. Between that time, Harrington had been a regular depth defender in Columbus.
For his career, Harrington has 210 NHL games under his belt between Pittsburgh, Toronto, and Columbus with only seven of those appearances coming last season. He has 38 points in those outings while averaging 13:37 per night in ice time. Harrington will still have to battle for a roster spot but there is definitely an opening with the long-term injury to Nikolai Knyzhov. Harrington could slot in as their seventh defender, a role he’s quite comfortable holding if nothing else. If the Sharks want to send him to their AHL affiliate to start the season, however, they will need to send Harrington through waivers over the coming weeks.
Metropolitan Notes: Rangers Cuts, Goodrow, Carter
The Rangers have made their first training camp cuts, announcing (Twitter link) that the following players were sent back to their respective junior teams:
F Sam Alfano (Erie, OHL)
F Maxim Barbashev (Moncton, QMJHL)
F Jayden Grubbe (Red Deer, QHL)
F Bryce McConnell-Barker (Soo, OHL)
Barbashev, Grubbe, and McConnell-Barker are all unsigned prospects and will look to have big seasons at the junior level to help them try to earn an entry-level deal; Grubbe has until June 1st to sign if the Rangers want to retain his rights. Alfano, meanwhile, was in camp on an ATO and has been released. With two of the three CHL leagues already starting their regular seasons, other teams may soon be following suit with some of their junior players.
More from the Metropolitan:
- Still with the Rangers, forward Barclay Goodrow is expected to join the team at practice tomorrow, relays Arthur Staple of The Athletic (Twitter link). The veteran is working his way back from an ankle injury and has been skating away from the team, including today, in an effort to make sure the injury has fully healed before participating in team exercises. Goodrow is coming off a career year that saw him put up 33 points in 79 games last season, his first with New York.
- The Penguins announced (Twitter link) that center Jeff Carter left today’s scrimmage early and is being evaluated for an upper-body injury. The 37-year-old had a strong performance last season with 45 points in 76 games while posting his best point-per-game rate since 2017-18 and losing him for any extended period would certainly be an early blow for Pittsburgh.
PHR Mailbag: Blues, Avalanche, CBA, Smaller Signings, Stand-Pat Teams, Virtanen
Topics in this edition of the PHR Mailbag include Colorado’s recent additions, some CBA questions, going over some under-the-radar signings, and more. If your question doesn’t appear here, check in next weekend’s mailbag.
haubrick4: With Scandella being gone most if not all of the season, do the Blues go and trade for, go and sign, or promote from within a defenseman?
In the short term, I don’t think they look outside the organization. Marco Scandella’s injury (which I think will keep him out for the whole regular season by the time you work in a possible conditioning stint in early April) opens up a full-time roster spot for Scott Perunovich. In a perfect world, he’s able to log the 18 minutes per game that Scandella did and give them a bit of a lift on the offensive side of things. If that happens, they don’t need to go get a defenseman.
The other thing that’s worth noting is that Scandella will be on LTIR and when a team is in LTIR, they’re not banking cap space. For the sake of simplicity, let’s say St. Louis gets the full cap relief for Scandella’s contract at $3.275MM. It’s worth $3.275MM today, next week, next month, or in March at the trade deadline. If you’re GM Doug Armstrong, you get one shot at utilizing that cap space. Is it better to do it now to fix a perceived problem or is it better to wait until midseason or the trade deadline when you have a better understanding of the weaknesses of your roster? If it were me in charge, I’d be waiting to make that move.
vincent. k. mcmahon: Who is more likely to remain in St. Louis past this upcoming season between O’Reilly and Tarasenko?
I touched on Ryan O’Reilly’s situation in more detail in the last mailbag so I won’t rehash it too much here. At this point, they can’t afford either him or Vladimir Tarasenko beyond this season. Armstrong would need to clear some salary out for 2023-24 and beyond for signing one of these two to be viable.
Of those two, if one stays, I think it’s O’Reilly. I don’t get the sense that Tarasenko’s trade request has really gone away but both sides know one isn’t feasible at this point. If that is indeed the case and the request hasn’t been rescinded, he probably isn’t going to be overly amenable to re-signing. At least, not without testing the market first.
O’Reilly, meanwhile, has indicated that he’d like to stick around and discussions on a new deal have already started although there is no perceived urgency to get something done. I think he’ll have to accept a pay cut from the $7.5MM on his current deal to stay but as long as he’s willing to do, there’s a much better chance that it will be him in a St. Louis uniform in 2023-24 and not Tarasenko.
@iwtfwc: What are your thoughts on Evan Rodrigues joining the Avalanche? Where will he fit in? Do you think he can play 2nd line center over J.T. Compher? And what chances do you give Alex Galchenyuk to make the team?
I’m not sold on Rodrigues being a legitimate top-six player for any extended stretch. Yes, he had a good few months last season with Pittsburgh but beyond that, he has been more of a depth player. Waiting out the market for a stronger deal that never came didn’t turn out to be a wise move.
However, I do like the fit in Colorado. He’ll probably split time in that second center spot with Compher but he’ll see more time on the wing. He’ll bounce around in the middle six and put up 25-30 points which, for $2MM, isn’t a bad deal. I thought they’d get someone a little more proven to fill that spot but with this signing, Colorado still has enough cap space that they can bank some in-season money and perhaps go for that more impactful second option closer to the trade deadline. As far as ‘bridge’ players go, adding Rodrigues is a good move for the Avs.
As for Galchenyuk, it has been a long time since he was a legitimate top-six player for an extended stretch and even longer since he was a legitimate top-six center. He’s not the type of player that fits well lower in the lineup. Perhaps with Gabriel Landeskog’s injury, there’s a chance for him to earn a two-way deal at the NHL minimum and break camp with the team. I’ll put it at 40% and while you might think that seems low, I think most PTO players have a lot lower of a chance than that of making their respective teams.
Gmm8811: When a player signs a PTO, what exactly is the club liable for? Lodging? Travel? Per diem? Medical? Are all PTOs standard across the NHL in regard to the language in the contract?
Technically speaking, the only truly defined PTO in the CBA is for a one-game emergency goaltender. These are the players that get a one-day contract to dress as the backup but aren’t actually part of the team. In other words, the ‘EBUG’ such as David Ayres, Thomas Hodges, and Jorge Alves (and many others). Their contracts are form deals and are in the CBA as Exhibit 17-A. The highlights are that they get $500 and get to keep their game-worn jersey.
I suspect you’re asking about the long list of NHL skaters that have signed PTO agreements to go to training camp with a team. There’s no formal contract in place and it can be terminated at any time by the team or the player (if he gets an offer from elsewhere). Article 15 of the CBA does, however, provide some guidelines for this question. Teams are required to pay for travel to camp, and provide lodging and per diem money (which can be reduced if the team offers breakfast and/or lunch at the training camp facility). I can’t say for certain on the medical but considering there is no contract in place, the team probably isn’t under any obligation to cover any costs associated with injuries.
wreckage: Differences between a 1-way and 2-way contract?
The only difference is salary. A one-way contract means that the player receives the same salary no matter what level they’re playing at. A two-way contract means that the player receives a specified lesser sum at the minor league level. Worth noting, more and more two-way deals now have a third dollar amount, a guaranteed salary above the level of the two-way provision. No matter what, they get that guaranteed figure with the team being responsible for topping up the AHL pay if they’re not brought up to the NHL for enough days during the regular season. There used to be three-way contracts a few CBAs ago (with fixed amounts for NHL/AHL/ECHL salaries) as well but those aren’t permitted anymore.
I’ll also note that a common mistake is that some interpret one-way and two-way deals with waivers. This is not the case. Waiver eligibility is solely defined by age, NHL games played, and the number of years that the player has been on an NHL contract. Salaries, whether they’re one-way or two-way, do not figure into the mix.
aka.nda: There have been several “big” stories this offseason that garnered a lot of attention. Do you have any hunches about any of the lower-key moves yielding more (or less) than the market value suggested?
One of the lower-key moves that I particularly liked was Washington’s signing of Dylan Strome. He has a clear and defined role as their second center behind Evgeny Kuznetsov and while Nicklas Backstrom hopes to play this season at some point, I’ll believe it when I see it. This is a prime opportunity for him to show that he’s a legitimate top-six option for a full season and if he does, the Capitals still have club control on him through arbitration for another year. That’s a tidy piece of business as far as I’m concerned that will yield a pretty good outcome for the Capitals.
A little lower on the radar was Edmonton’s signing of winger Mattias Janmark. He’s a versatile player that can play anywhere in the lineup, kill penalties, and is a safe bet to land somewhere between 20 and 30 points. On a team that is going to have some cap challenges when it comes to being able to afford some of their better prospects on recall, Janmark is going to become a very valuable role player for them. A shrewd addition a few days into free agency.
On the flip side, Columbus isn’t going to get a good return on the four-year, $16MM deal that they gave to Erik Gudbranson. He’s a capable fifth defender but giving him top-four money for that long was puzzling. Justin Schultz’s contract with Seattle (two years, $3MM AAV) also flew under the radar as one of many first-day signings in free agency but I don’t think it will work out as intended. He struggled last season and is more of a depth player than an impact one but they’re paying him to be a secondary producer and he has scored just 16 goals over the last five seasons combined.
Minor Transactions: 09/24/22
The preseason gets underway today but most of the roster shuffling won’t start for a few more days at least. In the meantime, we’ll look at some of the smaller moves around the hockey world.
- Hurricanes prospect Alexander Perevalov is listed on Kunlun Red Star’s roster which means that the 18-year-old has been loaned to the KHL. Perevalov was a third-round pick by Carolina (71st overall) back in July after spending most of last year with Yaroslavl in the MHL which is also where he started this season. Now, he’ll get a taste of playing in Russia’s top division for the time being.
- Veteran winger Bobby Butler isn’t ready to hang up his skates just yet. Worcester of the ECHL announced that they’ve inked the 35-year-old to a one-year deal. Butler played in 130 career NHL games over parts of five seasons and actually went more than two years without playing before signing with the Raiders back in January. Worcester is an affiliate team of the Islanders.
This post will be updated throughout the day.
