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Philadelphia Flyers Have Their Hands Full In Goal

August 12, 2017 at 8:48 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 2 Comments

The Philadelphia Flyers felt they had to make some goaltending changes this offseason after a year in which they were tied for 26th in save percentage as a team (.901). Veteran goaltender Steve Mason finished the season with a 2.66 GAA in 58 contests which left a lot to be desired, while backup Michal Neuvirth, who many hoped might build on a strong 2015-16 season and take over the starting reigns last year, finshed with an even more disappointing 2.82 GAA.

The team re-signed Neuvirth to a two-year, $5MM deal in March and then allowed Mason to go his own way, which turned out to be signing with the Winnipeg Jets. The Flyers then signed veteran Brian Elliott to a two-year, $5.5MM contract. He was also coming off a disappointing season with the Calgary Flames. The 32-year-old veteran finished last season with a 2.55 GAA in 49 games, which wasn’t enough for the Flames to want to bring him back.

CSN Philly’s John Boruk, Tom Dougherty, Jordan Hall, and Greg Paone all weighed in on what their expectations are for the changes next year in goal and, no surprise, many of them had differing opinions when it comes to the goaltenders.

All four scribes, for the most part, agreed that there was no loss in seeing Mason walk. Dougherty was the only one who suggests that Mason is probably currently the best of the three goaltenders, but Boruk believes that Mason is nothing better than an average goaltender despite his athleticism and size.

However, the real debate comes to Neuvirth. The 29-year-old goaltender had a great season in the 2015-16 season when he played 32 games and came away with a 2.27 GAA and a .924 save percentage in a backup role. However, after last year’s disappointment, the question is where is he now. Injuries are the biggest issue with both Hall and Paone. Neuvirth has missed time due to injuries over the past few years, including a knee injury and a moment in April when he collapsed in the middle of a game. Hall believes that he will never be able to be better than a backup with his health always an issue, while Paone believes that the Flyers would never have offered him a two-year deal if they didn’t think he could be the team’s No. 1 goaltender. Neither Boruk or Dougherty believe that Neuvirth can handle a starting role and at best, he would be able to pressure the starting goaltender for time.

As for Elliott, Boruk cites adjusting to life as a new father as a reason for his struggles last year in Calgary. Most of his struggles came early in the season as his worst numbers came in the first 13 games of the season and he finished the rest of the season with a 23-6-2 record. Dougherty suggests that Elliott is past his prime and shouldn’t provide numbers any better than what Mason offered Philadelphia.

Boruk also mentions that expect a third or even fourth goaltender who has to help out. Don’t be surprised if youngsters Anthony Stolarz and Alex Lyon both come up to fill in at certain points.

Philadelphia Flyers Anthony Stolarz| Brian Elliott| Michal Neuvirth| Steve Mason

2 comments

Capitals Notes: Carlson, Defensive Depth, Arena

August 12, 2017 at 7:27 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 2 Comments

Washington Capitals defenseman John Carlson will have his work cut out for him this coming season. The Capitals which had one of the deepest and most talented rosters in the league had no choice to break up their team due to salary cap issues. The team was forced to say goodbye to several players on their defense, including Kevin Shattenkirk, Karl Alzner, and Nate Schmidt, leaving Carlson to take on an even bigger role next year.

The defense does still have some of their high-paid defensemen remaining on the roster, including 30-year-old Matt Niskanen, who has four years remaining on the contract he signed in 2014 at $5.75MM AAV. Brooks Orpik, 36, still has two years remaining on his deal which pays him $5.5MM annually. The Capitals also locked up 26-year-old Dmitry Orlov to a new six-year, $30.6MM deal this offseason.

Carlson, who may have been one of the least noticed defenseman on his team, is currently fourth among the highest paid Capitals’ defenders at $3.96MM for one more year. He put up solid numbers of nine goals and 28 assists in 22:43 average minutes of ice time. He will likely have to do that again as the depth ends there.

Carlson said he has always been used to youth in the clubhouse with last year being an exception, so the 27-year-old veteran is not surprised the Capitals are trending in that direction, according to Tarik El-Bashir of CSNMidAtlantic. Carlson said he wouldn’t be surprised if he ends up playing with a rookie next season.

Currently, fifth on their depth chart is 30-year Taylor Chorney, who played in 18 games last year. AHL defenders Christian Djoos (58 points in 66 games) and Madison Bowey (14 points in 34 games) are currently penciled on the defensive depth chart. There is even some talk the Capitals might entertain promoting 2016 first-rounder Lucas Johansen from the WHL.

The team still has time to make some additions as they still have more than $4MM in cap space. They could attempt to sign a free agent like Cody Franson to a minimal deal or attempt to broker a deal with the Vegas Golden Knights for one of their many defenders, but the Capitals have other holes to fill on offense as well, so in the end, they may go with what they have.

  • Gone unnoticed was that the Capitals changed the name of their stadium last week. Previously known as the Verizon Center since 2006, the new stadium will be called Capital One Arena, according to NHL.com. Originally opened in 1997 as the MCI Center, and while the connection between Capital One and the Capitals is a clever one, the arena is also home to the Washington Wizards of the NBA, the Washington Mystics of the WNBA and Georgetown University basketball.

 

Washington Capitals Brooks Orpik| Dmitry Orlov| John Carlson| Karl Alzner| Kevin Shattenkirk| Matt Niskanen| Nate Schmidt

2 comments

Golden Knights Notes: Nickname Trademark, Haula

August 12, 2017 at 6:01 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 2 Comments

The Vegas Golden Knights can keep calling themselves that. According to The Las Vegas Review-Journal’s Steve Carp, the team won its appeal to have its nickname trademarked. Back in December, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office denied the team’s trademark request, pointing out that the Golden Knights trademark is also being used by The College of Saint Rose, a small school in New York.

According to Adam Candee of The Las Vegas Sun, while owner Bill Foley was never really in danger of being forced to change the team’s name, the ruling by the government should prevent or lessen any legal challenges down the road.

The team is not out of the woods yet. Despite getting their nicknamed trademarked, the Golden Knights did not get the same approval for its logo on their merchandise and gear. That request was suspended, pending further appeal. That will not stop the team from putting their logo on their merchandise, however, according to Carp.

“We’re happy,” team owner Bill Foley said. “We got what we wanted. We’ve got ’Golden Knights’ for hockey and we knew it would work out. We’re not worried about the other issue. That will work itself out in time. But we’re not paying anyone anything.”

  • The Golden Knights have high hopes for Erik Haula, who the team claimed in the expansion draft from the Minnesota Wild in June. The team hopes they can develop the 26-year-old center and former University of Minnesota hockey star, who has scored 29 goals in the past two seasons, according to Jessi Pierce of NHL.com. The hope is that Haula, who only managed to average 13:49 of ice time for the Wild will get more playing time in Vegas and produce more, possibly allowing the Golden Knights to move him at the trade deadline if all works out. Haula, who signed a three-year, $8.25MM deal in the offseason ($2.75MM AAV), is a good face-off specialist (he won 53.9 percent of his faceoffs last year) and is a good penalty killer, which could make him a solid trade asset if he can continue to improve.

Vegas Golden Knights Erik Haula

2 comments

Prospect Notes: Boeser, Puljujarvi

August 12, 2017 at 4:50 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg Leave a Comment

Offensive improvement is a major need in Vancouver. With the decline of Henrik Sedin and Daniel Sedin, the Vancouver Canucks offense struggled last year as the team finished 29th out of 30 teams in goals scored (2.17). Add in the fact that they also finished dead last in shots attempted, the team has some work to do.

Their top young players, 22-year-old Bo Horvat and 24-year-old Sven Baertschi have talent and while the team suffered through numerous injuries a year ago, there is a lot of hope for youngster Brock Boeser, according to NHL.com’s Kevin Woodley. The Canucks 2015 first-round pick (23rd overall) played two seasons for the University of North Dakota and after his team lost in the NCAA championships to Boston University, he signed an entry-level contract and joined the Canucks for the final nine games of the season. The 20-year-old thrived, scoring four goals in that span for five points.

Boeser, known for his great passing and offensive skills, played well with Horvat and Baertschi on the second line at the end of the year and also had a good showing on the power play with the Sedin twins. However, according to Woodley, the team will not just give him a roster spot for this coming season. Boeser must earn it and to prove that, Vancouver still made him attend his third-straight development camp. He must also compete with new free agent acquisitions Sam Gagner and Alexander Burmistrov if he wants playing time.

  • The Edmonton Oilers also have high hopes for their top pick a year ago. Jesse Puljujarvi, the fourth-overall pick in 2016, broke camp last year with the team, but struggled with the speed of the game as well as the language barrier and eventually found himself scratched in 10 out of 18 games. He was sent down to the AHL where he played 39 games for the Bakersfield Condors. He scored 12 goals and added 16 assists for 28 points there. The hope is that Puljijarvi can take the next step and make the rotation this year, according to NHL.com’s Tim Campbell. His combination of size (6-foot-4) and speed would be welcome with Edmonton’s young team.

 

Edmonton Oilers| Vancouver Canucks Alexander Burmistrov| Brock Boeser| Jesse Puljujarvi| Sam Gagner

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New York Islanders Hope Youth Will Propel Them Forward

August 12, 2017 at 3:32 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg Leave a Comment

Regardless of the outcome of the John Tavares contract situation that the Islanders have to deal with over the next season, the Islanders remain a young, up-and-coming team. Many of their top players are 27 years old or younger, including Tavares, Josh Bailey, Anders Lee, Brock Nelson, Nick Leddy amongst others. Even 27-year-old trade acquisition Jordan Eberle fits the bill. With the team starting to hit its prime, the Islanders believe that this is the year to make the playoffs.

However, another bright spot is their incoming infusion of talent. There are several former first-round picks who are ready to make their mark this upcoming season, including center Mathew Barzal, winger Joshua Ho-Sang and defenseman Ryan Pulock. All three were recognized by The Hockey News in their Top 10 Calder Trophy Candidates for next season. The Islanders were the only team to have three prospect recognized, although none of them were among the top five candidates. Barzal was the top-rated Islander at No. 8. The others were honorable mentions.

Barzal, a 2015 first-round pick, returned to play in the Western Hockey League again last season, putting up 79 points in 41 games and finished out the year with two games for the Islanders. The 20 year old has a good chance to seize the second-line center position in training camp, but must show that he can handle the physical pressure of playing in the NHL.

Ho-Sang, a 2014 first-round pick, played 50 games last season for the AHL Bridgeport Sound Tigers, putting up 10 goals and 26 assists, but then was promoted for the Islanders’ final 21 games and he put up four goals and six assists in that span and almost helped them reach the playoffs. The 21-year-old wing is almost a lock to make the rotation next year and could have a big season.

Pulock, a 2o13 first-round pick, has played three full seasons in the AHL so far, but after two average seasons, the blueliner took that next step last year. His 15 goals and 31 assists almost doubled his previous point totals, which gives him a chance to make the defensive rotation next season, possibly even hopping into the team’s top four. He did play 15 games for the Islanders two years ago, but didn’t get called up the following year and only played one game for the Islanders last year.

 

New York Islanders Anders Lee| Brock Nelson| John Tavares| Jordan Eberle| Josh Bailey| Josh Ho-Sang| Mathew Barzal| Nick Leddy| Ryan Pulock

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NHL Snapshots: Toews, Red Wings Logo, Klingberg

August 12, 2017 at 2:10 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg Leave a Comment

Chicago Blackhawks star forward Jonathan Toews spent all of last offseason training harder than he ever had and while the 29-year-old had a solid season, his numbers dropped, particularly his goal-scoring as his 21 goals last year were the lowest number of his career. According to Sportsnet’s Chris Johnston, Toews admitted that over-training might have been a mistake and is looking to make changes to his offseason work habits.

“Last summer is the first time I really got the time to train really hard and I might have overdone it in the wrong way. Just worrying about power and strength all the time,” Toews said. “I came into the season and just couldn’t move, just felt slow. I mean the game is so fast nowadays. It’s kind of a wake-up call in that sense.”

Toews said that he has been focusing on loosening up his body and improving his mobility. He adds that he is taking ideas from some of the young stars like Toronto’s Auston Matthews and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid and intends to devote time to skating and working on his offensive game.

  • The Detroit Red Wings and the NHL are considering legal action after white nationalists used an altered form of the Red Wings logo during the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Va. this weekend. The Red Wings tweeted that they vehemently disagree and are not associated with the event and will explore any legal action possible.
  • Sportsnet’s Sonny Sachdeva writes that Dallas Stars defenseman John Klingberg says that he is looking forward to working with new coach Ken Hitchcock this year in hopes that the veteran coach can emphasize defense more in hopes of bringing the Stars back to the playoffs. The 24-year-old blueliner has been one of the team’s brightest offensive stars, putting up a career-high 13 goals last year to go with 36 assists for 49 points. Klingberg who led the team in average ice-time (23:21) last season would embrace a coach that emphasized defense. The Stars went from winning the Central Division in 2015-16 to a sixth-place finish last year.

Chicago Blackhawks| Dallas Stars| Detroit Red Wings Auston Matthews| Connor McDavid| John Klingberg| Jonathan Toews

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Breaking Down John Tavares Standoff With Isles

August 5, 2017 at 5:59 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg Leave a Comment

As reported by PHR’s Gavin Lee, New York Islanders’ star John Tavares was quiet when asked about his extension. The 26-year-old was eligible to sign an extension with the Islanders starting on July 1, but after five weeks still hasn’t done it. Speculation suggests that he is keeping a keen eye on two critical elements, including the team’s success as well as whether the team will find a home. He has said he would like to stay in New York and continue to play for the Islanders, but is keeping his thoughts internally.

However, the New York Posts’ Larry Brooks writes that history suggests that what a player says during negotiations doesn’t mean anything. He cites former New York Rangers’ captain Ryan Callahan in 2014 as having said the same thing, only to be traded to the Tampa Bay Lightning after negotiations broke down over a no-trade clause the Rangers didn’t want to include. The scribe writes, however, that these negotiations have little to do with a no-trade clause or even money. The Islanders are willing to offer it all.

Brooks believes that the Islanders’ struggles, despite picking up Jordan Eberle this offseason, might count against the New York team. Tavares has played eight seasons in the NHL and has only made three trips to the playoffs, and only ies. Maybe, he wants more success. On top of that, the team still is having trouble finding a new home for the franchise. Is Belmont Park the answer? Possibly, but it’s not perfect and nothing is cemented in stone. Maybe he wants to wait until that is resolved. Many people compare Tavares to the Steven Stamkos standoff last year, but Tampa Bay had been to the Stanley Cup Finals in 2015 and to a Game 7 in the conference finals in 2016. They were a successful franchise.

While the eight-year contract they can offer to Tavares (as opposed to seven years for any other team) is critical to the Islanders, Brooks questions that advantage as well. Citing the belief that the Tampa Bay Lightning will make a play for the forward, he writes that Florida’s lack of a state tax would save Tavares quite a bit of cash. He writes that if the Islanders offer him an eight year, $80MM contract ($10MM per year), that would leave him with $41.81MM after taxes, according to Brooks. If Tampa Bay offers him a seven-year, $59.5MM deal ($8.5MM per year), Tavares would get to keep $36.28MM after taxes, which is only $5MM less overall. So that eighth year isn’t as big of a factor when dealing with teams that have no state income tax.

There are a lot of maybes, but there is a good chance the Islanders will be forced to trade Tavares if they want to keep their franchise afloat.

 

New York Islanders John Tavares| Jordan Eberle| Ryan Callahan| Steven Stamkos

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Blues Snapshots: Steen, Parayko, AHL, Fabbri

August 5, 2017 at 4:57 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg Leave a Comment

Don’t be surprised if the St. Louis Blues move on from Alex Steen, eventually. While St. Louis Post-Dispatch’s Jim Rutherford answered questions on the newspaper’s website, he added that while he’d be surprised to see Steen moved at this point in the offseason, he wouldn’t be shocked if the Blues were to look into trading him at the trade deadline next year or in the offseason.

The 33-year-old Steen’s new contract that he signed last offseason will be kicking in this year. He signed a four-year, $23MM contract and while his production has been consistently solid over the last couple of years (33 goals and 70 assists combined in last two years), the veteran is suddenly beginning to get in the way of the Blues massing core of young wingers, including Vladimir Tarasenko (25), Jaden Schwartz (25), Dmitrij Jaskin (24), Robby Fabbri (21 — although he could move to center next season — see below), Oskar Sundqvist (23) and Beau Bennett (25).

Rutherford adds the team still needs a veteran like Steen to provide the leadership to the youth, but there will be a point in which the team will be confident in its young wingers that it’s unlikely he’ll finish out his contract in St. Louis.

  • In the same piece, Rutherford writes that he expects young defenseman Colton Parayko to step up this season for the Blues and become the star defenseman they were hoping for. While his goals scored dropped from nine to four last year, his points still went up, finishing with 35 points compared to 33 two years ago. The scribe writes that with Kevin Shattenkirk finally gone, Parayko should be able to raise his scoring numbers and develop into a No. 1 defenseman.
  • Rutherford also writes that with the team agreeing to AHL agreements with the Chicago Wolves (Vegas’ affiliate) and the San Antonio Rampage (Colorado’s affiliate), the team will send prospects to either team, but are likely to have little say about playing time for their prospects. Both Vegas and Colorado will be putting a priority on their own prospects, leaving any Blues prospects to force their way into playing time.
  • Former 2014 first-rounder Fabbri is currently penciled in as the team’s third-line center behind Paul Stastny and new acquisition Brayden Schenn. However, if they feel he is ready to put up a big season, Rutherford writes that it is likely he’ll be moved up to be a wing on the second line and force Steen to move to the right side.

 

AHL| St. Louis Blues Alex Steen| Beau Bennett| Brayden Schenn| Colton Parayko| Dmitrij Jaskin| Jaden Schwartz| Kevin Shattenkirk| Oskar Sundqvist| Paul Stastny| Robby Fabbri| Vladimir Tarasenko

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NHL Snapshots: Dallas Stars, Zadorov, Butcher

July 30, 2017 at 12:59 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 5 Comments

As announced yesterday, the Dallas Stars will host the 2018 NHL Entry Draft at American Airlines Arena on June 22-23. One key reason they received the honor, according to NHL.com’s Sean Shapiro, is that 2018 will mark the team’s 25th anniversary in Dallas and NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said the way the team has successfully built a hockey community is a main reason for get awarded with the draft.

“I think they’ve done a fabulous job over the 25 years they’ve been here,” Daly said. “The Stars organization has led the way in turning a non-traditional hockey market into a hockey market. Your involvement in promoting and supporting youth hockey in the greater Dallas area comes from rink initiatives and sponsoring youth hockey teams. It’s not only inspiring, but it’s a model that all NHL clubs in non-traditional markets aspire to.”

Stars CEO and president Jim Lites said it has been a two-year commitment to get the draft to come to Dallas. The team has worked hard this year to get back into the playoff picture after a down year for their 25th anniversary. They have hired coach Ken Hitchcock, traded for goaltender Ben Bishop and defenseman Marc Methot and signed several key free agents, including Alexander Radulov and Martin Hanzal.

  • Adrian Dater of BSN Denver, writes that it is highly unlikely that Colorado Avalanche defenseman Nikita Zadorov will return to the KHL next year when his contract is up. Dater writes that the defensive defenseman and Colorado are less and $1MM apart in negotations and believes the Avalanche wouldn’t let the future restricted free agent leave over that little money. Zadorov, who was the key piece in the Ryan O’Reilly trade two years ago, played 56 games last year for the Avalanche and had 10 assists.
  • Joe Haggerty of CSNNE writes the Bruins, who are well-known for going after top college talent, should not consider signing Hobey Baker Award winner Will Butcher. The defenseman, who will become a free agent if he doesn’t sign with Colorado before Aug. 15, is likely to receive multiple offers. However, Haggerty writes that the team doesn’t need another undersized, unproven player on their defense since they already have Brandon Carlo and Charlie McAvoy on the roster.

Boston Bruins| Colorado Avalanche| Dallas Stars| Ken Hitchcock Alexander Radulov| Ben Bishop| Brandon Carlo| Charlie McAvoy| Marc Methot| Martin Hanzal| NHL Entry Draft| Nikita Zadorov| Will Butcher

5 comments

Detroit On Top Of NHL In No-Trade Clauses

July 30, 2017 at 12:08 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 4 Comments

No trade clauses seem to have become the “in-thing” in negotiations as NTC’s are more prevalent than ever. Many general managers are forced to offer them to entice free agents to come to their teams. Other teams just give them to their top players to prove their loyalty to that player. For instance, the Tampa Bay Lightning have eight no-trade clauses on their roster, but that’s normal for a team that is expected to contend for a Stanley Cup.

However, what about the Detroit Red Wings. The struggling franchise is tied with Ottawa for a league-high 10 no-trade clauses on their roster for a team that’s already capped out with nothing to show for it but a roster of aging, overpriced veterans. The best option for Detroit and general manager Ken Holland, who handed out those no-trade clauses would be to trade off their veterans and start a massive rebuild. Can’t do that, according to Yahoo Sports Greg Wyshynski, who writes that Detroit is in a tough situation compared to other teams. One key to the way general managers use no-trade clauses is how they are utilized and with all of their no-trade clauses, the team will be hamstrung for many years.

Holland and the Red Wings have given full no-trade clauses to Justin Abdelkader, who has three more years of a no-trade clause before it becomes a modified trade clause, but the 30-year-old is locked up for another six years. Gustav Nyquist has a full no-trade clause for the two years remaining on his contract. Darren Helm also has a full no-trade clause through next season, although that can be voided beyond that if he fails to be among the team’s top-nine forwards or if the team doesn’t make the playoffs. However, again, he has a four-year deal. Four defensemen have full no-trade clauses, including Mike Green, Danny DeKeyser, Jonathan Ericsson and newly signed Trevor Daley. Other than Green, all of them possess full no-trade clauses for the next year, but eventually turn into modified no-trade clauses in 2018-19 or later. To make matters even more difficult, Detroit also has three players with modified no-trade clauses, including Frans Nielsen, Niklas Kronwall and goaltender Jimmy Howard, that will only make a rebuild more challenging for the Red Wings.

Perhaps the biggest problem, according to Wyshynski, is that seven of the 10 no-trade clauses are in the hands of players that are 30 or older and whether there was a need to give one this offseason to Daley, who many viewed as a questionable acquisition in the first place, let alone that they gave him a two years worth of a full no-trade clause to go with his three-year, $9.5MM contract at age 33.

While some no trade clauses are unavoidable and even necessary to get a player to sign on the dotted line, it’s critical to know when to offer one and when not to. Wyshynski uses the Minnesota Wild as an example of a team who has six no-trade clauses on their roster and used them wisely. They handed ones out to Zach Parise, Mikko Koivu and Ryan Suter, where they were critical in negotiations and are franchise-type players. They used one on veteran Eric Staal to convince him to come to Minnesota last year, which worked out quite well. Finally, defenseman Jared Spurgeon and goaltender Devan Dubnyk each received modified no-trade clauses, but again, both are key pieces to the team’s success. That’s how it should be done.

The question is, how long will it take for Detroit to recover from these long-term contracts with all these no-trade clauses in place. Of course, after the Daley deal, it doesn’t necessarily mean that Detroit has learned from its mistakes anyway.

Detroit Red Wings| Ken Holland| Minnesota Wild Danny DeKeyser| Darren Helm| Devan Dubnyk| Eric Staal| Frans Nielsen| Gustav Nyquist| Jared Spurgeon| Jimmy Howard| Jonathan Ericsson| Justin Abdelkader| Mike Green| Mikko Koivu| Niklas Kronwall| Ryan Suter| Trevor Daley| Zach Parise

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