Pacific Notes: Whitecloud, Karlsson, Canucks, Flames

The Vegas Golden Knights are grappling with uncertainty surrounding the availability of defenseman Zach Whitecloud for their opening night banner-raising against the Seattle Kraken next Tuesday. Head coach Bruce Cassidy, during a press conference Wednesday, expressed hesitance to confirm Whitecloud’s participation in the season opener.

Cassidy said that until Zach is on the ice, he can’t say he expects him to play. Whitecloud, a key depth piece for the Golden Knights, has been dealing with an undisclosed issue that has kept him off the ice during preseason activities for around a week. The 26-year-old missed significant time last season with injury, playing 59 out of 82 games and recording 12 points and a +10 rating. When healthy, he’s expected to resume his usual role on the team’s third pairing behind Alex Pietrangelo and Shea Theodore on the team’s right side.

Elsewhere in the Pacific Division today:

  • Sticking with Vegas, they’re also dealing with a day-to-day injury to center William Karlsson that is not expected to stretch into the regular season. Cassidy said he’s been dealing with an undisclosed issue throughout training camp to date and that he will not play in tomorrow’s preseason contest against the Colorado Avalanche. Karlsson played a crucial role in the Knights’ run to the 2023 Stanley Cup, recording 11 goals and 17 points in 22 games. His 53 points last season were his highest since 2018-19, his sophomore campaign with Vegas, after potting 43 goals in the 2017-18 season.
  • The Vancouver Canucks are bringing in some reinforcements, recalling multiple players from the AHL’s Abbotsford Canucks today. Goaltender Arturs Silovs, defenseman Filip Johansson, and forwards Arshdeep Bains, Linus KarlssonAatu Räty, and Max Sasson will be available to the team for tonight’s preseason contest against the Seattle Kraken. All will likely get returned to the minors tomorrow after being cut from Canucks camp earlier this week.
  • Sportsnet’s Eric Francis believes a “significant announcement” regarding a new arena for the Calgary Flames could come tomorrow. Plans for a new home to replace the aging Scotiabank Saddledome are already well underway, with their ownership group and the Alberta government reaching a preliminary agreement for a new arena after the end of last season. The provincial government also greenlit the first C$39MM dedicated to the project last month.

Flames’ Kevin Rooney Out Long-Term After Shoulder Surgery

In addition to confirming young winger Jakob Pelletier underwent successful surgery today as planned, the Calgary Flames announced that forward Kevin Rooney also underwent a shoulder procedure and is out for the foreseeable future without a specific return timeline. Rooney will almost certainly begin the season on injured or long-term injured reserve, with the 2023-24 campaign commencing in six days.

Rooney sustained the shoulder injury in practice last Sunday after sliding awkwardly into the boards. Flames head coach Ryan Huska confirmed this morning, prior to Calgary’s announcement, that Rooney would be out longer-term.

It’s a disappointing start for Rooney, who was looking to regain traction in Calgary entering the second season of a two-year, $2.6MM contract. Initially expected to play a pivotal role on the team’s fourth line last season, Rooney fell far short of expectations and played just 17 contests for the Flames, posting just one assist. It earned him a demotion to the AHL’s Calgary Wranglers, where he played out the majority of the season. Things didn’t go much better for him there, as he posted just 17 points in 51 regular-season contests on one of the AHL’s best teams. His $1.3MM cap hit was not fully buriable in the minors, resulting in a $175K cap charge for the Flames while he was buried with the Wranglers.

Rooney had looked better coming into this season’s training camp, but today’s news means he won’t be on the opening night roster. That’s especially unfortunate, given Rooney was actually projected to start the season as the team’s fourth-line center – the team lost some minor depth this summer due to cap constraints. Instead, a younger centerman like 22-year-old Cole Schwindt (acquired from Florida in the Jonathan Huberdeau/Matthew Tkachuk blockbuster) or 2020 first-round pick Connor Zary could get a crack at centering the team’s fourth line to start the season.

If Rooney will be out long enough to qualify for LTIR, that could allow Calgary to carry an expanded roster to start the season. The team’s delicate cap situation was projected to force them to carry the bare minimum of 20 skaters to start the season, but with Rooney (and Pelletier) on LTIR, they could afford a pair of healthy extras to kick off the campaign.

Boston Bruins Sign Frederic Brunet To Entry-Level Contract

The Boston Bruins have signed defenseman Frédéric Brunet to a three-year entry-level contract carrying a cap hit of $860K, per a team release. Boston assigned Brunet to AHL Providence on October 1, where he’s likely to spend the entire 2023-24 season.

Brunet, 20, was a 2022 fifth-round draft choice of the Bruins after going undrafted upon his initial eligibility in 2021. It’s not entirely his fault – he was pushed down the depth chart and appeared in just 33 games with the QMJHL’s Rimouski Océanic in 2020-21, recording just nine points and never getting significant scouting attention. He turned things around the following season, however, leading Rimouski defenders in points and earning the honor of hearing his name called by the Bruins on draft day.

After Rimouski named him captain to start the 2022-23 season, Brunet would split the campaign between the Océanic and the Victoriaville Tigres thanks to a midseason trade. Across both teams, Brunet broke out even further for 73 points in 66 games, adding on 28 penalty minutes and a +2 rating. That was good enough to earn him second place in QMJHL scoring among defenders, trailing only Anaheim Ducks prospect Tristan Luneau. He also notched three assists in five playoff games for Victoriaville as they were ousted in the first round by the Drummondville Voltigeurs.

Brunet also had a rather raucous start to his professional career, recording two assists in a lone appearance with Providence at the tail end of last season. He’ll now gun for ice time among multiple other Bruins defenders under contract slated for Providence.

San Jose Sharks Sign Quentin Musty To Entry-Level Contract

2:09 p.m.: PuckPedia has confirmed the details of Musty’s entry-level deal, which carries the ELC maximum cap hit of $950K:

Year 1: $855K NHL salary, $95K signing bonus, $82.5K minors salary
Year 2: $855K NHL salary, $95K signing bonus, $82.5K minors salary
Year 3: $855K NHL salary, $95K signing bonus, $82.5K minors salary, $250K Schedule ‘A’ performance bonus

1:46 p.m.: The San Jose Sharks have signed left wing and 2023 first-round pick Quentin Musty to a three-year, entry-level contract, per a team release. San Jose will likely return Musty to junior hockey before opening night rosters are due, but they’ll do so with a contract in hand for one of their better forward prospects.

This is Musty’s first NHL training camp after the Sharks selected him 26th overall in June. He is, perhaps, the largest piece of the trade return received from the New Jersey Devils in exchange for forward Timo Meier in February – the pick they used on Musty originally belonged to New Jersey.

Born in Hamburg, New York, and a graduate of the Buffalo Sabres’ youth program, Musty spent last season as an alternate captain for the OHL’s Sudbury Wolves in his second season with the team. He potted 26 goals in 53 games, adding 52 assists for 78 points alongside 71 penalty minutes and a +16 rating. The well-rounded winger stands at 6-foot-2 and 201 pounds and was named to the OHL’s second All-Rookie Team in 2021-22.

Despite signing him to his entry-level contract now, returning Musty to Sudbury will slide the start of his contract to the 2024-25 campaign. Given Musty’s age, the Sharks can execute this maneuver twice – should he play less than ten NHL games in 2024-25 as well, his contract would then start in 2025-26 and run through 2027-28.

Waivers: 10/04/23

10/05/23: Per Sportsnets’ Elliotte Friedman, all players on the waiver wire yesterday have cleared (X Link).

10/04/23: Teams continue to trim their rosters ahead of the regular season, which starts in just six days. That means multiple players will hit the waiver wire daily until opening night rosters are due, and today is no different. Per TSN’s Chris Johnston, 12 players were waived today at 1 p.m. CT, 11 of whom have NHL experience. As a reminder, a waiver placement is a prerequisite for qualified players for assignment to the AHL but not necessarily an indication that a demotion to the minors will immediately happen. NHL teams can send a player down to the minors within 30 days or 10 games played of the date the player originally cleared waivers. After that time, their waiver clock will reset, and they will need to clear again.

Anaheim Ducks

Robert Hägg
Colton White

Boston Bruins

Jayson Megna

Buffalo Sabres

Brett Murray

Minnesota Wild

Jujhar Khaira
F Vinni Lettieri
D Dakota Mermis
Nic Petan

New Jersey Devils

Callan Foote

Nashville Predators

Mark Jankowski

San Jose Sharks

Leon Gawanke

Winnipeg Jets

Jeffrey Viel

Waivers: 10/02/23

10/3/2023: Following yesterday’s list of the waiver wire, Johnston reports that all players on the list have cleared.

10/2/2023: Another large slate of players was placed on waivers today by a handful of teams across the league, with the regular season just eight days away. Today’s full list of players hitting the waiver wire comes courtesy of TSN’s Chris Johnston:

Anaheim Ducks

Glenn Gawdin

Arizona Coyotes

Travis Barron
D Cameron Crotty
F Jan Jeník
D Steven Kampfer
F Justin Kirkland
F John Leonard
F Ryan McGregor
G Matt Villalta

Boston Bruins

Kyle Keyser

Calgary Flames

Clark Bishop
Oscar Dansk
Ben Jones
Colton Poolman

Colorado Avalanche

Wyatt Aamodt
Corey Schueneman

Dallas Stars

Gavin Bayreuther
Nicholas Caamano
Fredrik Karlstrom
Derrick Pouliot

Florida Panthers

Rasmus Asplund
D Lucas Carlsson
Gerald Mayhew

New Jersey Devils

Kyle Criscuolo

Ottawa Senators (announcement arrived Monday night, meaning players may be officially on Tuesday’s waivers)

D Jacob Bernard-Docker
D Jacob Larsson
F Matthew Highmore
F Egor Sokolov

Philadelphia Flyers

Louis Belpedio
Adam Brooks
Rhett Gardner
Cooper Marody
Victor Mete

West Notes: Simek, Lambert, Oilers

San Jose Sharks defenseman Radim Simek could miss the team’s season opener at home on October 12 against the Vegas Golden Knights, per Curtis Pashelka of the Bay Area News Group. Simek has been dealing with a lower-body injury for the past few days and did not skate today as planned.

Pashelka notes Simek starting the season on injured reserve is a “real possibility,” meaning the 31-year-old defender would miss at least seven days from the retroactive placement, which likely would not impact Simek’s ability to return after the start of the season given he sustained the injury four days ago already. His lack of availability is a huge blow to a paper-thin Sharks defense, as he’s quietly been one of their most effective defenders over the past few seasons. He’s a strong two-way force at even strength and quite adept on the penalty kill, where his absence is felt the most. Simek played in just 44 games last season due to injuries, recording three points and averaging just 14:37 per game – arguably under-utilized by head coach David Quinn. If unavailable for opening night, someone like Nikolai KnyzhovJacob MacDonald, or the young Henry Thrun could draw into the lineup.

Elsewhere in the Western Conference this Monday evening:

  • After cutting him from their training camp roster yesterday, the Winnipeg Jets are bringing 2022 first-round pick Brad Lambert up to the active roster for tonight’s preseason tilt against the Calgary Flames, per a team announcement. Lambert will likely be returned to the AHL’s Manitoba Moose after the game, where he’s projected to play the full season after splitting it between there and WHL Seattle last season, where he exploded for 38 points in 26 regular-season games and 26 points in 17 playoff contests. Lambert had two goals and an assist in 14 games in his first taste of pro hockey within the Jets organization with Manitoba last season.
  • The Athletic’s Allan Mitchell posits Edmonton Oilers GM Ken Holland is well set up to make a blockbuster deal this season, likely his last as a general manager in the NHL as he enters the final season of his contract with Edmonton. Mitchell cites that pressure for Holland to bring a Stanley Cup to Edmonton, plus the Oilers’ wide range of young players in the organization that aren’t yet NHL regulars, as grounds for giving up significant assets in a deal. In terms of potential targets, Mitchell mentions Winnipeg Jets star netminder Connor Hellebuyck to quash any uncertainty in the crease, Carolina Hurricanes defender Brett Pesce for additional depth on the right side and an all-world top-four with Evan BouchardMattias Ekholm and Darnell Nurse, and Philadelphia Flyers winger Travis Konecny as potential targets. All would require significant salary dumps going the other way to make a deal work, with the Oilers limited to carrying just one extra skater to be cap-compliant to start the season.

St. Louis Blues Expect Torey Krug Back For Regular Season

St. Louis Blues defenseman Torey Krug is expected to be ready to go for the 2023-24 campaign after sustaining a foot injury during offseason training, per NHL.com. The veteran defender was reevaluated yesterday, as per the team’s initial plan, and was cleared to play in tonight’s preseason contest against the Columbus Blue Jackets.

The news paves the way for the 32-year-old to assume his usual top-four role to begin the season, in all likelihood alongside Justin Faulk, his partner for the majority of three seasons in St. Louis thus far. Krug is coming off one of his worst seasons in recent memory, during which injuries limited him to 63 games and 32 points, the latter of which was tied for a career-low in a full season. His -26 rating was also, by far, a career worst.

In fact, injuries have become somewhat of a recent theme for Krug. He hasn’t played more than 70 games in a season since 2017-18 with Boston, up to which point he had been a rather durable player. Krug’s healthiest campaign as of late was when he suited up in 51 out of 56 games in the COVID-shortened 2020-21 campaign, his first with St. Louis.

He is entering the fourth season of a seven-year, $45.5MM contract he signed during free agency in 2020, which carries a full no-trade clause through 2025. That clause found its way into the spotlight this summer after Krug reportedly used it to block a deal with the Philadelphia Flyers that ended up going through anyway without him, seeing the Blues acquire center Kevin Hayes at half-price. There is still a chance if the Blues try again to trade Krug in-season if he can rebuild some trade value that he’d waive it for a different team, likely one closer to winning a championship.

Winning a championship is something Krug’s narrowly eluded throughout his career. His breakout came for Boston in the 2013 postseason, which saw them lose to the Chicago Blackhawks in the Stanley Cup Final. He joined the Blues in 2020, who were a year removed at the time from winning a championship in 2019 – one that Krug was also on the opposing side of with the Bruins.

Krug being healthy for opening night creates a significant roster crunch for the Blues, who will likely need to waive at least one of Robert Bortuzzo, Scott Perunovich, Calle Rosén, or Tyler Tucker to get under the 23-player roster limit.

Avalanche Expect Josh Manson Back For Season Opener, Pavel Francouz Still Sidelined

The Colorado Avalanche expect defenseman Josh Manson will be ready for the team’s season opener on October 11 in Los Angeles; however, they also confirmed backup goaltender Pavel Francouz will begin the season on the shelf, head coach Jared Bednar told reporters Monday. Neither player has appeared during preseason action thus far.

Manson has not suited up since Game 5 of the Avalanche’s first-round loss at the hands of the Seattle Kraken in seven games. Today, Manson told reporters, including NHL.com’s Ryan Boulding, that he tore an oblique muscle earlier in the series and could not continue playing through it, resulting in offseason surgery. Bednar mentioned last month that Manson is also rehabbing a separate lower-body injury.

Meanwhile, Colorado announced at the beginning of the offseason that Francouz had undergone adductor surgery and was expected to be ready in time for training camp, but that hasn’t happened. Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli reported last month that the Avalanche were eyeing the trade market for goalie insurance as they no longer believed Francouz would be ready for the start of the season, and the oft-injured backup still has an unclear timeline for a return. Much like the Tampa Bay Lightning, who are dealing with a much more consequential injury to starter Andrei Vasilevskiy, Colorado could look to make a waiver claim to add goalie depth as more third-string options hit the wire, as the Columbus Blue Jackets did with Spencer Martin last week.

It’s certainly not a good sign for Francouz, who’s still managed to be effective during his time as a backup option in Colorado despite a lengthy injury history. Making 73 regular-season appearances for the Avs since coming over from Europe in 2018 at the age of 28, the Czech goalie missed the entire 2020-21 season and the first 24 games of 2021-22 with an ankle injury. A recurring lower-body injury limited him to just 16 starts last season as well. For now, 23-year-old prospect Justus Annunen is the presumptive backup to starter Alexandar Georgiev.

However, it’s certainly good news regarding Manson, who spent most of the first season of a four-year deal last year on the shelf. Recording ten points in just 27 games, Manson averaged 17:41 per game during his first full season in the Mile High City. Manson is no stranger to consistent injuries, however, eclipsing the 70-game mark just four times during his eight-year career with the Anaheim Ducks before coming over to Colorado at the 2022 trade deadline. With both Bowen Byram and Samuel Girard able to play their off-side, expect a more limited third-pair role for Manson to start 2023-24 as the 31-year-old rebounds from a tough campaign. It’s far from ideal, however, given his substantial $4.5MM cap hit through the 2025-26 season.

Pittsburgh Penguins Claim Jansen Harkins Off Waivers From Jets

The Pittsburgh Penguins have claimed winger Jansen Harkins off waivers from the Winnipeg Jets, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports Monday. All other players placed on waivers yesterday, aside from new Nashville Predators forward Samuel Fagemo, cleared.

Harkins, 26, had spent his entire NHL career in the Jets organization after they drafted him with the 47th overall pick in the 2015 NHL Draft. He’s only logged one true season as a full-time NHLer, suiting up in 77 games for Winnipeg in 2021-22, but the Penguins will bank on him being a solid depth contributor signed to a cheap cap hit (but not league minimum) of $850K. It’s worth noting Harkins is due slightly more actual salary than cap hit this season – $875K, to be exact.

In 154 NHL games dating back to 2019, Harkins has 13 goals, 14 assists and 27 points – not awful totals for a player that’s averaged under ten minutes per game. Assigned to the AHL’s Manitoba Moose for the first time since 2020 last season, Harkins recorded well over a point per game, notching 25 goals and 50 points in 44 games. That production is what’s bumped his stock coming into this season and, evidently, influenced Penguins management to take a flyer on the 6-foot-2 winger with strong two-way instincts.

With trade acquisition Rem Pitlick having already cleared waivers and been assigned to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Pittsburgh has some competition to lock down depth forward spots, especially with Jake Guentzel out for the first few games of the season. Harkins will now compete for a spot on the Penguins’ opening night lineup alongside depth forwards like Vinnie HinostrozaAlexander Nylander and Radim Zohorna.