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Snapshots: Canadiens Injuries, Pastrnak, Rangers Leadership Group, Blais

October 10, 2022 at 11:03 am CDT | by John Gilroy 6 Comments

After heading all the way to the Stanley Cup Final in 2020-21, only to finish dead last in the NHL standings in 2021-22, it’s unclear exactly what is to be expected from the Montreal Canadiens this year. Injuries were a large part of what plagued the team last season, and heading into this season, they’re still a part of the headline. Of course, legendary goaltender Carey Price will be on LTIR and is unlikely to play this season, and it’s unclear if he’ll ever return. Still, there are some shorter-term updates available out of Montreal today.

For one, veteran defenseman Joel Edmundson, who is recovering from a back injury, was able to skate this morning and though his rehab is progressing, the team is still unable to provide a timetable for his return. Forwards Joel Armia and Emil Heineman will both be out with injury, Armia out one to two weeks with an upper-body injury and Heineman six weeks with a thumb injury. Defenseman Mike Matheson, who the team acquired in the Jeff Petry deal, is continuing to rehab a lower-body injury and is considered day-to-day. Finally, forwards and expected key contributors Nick Suzuki, Mike Hoffman, and Christian Dvorak, who had all been dealing with separate ailments, were back at practice this morning.

  • Boston Bruins GM Don Sweeney spoke to the media this morning, including Ty Anderson of 98.5 The Sports Hub, where he discussed a number of Bruins-related topics. Most notably, he touched on extension talks between the team and pending UFA forward David Pastrnak. While many teams and players, in hockey as well as other sports, generally put off contract talks once the season starts, that doesn’t appear to be the case here. Sweeney says the Bruins and Pastrnak have been talking almost every day and are comfortable talking into the regular season. While a deal isn’t done yet of course, the continued dialogue is clearly a good sign for the Bruins and their fans, showing Pastrnak presumably has interest in staying with the team.
  • Earlier this summer, the New York Rangers announced defenseman Jacob Trouba would be their next captain, remarkably their first since previous captain Ryan McDonagh was dealt to the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2018. In the interim, the team has relied on a group of alternate captains to fill their leadership group until they found the perfect fit for the vacant captaincy. Having now chosen Trouba as their man, the Rangers still have their contingent of alternates to go along with him, formally announcing them today. This season, the team will run with veterans Barclay Goodrow, Chris Kreider, Artemi Panarin, and Mika Zibanejad as alternates.
  • Tough news for Rangers forward Sammy Blais, who had been out with injury since last November, as he’s still dealing with the aftermath of an upper-body injury suffered after taking a hit from New York Islanders defenseman Alexander Romanov in their Saturday evening preseason contest. According to NHL.com’s Dan Rosen, the Rangers have said the forward will not practice today and is doubtful for tomorrow’s season opener against the, Tampa Bay Lightning.

Boston Bruins| Injury| Montreal Canadiens| NHL| New York Rangers| Players Artemi Panarin| Barclay Goodrow| Chris Kreider| Christian Dvorak| David Pastrnak| Emil Heineman| Jacob Trouba| Joel Armia| Joel Edmundson| Mika Zibanejad| Mike Hoffman| Nick Suzuki

6 comments

Ottawa Senators Sign Derick Brassard

October 10, 2022 at 10:28 am CDT | by John Gilroy 5 Comments

After being invited to their camp on a PTO, something he had been hoping for this offseason, veteran forward Derick Brassard has indeed signed with the Ottawa Senators on a one-year deal, the team announced. This will officially mark Brassard’s second stint as a member of the Senators after playing for seven different teams since Ottawa dealt the forward during the 2017-18 season. According to Frank Seravalli of The Daily Faceoff, the deal is worth $750,000.

The veteran Brassard finds himself on a growing list of players on PTO’s signing NHL contracts, following yesterday’s announcement of Zach Aston-Reese and Jimmy Vesey signing with the Toronto Maple Leafs and New York Rangers, respectively. Ottawa had perhaps the loudest offseason of any team around the league, acquiring Alex DeBrincat and Cam Talbot, signing Claude Giroux, and extending Tim Stutzle and Joshua Norris, so Brassard’s signing might fly under the radar. Still, the team should be able to count on the 35-year-old to fill a key veteran role in their bottom-six.

This new role might be far removed from the one he previously occupied when the team acquired him from the Rangers in 2016, but that still doesn’t mean he will be without value. As Brassard said himself last week, he hopes he can play a similar role to the one Jason Spezza had been playing for the Maple Leafs, used in different spots in the lineup for different purposes night in and night out. It’s no doubt Spezza’s contributions were much appreciated in Toronto, and if Brassard can do something similar, it could be a quiet, yet valuable element to the continued development of this young Senators core.

Ottawa Senators Derick Brassard

5 comments

Training Camp Cuts: 10/10/22

October 10, 2022 at 10:07 am CDT | by John Gilroy 7 Comments

A very happy Thanksgiving to all of our readers who are celebrating! Today marks the deadline for NHL clubs to become cap compliant and submit their opening night rosters. More specifically, the 5:00 pm ET deadline is now less than six hours away. With that in mind, we expect to see plenty of players sent to the minor leagues, returned to juniors, or released from their PTOs today, and we’ll keep track of them here.

Arizona Coyotes (via team tweet)

D Cam Dineen (to Tucson, AHL)
G Jon Gillies (to Tucson, AHL)
F Laurent Dauphin (to Tucson, AHL)
F Bokondji Imama (to Tucson, AHL)

Buffalo Sabres (via team tweet)

D Lawrence Pilut (to Rochester, AHL)
G Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (to Rochester, AHL)
F Olivier Nadeau (to Gatineau, QMJHL)

Carolina Hurricanes (via team release)

F Jack Drury (to Chicago, AHL)
F Jordan Martinook (to Chicago, AHL)

Colorado Avalanche (via team tweet)

D Wyatt Aamodt (to Colorado, AHL)
F Mikhail Maltsev (to Colorado, AHL)

Columbus Blue Jackets (per team release)

F Emil Bemstrom (to Cleveland, AHL)
D David Jiricek (to Cleveland, AHL)

Detroit Red Wings (per team release)

D Jeremie Biakabutuka (released from ATO)
F Kyle Criscuolo (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
F Taro Hirose (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
G Jussi Olkinuora (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
F Givani Smith (to Grand Rapids, AHL)

Edmonton Oilers (via team tweet)

D Jason Demers (released from PTO)
F James Hamblin (to Bakersfield, AHL)
F Devin Shore (to Bakersfield, AHL)

Los Angeles Kings (per team release)

G Pheonix Copley (to Ontario, AHL)
F Rasmus Kupari (to Ontario, AHL)
F Andre Lee (to Ontario, AHL)
D Jacob Moverare (to Ontario, AHL)

Montreal Canadiens (via two team tweets)

F Rafael Harvey-Pinard (to Laval, AHL)
F Jesse Ylonen (to Laval, AHL)
D Justin Barron (to Laval, AHL)
D Otto Leskinen (to Laval, AHL)
G Cayden Primeau (to Laval, AHL)
D Arber Xhekaj (to Laval, AHL)

Nashville Predators (via team release)

F Jimmy Huntington (to Milwaukee, AHL)
F Mark Jankowski (to Milwaukee, AHL)
F Philip Tomasino (to Milwaukee, AHL)
D Kevin Gravel (to Milwaukee, AHL)
D Jordan Gross (to Milwaukee, AHL)
D Roland McKeown (to Milwaukee, AHL)

New York Rangers (via team release)

D Matt Bartkowski (released from PTO)
F Julien Gauthier (to Hartford, AHL)

Ottawa Senators (via team tweet)

F Ridly Greig (to Belleville, AHL)

Philadelphia Flyers (per Olivia Reiner, The Philadelphia Inquirer)

F Jackson Cates (to Lehigh Valley, AHL)

Seattle Kraken (via team tweet)

F John Hayden (to Coachella Valley, AHL)
D Michal Kempny (to Coachella Valley, AHL)

St. Louis Blues (via team release)

F Josh Leivo (to Springfield, AHL)
F Jake Neighbours (to Springfield, AHL)

Toronto Maple Leafs (via team tweet)

F Kyle Clifford (to Toronto, AHL)
F Adam Gaudette (to Toronto, AHL)
F Pontus Holmberg (to Toronto, AHL)
D Filip Kral (to Toronto, AHL)
D Victor Mete (to Toronto, AHL)
F Nick Robertson (to Toronto, AHL)
F Wayne Simmonds (to Toronto, AHL)
D William Villeneuve (to Toronto, AHL)

Vancouver Canucks (via team tweet)

F Linus Karlsson (to Abbotsford, AHL)

Vegas Golden Knights (via team release)

F Pavel Dorofeyev (to Henderson, AHL)
F Sakari Manninen (to Henderson, AHL)
F Jonas Rondbjerg (to Henderson, AHL)
D Jake Bischoff (to Henderson, AHL)
D Kaedan Korczak (to Henderson, AHL)
G Michael Hutchinson (to Henderson, AHL)

Washington Capitals (via team tweet)

F Henrik Borgstrom (to Hershey, AHL)
D Lucas Johansen (to Hershey, AHL)

Winnipeg Jets (via team tweet)

D Ville Heinola (to Manitoba, AHL)

This post will be kept updated throughout the day.

AHL| Carolina Hurricanes| Colorado Avalanche| Columbus Blue Jackets| Detroit Red Wings| Edmonton Oilers| Los Angeles Kings| Montreal Canadiens| New York Rangers| Ottawa Senators| Philadelphia Flyers| Seattle Kraken| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions| Utah Mammoth| Washington Capitals

7 comments

Sabres Notes: Young Players, Okposo, Injuries

October 10, 2022 at 9:29 am CDT | by John Gilroy 4 Comments

On what is expected to be a busy Monday around the NHL with the deadline to submit rosters approaching at 5:00 pm ET today, Buffalo Sabres GM Kevyn Adams met with the media this morning to discuss, primarily, his new leadership group that features the club’s 20th captain, Kyle Okposo. Adams praised Okposo’s leadership and his relationship with teammates and echoed much of the same sentiment towards alternate captain Zemgus Girgensons. The GM also lauded defenseman Rasmus Dahlin, now a full-time alternate captain, for his development not only on the ice, but as a person in the locker room and his drive to get better.

Beyond the new leadership group, Adams touched on several other news and notes, including the status of several of the team’s young players like John-Jason Peterka, Jack Quinn, and Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen. As to Peterka and Quinn, Adams seemed to indicate that both would be on the team’s opening night roster, saying the body of work the pair had put in with the AHL’s Rochester Americans last year shows that they are “ready to take the next step.” Adams continued, referring to the team’s entire young core, including names like Peyton Krebs and Mattias Samuelsson as well, that they will ultimately need to get more and more reps in to continue to develop at this level. On Luukkonen, Adams was impressed with his offseason and training camp efforts, but appeared to confirm the expected, that the goaltender would begin the season in Rochester with veterans Eric Comrie and Craig Anderson on the NHL roster. Seeing Luukkonen spend another year in the minors may not necessarily be exciting news for Sabres fans, however giving him regular starts should make a strong contribution to his overall development.

  • Also from Adams’ availability, when discussing his new leadership group, he touched on the contractual future of captain Kyle Okposo, who is in the last year of a seven-year, $42MM deal, saying the team had yet to discuss an extension with their veteran. That news, combined with some of the objective disappointment on both sides over the life of the contract, might seem to point to a parting of ways at the end of this year, however given the fact that the team named him their captain with just one year left on his contract, with other cornerstone options available, indicates that there is a chance the winger could be back. Any extension with Okposo surely won’t match his current deal, but if he can repeat on his impressive 21 goal, 45 point 2021-22 season, he should find his way to a relatively strong payday.
  • On the injury front, goaltender Malcolm Subban, who left last night’s Rochester preseason game with an injury, could be out for some time, Adams said. The team is still awaiting a further update on Subban. Forward Riley Sheahan will begin the season on injured-reserve as well, the only player expected to be there on the opening night roster, says Adams.

AHL| Buffalo Sabres| Injury| NHL| Players Jack Quinn| Kevyn Adams| Kyle Okposo| Malcolm Subban

4 comments

Marco Rossi, Calen Addison Make Minnesota Wild Opening Night Roster

October 9, 2022 at 4:43 pm CDT | by John Gilroy 4 Comments

The Minnesota Wild announced via video on their website that prospects Marco Rossi and Calen Addison have both made the team’s opening night roster. In the video, Wild GM Bill Guerin and Head Coach Dean Evason sit down with each player individually to let them know they’ve made the team, and in Addison’s case, discuss becoming a full-time NHLer. Both players have made their NHL debuts, Addison playing as much as 15 regular season games last season on top of three playoff contests, but now both appear to be on their way to regular NHL roles. Michael Russo of The Athletic also reports that veteran defenseman Andrej Sustr has also made the opening roster.

Russo dove deeper into the team’s decision to keep two of its exciting young players on the roster, speaking with both, who reiterated their excitement at the news. Addison, who was originally a draft pick of the Pittsburgh Penguins, was acquired by the Wild in February of 2020 in the deal that sent forward Jason Zucker to Pittsburgh. After finishing up his junior career in 2019-20 with the WHL’s Lethbridge Hurricanes, Addison turned pro full-time in 2020-21, playing the majority of the season with the Iowa Wild of the AHL, making his NHL debut for Minnesota as well. Last season, Addison continued his AHL development, but appeared in 18 NHL games between the regular and postseason.

Rossi was Minnesota’s first round, ninth-overall selection in the 2020 draft coming off an impressive two-year stint with the Ottawa 67’s of the OHL, which included an incredible 120 points in just 56 games in 2019-20. However, a case of COVID that included long-term symptoms set Rossi back and raised concern that it could affect his development. The young forward was limited to just a single game in 2020-21 while playing in the Swiss league. Rossi would come over to North America for the 2021-22 season, and fears of his long-term hockey ability being set back were soon gone as the then-20-year-old scored 18 goals to go with 35 assists in 63 AHL contests for Iowa.

Now left in a precarious position with $12.7MM in dead cap in 2022-23 (going up to $14.7MM the following two seasons), Minnesota will need to find as much cost-controlled talent as it can get, especially after trading star forward Kevin Fiala. Though Addison and Rossi are largely unproven at this level, if Minnesota wishes to compete like it has the past few seasons, both will have to step up as regular contributors.

AHL| Minnesota Wild| NHL| Players| Prospects Andrej Sustr| Calen Addison| Marco Rossi

4 comments

Avalanche Notes: Waivers, Newhook, Helm

October 9, 2022 at 3:57 pm CDT | by John Gilroy 7 Comments

Saying the Colorado Avalanche have had a flurry of waiver-wire activity over the past couple of days surely wouldn’t make them unique; that would make them about a dime-a-dozen amongst other NHL clubs. However, their situation has created some buzz, and now we’re getting some clarity on it as well that not all teams necessarily provide. For one, as reported by Colorado Hockey Now’s Adrian Dater, former top prospects Shane Bowers and Martin Kaut, who were both placed on waivers yesterday, cleared and have been assigned to the Colorado Eagles of the AHL. Given the sheer number of players being placed on waivers this weekend, it’s not shocking that this pair would clear, especially given their lack of NHL success, however it was interesting to see the two placed on waivers given their former status as prospects and their still relatively young age (both are 23).

Turning to today’s waiver players, we noted earlier in today’s Waivers tracker that the Avalanche have put forwards Anton Blidh and Mikhail Maltsev on waivers. When head coach Jared Bednar met with the media, including Dater, earlier today, he shed some light on why that decision was made, indicating the two players were placed on waivers for “cap flexibility” purposes. That itself is not particularly surprising, considering that’s likely the reason for many waiver placements around the league right now, but Bednar did continue, saying that he felt Maltsev was “too quiet” in camp. The coach also added, without naming any specific names, “there’s a lot of guys that can ’play hockey.’ But we’re trying to win.”

  • For the most part, training camp is used as a time to decide who makes the roster, and for those who have already secured a spot, it may be about deciding where they play and what role(s) they occupy. That was set to be the case this camp for Avalanche center Alex Newhook, who appeared to be in line for the open second-line center job that was left vacant by Nazem Kadri who signed with the Calgary Flames. However, the team also inked veteran center Evan Rodrigues to a one-year, $2MM contract his offseason, giving Newhook formidable competition for the role. With camp in the rear-view and a focus on the regular season ahead, it seems as though the Avalanche have not made a concrete decision on who will occupy what role. Instead, Bednar told the media, including Dater, that he will give Newhook a real, everyday chance to win the job over “a couple of months.” The decision to essentially not make one, appears to make sense. Operating this way will not only to allow Colorado to evaluate team chemistry and see how Newhook’s development continues, but also to see where Rodrigues stands, who broke out with 43 points in 82 games last year.
  • On the injury front, Bednar said veteran forward Darren Helm likely won’t be able to play until “some time” early in the season. Helm, who played through an abdominal injury during Colorado’s Stanley Cup run last spring, is still recovering. A lack of a concrete timetable at this juncture is a bit concerning, however an early season return is nonetheless encouraging.

AHL| Colorado Avalanche| Injury| NHL| Players| Prospects| Waivers Alex Newhook| Darren Helm| Evan Rodrigues| Martin Kaut| Mikhail Maltsev

7 comments

New York Rangers Sign Jimmy Vesey

October 9, 2022 at 2:07 pm CDT | by John Gilroy 2 Comments

Jimmy Vesey has officially found his way back to the Big Apple. The New York Rangers announced this afternoon that they’ve signed the forward to a one-year deal. The team has not yet disclosed the salary or whether the contract is a one-way or two-way deal. The New York Post’s Mollie Walker reports that the deal is worth $750,000, the league minimum. Vesey had been in Rangers camp on a PTO after spending the 2021-22 season as a member of rival New Jersey Devils.

Much like Zach Aston-Reese who signed moments earlier with the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Rangers bring in a scrappy two-way forward of their own who should help them round out their game and contribute to the unsung areas of the game. Vesey was in fact one of the league’s better penalty killers during his time in New Jersey, where he also added an additional eight goals and seven assists in 68 games. Now 29, Vesey returns to the Rangers for the first time since the 2018-19 season, a career-year for him, but his last in Manhattan before the team dealt him upstate o the Buffalo Sabres that offseason.

Vesey is perhaps best known as the exciting prospect out of Harvard University who ultimately refused to sign his ELC with either team that held his rights – the Nashville Predators, who drafted him, and the Sabres, who acquired his rights. After becoming a free agent in the summer of 2016, a then-23-year-old Vesey opted to sign with the Rangers. The forward was far from bad during his first stint with the team, but he had failed to live up to the lofty expectations many had set for him. After being dealt to Buffalo in 2019, he bounced around, eventually spending time with Toronto, New Jersey, and even briefly the Vancouver Canucks.

Despite not putting up the offensive numbers he was once able to earlier in his career, Vesey did impress this season with the Devils, his ability to work hard and kill penalties evident, which seemed to give him an opportunity this offseason to prove he still belongs in the NHL. The Rangers gave him that opportunity with an invite to training camp in early September and the winger returned the favor with a strong showing in camp. Now, as the Rangers eye their first Stanley Cup since 1994, they’ll have another veteran to rely on, especially in the difficult situations along the way.

New York Rangers Jimmy Vesey

2 comments

Waivers: 10/09/22

October 9, 2022 at 12:05 pm CDT | by John Gilroy 9 Comments

With Monday’s season-opening roster deadline quickly approaching, the activity on the waiver wire is likely to pick up as teams get closer to making their final cuts.  We’ll keep track of today’s waiver placements here.

Anaheim Ducks

D Josh Mahura

Arizona Coyotes

F Laurent Dauphin
D Cam Dineen
G Jon Gillies
F Bokondji Imama

Boston Bruins

F Nick Foligno
D Mike Reilly
F Chris Wagner

Chicago Blackhawks

F Buddy Robinson

Colorado Avalanche

F Anton Blidh
F Mikhail Maltsev

Columbus Blue Jackets

F Emil Bemstrom

Dallas Stars

D Will Butcher

Detroit Red Wings

F Kyle Criscuolo
F Taro Hirose
G Jussi Olkinuora
F Givani Smith

Edmonton Oilers

F Devin Shore

Florida Panthers

D Michael Del Zotto
G Alex Lyon
F Gerald Mayhew
F Chris Tierney
F Aleksi Heponiemi
D Lucas Carlsson

Los Angeles Kings

G Pheonix Copley
D Jacob Moverare

Minnesota Wild

F Nic Petan
F Mason Shaw

Montreal Canadiens

D Madison Bowey
D Corey Schueneman

Nashville Predators

G Connor Ingram
F Mark Jankowski
D Roland McKeown
D Kevin Gravel
D Jordan Gross
F Jimmy Huntington

New Jersey Devils

F/D Mason Geertsen

New York Islanders

D Grant Hutton
F Otto Koivula
D Paul Ladue

New York Rangers

F Julien Gauthier
D Jarred Tinordi

Ottawa Senators 

F Jayce Hawryluk
F Scott Sabourin
D Jacob Larsson
G Antoine Bibeau

Philadelphia Flyers

F Zack MacEwen
F Cooper Marody

San Jose Sharks

G Aaron Dell
F Jeffrey Viel

Seattle Kraken

F John Hayden
D Michal Kempny

St. Louis Blues

F Josh Leivo

Tampa Bay Lightning

D Philippe Myers

Toronto Maple Leafs

F Kyle Clifford
F Adam Gaudette
D Victor Mete
F Wayne Simmonds

Vegas Golden Knights

F Jonas Rondbjerg

Washington Capitals 

F Axel Jonsson Fjällby 
F Henrik Borgstrom
F Brett Leason
D Lucas Johansen

Winnipeg Jets

F Jansen Harkins

This page will be updated throughout the day

AHL| Transactions| Waivers

9 comments

Training Camp Cuts: 10/09/22

October 9, 2022 at 9:07 am CDT | by John Gilroy Leave a Comment

It’s now less than 36 hours until teams are required to be cap-compliant and submit their opening-day rosters. With that being said, expect a flurry of training camp cuts today from teams that took advantage of their preseasons to take a long look at their organizational talent in an NHL environment. You’ll be able to keep tabs on all of today’s cuts right here.

Arizona Coyotes (via team tweet)

F Alex Chiasson (released from PTO)
F Michael Carcone (to Tucson, AHL)
F Jan Jenik (to Tucson, AHL)
D Vladislav Kolyachonok (to Tucson, AHL)

Chicago Blackhawks (via Charlie Roumeliotis, NBC Sports Chicago)

D Isaak Phillips (to Rockford, AHL)

Columbus Blue Jackets (via team release)

F Emil Bemstrom (to Cleveland, AHL)*
G Jet Greaves (to Cleveland, AHL)
D Ben Harpur (released from PTO)

Dallas Stars (via Matthew DeFranks, Dallas Morning News)

F Logan Stankoven (to Kamloops, WHL)
F Riley Damiani (to Texas, AHL)
F Thomas Harley (to Texas, AHL)

Detroit Red Wings (via press release)

F Pontus Andreasson (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
F Jonatan Berggren (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
F Austin Czarnik (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
F Cross Hanas (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
F Matt Luff (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
F Chase Pearson (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
F Dominik Shine (released from PTO; to Grand Rapids, AHL
D Simon Edvinsson (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
D Albert Johansson (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
D Steven Kampfer (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
D Jared McIsaac (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
D Wyatt Newpower (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
D Donovan Sebrango (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
D Eemil Viro (to Grand Rapids, AHL)
G Victor Brattstrom (to Grand Rapids, AHL)

Edmonton Oilers (via team tweet)

F Klim Kostin (to Bakersfield, AHL) (per Mark Spector, Sportsnet)
F Devin Shore (to Bakersfield, AHL)* (via team tweet)

Minnesota Wild (via Michael Russo, The Athletic)

F Nic Petan (to Iowa, AHL)*
F Mason Shaw (to Iowa, AHL)*

Montreal Canadiens (via team tweet)

D Madison Bowey (to Laval, AHL)*
D Corey Schueneman (to Laval, AHL)*

Ottawa Senators (via team tweet)

F Rourke Chartier (to Belleville, AHL)
F Jacob Lucchini (to Belleville, AHL)
F Zack Ostapchuk (to Vancouver, WHL)
D Jacob Bernard-Docker (to Belleville, AHL)
G Antoine Bibeau (to Belleville, AHL)*
F Jayce Hawryluk (to Belleville, AHL)*
D Jacob Larsson (to Belleville, AHL)*
F Scott Sabourin (to Belleville, AHL)*

Philadelphia Flyers (via Sam Carchidi, Philadelphia Hockey Now)

F Zack MacEwen (to Lehigh Valley, AHL)*
F Cooper Marody (to Lehigh Valley, AHL)*

Pittsburgh Penguins (via team release)

D Ty Smith (to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, AHL)

Seattle Kraken (via team tweet)

F John Hayden (to Coachella Valley, AHL)*
D Michal Kempny (to Coachella Valley, AHL)*

St. Louis Blues (per Andy Strickland, Bally Sports)

D Dmitri Samorukov (to Springfield, AHL)

Washington Capitals (via team tweet)

F Axel Jonsson Fjällby (to Hershey, AHL)*
F Henrik Borgstrom (to Hershey, AHL)*
F Brett Leason (to Hershey, AHL)*
D Lucas Johansen (to Hershey, AHL)*

Winnipeg Jets (via team tweet)

F Jansen Harkins (to Manitoba, AHL)*

*Pending waivers

This page will be updated throughout the day

AHL| Transactions

0 comments

2008 NHL Draft Take Two: Seventeenth Overall Pick

October 8, 2022 at 8:58 pm CDT | by John Gilroy Leave a Comment

Hindsight is an amazing thing, and allows us to look back and wonder “what could have been.”  Though perfection is attempted, scouting and draft selection is far from an exact science, and sometimes, it doesn’t work out the way teams – or players – intended. For every Patrick Kane, there is a Patrik Stefan.

We’re looking back at the 2008 NHL Entry Draft and asking how it would shake out knowing what we do now.  Will the first round remain the same, or will some late-round picks jump up to the top of the board?

The results of our redraft so far are as follows with their original draft position in parentheses:

1st Overall: Steven Stamkos, Tampa Bay Lightning (1)
2nd Overall: Drew Doughty, Los Angeles Kings (2)
3rd Overall: Roman Josi, Atlanta Thrashers (38)
4th Overall: Alex Pietrangelo, St. Louis Blues (4)
5th Overall: Erik Karlsson, Toronto Maple Leafs (15)
6th Overall: John Carlson, Columbus Blue Jackets (27)
7th Overall: Jacob Markstrom, Nashville Predators (31)
8th Overall: Braden Holtby, Phoenix Coyotes (93)
9th Overall: Jordan Eberle, New York Islanders (22)
10th Overall: Jared Spurgeon, Vancouver Canucks (156)
11th Overall: Cam Atkinson, Chicago Blackhawks (157)
12th Overall: T.J. Brodie, Buffalo Sabres (114)
13th Overall: Josh Bailey, Los Angeles Kings (9)
14th Overall: Adam Henrique, Carolina Hurricanes (82)
15th Overall: Tyler Myers, Ottawa Senators (12)
16th Overall: Gustav Nyquist, Boston Bruins (121)

Originally a fourth-round pick by the Detroit Red Wings in the real 2008 draft, Gustav Nyquist slides well up the board, over 100 spots, to 16th overall to the Boston Bruins in our redraft. Nyquist has had himself a strong career, spending the majority of his career with the Red Wings before a midseason trade to the San Jose Sharks in 2018-19. That offseason, Nyquist hit the free agent market and signed a four-year, $22MM contract with the Blue Jackets, which is set to expire after this season.

While Nyquist may never be remembered as a true superstar, the speedy winger has used his skill to be a regular scoring threat. He set a career-high with 28 goals in just 57 games back in 2013-14 with Detroit and his career-high 60 points came when he split the season in Detroit and San Jose. His 401 career points, which have come in 652 games, rank him 12th among all 2008 draftees. That would seem to justify being selected 16th in the re-draft, given the glut of defensemen and two star goalies chosen ahead of him here.

Leaving Nyquist and the 16th overall pick behind, we now turn to the 17th overall selection of the 2008 NHL Draft, which belonged to the Anaheim Ducks, who were one year removed from a Stanley Cup championship. The Ducks would use their pick to select defenseman Jake Gardiner, a Minnesota high school defenseman from Minnetonka High School. Gardiner would never have the star quality that players like Jordan Eberle or John Carlson, who were selected after him in that first round, however he was able to secure a lengthy career as a stable and reliable blueliner.

After being selected out of high school, Gardiner spent the following three seasons at the University of Wisconsin, becoming an intricate part of their program, including a runner-up finish in the 2010 NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey championship. During his junior year, just prior to turning pro, the Ducks dealt Gardiner, along with Joffrey Lupul an a fourth-round pick, for veteran defenseman Francois Beauchemin. Shortly after the trade and after his college season came to a close, Gardiner made his pro debut with the AHL’s Toronto Marlies.

The following season, 2011-12, Gardiner came onto the scene with the Maple Leafs. As a rookie, he posted seven goals and 23 assists over 75 games, good enough to earn him votes for the Calder Trophy. While Toronto would miss the playoffs that year, a then-21-year-old Gardiner represented a big, exciting piece of the rebuilder’s future core. With the 2012-13 lockout in effect, Gardiner spent a majority of the season in the AHL, dominating the league as a now-established NHLer. After that season the defenseman became a staple in the Maple Leafs lineup, rarely missing a game while providing quality defense and superb puck movement.

The 2017-18 season was a career-year for the Minnesota native, as he recorded 52 points, 47 of them assists, both career-highs. Following the 2018-19 season, Gardiner hit the open market and despite taking over two months to find a destination, he signed a four-year, $16.2MM contract with an exciting young Hurricanes squad. Gardiner would struggle to an extent in his first season down south, but remained healthy. However, his injury woes set in the following season, where he played just 26 games in the shortened 56 game season, as well as one postseason game. In the time since, Gardiner has undergone hip and back surgeries.

Gardiner missed more than a year after he last played in that 2021 postseason game before being cleared to return to hockey back in June of this year. That return was promising for the Hurricanes, who still have one more year on the contract at a $4.45MM salary ($4.05MM cap hit), however just as training camp was coming into full swing, it was reported that Gardiner had suffered a setback and would not be in camp. It’s unclear if this will be the end of the road for the veteran, but his recent setback doesn’t bode well.

For his career, Gardiner, now 32, has 49 goals and 228 assists coming in 645 career games. Regardless of how his tenure in Carolina played out, it seems clear that taking him at 17th overall was a safe bet and provided enough value to satisfy the Ducks, who chose him, and the Maple Leafs, who acquired him. In our redraft, Gardiner is still available, and a legitimate option at that, but who should be the pick knowing what we know now?

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Anaheim Ducks| Polls NHL Entry Draft| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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