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San Jose Sharks Expected To Add Ryan Warsofsky To Coaching Staff

July 28, 2022 at 3:24 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu Leave a Comment

The Sharks recently made their hire of David Quinn as their next head coach official, and now Quinn’s staff is starting to take shape. According to San Jose Hockey Now’s Sheng Peng, the Sharks will hire Ryan Warsofsky as an assistant coach with the responsibility of running the team’s defense and penalty kill.

Warsofsky, 34, is one of the fastest-rising coaching prospects in hockey. 2021-22 was Warsofsky’s second season behind the bench of the AHL’s Chicago Wolves, and it ended in a Calder Cup championship for the team. The win was Warsofsky’s second Calder Cup victory, as he won his first as an assistant on Mike Vellucci’s Charlotte Checkers staff. Warsofsky got his first experience as a head coach as the bench boss for the ECHL’s South Carolina Stingrays.

Warsofsky has won at every level he’s coached at, and he boasts a combined 193-91-30 record in 314 games of head coaching experience across two professional leagues and three teams. His Chicago Wolves squad last season had the fifth-best penalty kill in the AHL and had the fourth-least goals against, meaning he has a strong resume in the areas he’ll be asked to focus on in San Jose.

The expectation for GM Mike Grier, Quinn, and the entire Sharks organization is to deliver winning hockey to the San Jose market in 2022-23. Adding Warsofsky should certainly help them get there.

Coaches| Ryan Warsofsky| San Jose Sharks

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Snapshots: Slafkovsky, Tarasenko, Oil Kings

July 25, 2022 at 5:30 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 1 Comment

From the moment the Montreal Canadiens took Slovakian winger Juraj Slafkovsky with the first overall pick at the draft earlier this month, there has been significant speculation on where Slafkovksy would be playing the 2022-23 season. Canadiens co-director of amateur scouting Nick Bobrov indicated in his post-draft media availability that Slafkovsky had “learned all he could” from playing in the Finnish Liiga, and when one looks at the first-year landing spots of previous number-one picks it doesn’t take long to see a trend. Typically, a number-one pick will make their team’s opening-night roster, and 2021 number-one pick Owen Power’s choice to begin 2021-22 with the University of Michigan was a rare break to that trend. So, with that history in mind, many have assumed that Slafkovsky would be playing for Montreal in October.

But it isn’t that simple. Slafkovsky’s so-so production in Liiga has left many wondering if a stint in the AHL or another lower league would be preferable for his development, and some have hoped that Slafkovsky could continue his string of strong performances for the Slovak national team at this summer’s upcoming World Junior Championships. It doesn’t look like that’ll be happening, though, and where Slafkovsky will be spending 2022-23 is becoming more and more clear. Today, Slafkovsky told Tomas Prokop of Dennik Sport that his “main goal” is to play in the NHL in the fall and that he would, as a result, not participate in the World Juniors. The Canadiens have room on the left wing next to their budding stars in Nick Suzuki and Cole Caufield, so it’s likely that Juraj will spend the rest of the summer preparing to earn a shot on their line to open the season.

Now, for some other notes from across the NHL:

  • St. Louis Blues winger Vladimir Tarasenko made headlines in the summer of 2021 when he reportedly requested a trade from the St. Louis Blues. At the time, Tarasenko’s health was still very much a contentious topic and it looked as though his NHL future was cloudy at best. After a 2021-22 resurgence that saw him author the most productive season of his career, Tarasenko looks to be in St. Louis to stay, despite recent rumblings. There were those who supposed that Tarasenko would be included in any of the Blues’ offers to the Calgary Flames for Matthew Tkachuk, but that wasn’t the case. According to Andy Strickland of Bally Sports Midwest, the Blues never asked Tarasenko to waive his no-trade protection to be traded to the Flames. This report is likely an indication that the Blues have Tarasenko in their plans for next season, and his production could be increasingly important to their success thanks to the departure of David Perron.
  • The WHL’s Edmonton Oil Kings have a new head coach. The team announced today that Luke Pierce was named their fifth head coach in modern history. Pierce, 38, has been an assistant for the Oil Kings for three regular seasons, stretching from 2018-19 to 2021-22. Pierce has prior WHL head coaching experience, as he was the head coach of the then-Kootenay Ice for two seasons from 2015-16 through 2016-17. His time at the helm of the rebuilding Ice didn’t go well, and he had just 26 wins in 144 games. Pierce will be in a better spot in Edmonton, though, as they just won the WHL title and had an extremely successful 50-14-4 record in the 2021-22 regular season. He takes over for Brad Lauer, who left to become an assistant coach on Rick Bowness’ Winnipeg Jets staff.

Montreal Canadiens| St. Louis Blues| WHL Juraj Slafkovsky| Vladimir Tarasenko

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Roster Crunch Coming For Calgary Flames

July 25, 2022 at 4:30 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 9 Comments

The Calgary Flames have had quite the offseason. In a span of one month, they’ve lost two pillars of their franchise: Johnny Gaudreau and Matthew Tkachuk. Yet in the same month, they’ve added a Hart Trophy contender in Jonathan Huberdeau and a top-of-the-lineup all-around defenseman in Mackenzie Weegar. It’s clear from GM Brad Treliving’s actions that the Flames are intent on building on last season’s 111-point campaign and competing for a Stanley Cup, despite the roster turmoil. They certainly look poised to do so, boasting a roster that includes a Vezina Trophy contender in net, a balanced, skilled forward corps, and a stout defense.

Outside of negotiations on a new contract for RFA defenseman Oliver Kylington, the team looks decently set, outside of one crucial area. As things currently stand, there’s a bit of a logjam on the Flames’ defense. The recent addition of Weegar, the extension of Nikita Zadorov, and the signings of Nicolas Meloche and Dennis Gilbert have left the Flames with nine defenders on one-way contracts, with a tenth on the way once Kylington’s contract is settled.

NHL teams typically carry seven defensemen on their active roster, rarely carrying more unless there are special circumstances, typically injury-related considerations, in play.

At a glance, a solid chunk of the Flames’ defense is set in stone. The pairing of Noah Hanifin and Rasmus Andersson is rock-solid, and since Kylington’s breakout season in 2021-22 came next to Chris Tanev, it’s definitely possible coach Darryl Sutter wants to keep them together. And then there’s Zadorov and Weegar, two players who belong in the Flames’ nightly lineup.

So, as things currently stand, the Flames have six proven NHL defensemen on their roster, occupying the six slots in the nightly lineup typically reserved for defensemen. The result of this abundance of riches is that Treliving will need to make a choice about how he pursues the construction of his opening night roster, and each route is not without its risks.

The first route Treliving can follow when it comes to his defense is to simply keep the five of their NHL caliber defensemen on their opening-night roster, (Tanev is hurt and will be on long-term injured reserve for the first few months of the year) carry one defenseman in their sixth slot on the bottom pairing, and then hold a training camp battle amongst the remaining one-way blueliners for the job of seventh defenseman.

This route would be the simplest and would be the route that allows the Flames to hold all of their established defensemen on their roster, something few other teams can boast. But the downside to this route would be only one defenseman in the group of Meloche, Gilbert, and Connor Mackey would be guaranteed to remain with the Flames, the rest would be exposed to waivers.

Season-opening waivers can be the best time to attempt to sneak a player on a one-way deal to an AHL affiliate, as most teams are dealing with a roster crunch and waiving their own players. Then-Carolina Hurricanes goalie Alex Nedeljkovic is a perfect example of this, as he cleared season-opening waivers in 2020-21 before making his way to the Hurricanes’ roster and finishing as a Calder Trophy contender by the time the season concluded.

But even with that in mind, could the Flames reasonably expect to waive three defensemen on one-way contracts and keep them all? It’d be a major risk, especially if one of those waived players is Juuso Valimaki, who is just 23 years old and boasts first-round pedigree.

If the Flames don’t want to leave the fate of the lower half of their defense corps up to chance, they could also opt to subtract from their impressive group of six NHL defensemen in order to add to their forward corps or get their hands on a different type of valuable asset.

Kylington sticks out in this regard. Andersson and Weegar are unlikely to be traded, and Tanev and Hanifin have the right to limited no-trade protection on their contracts. Zadorov is extremely unlikely to be dealt as a new signing. That leaves Kylington as the clear choice for the Flames if they choose to deal a defender to clear their logjam, and his ongoing contract standoff only emphasizes that point.

Kylington was once regarded as a top prospect and has been someone Flames fans for many years had hoped would finally turn his hyped prospect status into tangible NHL results. This year, he just did that. The freedom Tanev’s elite defensive play provided Kylington allowed the 25-year-old to make the most of his tantalizing tools, and he finished 2021-22 with nine goals and 31 points in 73 games. He showed he could be a threat as a transitional defenseman and even flashed improvements to his all-around game. He could net the Flames a strong return, perhaps even a young forward from a team in need of defensive help.

Trading Kylington would be a tough pill to swallow after he finally had the break-out season the organization had been waiting for, but it would also help alleviate the Flames’ (admittedly good) problem of having so many NHL defensemen. If the Flames want Valimaki to see regular minutes next season, this may be the route to take.

Whatever direction the Flames choose, they’ll have to do something. As things currently stand, at least some combination of defensemen in Calgary will be available to other teams, either via a trade or waivers. If Treliving wants to control who stays and who goes, he’ll need to be decisive.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.  Contract information courtesy of CapFriendly.

Calgary Flames Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Seattle Kraken Sign Michal Kempny

July 25, 2022 at 10:50 am CDT | by Ethan Hetu 1 Comment

July 25: Seattle has officially announced the contract, adding Kempny to the organization.

July 24: The Seattle Kraken have added another player, signing defenseman Michal Kempny to a one-year, one-way $750K deal, according to CapFriendly.

Kempny, 31, won the Stanley Cup in 2018 with the Washington Capitals, playing a decently-sized role on their veteran defense. Since that point, Kempny has struggled in larger roles and fallen down the depth chart in Washington, to the point where he split time between the Capitals and their AHL affiliate, the Hershey Bears, in 2021-22.

The 31-year-old native of Czechia is an undrafted player who once looked like a potential middle-of-the-lineup NHL defenseman. Nowadays, though, he’s more of a depth player, and he’ll likely battle with Cale Fleury and Gustav Olofsson for the seventh defenseman slot in Kraken training camp. In Washington this year, Kempny skated in 15 games and notched two points, playing just under 16 minutes of ice time per game and just over a minute on the penalty kill. In the AHL, Kempny was able to handle a larger role and acted as the Bears’ number-one defenseman in the games he played. In Hershey, Kempny led the Bears in time-on-ice per game and saw significant minutes on their penalty kill.

In Seattle, Kempny will either win a training-camp battle and make the opening night roster, or the Kraken will hope he clears waivers and is able to be sent to their AHL affiliate, the Coachella Valley Firebirds. If the latter scenario comes about, Kempny will likely play as a top-pairing defenseman in the AHL and be one of the team’s first call-ups if injuries hit their blueline. At a $750k cap hit, Kempny is a wise signing for a Kraken team looking to improve upon a dismal first season.

Seattle Kraken Michal Kempny

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Blue Jackets Notes: Gavrikov, Bjorkstrand, Dubois

July 24, 2022 at 2:40 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 2 Comments

The Columbus Blue Jackets have had quite the offseason. GM Jarmo Kekalainen landed the consensus top player available on the free agent market, Johnny Gaudreau, and locked his superstar sniper, Patrik Laine, into a four-year deal to stay in Columbus. With the signing of Erik Gudbranson also on the books, the Blue Jackets have been left in an unfamiliar position: without any salary cap room. The team does have Gustav Nyquist’s $5.5MM contract coming off the books next summer, and it looks like we may already have a good idea as to who a good chunk of those funds will be re-allocated to next summer. According to Aaron Portzline of The Athletic, (subscription link) the Blue Jackets “would like to get” defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov “signed long-term” to an extension.

It’s easy to see why the Blue Jackets would want to retain Gavrikov, who will be an unrestricted free agent next summer. Gavrikov was the clear number-two defenseman on the Blue Jackets, handling over 22 difficult minutes per night. Gavrikov was also a highly-trusted penalty killer, and he anchored the Blue Jackets’ penalty kill operation alongside Andrew Peeke. The 26-year-old Russian also took a step forward on the offensive side of the game, ending the season with a healthy 33 points despite playing barely any time on the team’s power play. Gavrikov is among the league’s most underrated all-around defensemen and his overall profile should see a boost once his (likely lucrative) next contract hits the books.

Now, for some other notes regarding the Blue Jackets:

  • While the Blue Jackets’ trade of Oliver Bjorkstrand wasn’t ideal for management, the player, or the Blue Jackets fans, it was necessary. Kekalainen said dealing Bjorkstrand to Seattle was “the best of the no-good options,” and today, Portzline shed some light as to why that was the case. With the flat cap driving the prices to dump contracts to sky-high levels, Portzline believes that if the Blue Jackets preferred to shed Nyquist’s contract, it likely could have cost a 2023 first-round pick or even a top prospect. If the Blue Jackets wanted to trade Jakub Voracek and his $8.25MM cap hit over two more seasons, Portzline believes it may have even cost both a first-rounder and a top prospect. So, with that reality in mind, Bjorkstrand being the departing player rather than Nyquist or Voracek makes a bit more sense.
  • One name Blue Jackets fans have moved on from is that of their 2016 third-overall pick, Pierre-Luc Dubois. The Blue Jackets sent him to Winnipeg in exchange for Laine and Jack Roslovic, and with Laine locked up long-term and Roslovic authoring productive seasons in Columbus, it seems both the fanbase and organization are satisfied with the deal. The one person who hasn’t been satisfied, seemingly, is Dubois, who has made his desire to play in Montreal no secret. According to Portzline, Dubois has “twice gone into a summer wanting” the Canadiens to submit an offer sheet for his services, and it seems that the Blue Jackets were even “tipped off” about the possibility of an offer sheet in 2020 when they dealt Markus Nutivaara and Ryan Murray for minimal returns in order to clear cap space. Dubois recently accepted a one-year qualifying offer, meaning the offer sheet possibility is now off the table, but with Dubois inching towards his own unrestricted free agency it’s definitely possible, if a bit unlikely, that he ends up in Montreal this summer.

Columbus Blue Jackets Pierre-Luc Dubois| Vladislav Gavrikov

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Minor Transactions: 07/22/22

July 22, 2022 at 6:30 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 1 Comment

We’re now a week out from free agency and Nazem Kadri still hasn’t signed. NHL fans are patiently waiting on the decisions of several key free agents, though plenty of other moves are happening around the hockey world. As always at this time of year, we’ll keep track of all the notable minor moves right here.

  • Former NHLer Nick Lappin will be playing overseas for the first time in his professional career. Lappin, who last played in the NHL in 2018-19 for the New Jersey Devils, signed a contract with Italian club HC Bolzano of the ICEHL. Lappin’s departure from North American hockey comes after the least productive season of his AHL career. The 29-year-old forward had just eight points in 38 games, and now heads to the ICEHL, a league with a lower overall talent level. In Bolzano, Lappin will be teammates with another former NHL-er, Matt Frattin, and will look to help the Foxes improve on last season’s ninth-place finish that came without a playoff berth.
  • Former NHLer Victor Bartley will have a new team after three seasons playing for the Kunlun Red Star of the KHL. Bartley, who has 121 NHL games on his resume and last played NHL hockey in 2015-16, will play for Black Wings Linz of the ICEHL. Linz won just 11 of 49 games last season and have to hope that Bartley’s experience on their back end can help them have a better 2022-23.
  • Kris Bennett, the captain of the ECHL’s Iowa Heartlanders, is heading to Switzerland. Per a team announcement, Bennett signed a contract with Swiss club HC Lugano, who have the option of sending Bennett to the second-division Ticino Rockets if they choose to. Bennett scored 35 goals and 73 points in 50 games for the Heartlanders last season and with this contract will have an opportunity to prove himself in one of Europe’s top leagues in 2022-23.
  • Joseph Garreffa, a former star for the OHL’s Ottawa 67’s, has chosen to continue his career overseas. The dazzling forward once formed a lethal offensive trio with 2020 top-ten picks Marco Rossi and Jack Quinn, but hasn’t enjoyed the early success at the professional level that those two earned. Per an announcement from the club, Garreffa has signed a contract with Slovenian side HK SZ Olimpija, based in the Slovenian capital of Ljubljana. HK SZ Olimpija were a playoff team in 2021-22 and are hoping that Garreffa can help them return to the playoffs next season.
  • The Vancouver Canucks’ AHL affiliate, the Abbotsford Canucks, announced today that they signed defenseman Chad Nychuk to a one-year AHL contract. Nychuk is a 21-year-old undrafted player who has spent the past four seasons manning the blueline for the Brandon Wheat Kings of the WHL. In his final season in Brandon, Nychuk had 71 points in 64 games, which ranked second on the team in points. This signing marks the beginning of Nychuk’s professional career and he will join Abbotsford with the hope of climbing the developmental ladder and earning an NHL contract with Vancouver.

This page will be updated throughout the day

AHL| Transactions

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San Jose Sharks Extend Steven Lorentz

July 22, 2022 at 4:58 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 3 Comments

Per a team announcement, the San Jose Sharks have re-signed forward Steven Lorentz to a two-year contract. Per a club policy, the financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, but Curtis Pashelka of Bay Area News Group is reporting that the deal has the following yearly financial structure:

  • 2022-23: $950K
  • 2023-24: $1.15MM

That structure means the deal will have an overall cap hit of $1.05MM.

Lorentz, 26, arrived in San Jose as part of the team’s compensation package for sending Brent Burns to the Carolina Hurricanes. In Carolina, Lorentz got into 67 games and scored eight goals and 13 points. Lorentz didn’t see much action in the team’s playoff run, getting into only five games, but he’s established himself as a scoring threat at the AHL level (he had 23 goals and 46 points in 61 games) and a depth piece at the NHL level.

In San Jose, Lorentz will have an opportunity to continue his development path and establish himself as a quality bottom-sixer. The Hurricanes’ special teams units were largely established and closed for Lorentz for most of the year, meaning Lorentz really could only show what he could do in even-strength situations.

If he can earn the trust of reported new head coach David Quinn, Lorentz could find himself in a greater role than he’d likely have gotten in Carolina. If Lorentz can be a capable penalty-killer on top of the energetic, physical play he already has shown he can provide, this will be a solid two-year investment for the Sharks.

San Jose Sharks

3 comments

Anaheim Ducks Extend Three Players

July 22, 2022 at 4:31 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 3 Comments

The Ducks have gotten a chunk of their outstanding offseason business done, signing three of their restricted free agents to extensions. The team announced deals for defensemen Simon Benoit and Urho Vaakanainen as well as for goalie Olle Eriksson Ek. 

Vaakanainen, 23, received a two-year extension, the terms of which were not fully detailed in the announcement. Vaakanainen came to Anaheim as part of the mid-season Hampus Lindholm trade, and got into 14 games with the Ducks after being dealt there. Vaakanainen was the 18th overall pick at the 2017 draft and has yet to establish himself as a full-time NHL defenseman. In that limited sample with the Ducks, Vaakanainen played in nearly 20 minutes of ice time per game and got a sprinkling of ice time on both the power play and penalty kill.

Vaakanainen may never develop into the shutdown top-four force he was drafted to be, but there is hope that he can become a defense-first bottom-pairing piece in Anaheim.

Benoit, 23, is an undrafted player who got into an impressive 53 games for the Ducks last season. Benoit got a one-year, two-way deal. A hulking six-foot-three, 200-pound physical force, Benoit steadily earned coach Dallas Eakins’ trust and eventually saw time on the Ducks’ penalty kill. There isn’t much offense to Benoit’s game, and he had just five points in 53 games, but he’s got four seasons of professional hockey under his belt and should be in the mix for a similar role in Anaheim this fall.

Eriksson Ek, 23, is the brother of Minnesota Wild center Joel Eriksson Ek and has been a developmental goalie project for the Ducks organization since he was drafted in the sixth round of the 2017 draft. Eriksson-Ek served as the backup goalie for most of the season playing for the AHL’s San Diego Gulls. He got into 26 games and went 7-15-2 with an .880 save percentage and a 3.44 goals-against-average. He got a one-year extension.

Anaheim Ducks Urho Vaakanainen

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Dallas Stars Sign Will Butcher

July 22, 2022 at 4:08 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 6 Comments

As John Klingberg continues his extended stay on the free agent market, his former team has continued to make moves to bolster their blueline. Today the Dallas Stars announced they signed former Hobey Baker Award winner Will Butcher on a one-year, two-way contract. Per CapFriendly, the deal carries a $750K cap hit and a $300K minors salary.

Butcher, 27, once looked like a budding star in the NHL after his first season with the New Jersey Devils. As a rookie, Butcher notched 44 points in 81 games and looked like the kind of player who could quarterback the Devils’ power play for years to come. Since that point, though, Butcher’s game has regressed, and due to a mix of injuries, inconsistency, and a lack of development in the defensive side of the game, Butcher has found himself on the type of one-year, two-way contract signed by players who need to re-establish themselves as quality NHLers.

With Klingberg’s exit now certain, the Stars will need a new face to fill Klingberg’s vacated role, that of an offense-first defenseman who can push the pace of play and help on the power play. Just a few years ago, that was what was driving Butcher’s NHL value and what made him such a coveted college free agent. In Dallas, Butcher will have a chance to play on a quality team and have the opportunity to remind people of his skills as an offensive defenseman.

Dallas Stars Will Butcher

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Pierre-Luc Dubois Accepts Qualifying Offer

July 22, 2022 at 3:40 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 7 Comments

5:10 PM: The Jets have now officially announced the extension.

3:40 PM: With his name featuring heavily in trade rumors, Pierre-Luc Dubois has taken himself one step closer to an exit from Winnipeg. According to TSN’s Darren Dreger, Dubois has chosen to accept his one-year, $6MM qualifying offer in advance of the upcoming deadline.

This means that Dubois has, at least for this summer, elected to not sign a long-term deal with the Jets, as many have expected. Dubois will be an unrestricted free agent in two years’ time. Dubois’ representation has communicated a desire for their client to end up playing for the Montreal Canadiens and Dubois actually attended the draft in Montreal because he believed a trade would be completed on the draft floor. That did not happen, though, so Dubois has now accepted his qualifying offer as a means of simplifying his exit from Winnipeg.

The Jets surrendered two significant players to acquire Dubois: Patrik Laine and Jack Roslovic and did so because they believed a one-two punch at the center position of Dubois and Mark Scheifele would be the key to the next era of contending Jets squads.

That pairing of Dubois and Scheifele doesn’t look like it’ll remain in place for much longer, as the Jets will have to decide if they want to deal Dubois this summer or continue with him on the roster in the hopes that he changes his mind about staying in Winnipeg.

Winnipeg Jets Pierre-Luc Dubois

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