Winnipeg Jets Sign Jansen Harkins
The Winnipeg Jets have signed Jansen Harkins to a new two-year contract that will carry an average annual value of $725K. The 23-year-old forward was a restricted free agent but did not qualify for salary arbitration.
Harkins, a fan favorite in the Jets organization who earned his first taste of NHL action this season, scored seven points in 29 games. When Harkins was inserted into the lineup and scored in the Jets qualification round against the Calgary Flames this summer, head coach Paul Maurice took time in his press conference to highlight exactly how hard the young forward has worked to get to that point.
I don’t know that I’ve had a player that has been given less opportunity and stayed in the fight, competed as hard as this guy has. He had no chance of making our team, but had a good camp. But he’s not a first overall pick so he doesn’t have ten guys pounding the table for him to give him that chance. He’s been given nothing here. But what he did was he forced an opportunity. With the [Manitoba] Moose, there was no choice but to call him up. And then he gets in the lineup and he gets into practice and he works so hard you just have to play him.
A second-round pick in 2015, Harkins was in the ECHL during the 2017-18 season and his career seemed completely off track. He’s turned things around since then and now could be a full-time option for the Jets in 2020-21.
While he may never be an impact scorer, his work ethic and competitiveness have made him an effective option, at least in Maurice’s eyes. A multi-year deal will now give him some financial security and allow him to really try and prove he belongs at the NHL level.
Columbus Blue Jackets Sign Calvin Thurkauf
The Columbus Blue Jackets have signed restricted free agent Calvin Thurkauf to a one-year, two-way contract. The 23-year-old forward is currently playing with Zug EV of the Swiss NLA, but is expected to return for NHL training camp when it starts later this winter.
Thurkauf made his NHL debut this season, suiting up in three NHL games for the Blue Jackets after spending most of the last three years in the minor leagues. A seventh-round pick from 2016, he’s slowly worked his way through the minor league system and is now a real candidate for a bottom-six role.
It’s hard to know exactly where Thurkauf’s offensive game can go at the highest level, but he has looked good in a two-way role in Switzerland so far. He’ll have to continue to play good defense and use his big frame to carve out a role in Columbus.
This is of course not the restricted free agent that Blue Jackets fans are excited to hear about. That would Pierre-Luc Dubois, who figures to get a massive raise if he agrees to a long-term deal with Columbus. Still just 22, Dubois is already arguably the team’s best forward but does not have arbitration rights.
Tyler Bertuzzi Receives Arbitration Award
Most players that file for salary arbitration never reach it, instead settling on contract terms in the days preceding their scheduled hearing. That wasn’t the case for Tyler Bertuzzi, whose hearing was held over the weekend with the Detroit Red Wings. According to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet, Bertuzzi has received the arbitrator’s decision today, awarding him a one-year $3.5MM contract.
Bertuzzi had filed for $4.25MM, while the Red Wings had filed for $3.15MM. That means the deal comes in slightly closer to the Red Wings side of things but still landed in the middle like usual.
The award is not above the “walkaway” threshold, meaning it is binding and will be signed by both parties in the coming days. Bertuzzi, 25, will still be a restricted free agent when the contract expires and will be eligible for arbitration once again.
A $3.5MM salary actually makes Bertuzzi the fourth-highest paid forward on the Red Wings, something he certainly deserves after the last two seasons. The scrappy, in-your-face forward has recorded consecutive 21-goal campaigns, actually leading the Red Wings in 2019-20. His ability to get under opponents’ skin while also contributing at the offensive end is something not easily found in the NHL, making him an important piece for Detroit to build around.
Unless, of course, the team decides to build around the next wave of prospects instead. Given Bertuzzi’s proximity to free agency and ability to take another one-year arbitration award that would walk him right to the open market, Red Wings GM Steve Yzerman could potentially dangle him as trade bait if they decide not to (or believe they can’t) sign him long-term. Anthony Mantha, who decided not to file for arbitration, could potentially be in the same situation.
The Red Wings minor league system is filling up with extremely talented youngsters that will soon be the core of the NHL roster, while Dylan Larkin remains the only player signed through the 2022-23 season (not counting entry-level contracts). A one-year deal for Bertuzzi certainly doesn’t guarantee he’ll be around the next time the team is competitive.
Ottawa Senators Sign Filip Chlapik
The Ottawa Senators have taken care of a little more business, signing Filip Chlapik to a new contract. The one-year, two-way deal will pay him $735K at the NHL level. Senators GM Pierre Dorion had this to say on his young forward:
Filip’s a competitive player who works hard. He has applied himself to becoming an important player for us in Belleville. We’re confident that work ethic will be equally as effective for him as he strives to become the same type of player in Ottawa.
Chlapik, 23, still hasn’t established himself as a full-time NHL option, but did play 31 games with Ottawa this season. The 48th overall pick in 2015, he has 11 points in 56 career games. As Dorion points out, he has become a core piece of the Belleville lineup and could very well make the jump in the coming years.
While he waited for a new deal with Ottawa, Chlapik had signed on to play with HC Sparta Praha in the Czech professional league. Unfortunately, he has suited up just three times because of the COVID-19 situation overseas, which has put that league on pause. He has one goal in those three games.
Chlapik’s new contract leaves only Christian Jaros left for the Senators to sign, with an arbitration hearing on the books for November 7.
Oscar Fantenberg Signs In KHL
A free agent defenseman has decided to take his talents overseas. Oscar Fantenberg, who spent the 2019-20 season with the Vancouver Canucks, has signed a one-year contract with SKA St. Petersburg in the KHL. The deal carries him through the end of April 2021.
Fantenberg, 29, has actually played in the KHL before, suiting up 44 times for Sochi HC in 2016-17. That’s the season which landed him an NHL contract, signing a one-year entry-level deal with the Los Angeles Kings almost immediately after it ended. Since then, the two-way defenseman has played in 147 NHL games, split between the Kings, Canucks, and Calgary Flames.
Perhaps his most impressive hockey came just this summer for the Canucks, where he played 16 postseason contests. While he’ll never be a top-four option in the NHL, it did appear as though he could be a useful depth piece for the next several years.
With that in mind, it will be interesting to see if his name pops up again after the KHL season ends, given that the NHL schedule will likely not be finished by the beginning of May. He’ll also be a candidate to return for the 2021-22 campaign, if he decides to try his hand in North America once again.
Hendrix Lapierre Signs Entry-Level Contract
The Washington Capitals have signed their first-round selection, inking Hendrix Lapierre to a three-year, entry-level contract.
A few years ago, if someone had said that Lapierre would be available with the 22nd overall pick in the 2020 draft, they would have been laughed out of the building. Selected first overall in the 2018 QMJHL Entry Draft, Lapierre was considered a candidate to go in one of the very first few spots by the time he was 18. His rookie season went well, with Lapierre winning the Michel Bergeron Trophy as offensive rookie of the year, scoring 45 points in 48 games.
Unfortunately, during that first season for Chicoutimi, Lapierre suffered a concussion that forced him to miss several games. He would return and play well in the playoffs, before suiting up for Team Canada at the Hlinka-Gretzky (dominating the tournament competition). The next season, Lapierre suffered multiple head injuries over a short time period and he suffered endless symptoms. He had played just 19 games in the 2019-20 season.
It wasn’t until February that it was discovered that the injuries were not actually concussions, but related to a previous vertebrae injury. He was on track to return for Chicoutimi when the season was shut down due to COVID-19. The lack of in-person medical testing because of the lockdown only lessened teams’ comfort with selecting the talented youngster, which allowed him to drop all the way to the back half of the first round.
Washington, apparently unwilling to wait any longer, used the 80th overall pick to trade up two spots and take Lapierre at 22. Now, presumably after putting him through their own medical testing, they’ve given him his first pro contract.
Lapierre was back playing for Chicoutimi this season before the QMJHL instituted another temporary shutdown. He has eight points in four games.
Devon Toews Avoids Arbitration
One of the most interesting arbitration cases on the schedule this year was Devon Toews, who would have had to sit across the (virtual) table from Colorado Avalanche management that barely knew him. The Avalanche traded two second-round picks for Toews earlier this offseason, taking him away from the New York Islanders. That hearing, scheduled for October 31, will not be needed anymore, as the team has reached a four-year contract with Toews that will pay him an average annual value of $4.1MM.
CapFriendly has the full breakdown:
- 2020-21: $2.35MM
- 2021-22: $3.55MM
- 2022-23: $4.6MM
- 2023-24: $5.9MM
Toews, 26, is giving up three years of unrestricted free agency in the deal and turning down the chance to walk into the open market next offseason. An arbitration award would have only been able to be a one-year deal, making him a UFA at the age of 27. In exchange for giving that up, Toews has received quite the raise over the $700K salary he had averaged over the last two seasons.
Though it took him a while to get to the NHL, when he did, Toews found immediate success. A fourth-round pick in 2014 after his first season at Quinnipiac University, Toews would stay in college for two more years before joining the Islanders organization. In 2016-17 he would burst onto the AHL scene with 45 points in 76 games, racking up the most assists by any rookie and earning himself a place on the All-Rookie team.
Though injuries would limit his sophomore year, Toews would finally make it to the NHL just before Christmas in 2018 and never look back. In his first season with the Islanders he recorded 18 points in 48 games while averaging a little less than 18 minutes a game, but both those numbers ballooned in 2019-20.
Now thrown over the boards for more than 20 minutes a night and given regular powerplay time, Toews racked up 28 points in 68 games and was a monster in almost every possession statistic.
In Colorado, while the powerplay opportunity may disappear thanks to the presence of talented youngsters like Cale Makar and Samuel Girard (not to mention Bowen Byram, who is on the way), he’ll represent a perfect two-way complement that can slide in beside almost anyone. In fact, he seems a capable replacement for Ian Cole, who has quietly been extremely effective since ending up in Colorado, but whose contract expires after the 2020-21 season.
Josh Ho-Sang Avoids Arbitration
The New York Islanders and Josh Ho-Sang have avoided arbitration, signing a new one-year, two-way contract worth $700K at the NHL level according to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. Ho-Sang had a hearing scheduled for Friday, which will no longer be required.
Ho-Sang, 24, appeared to be heading toward a split with the Islanders after another testy season. He played only 16 games with the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, requested a trade, and found himself sent nearly 2,000 miles away to San Antonio, loaned to the AHL’s Rampage. Even a qualifying offer was surprising, but the team obviously didn’t want to allow him to walk into unrestricted free agency without receiving any value back.
Now, on a two-way, league-minimum contract, Ho-Sang’s trade value may actually have crept high enough for something to get done. Teams around the league that need to fill out their lineup with cheap forwards could call the Islanders and give the talented offensive player a chance. While he certainly hasn’t proven anything to this point, Ho-Sang does have 24 points in 53 career NHL games and has always been able to contribute on the minor league powerplay.
The Islanders haven’t escaped arbitration completely just yet. The team still has a hearing with star defenseman Ryan Pulock scheduled for November 6, and also has a negotiation to complete with the ineligible Mathew Barzal.
Minor Transactions: 10/26/20
While NHL teams continue to fill out their rosters and prepare for the 2020-21 season, minor and European leagues also are working on new contracts. We’ll keep track of some of the newsworthy minor transactions right here:
- San Jose Sharks prospect Artemi Kniazev has signed a deal with Ak Bars in the KHL for the upcoming season, giving him a place to play as he continues his development. The 19-year-old defenseman was selected 48th overall in 2019 and has spent the last two seasons in the QMJHL. Kniazev signed his entry-level contract with the Sharks just a few weeks after he was drafted but it won’t kick in until next season given his age.
- Former NHL forward Jack Skille has found a new home, signing with EC Salzburg in the Austrian ICEHL. Skille played 55 games for the Vancouver Canucks in 2016-17 but has bounced around the globe the last several seasons, suiting up in the KHL, NLA and DEL.
- Phil Varone has officially signed his KHL contract, a one-year deal with Barys Nur-Sultan that was reported by his agent a few days ago. Varone has 97 games of NHL experience, most recently playing in 2018-19 with the Philadelphia Flyers.
Trevor Daley Retires, Joins Pittsburgh Penguins Front Office
After the Pittsburgh Penguins announced they had relieved AGM Jason Karmanos earlier today, they now have brought in a new (though familiar) face to the front office. Trevor Daley, who won the Stanley Cup with the team in both 2016 and 2017, has decided to retire and join the organization as a hockey operations advisor. Daley had played the last three seasons with the Detroit Red Wings, but will now hang up his skates and put on a suit. Penguins GM Jim Rutherford released a statement on the hire:
First, I would like to congratulate Trevor on an incredibly successful 16-year career. In addition to being a Stanley Cup Champion with us, he left us with a great impression due to his professional demeanor and quiet leadership qualities. Those traits, along with his desire to want to learn about the business side of the NHL, made him a great candidate to join our staff.
Daley, 37, played more than 1,100 games in the NHL, suiting up for the Dallas Stars, Chicago Blackhawks, Penguins, and Red Wings. A smooth-skating defenseman that could contribute at both ends of the rink, he racked up 309 points in 1,058 regular season contests including a career-high 38 in the 2014-15 season. After winning his second title with Pittsburgh in 2017 he signed a three-year, $9.5MM contract with the Red Wings, but dealt with several injuries and ended up playing in just 164 games with the team.
With the Penguins, Daley will assist with player evaluations and serve as an “eye in the sky” for the coaching staff during games. While this is just the beginning of his post-playing career, it does provide the Penguins with another set of hands in what had recently become quite a thin front office.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

