Buffalo Sabres Avoid Arbitration With Victor Olofsson
One of the most intriguing arbitration cases scheduled for the next few days was Victor Olofsson, the Buffalo Sabres sniper who has scored 22 goals and 46 points in his 60-game NHL career. Despite being a relative newcomer to the NHL, Olofsson is already 25 and is a lot closer to unrestricted free agency than some of his rookie counterparts. His hearing was scheduled for November 4, but it appears as though it will not be necessary. The Sabres have signed Olofsson to a two-year contract that carries an average annual value of $3.05MM. Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic reports that it will pay Olofsson $2.85MM in 2020-21 and $3.25MM in 2021-22.
Not only does a two-year deal limit the cap hit and provides a very real chance for the Sabres to receive excess value out of the young forward, but it also leaves him a restricted free agent in 2022. While he has already turned 25, Olofsson’s birthday comes after the normal start of free agency meaning this deal does not walk him right to the UFA market. At its expiry, the two sides will have a chance to work out a long-term deal should his outstanding goal production continue.
Even though he has real 30-goal potential, there are some things to consider about Olofsson’s production so far. Only nine of his 22 career goals have come at even-strength, and this year he scored on 15.7% of his shots. If used properly he can be a game-changing presence on the powerplay, but he has still yet to prove that he can jump over the boards and produce at even-strength on a regular basis.
Still, there’s a lot to like about a deal that pays him about half of what the Sabres owe Kyle Okposo in each of the next three seasons, or what they could have found on the free agent market. Olofsson will join a top-six that suddenly looks quite impressive, after the offseason additions of Taylor Hall and Eric Staal. The team also has top prospect Dylan Cozens coming and still have Jack Eichel in the middle of it all, providing all-world production.
At the end of this deal, Olofsson will be arbitration-eligible once again and could potentially get himself to unrestricted free agency by taking that one-year award. He’ll also be owed a hefty qualifying offer of $3.25MM, something he could fall back on if his production dips but the Sabres still want to keep him around.
Because this was their final arbitration case, Buffalo will now receive a short buyout window starting two days from now.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Rick Bowness Officially Named Dallas Stars Head Coach
The entire organization had basically already confirmed that Rick Bowness would be back as the head coach of the Dallas Stars in 2020-21, but today they made it official. Bowness has left behind his interim tag and becomes the full-time head coach moving forward. Stars GM Jim Nill released a statement on the move:
The Stars are very excited to officially announce Rick as the team’s head coach. After being called upon in a difficult situation, Rick stepped into the interim head coaching role seamlessly and used his unmatched experience to lead the team to a successful second half of the season and a spot in the Stanley Cup Final. Watching the team throughout our playoff experience, you really saw the team become his. His ability to connect with our players and our staff is remarkable, and it leads to a situation where everyone is competing for him because they want to see him win.
Bowness of course led the Stars all the way to the Stanley Cup Final as an interim coach, taking over midseason after Jim Montgomery was fired for unprofessional conduct. The team had a 20-13-5 record down the stretch with him behind the bench, before winning the Western Conference in the return to play tournament.
For that, and the way players have obviously responded to the long-time NHL coach, it was an obvious choice to bring him back next season if Bowness wanted to. Amazingly, it might have been the unique bubble situation that actually convinced Bowness to return as head coach, a position he hasn’t held on a full-time basis in more than 20 years. Bowness explained:
My wife Judy and I are thrilled to have this opportunity to continue our work here in Dallas. This team is very special for me, that time in Edmonton was unlike any experience I have ever had in hockey, and it brought us together as a staff and as a team. We had a great run to the Stanley Cup Final, but we have some unfinished business left and we’re looking forward to the opportunity to build on what we started.
The Stars, armed with one of the most valuable players in the entire league, Miro Heiskanen (relative at least to his entry-level salary), will bring back mostly the same unit next season after mostly passing on the free agent market. It will be Bowness’s job to somehow get that group back to the promised land.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Columbus Blue Jackets Sign Ryan MacInnis
The Columbus Blue Jackets have re-signed restricted free agent Ryan MacInnis to a one-year, two-way contract for 2020-21. MacInnis had actually been eligible for salary arbitration but decided not to file. Aaron Portzline of The Athletic reports that the deal is worth $700K at the NHL level and $105K at the AHL level, suggesting that MacInnis expects to spend most of the year in the minor leagues. The young forward’s qualifying offer would have had a higher NHL salary but would have paid him just $70K in the AHL.
Spending most of the season at the AHL level is likely for a player that has just ten NHL games under his belt. MacInnis, a second-round pick from 2014 has spent almost his entire career in the minors to this point. In 2019-20 he recorded 30 points in 45 games for the Cleveland Monsters, his best offensive season so far.
With additions like Mikko Koivu, Max Domi, and Mikhail Grigorenko lengthening out the NHL roster, players like MacInnis will find it extremely difficult to secure any playing time in Columbus this season. With this deal, he has guaranteed he’ll get a nice little payday for the Monsters, while also setting himself up to be a Group VI unrestricted free agent next offseason.
Jan Jenik Loaned To Kettera
After loaning Ilya Lyubushkin back to the KHL, the Arizona Coyotes have sent another player abroad today. This time it’s Jan Jenik who has been loaned to Kettera of the Finnish second league.
Jenik, 20, was actually injured at the World Juniors this season and ended up playing in just 27 games for the Hamilton Bulldogs of the OHL. A third-round pick (65th overall) in 2018, he was one of the most dynamic players in the whole league during that short period, racking up 22 goals and 56 points.
That performance certainly has a lot of excitement surrounding the Czech-born forward, who was actually ranked 98th in Corey Pronman’s recent list of the top players under 23 for The Athletic. Getting him back on the ice is a huge deal for his development, even if it does come in an uncertain time for professional hockey players.
Because of his age, Jenik’s entry-level contract is not actually eligible to slide forward another season, meaning the Coyotes will burn the first year no matter where he plays. With that in mind, it will be interesting to see if he gets a chance in training camp to potentially push for a spot in the NHL right away, or ends up in the AHL, which recently announced they are targeting a February start date.
AHL, OHL Targeting February Start Dates
The NHL said as recently as last week that they are still targeting a January start for the 2020-21 season, but other leagues may not be so optimistic. Jeff Marek of Sportsnet reports that at the OHL GM meeting today, a plan was presented that would have their regular season start on February 4. Training camp for the junior league would start on January 23, with a 40-game schedule expected. The AHL meanwhile had their own meeting, this time with the league’s board of governors, which included a new target start date of February 5.
While the idea of hockey returning in February is exciting, it also means nearly a year between meaningful games for many prospects. Leagues shut down in early March this year, and though some teams have found landing spots for their players overseas, many have been limited to training in small groups or individually.
The AHL had originally given a target date of December 4, but “due to the ongoing COVID-19 public health crisis” that has been moved back two full months. The minor league is much more reliant on ticket sales than the NHL is, while also not being quite as well set up for regional bubbles. With so much uncertainty over the public health situation, individual state, provincial and federal guidelines, and an NHL season that isn’t set in stone yet, even this AHL target is completely temporary. It can—and very well might—be changed again down the line.
For now though, the leagues will hope to get things started in just over three months’ time.
Columbus Blue Jackets Re-Sign Kevin Stenlund
The Columbus Blue Jackets have completed a pair of transactions, signing Kevin Stenlund to a one-year, two-way contract for 2020-21 and loaning Jacob Christiansen to Bratislava in the Austrian ICEHL. Christiansen will return in time for the upcoming season in North America. Aaron Portzline of The Athletic reports that Stenlund accepted his qualifying offer, meaning he’ll carry a cap hit of $874,125 in the NHL this season on the two-way deal.
The 24-year-old Stenlund never did have a ton of notoriety as a prospect, but several years after he was selected 58th overall in 2015, he made his NHL debut for the Blue Jackets in 2019. After that quick four-game taste, he was back with the Cleveland Monsters again, providing solid two-way play and adding size to the minor league lineup. This past season he spent much more time in the NHL, suiting up 32 times for the Blue Jackets in the regular season, scoring six goals and ten points. He even dressed in two of the team’s postseason matches, scoring a key goal on the powerplay against the Tampa Bay Lightning.
Now, he will have to compete for a roster spot in what has become a crowded forward group in Columbus. The team has added Mikko Koivu and Mikhail Grigorenko in free agency while trading for Max Domi as well. Even without Pierre-Luc Dubois signed they have a long list of forwards battling for minutes, including youngsters Alexandre Texier, Emil Bemstrom, and Liam Foudy. Stenlund will have to earn any opportunity he wants next season.
Mac Hollowell Loaned To TUTO
The Toronto Maple Leafs have sent another one of their prospects overseas, this time loaning Mac Hollowell to TUTO of the Finnish second league. Hollowell split last season between the Toronto Marlies and Newfoundland Growlers in his first year of professional hockey.
Selected in the fourth round two years ago, Hollowell is another Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds connection for the Maple Leafs—the organization that GM Kyle Dubas and head coach Sheldon Keefe both came from. The undersized defenseman is already 22 as he was an over-aged prospect when the Maple Leafs picked him, but certainly brings a lot of talent to the table.
In 2018-19 when Hollowell went back to the Greyhounds, he led all OHL defensemen in scoring with 24 goals and 77 points. While he was older than much of his competition, it still demonstrated the easy puck-moving capabilities that Toronto hopes to coax out at the professional level. Things didn’t go quite as smoothly in the AHL, but Hollowell did still record 12 points in 34 games for the Toronto Marlies.
A longshot to ever become an impact player at the NHL level (or perhaps even reach it at all), Hollowell nevertheless signed his entry-level contract in 2019 and is heading into the second season of the three-year deal. He’ll get his blades on the ice in Finland for the time being but is expected to be back in North America for training camp.
Minnesota Wild Sign Marco Rossi To Entry-Level Contract
October 28: Now that Rossi has been signed, a loan to the ZSC Lions can become official. Rossi actually doesn’t count against the import player limit for Zurich thanks to holding a Swiss player license from his years in the development system. He will return to North America in time for NHL training camp.
October 23: The Minnesota Wild have signed top draft choice Marco Rossi to a three-year, entry-level contract. Rossi has spent the last two seasons with the Ottawa 67’s of the OHL before going ninth overall in this month’s draft.
Rossi, who turned 19 a month ago, is considered one of the few players selected this year that could be able to step directly into an NHL lineup next season. The Austrian-born center was a sensational talent for Ottawa, scoring 120 points in just 56 games this season. That point total led all CHL skaters and he was named the OHL’s Most Outstanding Player.
Good at both ends of the rink, the biggest knock on Rossi is his size. Standing just 5’9″ he is by no means the prototypical big-bodied center, but he makes up for it with skill, skating ability and tremendous awareness.
The OHL was shooting for a December start date in the past, but is now much more likely to push the start of their season even further. If that’s the case, Rossi could very well end up in NHL training camp with the Wild as the next stop in his hockey career.
Ottawa Senators To Sign Alex Galchenyuk
12:00pm: The Senators have officially announced the contract, signing Galchenyuk to a one-year, $1.05MM contract for the 2020-21 season. Dorion released a statement on the deal:
Alex’s signing represents another good addition for us at forward. He’s versatile in that he can play both left wing and centre. He’s gifted offensively, has been a solid power-play contributor and is a proven goal scorer in this league.
11:07am: The Ottawa Senators are going to add some more offensive firepower to the lineup, as Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic reports they are close to signing unrestricted free agent Alex Galchenyuk. Bruce Garrioch of Postmedia tweets that the contract is expected to carry a salary of $1.05MM.
Galchenyuk, 26, is a long way from the 30-goal campaign he had in 2015-16 with the Montreal Canadiens. Since then he’s been included in separate trades for Max Domi, Phil Kessel, and Jason Zucker, bouncing from Montreal to Arizona, Pittsburgh and Minnesota. He was a disaster for the Penguins, scoring just five goals and 17 points in 45 games despite getting an early opportunity beside Evgeni Malkin, and was anything but a dominant presence for the Wild, registering zero points in their four qualification round games.
Still, he’s 26 and was a third-overall pick eight years ago. There is incredible skill in Galchenyuk’s hands and though he has been a relative disappointment given his draft position, he still does have 135 goals and 320 points in 549 regular season games. That’s good enough for second among all players drafted in 2012, behind only Nashville’s Filip Forsberg (166 goals, 353 points).
In Ottawa, he can slide into a lineup that suddenly looks a lot deeper than expected. The Senators have not only added Galchenyuk, but also Evgenii Dadonov and Austin Watson to a forward group that will also likely include third-overall pick Tim Stuetzle. On defense they’ve added Josh Brown and Erik Gudbranson while solidifying the crease with Matt Murray. It’s an impressive offseason for GM Pierre Dorion, who has been adamant that the Senators will be competitive sooner than many believe.
The question now becomes where exactly Galchenyuk plays, given he is likely more effective as a center (even if there are still legitimate questions about his defensive ability). The team already has Chris Tierney, Colin White, Josh Norris, and Logan Brown as potential pivots, meaning someone—perhaps Galchenyuk—will have to move to the wing.
Still, for just over a million dollars, this is an almost risk-free move for Dorion. At worst, Galchenyuk struggles and the team doesn’t retain him next season. At best, he rediscovers his previous 30-goal potential and becomes a core piece in the rebuild. Most likely? Galchenyuk gets strong powerplay time and becomes a trade chip for the Senators at the deadline to add even more assets to the cupboard.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Ilya Lyubushkin Loaned To KHL
The Arizona Coyotes have loaned defenseman Ilya Lyubushkin back to his old KHL club, Yaroslavl Lokomotiv, until NHL training camps open in a few months. Lyubushkin signed a new contract with the Coyotes earlier this month and is expected to challenge for a full-time roster spot in 2020-21. For now, he’ll go back to the place that put him on NHL radars in the first place.
Undrafted, Lyubushkin worked his way up the depth chart with Lokomotiv, playing five seasons in the KHL before signing an NHL contract in 2018. The 26-year-old provides almost no offense—he is still looking for his first NHL goal, 92 games in—but does represent a physical presence that is basically unmatched in Arizona. Even while playing in only 51 of the team’s 70 games and averaging just over 14 minutes a night this season, he led all defenders in hits with 151.
When he signed his one-year contract, he joined four other defensemen on the roster that will become unrestricted free agents in the 2021 offseason. Lyubushkin, Alex Goligoski, Niklas Hjalmarsson, Jason Demers and Jordan Oesterle are all on expiring deals, meaning if new GM Bill Armstrong wants to shake up the roster there will be an obvious opportunity on the blue line.
Lybushkin meanwhile will get a chance to go back to the organization that developed him, even if it is on a short-term loan. He played more than 300 games in the KHL before coming over, recording nearly 400 penalty minutes in the process.

