Avalanche Release Pierre-Édouard Bellemare

The Avalanche have released Pierre-Édouard Bellemare, per a team announcement. Bellemare was attempting to land his second contract in Colorado on a PTO as a fourth-line piece.

While this may mark the end of the road for Bellemare in the NHL, don’t expect him to hang up his skates. The 39-year-old said in August that if an NHL opportunity didn’t materialize, he’d likely head overseas to Skellefteå AIK of the Swedish Hockey League, where he played from 2009 to 2014.

Bellemare has 64 goals, 74 assists, and 138 points over 700 career appearances, getting a late start to his NHL career with the Flyers at age 29 after spending the early part of his prime playing in Sweden. That includes 122 games over a previous stint with the Avalanche, where he had a career-high 22 points in 69 games during the 2019-20 campaign.

Despite a lengthy track record of being a serviceable fourth-line center over the past decade, it wasn’t surprising to see Bellemare settle for a PTO. The Frenchman looked like he lost a step last season after signing a one-year deal with the Kraken, limited to seven points in 40 games and serving as a routine healthy scratch for the first time since arriving in North America. He averaged a career-low 9:50 per game and had a diminished effect physically, laying 20 hits after a lengthy history of averaging at least one per game.

Still an international team fixture for his native France, Bellemare has reached the Stanley Cup Final twice, with the Golden Knights in 2018 and with the Lightning in 2022, although he was on the losing end both times. He’d likely still be a decent depth piece for Skellefteå if he decides to return to Sweden (and if there’s a spot for him). He’d join a squad headlined by Red Wings first-round picks Michael Brandsegg-Nygård and Axel Sandin-Pellikka that’s off to a strong 4-1-0 start in SHL league play.

As for the Avalanche, they’re still looking for a veteran to hold down their fourth-line center spot. Look for them to make a claim off waivers in the coming days to address that vacancy.

Flames Reassign Jonathan Aspirot, Clark Bishop

Oct. 3: Aspirot and Bishop were returned to the Wranglers today, the team announced.

Oct. 2: After they both cleared waivers on Sunday, the Flames have summoned defenseman Jonathan Aspirot and center Clark Bishop back from the AHL’s Calgary Wranglers, per team announcement.

They’ll be returned to the Wranglers before opening night rosters are due Monday. For now, they’ll get another brief look in exhibition play, presumably in tonight’s contest against the Jets.

Aspirot, 26, is entering the sixth professional season of his career, which has been spent entirely in the AHL. He spent four years in the Senators organization with Belleville before signing a contract with the Wranglers for 2023-24. Calgary brought him back to their affiliate for this season by signing him to a two-way deal ($775K/$140K) on July 3.

The 6’0″, 201-lb defender has also played left wing at points during his career but has consistently stuck on the blue line since arriving in Alberta. A decent minor-league two-way threat, he posted career highs across the board last year with 27 assists and 33 points in 66 appearances for the Wranglers. He likely isn’t very high on the list of potential call-ups, but a good showing tonight could help him make some headway.

Unlike Aspirot, Bishop has NHL experience, but none since skating in nine games with the Senators in the 2021-22 campaign. He’s appeared in 47 career contests at the top level with Ottawa and Carolina, scoring once and adding seven assists for eight points with a -6 rating. The 28-year-old was a fifth-round pick of the Hurricanes back in 2014 and is entering his third season in the Flames organization. He posted 22 points (10 G, 12 A) in 57 games for the Wranglers last year with 72 PIMs and a -2 rating.

Robin Lehner Won’t Count Against Golden Knights’ Salary Cap

Goaltender Robin Lehner will carry a $0 cap hit for the Golden Knights this season, reports Frank Seravalli of Daily Faceoff. They’d reportedly been exploring options to terminate his contract after he failed to report for his pre-training camp physical, which Lehner said was pre-planned.

The 33-year-old is entering the final season of a five-year, $25MM contract, but he’s missed all of the last two seasons after undergoing double hip surgery. He was expected to remain on long-term injured reserve for all of the 2024-25 campaign as well, but Vegas couldn’t have placed him there without him failing a physical.

Since he didn’t report, Vegas was in a tricky situation, requiring the league and NHLPA to step in. They’ve now reached a resolution that will still involve Lehner receiving his $4.4MM salary for this season, per Seravalli, but he’ll effectively be suspended without pay as it relates to Vegas’ salary cap picture.

That takes a ton of workload off general manager Kelly McCrimmon’s plate. The Golden Knights would have had no issues starting the season with a cap-compliant roster with Lehner on LTIR, but that wouldn’t have allowed them to accrue cap space throughout the year. They’ll now be able to accrue space by operating without LTIR. It’ll be a significant amount of flexibility, too – with a full roster, they’ll have $1.36MM in projected space on opening night with Lehner essentially off the books, per PuckPedia.

At this stage, if it wasn’t already, Lehner’s NHL career should be considered over. The Swedish netminder made 364 appearances in parts of 12 seasons with the Senators, Sabres, Knights, Islanders, and Blackhawks, posting a strong .917 career SV% and 2.71 GAA with a 152-141-49 record and 17 shutouts.

Bruins Recall Fabian Lysell

The Bruins have recalled right-winger Fabian Lysell from AHL Providence, the team announced. It’s not an indication that their top forward prospect will make the opening night roster, rather, it allows them to give him another viewing in exhibition action, likely this weekend’s preseason finale against the Capitals, although he could also suit up tonight in Quebec City against the Kings.

Boston cut Lysell from its training camp roster last weekend, so unless an injury gives him an opening to land a job, he’ll be returned to Providence before rosters are due on Oct. 7. Lysell, 21, has yet to make his NHL debut since the B’s drafted him 21st overall in 2021. He’s impressed in AHL action, though, scoring 29 goals and 58 assists for 87 points in 110 appearances with the P-Bruins over the last two seasons.

While he took a step forward last year with 50 points in 56 games and had a goal in three preseason contests for Boston last month, it wasn’t enough to convince the Bruins he’s ready for NHL minutes. There was an opportunity for him to capture a middle-six wing role, potentially on the second line alongside Charlie Coyle and Brad Marchand, but all indications point toward Morgan Geekie filling that role with PTO camp invite Tyler Johnson trending toward landing a contract.

Lysell should still be near the top of Boston’s list for in-season recalls, so he shouldn’t have to go much longer before making his NHL debut. He’s still got two seasons left or 160 NHL appearances, whichever comes first, before he requires waivers to head to the minors.

Blue Jackets Place Gavin Brindley On Season-Opening Injured Reserve

Blue Jackets prospect Gavin Brindley sustained a broken finger in Tuesday’s exhibition win over the Blues and will miss four to six weeks in recovery, general manager Don Waddell said. He’s been placed on season-opening injured reserve and won’t count against the 23-man limit to start the season. The Jackets also assigned defenseman Ole Julian Bjørgvik-Holm to AHL Cleveland, cutting him from their training camp roster.

It’s a tough break for Brindley, who was in the running to crack Columbus’ roster in his first training camp with the club. A spectacular 2023-24 season at the University of Michigan vaulted the 19-year-old up the organizational depth chart, leading the Wolverines in scoring with 25 goals and 53 points in 40 games while being named the Big Ten’s player of the year. He signed his entry-level contract following Michigan’s elimination from the national tournament and made his NHL debut in the Jackets’ final game of the season against the Hurricanes, posting zeros across the board in 12:20 of ice time.

The diminutive 5’9″, 168-lb forward was viewed as a potential first-round threat in 2023 but fell to Columbus in the early second at 34th overall, largely due to concerns over his size. It hasn’t stopped the high-end playmaking winger from making a major impact at the collegiate and international junior levels, though. Brindley also scored six goals and 10 points in seven games at this year’s World Juniors en route to a gold medal with the United States. He also made his senior national team debut with a goal in five games at the World Championship.

Brindley’s timeline for a return puts his potential season debut during the first half of November. Whether that comes with the Jackets or AHL Cleveland remains to be seen. He doesn’t require waivers, so upon returning to health, he can be ferried directly to the minors without any hassle.

With Justin Danforth still likely on the shelf to start the year due to a wrist injury, there’s one forward spot open in Columbus that Brindley was in contention for. That competition is now down to a more experienced list of Dylan GambrellOwen Sillinger, and 23-year-old Mikael Pyyhtia to open the season as the Jackets’ fourth-line left wing.

Training Camp Cuts: 10/3/24

We’re still five days away from opening night, but the regular season technically kicks off tomorrow, with the Devils and Sabres taking each other on in Prague. Most teams have trimmed over a third of their initial training camp rosters by this point, and most have no more than five to 10 cuts left to make – if that – before they reach their final form. Today should mark some of the last minor moves involving players who never had much of a shot, with the weekend signaling an end to much fiercer camp battles. All of Thursday’s cuts will be listed here:

Last updated 5:03 p.m.

Buffalo Sabres (per team announcement)

Tyson Kozak (to AHL Rochester)

Calgary Flames (per team announcement)

Hunter Brzustewicz (to AHL Calgary)
Martin Frk (to AHL Calgary)
Justin Kirkland (to AHL Calgary)
Sam Morton (to AHL Calgary)

Columbus Blue Jackets (per team release)

D Ole Julian Bjørgvik-Holm (to AHL Cleveland)

Nashville Predators (per team release)

Zachary L’Heureux (to AHL Milwaukee)
Ozzy Wiesblatt (to AHL Milwaukee)
Adam Wilsby (to AHL Milwaukee)

New York Rangers (per team announcement)

Benoit-Olivier Groulx (to AHL Hartford)

Pittsburgh Penguins (per team announcement)

D Mac Hollowell (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Jimmy Huntington (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
F Marc Johnstone (to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)

Seattle Kraken (per team announcement)

Cale Fleury (to AHL Coachella Valley, pending waivers)

Toronto Maple Leafs (per team announcement)

Nicholas Abruzzese (to AHL Toronto, pending waivers)
Matt Anderson (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Matthew Barbolini (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Jacob Bengtsson (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Jacob Frasca (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Jon Gillies (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
F Mathieu Gosselin (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Dennis Hildeby (to AHL Toronto)
Braeden Kressler (to AHL Toronto)
Brandon Lisowsky (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Robert Mastrosimone (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Ryan McCleary (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Tommy Miller (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Rhett Parsons (released from ATO to AHL Toronto)
Vyacheslav Peksa (to AHL Toronto)
Chas Sharpe (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Marko Sikic (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Zach Solow (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
Sam Stevens (released from PTO to AHL Toronto)
William Villeneuve (to AHL Toronto)
Ty Voit (to AHL Toronto)

Utah Hockey Club (per team announcement) – waivers separate

Andrew Agozzino (to AHL Tucson, pending waivers)
Miloš Kelemen (to AHL Tucson)
Patrik Koch (to AHL Tucson, pending waivers)
Maveric Lamoureux (to AHL Tucson)
Ben McCartney (to AHL Tucson, pending waivers)
Aku Raty (to AHL Tucson)
Maksymilian Szuber (to AHL Tucson)

Winnipeg Jets (per the team’s Mitchell Clinton)

Tyrel Bauer (to AHL Manitoba)
Axel Jonsson-Fjällby (to AHL Manitoba, pending waivers)
Dmitry Kuzmin (to AHL Manitoba)
Simon Lundmark (to AHL Manitoba, pending waivers)
Thomas Milic (to AHL Manitoba)
Mason Shaw (to AHL Manitoba, pending waivers)
Dominic Toninato (to AHL Manitoba, pending waivers)

Waiver Wire: 10/2/24

Twelve new faces were placed on waivers Wednesday, per PuckPedia. All who were waived yesterday cleared, aside from goaltender Jiří Patera, who’s heading from Vancouver to Boston. Here’s the listing of today’s players who hit the wire:

Carolina Hurricanes

Spencer Martin

Colorado Avalanche

Jack Ahcan
Matthew Phillips
D Calle Rosén

Columbus Blue Jackets

Trey Fix-Wolansky

New York Rangers

Benoit-Olivier Groulx

Pittsburgh Penguins

Mac Hollowell
Jimmy Huntington
F Marc Johnstone

Philadelphia Flyers

Calvin Petersen

San Jose Sharks

Andrew Poturalski
Scott Sabourin

Bruins Claim Jiří Patera From Canucks

The Bruins have claimed goaltender Jiří Patera off waivers from the Canucks, PuckPedia reports.

Patera is the only player out of 28 who were waived yesterday to be claimed. The 25-year-old reached Group VI UFA status this summer with only eight career NHL appearances under his belt with the Golden Knights.

Patera signed a two-year, two-way deal in Vancouver to initially serve as their No. 3 option behind Thatcher Demko and Arturs Silovs, but he’d slipped to fourth on the depth chart after they signed Kevin Lankinen late in the summer. He was still projected to start the season as their third-stringer, with Demko set to start the year on the shelf with a continuing knee injury, but became more expandable with the veteran Lankinen in the fold.

It’s still a blow to Vancouver’s thinning goalie depth and a boon for the Bruins, who add some insurance between the pipes with RFA Jeremy Swayman still likely to be unsigned by the time their season opener rolls around next week. It’s now a two-man competition between Patera and 26-year-old Brandon Bussi, who also requires waivers, to start the year as Joonas Korpisalo‘s backup. They’ll now choose which name to expose to the wire before opening night.

Given their similar ages, Bussi is probably the higher-ceiling option for the B’s. He has a strong .918 SV% in 78 AHL games with Providence over the past three years, although he’s yet to make his NHL debut. Patera has worse but still solid career AHL numbers with a .907 SV% through 85 appearances, and his brief NHL action with Vegas was fine – a .902 mark with a 3.57 GAA through seven starts and one relief appearance over the past two years.

Suppose Boston keeps Bussi as the backup to open the season and places Patera on waivers again to try and pass him to Providence. In that case, the Canucks can re-claim him and send him directly to their AHL affiliate in Abbotsford if they’re the only team to submit a claim.

If the Bruins decide/manage to retain Patera, it’s a solid move to acquire some experienced goalie depth for not just this season but the next one, too. Vancouver likely hoped the second year of the two-way pact would dissuade teams from making a claim, but it didn’t work out that way.

Blue Jackets Recall Three, Make Other Roster Moves

Oct. 2: Clayton, Svozil, and Sawchenko were returned to Cleveland today while Gaudet was released from his PTO, the Blue Jackets confirmed.

Oct. 1: The Blue Jackets have recalled defensemen Cole ClaytonStanislav Svozil, and goaltender Zachary Sawchenko from AHL Cleveland, general manager Don Waddell announced Tuesday. They’ve also signed forward Jake Gaudet, who is under contract with Cleveland for this season, to a PTO and assigned forward Hunter McKown to the minors.

The moves come with three preseason games still left on Columbus’ schedule this week, including a home-and-home against the Penguins on Thursday and Friday. Adding some of their earlier training camp cuts back to the training camp roster gives them more flexibility to rest their regulars, likely saving most of them for the finale against Pittsburgh.

Clayton, 24, is an intriguing name to watch entering his fourth professional season. The right-shot defender went undrafted out of the WHL’s Medicine Hat Tigers, signing an AHL deal with Cleveland in 2021 and spending three years there before landing a one-year entry-level deal with Columbus this past summer.

The Alberta native has good size at 6’2″ and 209 lbs and is coming off a career-best year on the farm, finishing fourth among Cleveland defenders in scoring with 20 points (5 G, 15 A) in 59 games with a +4 rating. His skating is a concern, and he’s not overly physical for his frame, but he does have good playmaking skills and could be a fringe NHL option down the line. He’ll get at least one more chance to prove his worth in exhibition competition before returning to Cleveland in the coming days.

Svozil was a third-rounder back in 2021, later than some thought he’d go after spending nearly the entire season in the top-level Czech Extraliga. Now 21, the left-shot blue liner is coming off a strong rookie season with Cleveland that saw him post five goals and 18 assists for 23 points in 57 games with a +1 rating.

He didn’t see NHL action last season but did make his debut at the tail end of the 2022-23 campaign, recording an assist and a -3 rating in two appearances. He has two years left on his entry-level contract and is expected to log top-four minutes for Cleveland this year. He should be considered for a mid-season recall if injuries strike.

Sawchenko, 26, was signed purely as organizational depth between the pipes this summer as a Group VI UFA. He spent last season on a two-way deal with the Canucks, but injuries limited him to just six appearances with AHL Abbotsford. He was strong in his limited run, though, posting a 2.12 GAA and .924 SV% with a 4-1-0 record. His career-average .898 SV% in the minors leaves much to be desired, though. He’s the fourth goalie on the Blue Jackets’ depth chart and will serve as the backup to Jet Greaves this season in Cleveland after clearing waivers last Saturday.

Gaudet, 28, will likely get a nice opportunity to skate in an exhibition game but don’t expect it to lead to an NHL deal down the line. The 6’2″, 201-lb center split last season between AHL Cleveland and ECHL Cincinnati, posting 12 points in 49 AHL contests and seven points in 10 ECHL games. He’s spent his entire professional career under contract with Cleveland after a four-year run with UMass, which ended with him captaining them to a national championship in 2021.

McKown, 22, will start the season in Cleveland after being cut from camp for the second year in a row. An undrafted free agent signing out of Colorado College in 2022-23, he played out the final 12 games of the season with Columbus and had two assists with a -4 rating. He didn’t crack the opening night roster in 2023-24, though, and proceeded to post a lukewarm nine goals and 24 points in 53 games with Cleveland.