Injury Notes: Manson, Francouz, Clarke, Avon
Colorado Avalanche general manager Chris MacFarland told reporters today that he expects defenseman Josh Manson to be ready for the start of training camp after an offseason procedure. Manson missed the last two games of Colorado’s first-round loss to the Seattle Kraken with an undisclosed injury, likely related to the procedure MacFarland mentioned.
Last season was a trying one for Manson, who appeared in just 27 regular-season games due to two lower-body injuries. It was his first full campaign in Colorado after inking a four-year, $18MM deal with trade protection when free agency opened in July 2022 after playing a crucial role in the team’s run to the 2022 Stanley Cup. Coming over from the Anaheim Ducks at the trade deadline, Manson notched eight points in 20 playoff games, adding a +6 rating. Even when in the lineup last season, it wasn’t a smooth start to Manson’s hefty new deal – most commonly paired with Bowen Byram, the pair controlled just 40% of expected goals when on the ice together, per MoneyPuck, a figure Byram far exceeded with his other partners. With mainstay Erik Johnson moving on for the Buffalo Sabres in free agency this summer, the Avs will need a rejuvenated and healthy Manson to play a key role as their second-best right-shot defender behind Cale Makar.
Elsewhere in the realm of injury news tonight:
- Reports earlier in the week surfaced that Colorado was looking to add a goaltender with backup Pavel Francouz‘s health uncertain. Today, MacFarland also confirmed that Francouz is not yet cleared to return after undergoing offseason adductor surgery and remains “banged up” without a timeline to return. He did note, however, that Francouz has returned to Denver and Avalanche team doctors will evaluate him next week. While often injured, Francouz has given the Avs solid play when cleared to occupy the crease, going 8-7-1 with a .915 save percentage last season in 16 starts.
- Unfortunately, top Los Angeles Kings defense prospect Brandt Clarke won’t get to join the team on their preseason excursion to the 2023 NHL Global Series in Melbourne, Australia, next weekend. That’s because he’s sustained an undisclosed injury which requires seven to ten days without contact, per Mayor’s Manor. Clarke, who looks to make the Kings out of camp after a nine-game trial last season, will continue skating in LA and rehabbing his injury while the travel squad, presumably made up of the team’s expected NHL roster, is away. The eighth overall pick in 2021 was named to the OHL’s and CHL’s First All-Star teams in 2022-23 after recording 61 points in 31 games after his mid-season return to junior hockey with the OHL’s Barrie Colts. The 20-year-old right-shot defender projects to begin the season in a third-pairing role behind Drew Doughty and Matt Roy.
- Philadelphia Flyers forward prospect Jon-Randall Avon sustained a PCL sprain in his left knee just before rookie camps got underway, per PHLY Sports’ Charlie O’Connor. The 20-year-old center will miss between four and six weeks, keeping him out of the remainder of Flyers rookie and training camp. A free agent signing in 2021 after going undrafted, Avon recorded 60 points in 59 games with the OHL’s Peterborough Petes last season and will likely make his pro debut with the AHL’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms this season when healthy.
Paul Stastny Looking For Guaranteed Contract, Not Interested In PTO
Veteran free agent center Paul Stastny isn’t interested in proving his worth to potential suitors on a PTO during training camp and is only interested in firm contract offers, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman said on yesterday’s edition of the 32 Thoughts podcast.
Stastny, 37, was relegated to a bottom-six role for the first time in his NHL career last season with the Carolina Hurricanes. It took him quite a while to ink a deal last summer, too – he ended up signing a one-year, $1.5MM contract with Carolina on August 23, but that was still well in advance of training camp. There’s now less than a week remaining before this year’s camps kick off, and Stastny still finds himself on the outside looking in. He’s coming off a 2022-23 season that saw him notch nine goals and a career-low 13 assists for 22 points in 73 games while averaging just 11:52 per game.
Playing a fourth-line role for Stastny was quite a change of pace. Colorado’s second-round pick in the 2005 NHL Entry Draft had never averaged less than 17 minutes per game in a season during his career. Injuries aren’t a concern for him heading into next season – he didn’t miss any time with Carolina last season due to injuries and hasn’t missed significant time since the 2018-19 season with the Vegas Golden Knights. While his offensive ability and foot speed may be diminished from his peak, he’s still the reliable two-way presence he’s been throughout his career and would carry value as a fourth-line center. This isn’t anything new, either. His offensive pace has largely seen a linear path downward since his age-30 season back in 2015-16.
With Stastny likely to reprise a fourth-line role next season, however, his options for any contract much above the $775K league minimum are slim to none. Most teams with vacancies at the petition have gone the PTO route to evaluate options for the role – namely, the Edmonton Oilers, who have brought in Sam Gagner and Brandon Sutter as veteran options on tryouts in addition to free agent acquisition Lane Pederson. Most of the teams that do still have openings also have younger centers in play to make the team, and likely wouldn’t want to box them out of a job by giving Stastny a guaranteed contract.
It’ll be interesting to see if Stastny changes his tune by this time next week if he remains without an NHL home. He likely still has at least one solid season of hockey left in him and is still chasing a Stanley Cup after suiting up in 1,145 regular-season games across 17 seasons.
PHR Chatter: Expanding On Expansion
As we near the beginning of the 2023-24 season, PHR is excited to announce the return of a feature to encourage discourse between reader and writer. On Friday mornings, we’ll post a topic of discussion that we think will draw out varied and interesting perspectives from both our commenters and the other staff writers.
For too long, there have only been a couple of outlets for our readers to interact with the PHR staff. Live chats and mailbags offer a chance at some discussion but also run the risk of being too crowded or even outdated by the time the answer arrives. With PHR Chatter, we’re hoping to get weekly talks going on a topic that normally would have to be brought into the spotlight by a reader before even being discussed.
To kick this series off for the first time in almost a year and a half, let’s focus on one of the most engaging topics we had on the site this week: the possibility of Atlanta as an NHL market for a third time. The pros and cons of such a move could be a post in and of itself, but let’s open up the topic of discussion to adding a 33rd (or even 34th team) in general. Is the talent pool too diluted as it stands? Would a rumored $2B price tag from TSN’s Darren Dreger help kickstart the league into a new era and mean good things for players and teams alike? Would adding further teams necessitate another divisional realignment and potentially reopen the conversation around modifying the playoff format? What markets would you like to see get a team? Feel free to chime in about anything expansion-related in the comment section below and check in regularly, as we aim to keep this a rather open-ended platform.
Josh Leivo Signs With KHL’s Salavat Yulaev Ufa
Salavat Yulaev Ufa of Russia’s KHL announced today they’ve signed winger Josh Leivo for the 2023-24 season. Reports out of Sweden emerged earlier this month that Leivo was close to signing with SHL club MoDo Hockey, but those discussions obviously fell through.
This will be Leivo’s first season overseas after appearing in NHL games in each of the last ten seasons. Now 30, the Ontario native has seen a fair bit of playing time in both the NHL and AHL since the Toronto Maple Leafs selected him in the third round of the 2011 NHL Draft. He would turn pro full-time with the Maple Leafs and AHL Marlies in 2013-14 and was a highly productive AHL player for three seasons before becoming more of a mainstay on the NHL roster – although, famously, that didn’t translate into much playing time. Under then-head coach Mike Babcock, Leivo would play in just 56 games for Toronto over the course of three seasons from 2016 to 2019 despite rarely seeing any AHL assignments, spending most of his time sitting as a healthy scratch.
After finding himself in the minors for nearly all of 2021-22, Leivo once again returned to the NHL ranks on a more consistent basis last season with the St. Louis Blues. He made 51 appearances in a bottom-six role compared to just two games for AHL Springfield. Leivo gave the Blues some solid production in the process, recording four goals and 12 assists for 16 points – his highest total since he notched 19 points in 36 games with the Vancouver Canucks in 2019-20.
The Blues didn’t offer Leivo a contract at season’s end, however, and he hit the unrestricted free-agent market on July 1. They looked to replace his role internally, giving more playing time to younger talents such as Nikita Alexandrov and Alexey Toropchenko while also bringing back some familiar faces via free agency in Mackenzie MacEachern and Oskar Sundqvist.
He now makes the jump to Ufa, where he could line up alongside one-time teammate Nikolai Kulemin, whose last season in Toronto was 2013-14 – the same year Leivo made his NHL debut. Ufa is off to a 3-2-0 start to their season thanks to four goals and six points from San Jose Sharks prospect Sasha Chmelevski. They also are playing with heavy hearts this season after retiring Toronto Maple Leafs prospect Rodion Amirov‘s number 27 at the beginning of the season – he passed away from a brain tumor this summer at the age of 21.
Phil Kessel Wants To Continue Playing, Not Concerned About Ironman Streak
09/14/23: TSN’s Chris Johnston reports that there is “some percolating interest” from NHL teams in signing Kessel to a contract for this season. Johnston adds that Kessel “isn’t in PTO territory” at the moment, and could end up signing a full NHL contract with a team before the season.
08/31/23: UFA winger Phil Kessel has let potential suitors know he’s open to ending his league-record ironman streak to land a guaranteed deal for the 2023-24 campaign, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports.
Kessel’s consecutive regular-season games played streak of 1,064 set the all-time record this season, passing longtime NHL defender Keith Yandle. The last game Kessel missed was nearly 14 years ago on October 31, 2009, as a member of the Toronto Maple Leafs, the last of 12 games he missed to open the season with a shoulder injury.
Set to turn 36 before next season, however, the end of Kessel’s days as an everyday NHLer is in sight. While he did skate in all 82 games for the Vegas Golden Knights last season, his ice time dropped below the 15-minute average mark for the first time since his rookie season, and he played in just four out of Vegas’ 22 playoff games en route to his third Stanley Cup win.
As Friedman notes, this could dramatically increase Kessel’s likelihood of landing a one-year deal before training camps start. Teams are looking to avoid what transpired between the Yandle and the Florida Panthers at the beginning of the 2020-21 season when the team kept him in the lineup to avoid drawing the ire of its players despite wanting to scratch him for performance-related reasons.
That said, you could do much worse for a 13th forward or even a fourth-line playmaking winger. Kessel still managed 14 goals and 22 assists last season despite a below-career-average 9.4 shooting percentage. He also recorded 44 assists the year prior on an Arizona Coyotes team which won just 25 games and finished dead last in the league in goals.
He’ll likely have to settle for a league minimum cap hit on a one-year deal, regardless. But his age now makes him eligible to sign a bonus-laden 35+ contract, as Friedman points out, allowing him to earn money via performance bonuses that, for cap purposes, would defer to the 2024-25 campaign for the team that signs him if they can’t fit said performance bonuses under the $83.5MM Upper Limit. Last year, he signed a one-year, $1.5MM pact with Vegas late into the summer on August 24.
Patrick Kane and Tomas Tatar are the only two unrestricted free agents left on the market who had more points than Kessel last season.
Atlantic Notes: Knies, Savoie, Komarov
Matthew Knies gave the Toronto Maple Leafs some solid playoff hockey as a rookie just weeks after wrapping up his collegiate career, posting four points in seven games and even sliding into a top-six role at times. Unfortunately, his postseason was cut short early into Game 2 of their second-round loss to the Florida Panthers when a behind-the-net hit from Panthers center Sam Bennett concussed Knies and kept him out of the final three games of the series.
Today, Knies says he’s “fully recovered” from the collision and has been for quite some time – saying he’d been cleared to return to the lineup in Game 6 had Toronto avoided elimination. Toronto’s 57th overall pick in 2021 has shot up prospect rankings thanks to two spectacular campaigns at the University of Minnesota, during which he averaged over a point per game. He was named the NCAA’s Big 10 Player of the Year for 2022-23 after recording 21 goals and 42 points in 40 games. After Toronto signed both Tyler Bertuzzi and Max Domi to one-year deals in free agency, he’s far from guaranteed to slot into the team’s top-six on opening night but should still play a significant role.
Elsewhere in the Atlantic Division:
- While top Seattle Kraken prospect Shane Wright was granted an exemption from the CHL to head to the minor leagues a year earlier than normal, don’t expect the same for Buffalo Sabres 2022 ninth-overall pick Matthew Savoie. The Buffalo News’ Lance Lysowski says the Sabres have “communicated” with the CHL regarding an exemption, but the “odds aren’t in their favor.” Savoie lit up the WHL for 95 points in 62 games with the Winnipeg ICE (now Wenatchee Wild) last season and was born on January 1, 2004 – if he had been born a day earlier, he would be eligible for a full-time AHL assignment to Rochester this season. There is still an outside chance Savoie turns pro this season by making the Sabres out of camp, however.
- Sticking with Buffalo, Lysowski also reports defense prospect Vsevolod Komarov is dealing with a lower-body injury that will keep him out of their rookie tournament games. Komarov, 19, is expected to return to the QMJHL’s Québec Remparts after being released from Sabres camp. The team selected him 134th overall in the 2022 draft, and he put up stellar two-way numbers for the Remparts last season en route to a QMJHL championship and Memorial Cup win, posting 39 points and a +38 rating in 62 regular-season games.
Minor Transactions: 09/13/23
European leagues are close to kicking off their seasons, and some teams are still making last-minute consequential adds before 2023-24 begins. As always, we’re keeping track of notable overseas and minor-league moves right here:
- Latvian forward Kaspars Daugavins hasn’t played in the NHL since he split the 2012-13 with the Ottawa Senators and Boston Bruins, but he’s still active overseas at age 35. Today, he’s moving to Slovakia, signing with Extraliga club HK Dukla Michalovce for this season and next, per the team’s Instagram account. The 2006 third-round selection of the Senators was an international hero just a few short months ago, captaining host Latvia to a bronze medal at the 2023 World Championship while posting seven points in ten games. He’s still been quite productive in major overseas leagues as well, producing 49 points in 55 games with the DEL’s Iserlohn Roosters last season. After spending many years in the KHL after leaving the NHL in 2013, he moved to Switzerland for the 2021-22 season before joining Iserlohn last year.
- The AHL’s San Jose Barracuda have added some center depth, signing Cole Cassels to a one-year deal, per the league’s website. Cassels, 28, finally had his breakout season at the pro level last season, ten years after being selected in the third round of the 2013 draft by the Vancouver Canucks. He notched 51 points in 64 games for the Belleville Senators, shattering his previous career high of 26 set with Utica in 2017-18. He’ll look to help bolster a Barracuda squad that’s finished near the bottom of their division for the past two seasons.
This page may be updated throughout the day.
New York Islanders Sign Isaiah George To Entry-Level Deal
The New York Islanders have signed defenseman Isaiah George to a three-year, entry-level contract, per a team announcement. CapFriendly reports that the deal carries a $950K AAV and breaks down as follows:
2023-24: $775K base salary, $95K signing bonus, $80K in GP bonuses
2024-25: $775K base salary, $95K signing bonus, $80K in GP bonuses
2025-26: $775K base salary, $95K signing bonus, $80K in GP bonuses
George, 19, will be returned to the OHL’s London Knights for 2023-24 after attending Islanders training camp, which will defer the start of his contract to the 2024-25 season. Selected in the fourth round (98th overall) of the 2022 NHL Draft, George has displayed consistency throughout his junior hockey career and projects as a smooth-skating shutdown defender at the NHL level. He’s totaled 13 goals, 32 assists and 45 points in 121 appearances for the Knights over the past two seasons, alongside a promising +46 rating.
Standing at 6 feet and 198 pounds, the Islanders would like to see George fill out his frame before transitioning to the pro game. He’ll likely report to the AHL’s Bridgeport Islanders in 2024-25 and could very well spend two or even three seasons there before getting an extended look in the NHL lineup. He’s a bit of a project, as is the case with most defenders drafted in the later rounds, but he does carry significant shutdown upside should he make the NHL.
George officially joins an Islanders defense prospect pool devoid of any major upside but has a few nice pieces in 2019 second-round pick Samuel Bolduc (who looks to lock down a full-time NHL role this season) and 2022 second-round pick Calle Odelius.
Arizona Coyotes Sign Olli Juolevi, Ten Others To PTOs
The Arizona Coyotes have announced a slate of new and previously reported PTOs ahead of training camps kicking off next week, totaling 11 players:
D Peter DiLiberatore
F Hunter Drew
F Ryan Dzingel
F Patrick Harper
F Cameron Hebig
D Olli Juolevi
F Micah Miller
F Austin Poganski
D Austin Strand
F Colin Theisen
F Reece Vitelli
Nine of these players are new information. CapFriendly had reported that Dzingel and DiLiberatore had secured PTOs with the Coyotes last week.
The headlining name here is absolutely Juolevi, who’s fallen far off track since the Vancouver Canucks took him fifth overall in the 2016 NHL Draft. He spent last season entirely in the minors as a member of the Anaheim Ducks organization, recording 14 points and a -14 rating in 38 games with the AHL’s San Diego Gulls. Once appearing as a solid prospect after recording 13 points in 18 AHL games during his rookie pro season, injuries completely derailed Juolevi’s development, and if he lands a contract, will find himself with his fifth NHL organization at 25 years old.
The scope of the Coyotes’ PTOs here is not surprising. The team needs to ice a team during their busy preseason schedule, including three games on one day (September 23rd) while the main group is in Australia playing Global Series matches against the Los Angeles Kings. All of these players will likely lace up the skates in one of their North American-based split-squad games against the St. Louis Blues on that day.
A handful of these players are already under AHL contract with Arizona’s affiliate, the Tucson Roadrunners, for next season: Drew, Hebig, Miller, and Vitelli. They’ve also temporarily contracted the services of Strand, who is under AHL contract with the independently-operating Chicago Wolves this season. Harper is signed to an ECHL deal with the South Carolina Stingrays, the second-tier affiliate of the Washington Capitals. Poganski and Theisen remain without contracts for 2023-24 – the latter did play last season in the Coyotes organization after graduating from Arizona State University.
Arizona is at 47 out of the maximum 50 contracts, meaning NHL contracts aren’t likely in the cards for anyone in this group. These transactions were purely made to get enough bodies around the team for their preseason schedule. However, this could lead to Poganski and Theisen landing AHL deals with Tucson for 2023-24.
New Jersey Devils Sign Max Willman To PTO
Free agent forward Max Willman will attend the New Jersey Devils training camp on a PTO, the team said today.
Willman, 28, had spent the last four seasons in the Philadelphia Flyers organization after going unsigned by the Buffalo Sabres, who selected him in the fifth round of the 2014 NHL Draft. He made his NHL debut in the 2021-22 season and has amassed 50 games in the last two seasons, scoring four goals and adding two assists for six points while playing a limited role. While a strong skater, that hasn’t translated into successful backchecking at the NHL level – he’s been eaten alive in terms of possession in his limited usage, although that’s likely exacerbated by his excessive defensive zone start rate of 66.7% at even strength since making his NHL debut.
He’s posted solid middle-six production in the minors, recording 32 goals, 35 assists and 67 points in 142 games with the AHL’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms since 2019. He’s found his way into mainstay territory in AHL lineups and can shuffle around all forward positions, making him a valuable farmhand for the Flyers in recent years.
That being said, his chances of landing an NHL role with the Devils out of camp are near zero, so he’ll be battling for either a two-way deal or an AHL contract with their affiliate, the Utica Comets. The Devils’ 42 contracts sit well below the 50-contract limit, and they do have just nine forwards signed and projected to serve in the minors. There’s certainly room for Willman’s services in Utica.
