Hurricanes, Eric Robinson Discussing Extension
An extension for winger Eric Robinson with the Hurricanes “sounds like it will happen,” Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet wrote in his “32 Thoughts” blog Tuesday. The 29-year-old became eligible to sign one on Jan. 1 after inking a one-year, $950K pact with Carolina in free agency last summer.
Robinson’s decision to take a prove-it deal with the Canes has worked out quite well for both sides. Carolina gained some much-needed cost-effective forward depth after losing Jake Guentzel, Stefan Noesen and Teuvo Teräväinen to the open market. At the same time, Robinson thrived in a depth role and positioned himself to land a significant raise on his next contract.
The Hurricanes have some important UFAs-to-be again this season, namely Brent Burns and Dmitry Orlov on the back end and another valuable depth scorer, Jack Roslovic, up front. It makes sense that general manager Eric Tulsky wants to get business done early with at least one of them.
Robinson is likely looking for stability after being traded from the Blue Jackets, where he started his career, to the Sabres last season and then landing with Carolina in free agency. He’s posted nine goals and 11 assists for 20 points through 41 games, on pace for a career-high 40 points while averaging 12 minutes per game.
Normally deployed as a checking winger with heavy defensive zone usage, Robinson’s offensive zone deployment under Rod Brind’Amour has skyrocketed. After starting over 60% of his 5-on-5 faceoffs in the defensive zone throughout his seven years in Columbus, he’s started 62.8% in the offensive end since arriving in Carolina. He’s also receiving semi-meaningful penalty kill minutes for the first time since the 2022-23 campaign.
His offensive pace likely puts his next contract in the $3MM neighborhood per season, with Dakota Joshua‘s recent four-year, $3.25MM AAV extension with the Canucks likely serving as a blueprint. The New Jersey native has never earned an AAV of more than $1.6MM on any of his five NHL contracts.
Rangers Rumors: Zibanejad, Trocheck, Jones
In the written edition of his “32 Thoughts” blog Tuesday night, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet expanded on a report yesterday from Josh Yohe of The Athletic that the Canucks turned down a one-for-one trade proposal from the Rangers that would have seen the clubs swap struggling top-six fixtures J.T. Miller and Mika Zibanejad.
Friedman “believe[s] he’s correct — with some semantics.” Those Miller-for-Zibanejad rumors, which started when the former took a brief leave of absence from Vancouver for personal reasons, were vehemently shut down by New York. At the same time, Canucks president of hockey operations Jim Rutherford quickly said that his team wasn’t interested in trading Miller, at least not while he was still on leave.
Fast forward to today, and all indications point to Miller and star pivot Elias Pettersson at least entering trade conversations amid speculative reports of a locker-room clash between the pair. But, as Friedman wrote, the Rangers didn’t quite come as close to landing their desired swap as it may have seemed at first glance.
Friedman doesn’t believe that Zibanejad, who has a no-move clause, “was ever approached” by Rangers management about accepting a move to Vancouver. There were likely other moving parts in the framework of the deal being discussed, namely up-and-coming Blueshirts defender Braden Schneider, that New York wasn’t willing to move to make happen. Friedman adds this is the second time the Rangers have rejected an attempt from the Canucks to acquire Schneider, now in his fourth NHL season after being selected 19th overall in 2020.
There’s more from Friedman on the Rangers’ trade plans leading up to the deadline:
- Should they enter an aggressive sell-off mode, New York’s highest-value trade asset would be center Vincent Trocheck. He’s having a more productive season offensively than Zibanejad, albeit slightly, with a still-disappointing 27 points in 40 games. Like Zibanejad, he carries a no-movement clause but costs a far more affordable $5.625MM against the cap through 2029 than Zibanejad’s $8.5MM cap hit through 2030. Nonetheless, Rangers general manager Chris Drury won’t entertain the idea of trading him, Friedman reports, going so far as to suggest he could be Jacob Trouba‘s successor to the captaincy after the latter was traded to the Ducks last month.
- One player definitely on the block for the Rangers is defenseman Zac Jones, who Friedman reports the Rangers have permitted to speak to other teams about a longer-term fit. The pending restricted free agent was expected to land a more prominent role this season with Erik Gustafsson out the door in free agency, but he’s still been a healthy scratch for a good portion of the campaign – suiting up in 26 of the Blueshirts’ 40 games. Jones, 24, has a goal and seven assists for eight points with a plus-two rating, ranking second among Rangers defenders behind Schneider’s plus-six. He’s averaging a career-high 16:42 per game when dressed, seeing expanded power-play usage but posting mediocre possession numbers.
Senators’ Jacob Bernard-Docker Out Long-Term With High Ankle Sprain
Senators defenseman Jacob Bernard-Docker will miss an extended period while recovering from a high ankle sprain, head coach Travis Green told TSN 1200 Ottawa on Tuesday.
Bernard-Docker, 24, sustained the injury in practice on Monday after taking an awkward spill into the boards. He immediately left the session for evaluation, and it was clear he would miss time when Ottawa recalled Max Guenette from AHL Belleville earlier today. Bernard-Docker is likely headed for IR to accommodate Guenette’s recall.
The Sens’ second of two first-round picks in 2018 after Brady Tkachuk, Bernard-Docker has established himself as a roster fixture but not much more than that. He’s made 25 appearances this season and spent a good bit of time in the press box, posting a goal and three assists for four points and a plus-two rating when healthy.
Bernard-Docker has averaged 13:06 of ice time per game, down from last season’s 15:42 mark and no longer receiving fringe penalty kill deployment. That’s despite the Alberta native putting up better possession metrics at even strength, controlling 50.6% of shot attempts.
His usual pairing with Tyler Kleven has been on the ice for 10 goals, second on the team behind the Thomas Chabot–Nick Jensen pairing’s 33, per MoneyPuck. When dressed, he’s been an effective third-pairing piece, one the Sens will miss for the next few weeks despite the limited minutes he’s vacating.
Recovery from a high ankle sprain usually lasts around six weeks, meaning JBD should be back in action in mid-to-late-February if all goes well.
Cody Ceci Interested In Extension With Sharks
Pending unrestricted free agent defenseman Cody Ceci hopes to begin talks on a contract extension with the Sharks later this month, he told Curtis Pashelka of The Mercury News on Wednesday.
San Jose general manager Mike Grier acquired Ceci from the Oilers and a 2025 third-round pick in exchange for depth defender Ty Emberson in August. Ceci is in the final season of a four-year deal with a $3.25MM cap hit, which ended up being a tad too rich for incoming Edmonton GM Stan Bowman‘s blood as he looked to retool the roster for another run to the Stanley Cup Final.
The trade has worked out reasonably well for both sides. The Oilers gained over $2MM in cap space and have gotten serviceable minutes out of Emberson, who has five assists and a minus-four rating in 37 appearances. San Jose gained a veteran presence who can log heavier minutes in Ceci, who’s averaging 22:02 per game this season – second on the team behind Jake Walman.
The 31-year-old Ceci has 11 points through 42 games, roughly in line with the offensive totals many have come to expect from the 2012 first-round pick. He leads the team with 73 blocked shots, but that’s also indicative of a lack of possession control. His 43.1 CF% at even-strength is fifth-worst among Sharks with at least 10 games played this season, and his -13.8 expected rating, while exaggerated slightly due to his heavy minutes, is the worst on the club.
That said, he’s been given difficult usage on one of the league’s thinnest blue lines. Ceci averages 18:43 per game just at even strength, leading second-place Mario Ferraro by more than a minute, and is the only Shark averaging more than three minutes per contest on the penalty kill.
All told, he’s putting up similar results to his numbers in a complementary role in Edmonton the past few years while receiving arguably the most challenging minutes of his 12-year NHL career. Whether there’s mutual interest in a commitment past this season remains to be seen. However, it would make sense for the Sharks to retain at least one of Ceci or Jan Rutta – both veteran pending UFAs – as short-term stop gaps until more defense prospects like Sam Dickinson and Shakir Mukhamadullin are ready for top-four minutes.
From Ceci’s point of view, he likely wouldn’t receive more playing time – or money – anywhere else. San Jose projects to have $37.9MM in cap space next season, assuming an upper limit increase to $92MM, with just seven roster spots to fill. He’d likely earn a bit of a premium, at least on his average annual value on a two- or three-year extension, compared to other destinations on the open market.
Islanders Recall Grant Hutton
The Islanders recalled defenseman Grant Hutton from AHL Bridgeport on Tuesday, Stefen Rosner of The Hockey News reports. Winger Simon Holmström, who’s been out since Dec. 29 with an upper-body injury, was placed on injured reserve to open up a roster spot, Rosner adds. The team also moved defenseman Mike Reilly, who had been on IR since November after undergoing a heart procedure, to LTIR to give the Isles the necessary salary cap flexibility to add Hutton.
Hutton, 29, comes up to serve as an extra defenseman for the Islanders’ two-game Western Conference road trip. Rookie Isaiah George, who remains day-to-day with the upper-body injury he sustained last Thursday against the Maple Leafs, didn’t travel with the club, per Rosner.
Most of New York’s defensemen have spent time on IR this season, allowing players like Hutton to get some reps. The Indiana native played in 12 games in November and December, logging two assists and a plus-one rating while averaging 14:09 per game. The 6’4″, 214-lb righty controlled only 42.2% of shot attempts when he was on the ice at 5-on-5, but the stay-at-home defender was deployed as such and was primarily given defensive zone starts.
A pending unrestricted free agent, Hutton also has three assists and a plus-two rating in 15 appearances for Bridgeport. The former Miami University captain has spent his entire professional career in the Islanders organization, where he signed as an undrafted free agent in 2019. He’s now in his seventh season with the Baby Isles, amassing 89 points and a minus-six rating across 242 games.
He’s peaked as a replacement-level third-pairing piece, but getting so many professional games out of an undrafted pickup means the Islanders have gotten a good return on their investment. He’ll presumably sit as an extra defenseman on Thursday against the Golden Knights. It’s worth noting the Islanders are only carrying 12 healthy forwards on their road trip, though, so if one sustains an injury, he could draw into the lineup as a result of head coach Patrick Roy dressing 11 forwards and seven defenders.
Holmström, who’s already missed three games, can come off IR at any time upon their return home. He has nine goals and 22 points through 37 contests, on pace to shatter last year’s career-best 25 points in 75 games.
Oilers, Canucks Among Teams With Interest In Penguins’ Marcus Pettersson
The Oilers and Canucks have demonstrated interest in acquiring defenseman Marcus Pettersson from the Penguins ahead of the March 7 trade deadline, Josh Yohe of The Athletic reports Tuesday.
At least on paper, Edmonton and Vancouver have much more precise needs for a right-shot defender than a lefty like Pettersson. He hasn’t logged significant time playing on his off side since his first NHL stint with the Ducks in the 2017-18 season, either.
That being said, both clubs need to add at least one defenseman – preferably one with historically strong possession impacts like Pettersson – to be in great shape heading into the postseason in Edmonton’s case and a passable shape in Vancouver’s case. There’s a far more apparent need for Pettersson in British Columbia than in Alberta, where he’d be competing for top-four minutes with Darnell Nurse and likely pushing Brett Kulak to the latter’s offside.
The Canucks would immediately have Pettersson slot in as their No. 2 left defender behind Quinn Hughes, giving them a much more competent and well-rounded top-four group once Filip Hronek returns to the lineup from his lower-body injury. Acquiring arguably the best pure defensive blue-liner that’s set to be available on deadline day, especially one who’s controlled over 50% of shot attempts when on the ice at even strength in all of his seven seasons with the Penguins, would be a significant boon to a Vancouver squad that’s only controlling 49.4% of shot attempts and 48.7% of scoring chances at 5-on-5.
Over in Edmonton, Nurse has proved that reports of his demise are only slightly exaggerated this season. He’s got 17 points through 36 games, up from last season’s pace, and has been one-half of Edmonton’s best shutdown pairing this season when deployed with Kulak on his right. That duo only allows 1.83 expected goals against per 60 minutes, seventh-best in the league among pairings with over 200 minutes together, per MoneyPuck.
Still, Pettersson’s raw shot attempts numbers this season (52.5 CF%) are better than Nurse’s (50.8 CF%) at even strength, as are his relative impacts on a much weaker possession team in Pittsburgh. Acquiring him would allow the Oilers to roll out the effective Nurse-Kulak duo against lesser competition in a third-pairing role while pairing Pettersson with one of Ty Emberson or Troy Stecher.
Yohe reports that more teams will undoubtedly call the Pens about Pettersson’s services, and a trade is a matter of when, not if. Even with Pittsburgh hanging around a playoff spot, the club “only has so many players without no-trade clauses” and is “almost certainly as good as gone” as a pending unrestricted free agent.
That leaves the question of which club is in a better position to take on his $4.025MM cap hit, although the Penguins still have a pair of retention slots open and would likely be willing to slash that cap hit to $2.01MM for additional assets since it’s an expiring deal. The Oilers can only swing if Evander Kane remains on long-term injured reserve for the remainder of the season; otherwise, they only have $1.02MM in projected deadline space, per PuckPedia. The Canucks are in a similar boat with Hronek on LTIR and only project to have $1.33MM in deadline space, although both clubs will up those numbers with some minor moves in the days leading up to March 7.
Rangers Place Chris Kreider On Injured Reserve
11:30 a.m.: Rempe has officially been added back to the roster today, per a team announcement.
9:49 a.m.: The Rangers placed left-winger Chris Kreider on injured reserve Tuesday, reports Larry Brooks of the New York Post. The move is retroactive to his last appearance on Saturday against the Capitals. It rules him out for their next three contests with an upper-body injury, including tonight’s game against the Stars and Thursday’s rivalry matchup with the Devils. They now have an open roster spot, which, as Brooks notes, could go to winger Matt Rempe after he was sent down yesterday to make room for waiver claim Arthur Kaliyev.
As Colin Stephenson of Newsday points out, doing so would mean Rempe serves the final game of his eight-game suspension for elbowing Stars defenseman Miro Heiskanen today. He would then be available to re-enter the lineup for the New Jersey game.
Kreider’s upper-body issue may be recurring, partially explaining why the 6’3″ winger’s point production has fallen off a cliff this season. He also missed three games with a UBI in November.
It is unfortunate timing for the 33-year-old, who was on a season-high three-game point streak before exiting the lineup. After scoring the first goal of the game in a 7-4 loss to Washington, he sat out the following day’s 6-2 win over the Blackhawks.
Despite still seeing consistent top-six usage, Kreider has 15 points in 34 games this year – just 0.44 per game. That would be the lowest rate of his 13-year career aside from a 23-game trial in the 2012-13 campaign, his first taste of NHL regular-season hockey.
13 of those 15 points are goals, still putting him on pace for a strong 31 goals if he played a full 82 games. Still, that would check out as his worst total since the 2020-21 season, notwithstanding his paltry two helpers on the year.
Before his injury, Kreider’s struggling second line, including Mika Zibanejad and Reilly Smith, was beginning to turn things around. The latter two also have active three-game point streaks. According to MoneyPuck, the trio has now controlled 51.2% of expected goals on the year after sitting below 50% through most of the early going.
Even through his struggles and trade rumors this season, Kreider still ranks second on the Blueshirts in goals behind Artemi Panarin‘s 16 in 37 games. Generating offense has been an issue overall for the Rangers, who are 21st in the league at 2.90 goals per game. That’s down sharply from last year’s 3.39 mark, which placed them seventh in the league amid a Presidents’ Trophy-winning season.
Kreider will be eligible to return on Jan. 14 against the Avalanche if his health allows.
Senators Recall Max Guenette
The Senators recalled defenseman Max Guenette from AHL Belleville on Tuesday, per a team announcement. The move indicates Jacob Bernard-Docker will be unavailable for tonight’s game against the Red Wings after sustaining a lower-body injury in Monday’s practice. Guenette puts Ottawa one over the active roster limit, so a corresponding transaction, likely an injured reserve placement of some kind, is still coming.
It’s Guenette’s first recall of the season but not the first of his career. The 23-year-old has logged eight appearances for the Sens since the 2022-23 campaign, posting a minus-two rating and eight shots on goal while averaging 13:10 of time on ice per game.
A seventh-round pick by Ottawa in 2019, Guenette has already given the Senators positive value on their selection just by beating the odds to appear in an NHL contest. The Sens have controlled 46.2% of shot attempts with Guenette on the ice at even strength in his limited minutes – not great, but not painting him as a humongous liability, either. He’s a fine replacement-level call-up at this stage of his career with more room still to grow.
Whether he’ll get the chance to show that ceiling on this call-up is uncertain, however. Ottawa also summoned Nikolas Matinpalo from Belleville yesterday, so even with Bernard-Docker out and Travis Hamonic heading to injured reserve, Guenette is likely to sit in the press box for tonight’s game unless another injury strikes.
Guenette, a Quebec native, has nine points and a team-high +16 rating in 27 games for Belleville this season. Emerging as their top shutdown option, Guenette also serves as an alternate captain for the B-Sens in what’s now his fourth season of professional hockey.
In terms of who may land on IR to make room for Guenette’s recall, Bernard-Docker and goaltender Linus Ullmark are the likely options. JBD’s placement will be contingent on the results of his post-injury evaluation, while Ullmark has already missed multiple games with a back strain and could be eligible for activation at any time.
Predators Recall Kevin Gravel
The Predators have recalled veteran defenseman Kevin Gravel for the second time in as many months, the team announced Monday. Jeremy Lauzon, who’s missed the last two games with a lower-body injury, has landed on injured reserve in a corresponding transaction. The move was previously reflected in yesterday’s AHL transactions log but wasn’t made official by the team until today.
Recalling Gravel gives Nashville an extra defender on hand for tomorrow’s game against the Jets. They’re down two right now with Lauzon and Adam Wilsby (upper body, day-to-day) both on injured reserve.
In fact, Gravel projects to be the only extra healthy skater available for Nashville on Tuesday. The Preds are also carrying just 12 healthy forwards with Zachary L’Heureux serving the final game of his suspension for slew-footing Wild captain Jared Spurgeon and Thomas Novak dealing with an upper-body injury despite remaining on the active roster.
Gravel appeared in three games for Nashville last month while injuries plagued Lauzon, Alexandre Carrier and Roman Josi. The 32-year-old recorded an assist and a +2 rating while averaging 18:19 per contest, the highest usage of his seven-year, 135-game NHL career.
It was Gravel’s first NHL appearance since skating in 23 games with the Preds in the 2022-23 season. The Michigan native has spent the last three years in the organization, primarily playing for the Milwaukee Admirals, their AHL affiliate. He’s made 25 AHL appearances this year, posting five points and a -4 rating. He served as the club’s captain last season.
He’ll remain in Nashville/Milwaukee for at least one more season after he inked a two-year extension midway through the 2023-24 campaign. The 6’4″ lefty was a fifth-round pick of the Kings back in 2010 and has also logged games for the Oilers and Maple Leafs in addition to his time in Hollywood and Nashville.
Lauzon last played on Dec. 31 against Minnesota. He’ll sit out tomorrow’s contest but is eligible to return on Saturday against the Capitals if his health allows. He also missed 10 games with a lower-body issue in November and December, but has one assist and 127 hits in 28 appearances this season when healthy.
Gary Bettman Meets With Group Regarding Arizona Expansion Franchise
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman recently met with a newly formed committee of Maricopa County “political and business leaders” interested in pursuing an expansion franchise to bring the league back to the Arizona market, former Coyotes beat writer Craig Morgan reports.
The now-deactivated Coyotes franchise’s hopes of a revival, at least under former majority owner Alex Meruelo, ended in June when the Arizona State Land Department canceled an auction Meruelo intended to use to purchase a plot for a new arena and entertainment district because the organization failed to obtain the proper zoning permits. Shortly after, Meruelo informed Coyotes staff that he was relinquishing ownership of the franchise and officially returned the team’s branding and intellectual property to the league a few weeks later.
The situation ended a years-long saga in which multiple owners, Meruelo in particular, failed to stabilize the fledgling club on and off the ice. In the 2022 offseason, the team was effectively kicked out of its longtime, inconveniently located home in Glendale, forcing it to strike a deal with Arizona State University to share its new multipurpose Mullett Arena, which held fewer than 5,000 people for hockey.
After two years in the temporary facility and no firm plan for a permanent home in sight, Meruelo struck a multi-part deal with the league to sell the franchise to Salt Lake City-based Smith Entertainment Group, birthing the Utah Hockey Club out of the Coyotes’ former hockey operations assets. Meruelo could reactivate the Coyotes franchise and trigger an expansion draft if specific timelines were met on a new arena. However, after the auction was canceled, that was no longer plausible.
So, while the potential of the Coyotes’ name and logo resurfacing in the coming years persists, it will be with a blank slate roster-wise and ownership-wise in a new arena. Maricopa County Board of Supervisors chairman Tom Galvin, who’s at the head of the advisory committee, told Morgan that he’s “had several meetings with NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman and he looks forward to working with us to identify an owner and the best location for a world-class building.”
There’s still much work to be done before Arizona can once again be seriously considered as an expansion destination, though. Not only does the advisory committee need to develop a pathway toward building a new NHL-caliber facility, but they also need to identify a stable ownership group willing to take on the project. That could come from NBA Phoenix Suns owner Mat Ishbia, who told Barry M. Bloom of Sportico in July that he’s interested in acquiring an expansion franchise and has long-term plans to build a new arena in downtown Phoenix.
