Jonas Brodin Enters COVID Protocol
Jan 1: The Wild were hoping Brodin would be able to test out of the protocol given the league’s reduced isolation period, but Michael Russo of The Athletic reports that the veteran defenseman will miss the Winter Classic. Addison has been officially recalled and is expected to play in Brodin’s place.
Dec 28: The Minnesota Wild already ruled out Jared Spurgeon and Joel Eriksson Ek for the upcoming Winter Classic, and now appear to be losing another one of their best players. Jonas Brodin will not practice with the team today due to the league’s COVID protocol.
If Brodin is held out–a confirmed positive with symptoms would keep him out a minimum of ten days, while an asymptomatic case would need two negative tests 24 hours apart–it’s another huge loss for the Wild and the fans that will be at Target Field in just a few days. The hope at this point will be that no other key Minnesota players are pulled from the lineup between now and Saturday, as this game isn’t exactly one that can be rescheduled for later in the season.
The 28-year-old defenseman is an absolute horse for the Wild, logging huge minutes every night and playing some of the best two-way hockey in the league. While his 14 points in 28 games don’t immediately jump off the page, Brodin is the anchor that drives a Minnesota transition game that can strike extremely quickly. His smooth skating and quick defensive stick constantly disrupt plays before the opposition even gets a chance at the net, and his ability to escape forecheckers results in easy breakouts for the Wild.
Now, without Brodin or Spurgeon in the lineup, a lot of pressure will be placed on Matt Dumba and veteran Alex Goligoski for Saturday’s game. The team also may decide to recall some youngsters, giving someone like Calen Addison a chance to play on the national stage.
Florida Panthers Expected To Have Interest In Ben Chiarot
Through the first period of today’s afternoon tilt against the Florida Panthers, the shorthanded Montreal Canadiens were able to stay even. Playing without most of their regulars the team had just five defensemen dressed, many of them without much NHL experience.
One of the veterans that they were missing is Ben Chiarot, whose name is coming up more and more often as the trade deadline approaches. Chiarot is a pending unrestricted free agent and arguably the Canadiens’ best trade chip this season, though he’s currently in the COVID protocol and unable to help the club against the Panthers.
It’s those same Panthers who could show interest in Chiarot before the deadline, according to Pierre LeBrun on the TSN broadcast:
It just so happens that the team the Habs are playing today, the Florida Panthers, I hear are pretty high on Ben Chiarot. Now they won’t be alone–most Cup contenders, and I believe Florida is a contender, are going to have Chiarot on their trade bait list. They’re going to want to at least try to acquire him.
I think that is going to be the case. I think Florida will reach out to the Canadiens between now and March 21st and see what it takes to pry him out. They won’t be alone, there will be a half dozen contenders looking at Ben Chiarot.
Through 31 games this season, the 30-year-old Chiarot has averaged more than 23 minutes of ice time for the Canadiens. He has five goals and seven points in that time, but is much more known for his punishing, physical defense than his offensive upside. Given that contenders usually have their puck-moving options locked up already, Chiarot seems like a perfect addition for many who want to add some size, length, and experience to the blue line before the deadline.
Still, the amount of chatter that has emerged about Chiarot ever since the Canadiens struggled out of the gate is likely a bit excessive for his actual on-ice impact. This could be a perfect storm for Montreal where a lack of other options could lead to someone overpaying for the rental defenseman.
Roman Josi Activated From COVID Protocol
The Nashville Predators have their captain back just in time. The team will take on the Chicago Blackhawks this afternoon in their first game of 2022 and Roman Josi has been activated from the COVID protocol in time to participate. Josi returns along with Colton Sissons, who has also been activated. Meanwhile, Michael McCarron has been recalled from the taxi squad and Mathieu Olivier takes his place.
Unfortunately, just a few minutes later, the team announced that Dante Fabbro has entered the protocol.
Nashville has lost the first two games following the holiday break, both played without Josi in the lineup. The 31-year-old defenseman is the most important skater on the Predators roster, playing in all situations and driving the offense almost single-handedly at times.
In 30 games, the 2020 Norris Trophy winner has ten goals and 29 points, good for the team lead (tied with Mikael Granlund). Josi averages almost 25 minutes a night, though it remains to be seen whether he’ll see that much ice time in his first game back.
Sissons too is an important player to have back in the lineup, given his role as one of the team’s regular centers. While not a huge offensive contributor, his 13 points in 29 games are still a good bit of secondary scoring.
With these two back, the Predators were almost completely out of the woods when it comes to their current COVID placements. Fabbro’s presence will obviously be missed, meaning they won’t be at full strength for a little while longer.
Ian McCoshen Signs AHL Contract
If you are a fan of the Henderson Silver Knights and watched Ian McCoshen suit up 22 times this season, you might just assume that he had signed an AHL deal for this season. That wasn’t the case though, as McCoshen had actually been on a tryout to this point. No more, as the veteran defenseman has inked an AHL contract for the rest of the season.
McCoshen, 26, was the 31st overall pick in 2013, selected by the Florida Panthers the same year as Aleksander Barkov (and MacKenzie Weegar, who went 206th overall). After three very good seasons at Boston College, it looked like McCoshen was going to be a key building block for the Panthers. In his first professional season, he suited up three times at the NHL level as a polished college product.
Things didn’t quite go as planned, however, as McCoshen has totaled just 60 games so far in his NHL career. More than half of those came in the 2017-18 season and he hasn’t seen the league since 2018-19. This season in 22 games for Henderson he has four points.
Once again there is a prize for players like McCoshen, who are not signed to NHL deals this season. He would potentially be eligible to play at the Olympics, where USA Hockey will have to ice a team made up of minor league, college, and international talent. Years ago, McCoshen played in two different World Junior tournaments for his country. Depending on how young the management group decides to go, a 6’3″ minor league veteran like McCoshen could potentially be an option.
Evening Notes: Van Ryn, Eller, Bogosian
The St. Louis Blues have placed assistant coach Mike Van Ryn in the COVID protocol, meaning in all likelihood he’ll unfortunately miss tomorrow’s Winter Classic. The Blues are holding their breath hoping no other players or coaches will be ruled out at the last minute, while the Minnesota Wild are just hoping that Jonas Brodin will be able to test out of the protocol before the game.
Some more notes from around the league this evening:
- The Washington Capitals once again are without one of their centers, as Lars Eller is missing tonight’s game with a non-COVID illness. Eller has been an important player for the Capitals this season given the absences of Evgeny Kuznetsov and Nicklas Backstrom for various stretches, and has 15 points in 26 games. Meanwhile, Lucas Johansen, the team’s first-round pick from 2016, is making his NHL debut.
- The Tampa Bay Lightning are without Zach Bogosian, who is out day-to-day with a lower-body injury. The veteran defenseman has been playing more than the team likely expected, averaging more than 17 minutes a night. With several defensemen coming out of the COVID protocol the Lightning will be able to take a short absence, but it certainly isn’t ideal given how many issues they’ve had keeping the puck out of their net of late.
Ian White Signs In FPHL
The last time Ian White played professional hockey, he racked up 23 points in 42 AHL games, mostly for the Milwaukee Admirals. That was in 2015. Nearly seven years later, he’s pulling on another minor league sweater, signing a contract with the Columbus River Dragons of the Federal Prospects Hockey League.
White, 37, made his debut for the Georgia-based club last night in a win over the Port Huron Prowlers, a team they will face again tonight.
It’s not often that you find a veteran of more than 500 NHL games in the low minors, but that’s exactly what White brings to the table. A sixth-round pick of the Toronto Maple Leafs in 2002, he won silver with Team Canada at the World Juniors before growing into a solid two-way contributor at the NHL level. In 2009, he represented Canada again on the World Stage, winning silver at the World Championship.
After more than half a decade on the sidelines, White returns to the game to help the River Dragons win the Commissioner’s Cup.
Max Pacioretty Out Indefinitely Following Wrist Surgery
The Vegas Golden Knights will be without one of their top players for the foreseeable future, as Max Pacioretty is out indefinitely following wrist surgery. Pacioretty played just over 17 minutes on Tuesday against the Los Angeles Kings but has been absent from Golden Knights practice as he tried to deal with the injury.
The Golden Knights, of course, are dealing with an impending cap crunch as Jack Eichel rehabs from neck surgery and approaches a return to action. Pacioretty’s injury will solve that issue for the time being, given he can likely be placed on long-term injured reserve as he recovers from his own surgery. The 33-year-old’s $7MM salary would be more than enough to cover Eichel’s cost as long as Alec Martinez stays out, though things would get tricky again if everyone was healthy before the postseason.
While it may seem conspiratorial that Pacioretty is going on LTIR, the Golden Knights would obviously rather have him in the lineup. The veteran forward has been outstanding since arriving in Vegas, with 90 goals and 178 points in 201 games. This year he was scoring at an incredible pace with 12 goals and 21 points in just 16 games. Never a point-per-game player during his time in Montreal, it would be two seasons in a row that Pacioretty reached that mark in Vegas had he been able to continue it through the rest of the year.
Now it’s unclear when he will be back, making this a disappointing season for the winger. With just one year left on his contract and Vegas bringing in more big-money players at every chance, it’s hard to know how much longer Pacioretty will even be with the Golden Knights.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Coyotes-Stars Game Postponed
With the Dallas Stars dealing with massive COVID absences, their game against the Arizona Coyotes on January 2 has been postponed. This is the 81st postponement of the season, with more likely coming because of attendance issues in Canada.
The Stars are currently missing Luke Glendening, Jamie Benn, Roope Hintz, Joel Kiviranta, Jason Robertson, Michael Raffl, Radek Faksa, Ryan Suter, Esa Lindell, Miro Heiskanen, and Jani Hakanpaa. Many of those players should be eligible to come out of the protocol in the coming days if they are asymptomatic or their symptoms have disappeared, though they will still need to provide a negative test result. With that anything but a guarantee, the game for this weekend has been postponed.
With other postponements already in the books, Dallas’ next game isn’t until January 6 against the Florida Panthers, a date that should give them a reasonable amount of time to get most players out of the protocol and up to speed. For Arizona, things will resume on January 4 against the Winnipeg Jets.
Boeser, Di Giuseppe, Dowling Placed In COVID Protocol
Dec 30: The Canucks have put Justin Dowling into the protocol today. Of note, Dowling played last night against the Ducks, though it was fewer than eight minutes of actual ice time.
Dec 29: The Vancouver Canucks have announced that Brock Boeser, Phillip Di Giuseppe, and a member of the team’s support staff have been placed in the COVID protocol. Patrick Johnston of The Province reports that both players tested positive this morning in Anaheim, after traveling to face the Ducks tonight.
Losing Boeser ahead of tonight’s match will make it a lot tougher on the Canucks, who are actually working on a six-game win streak despite having not hit the ice since December 16. The team hasn’t lost a game under new head coach Bruce Boudreau, and a big part of that success has been the rejuvenated Boeser, who has five goals and seven points during that stretch.
While the two players would normally be subject to the league’s recently-reduced isolation period given they’re in the U.S., it certainly won’t help them in this case. The team’s road trip ends on Saturday and with the Canucks heading back to Canada, it is unclear when they will be ready to return to action (or even travel back to Vancouver). For now, the team will have to make do without their sniper or Giuseppe, who could have been the direct replacement for Boeser if he was eligible to enter the lineup.
Montreal Canadiens Add Two More To COVID Protocol
Welcome to Montreal, you’re going into the COVID protocol. The Montreal Canadiens have announced that Louis Belpedio and Gianni Fairbrother have both entered the protocol, just two days after they were recalled from the AHL.
Belpedio and Fairbrother join Paul Byron, Laurent Dauphin, Mike Hoffman, Artturi Lehkonen, Tyler Toffoli, Ben Chiarot, Joel Edmundson, Jeff Petry, Chris Wideman, Jake Allen, and Cayden Primeau in the protocol.
The Canadiens are still currently scheduled to take on the Carolina Hurricanes tonight, despite Montreal’s drastically impaired roster. The team is missing 13 skaters due to COVID (Lehkonen is skating but not yet activated) and another half dozen to injury.
Players like Rafael Harvey-Pinard, Lukas Vejdemo, and Corey Schueneman all made their season debuts on Tuesday against the Tampa Bay Lightning, a game that was actually one of the more competitive matches from the Canadiens all season.
It continues to be a nightmarish season for Montreal, who are now 7-21-4 on the year.
