Kraken Recall Logan Morrison, Ryan Winterton

The Kraken have recalled forwards Logan Morrison and Ryan Winterton from AHL Coachella Valley on emergency loans, per CapFriendly. The emergency designations suggest multiple forwards are questionable for Tuesday’s game against the Ducks.

If Morrison slots into the lineup, it would mark his NHL debut. The 21-year-old center is in his first professional season with Coachella Valley, where he’s done quite well with 15 goals and 40 points in 60 games. It’s an earlier recall than expected for the Guelph, Ontario native, who inked an entry-level contract with Seattle as an undrafted free agent in April 2023.

It was a tough road to the pros for Morrison, who went undrafted in 2020 as a member of the OHL’s Hamilton Bulldogs and was shut out of the 2020-21 campaign entirely when the league canceled its season due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He responded well, though, rattling off 100 points in 60 games the following year en route to a league championship, also capturing the Wayne Gretzky 99 Award for the postseason MVP after he potted 17 goals in 19 playoff games. The 6’0″ pivot also earned OHL First All-Star Team honors last year, recording 40 goals and 94 points in 56 games split between Hamilton and the Ottawa 67’s.

An extremely sportsmanlike player, Morrison has only recorded 2 PIMs through his 60 minor-league contests. He’s benefitting greatly from Coachella Valley’s optimally deep development environment, which boasts nine double-digit goal-scorers this season.

This is the second NHL call-up for the 20-year-old Winterton, who played his first three major league games across a five-day stint in early November 2023. The 2021 third-round pick and longtime teammate of Morrison with Hamilton averaged just 8:12 through his trio of appearances, however, and notched just one shot on goal without getting on the scoresheet. His possession stats were quite poor as well, despite seeing most of his time in the offensive zone, posting a 37.1 CF% at even strength and a -0.5 expected rating.

Things have gone considerably better for Winterton in the minors, where, like Morrison, he’s having a strong first professional season. Once one of major junior hockey’s most prolific players at getting pucks on net, Winterton is tied for second on Coachella Valley in goals with 21 in 55 games. He also leads the squad with a +26 rating.

Golden Knights Recall Jiri Patera, Move Tomas Hertl To LTIR

The Golden Knights recalled goaltender Jiří Patera from AHL Henderson on Sunday, per a team release. He’ll serve as the backup to Logan Thompson to kick off their four-game road trip after Adin Hill sustained an undisclosed injury in the third period of yesterday’s 4-2 win over the Blue Jackets. To open up space for Patera’s $775K cap hit, the team moved center Tomas Hertl to LTIR, per CapFriendly, retroactive to when he underwent knee surgery in February as a member of the Sharks.

Patera, 25, sits firmly in the third spot on Vegas’ goaltending depth chart. He’s been recalled multiple times this season in the wake of injuries to Hill and Thompson, yielding mixed results with a .901 SV%, 1-3-0 record, 3.75 GAA, and -2.5 goals saved above expected, per MoneyPuck. The Prague-born netminder was selected in the sixth round of the Knights’ inaugural 2017 Entry Draft class and inked a one-year, two-way deal ($775K/$100K/$145K) to remain in the desert after reaching restricted free agency last offseason.

His play has dropped off slightly in the minors this year, however. After taking over as Henderson’s starter last season with a .911 SV% in 31 games, he’s posted a .902 SV%, 3.04 GAA, and 10-10-4 record in 24 AHL games in 2023-24. He’s still posted the best numbers out of any Silver Knights netminder, however, and is at little risk of losing his starting spot for the time being.

Moving Hertl to LTIR does not affect his timeline or eligibility to return to the lineup. He remains listed as week-to-week but is expected to make his Golden Knights debut before the postseason begins. Placing him on LTIR frees up an additional $6.75MM in relief, increasing their salary pool to $21.25MM.

Bruins Sign Riley Duran To Entry-Level Deal

The Bruins have come to terms on a two-year, entry-level contract with center prospect Riley Duran, per a team release. The contract carries a cap hit of $867.5K and will begin next season. Duran, who completed his junior season at Providence College last weekend, will finish the season on a tryout with the Bruins’ AHL club in the same city.

The 22-year-old Duran was drafted by the Bruins in the sixth round of the 2020 draft and had one season remaining of collegiate eligibility before his exclusive signing rights with Boston expired. The 6-foot-2, 181-lb Massachusetts native was selected straight out of high school and spent his post-draft season playing major junior hockey with USHL Youngstown before kicking things off with Providence in 2021-22.

Duran was relatively consistent through his three seasons with the Friars, although his play dropped off slightly in 2023-24. He recorded 55 points in 102 games with the school, a 0.54 points per game average, but produced only 0.46 per game this season (9-7–16 in 35 GP). He was an unexpectedly important piece of the United States contingent at the 2022 World Junior Championship, where he rattled off 2-3–5 in 5 GP en route to a quarterfinal loss.

His ceiling is that of a two-way, third-line center, but he will need some significant seasoning in the AHL before he’s considered for a recall. He’ll be an RFA when his deal expires in 2026.

Flames Sign Joni Jurmo To Entry-Level Deal

The Flames have signed Finnish defense prospect Joni Jurmo to a two-year, entry-level contract, per a team announcement Sunday. The deal carries an AAV of $850K.

Calgary picked up Jurmo’s signing rights earlier this season, acquiring them as part of the deal that sent Elias Lindholm to the Canucks. As defense prospect Hunter Brzustewicz also signed his ELC earlier this March, both unsigned prospects acquired in the deal are now Flames property through at least 2026.

Jurmo, 21, carries appeal with his 6-foot-5, 209-lb frame. A strong skater for his size, he was a second-round pick of the Canucks in the 2020 draft but has had a rather tumultuous tenure since in various levels of the Finnish system.

However, he has been a mainstay in the pros since the 2021-22 campaign, when he logged 10 points and a +10 rating in 50 games for Jukurit in a strong first showing as a full-timer in the Liiga. He also represented Finland at the delayed World Junior Championships the following summer, recording an assist in seven games en route to a silver medal.

He’s played for three teams in the following two seasons, heading from Jukurit to Ilves over last offseason and being moved again to KooKoo in a midseason trade. He’s held a bottom-pairing role with all three clubs, posting 8-20–28 with a -2 rating in 168 Liiga games since his debut with JYP in the 2020-21 season. He finished his 2023-24 season with five points and a +3 rating in 46 games split between Ilves and KooKoo.

Jurmo will be eligible to suit up for AHL Calgary next season, but if his ELC holds a European Assignment Clause, he may also be loaned back to KooKoo, which holds his Liiga rights through next season. For the Flames, he’ll be an RFA upon expiry in 2026.

Blue Jackets Modify Brendan Gaunce’s Recall, Reassign Trey Fix-Wolansky

The Blue Jackets are down to two post-trade deadline recalls after they covered Brendan Gaunce‘s emergency recall into a standard one Sunday, per a team release. The club also assigned winger Trey Fix-Wolansky to AHL Cleveland.

Gaunce, 29, has been in the majors since an emergency summons on March 12 in the wake of depth forward Justin Danforth exiting the lineup due to a suspected concussion and a brief illness sidelining Kirill Marchenko. The 6-foot-2, 217-lb center has played in all seven Blue Jackets games since, recording a goal and a -2 rating while averaging 12:19 per game.

The 2012 first-round pick is on his third NHL organization, ending up with Columbus in 2021 after stints with the Canucks, Bruins, and the Swedish Hockey League’s Växjö Lakers HC. He hasn’t been overtly impressive in major-league minutes while with the Blue Jackets, posting 7-5–12 in 50 games over the last three seasons with a -3 rating while averaging under 10 minutes per contest, but keeping him around allows younger prospects like Fix-Wolansky to play out the stretch run of the minor-league campaign with Cleveland and log high-end minutes.

Gaunce, who remains third on Cleveland in scoring with 19-20–39 in 46 games, is in the back half of a two-year, $1.525MM extension signed in June 2022. He carries a cap hit of $762.5K but earns a slightly higher base salary of $775K in the NHL due to the league minimum increasing by $25K last offseason.

Fix-Wolansky was the first post-deadline standard recall for the CBJ, coming up to the majors on March 8 after lighting up the minors at over a point-per-game pace (23-31–54 in 51 GP). The 5-foot-8 winger could not convert that success to the majors, however, posting one assist in eight games with a -2 rating. His only other NHL appearance this season came during a brief recall in November, and he was held without a point in a loss to the Coyotes.

The 24-year-old will return to spark Cleveland as they jockey for playoff positioning in the AHL’s North Division, in which they sit second with a 35-21-3-3 record. He’s appeared in NHL games in three straight seasons, a solid feat for the 2018 seventh-round pick.

Fix-Wolansky is in the first season of a two-year, $1.55MM extension he inked shortly before reaching restricted free agency last summer. He earns a $350K salary while in the minors but is guaranteed at least $425K in salary this year.

Bruins Reassign John Beecher

Bruins forward John Beecher is back on the farm with AHL Providence after being reassigned Sunday, per CapFriendly.

The 22-year-old center/winger has spent most of the season in the majors, landing a spot on the opening-night roster and making his NHL debut over four years after Boston selected him with the 30th overall pick in the 2019 draft. He was designated for the minors for the first time this season on Jan. 20 and remained there through the trade deadline until being recalled on three separate emergency loans earlier this month. He’d been on the NHL roster without reassignment since Mar. 16 after being papered between leagues five times in six days.

Beecher had played in four consecutive contests before being scratched due to illness in Saturday’s 3-2 loss to the Flyers. He scored once on three shots on goal and added an assist and a +1 rating in that timeframe, playing solid bottom-six minutes while averaging 12:28 per game.

He wouldn’t have lasted much longer on the active roster anyway, at least as an emergency recall. Winger James van Riemsdyk returned from an illness that kept him out for most of mid-March against Philadelphia, ending the conditions that required Beecher to have 12 healthy forwards. If the Bruins want to bring Beecher up without any other absences from their forward group, they would need to utilize one of their three remaining post-deadline standard recalls.

After an injury-plagued collegiate career with the University of Michigan and middling offensive results in the minors, it seems unlikely the 6-foot-3 pivot will reach the ceiling Boston hoped for by selecting him in the first round. Overall, early returns on his impact in a fourth-line role aren’t terribly promising outside of his 54.7 FO%, as he’s managed only six goals and three assists through 43 games.

He’s also recorded the worst even-strength CF% (37.7) of any Bruins skater with at least 10 games played. His -6.3 expected rating is also the lowest on the team. Beecher’s point totals likely aren’t sustainable either, as he’s shooting at an unusually high 20% rate.

Beecher has shown some improvement with Providence this season, posting 4-4–8 with a +9 rating in 17 games compared to 9-14–23 and a +9 rating in 61 games last year. The New York native is in the second season of his three-year, $2.775MM entry-level contract, which pays him a $70K salary at the minor-league level.

Capitals Reassign Matthew Phillips

The Capitals have returned forward Matthew Phillips to the AHL’s Hershey Bears, according to a statement from the team’s PR department. He was listed as a scratch on the league’s roster report for Sunday’s game against the Jets.

Phillips, 25, had been on the Caps’ roster for only two days since being summoned from Hershey on an emergency loan Friday. However, with T.J. Oshie (upper body) and Aliaksei Protas (lower body) returning from their respective injuries for today’s contest, the conditions necessitating Phillips’ presence in the NHL were no longer met.

Washington needed to either convert Phillips’ recall into a standard one or return him to the minors, choosing the latter option. He played 4:15 against the Hurricanes in Friday’s 7-6 shootout loss, posting a -1 rating and one shot on goal.

However, despite logging the least time on ice of any Capitals skater, he managed to record three individual scoring chances, tied for second in the game, per Natural Stat Trick. Still, Phillips has gone 13 games without a point, last getting on the scoresheet with an assist in a shootout loss to the Stars on Dec. 7.

Including Friday’s contest, Phillips has one goal, four assists, and five points in 31 games split between the Capitals and Penguins. Pittsburgh claimed him off waivers in mid-February after Washington attempted to send him to the minors for the first time this season. He went pointless in three appearances before ending up on the waiver wire again in early March.

The Caps took the opportunity to bring him back to the organization, claiming him off waivers from the Pens shortly before the trade deadline. As they reclaimed him within 30 days of initially losing him on waivers, they could assign him directly to AHL Hershey.

Phillips was strong in limited action with the league-leading Bears this month, posting 1-2–3 with 2 PIMs and a +2 rating in four games. The 2016 sixth-round pick of the Flames has developed into an elite producer at the minor-league level, recording 67-77–144 in 131 games with Calgary’s AHL affiliates between 2021 and 2023 before reaching Group 6 unrestricted free agency last summer.

Signed to a one-year, one-way deal, the 5-foot-7 Phillips will continue to earn his $775K base salary while on assignment to Hershey. He will be an RFA with arbitration eligibility if the Caps issue him a qualifying offer this offseason.

Atlantic Notes: Harvey-Pinard, Lyubushkin, Marchand, Barkov

Canadiens winger Rafaël Harvey-Pinard is no longer waiver-exempt after playing in his 70th career NHL game in Thursday’s 4-1 loss to the Canucks, per CapFriendly. The 25-year-old has had his 2023-24 season plagued with injuries, only skating in 32 of Montreal’s 69 contests, although he hasn’t been particularly effective in the lineup, either. His 14 goals in 34 games after being called up from AHL Laval last season hasn’t managed to carry over, and he’s only scored once in 32 contests this season while adding seven assists. Logging 12:49 per game, the 2019 seventh-round pick has been one of the Habs’ worst offensive forwards. He has produced some value with decent possession metrics, logging a 45.8 CF% at even strength that’s above average relative to his teammates, but there hasn’t been much to suggest he can stick in a top-nine role long-term. The 5-foot-9 forward has one season left on a contract carrying a $1.1MM cap hit and will be an RFA with arbitration rights in 2025.

Other updates from the Atlantic Division:

  • Maple Leafs defenseman Ilya Lyubushkin isn’t quite recovered from his illness and will miss his third straight game Saturday when Toronto hosts the Oilers, head coach Sheldon Keefe said today. Recently picked up via trade from the Ducks for his second go-around with the Leafs, Lyubushkin did skate today for the first time since his last appearance, Saturday’s 5-4 shootout loss to the Hurricanes. The 29-year-old has been solid since re-joining Toronto, recording two assists and a 51.5 CF% in seven games, mainly skating alongside Morgan Rielly while averaging 16:07 per game.
  • Bruins captain Brad Marchand is questionable for Saturday’s game against the Flyers after he was absent from today’s practice for maintenance purposes, head coach Jim Montgomery told reporters. The 35-year-old had been on a hot streak, picking up eight points in his last seven games. He’s on pace to finish below a point per game for a second straight season after doing so every year from 2016-17 to 2021-22, and his possession metrics have also dipped considerably without the now-retired Patrice Bergeron centering his line. He remains the Bruins’ top secondary talent to David Pastrňák, though, and is the team’s second-leading scorer with 27 goals and 62 points in 71 games.
  • Panthers first-line mainstay Aleksander Barkov traveled with the team on their road trip but is unlikely to draw in Saturday against the Rangers, head coach Paul Maurice said. The perennial Selke Trophy candidate missed yesterday’s loss to the Predators with an undisclosed injury and hasn’t been completely ruled out against New York. The 28-year-old Finn is having another elite campaign, notching 48 assists, 66 points, and a +23 rating in 62 games while helping facilitate linemate Sam Reinhart‘s breakout season.

Islanders Sign Cam Thiesing To Entry-Level Deal

The Islanders have signed undrafted free agent center Cam Thiesing to a two-year entry-level contract beginning next season, per a team announcement. The Tennessee native will likely finish 2023-24 on a tryout with AHL Bridgeport.

Thiesing, 23 next week, was initially eligible for selection in the 2019 draft but was on few scouting departments’ radars after recording 39 points in 54 games with the Chippewa Steel of the NAHL, the second-tier junior league in the U.S. system. He played two more seasons with the Green Bay Gamblers in the USHL, one level up, but wasn’t given draft selection as an overage player there, either.

After wrapping up his junior career in 2021, Thiesing joined Ohio State University for a three-year run. Thiesing actually had decreasing production throughout his seasons at the school. He started with a strong freshman campaign, posting 25 points and a team-leading +21 rating for the Buckeyes in 2021-22, but dropped to 20 points last season and even further to nine goals and 16 points in 31 games this year on a team that finished last in the Big 10 conference.

Unfortunately, Thiesing’s season ended prematurely due to injury. He missed the Buckeyes’ final two games and their four Big Ten tournament games, including a major quarterfinal upset over Wisconsin. Overall, he finished his time at Ohio State with 32 goals, 29 assists, 61 points, 166 PIMs, and a +11 rating over 108 games.

The physical 6-foot, 183-lb right-shot center now joins an Isles prospect pool flush with similarly skilled talent, so he doesn’t move the needle much. Late-developing junior production and failure to advance his offensive game at the collegiate level aren’t promising signs for an NHL future, but his checking game and decent shot do give him an outside shot at cracking a team’s fourth line at some point. Thiesing will be an RFA when his contract expires in 2026.