Yu Sato Signs In QMJHL

If you were following along with the 2019 CHL Import Draft in June, you may have noticed something extremely uncommon partway through the first round. With the 24th selection, the Quebec Remparts picked Yu Sato of Japan. While countries like Finland, Russia, Sweden and Switzerland are commonly represented in the draft, Japan is not. Six weeks later Sato has signed with the Remparts and will be suiting up for head coach Patrick Roy this season.

Sato, 17, is eligible for the 2020 NHL Entry Draft and if selected would become just the third Japanese-born player ever picked. Defenseman Hiroyuki Miura was selected by the Montreal Canadiens in 1992 but never appeared in an NHL game, while goaltender Yutaka Fukufuji was picked by the Los Angeles Kings in 2004 and played four games for them in 2007. There was also the infamous Taro Tsujimoto incident in 1974, when Buffalo Sabres GM Punch Imlach created a fictional Japanese player to select in the late rounds as a joke.

The young Remparts forward however is no joke. Sato played last season in Finland’s junior system and dominated, something he’d done in Russia’s junior league the year prior. If he can find some success in Quebec under Roy this season, perhaps there will be a new name added to the history books next June and potentially the first Japanese NHL skater a few years after that.

Minnesota Wild Interview Bill Guerin, Don Waddell

The Minnesota Wild are aggressively searching for their next GM after unceremoniously firing Paul Fenton just 14 months into his tenure and two more interesting names have popped up. Michael Russo of The Athletic (subscription required) confirms that the team interviewed Pittsburgh Penguins assistant GM Bill Guerin on Monday after previously receiving permission from the club to do so, but it is the second name that raises an eyebrow. Don Waddell also interviewed for the job, despite still being the GM of the Carolina Hurricanes. Russo reports however that Waddell is technically a free agent given that his contract with the Hurricanes expired on June 30th and he has actually not yet been signed to a new deal by Carolina owner Tom Dundon.

Waddell has been with the Hurricanes for several years and when Ron Francis was let go in the spring of 2018 he moved from the business side over to hockey operations and assumed control. Carolina found immediate success under Waddell and went all the way to the Eastern Conference Final, notably with former Minnesota forward Nino Niederreiter riding shotgun after he was snatched from Fenton in exchange for Victor Rask. Interviewing a current GM from another team—even one without a valid contract—is so uncommon that it is not clear how a situation like that would unfold if the Wild decided that Waddell was their man.

Guerin meanwhile has been an up-and-coming GM candidate for quite a while but doesn’t have the kind of experience that owner Craig Leipold hinted he was looking for when explaining the Fenton move. He has served as assistant GM in Pittsburgh for the last five years and took over as GM of Wilkes-Barre/Scranton when Jason Botterill moved on to Buffalo in 2017.

Other candidates listed by Russo include Ron Hextall, Peter Chiarelli, Brian Lawton, Scott Mellanby, Tom Fitzgerald, Bill Zito, Basil McRae, Mike Futa and Mark Hunter.

Latest On Brock Boeser’s Contract Negotiations

The Vancouver Canucks are one of the many teams waiting to resolve a contract situation with one of their best players, in their case restricted free agent Brock Boeser. The 22-year old forward has scored 59 goals through his first 140 NHL games and possesses one of the most lethal shots in the league. Seemingly a perfect fit alongside phenom center Elias Pettersson, the Canucks would surely like to lock Boeser up to a reasonable long-term deal. Ben Kuzma of Postmedia was on TSN radio yesterday and reported that Boeser’s camp is looking for a $7MM average annual value on his next deal and suggests Timo Meier‘s four-year deal as a reasonable comparison.

Meier signed that four-year $24MM contract with the San Jose Sharks at the beginning of July, but it was designed in a very interesting way. At the conclusion of the contract Meier will still be a restricted free agent for one more year, but because he earns $10MM in salary during the 2022-23 campaign that is what the Sharks would have to extend him as a qualifying offer in order to retain his rights. Obviously they could work out another extension, but Meier has virtually turned the deal into a five-year $34MM contract if he wants it to be. That gets the average annual value a lot closer to that $7MM mark that Kuzma reports Boeser is after.

It’s not clear if the Canucks would be willing (or able) to structure a deal like that, but obviously some sort of compromise will have to be made. Seemingly the entire RFA class has decided that they want to get paid handsomely this summer on their second contracts, and many believe the market is still being held up by Mitch Marner and the Toronto Maple Leafs. Marner isn’t a very good comparable for Boeser given the difference in their NHL experience (Marner has played in 101 more regular season games than Boeser and is a year closer to UFA status), but he still may set the ceiling on the entire market whenever he actually signs. For what it’s worth, Toronto GM Kyle Dubas spoke with TSN at the World Junior Summer Showcase and explained that there isn’t a ton of progress in any of the RFA situations around the league.

A $7MM cap hit would put Boeser into the top-35 in terms of highest paid forwards in the league, tying him with names like Anders Lee, James van Riemsdyk and Evander Kane who were all paid for their UFA seasons relatively recently. William Nylander‘s six-year $45MM deal comes in just shy of the $7MM mark and was signed as an RFA, though it also buys out a year of unrestricted status.

It is important to note that the Canucks don’t actually have a ton of cap space to throw around. CapFriendly is currently projecting them to have just over $5MM, though that is based on a 24-man roster that will obviously be downsized before the start of the season. With Nikolay Goldobin still to go however, there will likely have to be a few more moves to fit everyone in if Boeser does get his $7MM deal. While Boeser is obviously worth it, the Canucks have a lot of money tied up in bottom-six forwards (even through 2020-21 and beyond) and may have to find a way to shed some of them before things really get going next month.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Snapshots: Shattenkirk, Schuldt, Maroon

The Tampa Bay Lightning snapped up Kevin Shattenkirk this morning on a one-year deal and the veteran defenseman is determined to make it pay off for both sides. Looking to re-establish himself in the NHL he told reporters including Joe Smith of The Athletic that he was “pissed off” when he received his buyout and now has a “huge chip” on his shoulder.

Smith also reports that Shattenkirk had 11 teams reach out to him once he became an unrestricted free agent, and Richard Morin of AZ Central Sports tweets that the Arizona Coyotes were one of them. The defenseman was close to joining the Lightning in the past when he was on the trade block but wouldn’t sign an extension with Tampa Bay, but now will have the chance to show the organization what he is capable of.

  • The Vegas Golden Knights have most of their offseason business dealt with, but Jimmy Schuldt remains unsigned after burning through his entry-level contract in the last few weeks of the 2018-19 season. Jesse Granger of The Athletic reports that negotiations with the young defenseman only recently started, perhaps delayed because of all of the other moves the team needed to make. After trading away the likes of Nikita Gusev, Erik Haula and Colin Miller the Golden Knights got themselves under the salary cap, but not by a ton. It will be interesting to see what kind of salary Schuldt can command after playing just a single NHL game. The St. Cloud State standout signed with the Golden Knights after an excellent college career and could see regular time on their blueline this season.
  • Ben Frederickson of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that the St. Louis Blues and Pat Maroon “remain on one another’s radar” even this late into the offseason. Maroon remains an unrestricted free agent for the time being after playing a year with the Blues last season at a discount in order to be closer to family. That decision worked out for him in terms of team success at the Blues went on to win the Stanley Cup, but one has to wonder if a multi-year deal is still the expectation for the power forward. Maroon scored just 10 goals and 28 points for the Blues in 74 games but was a physical force in the playoffs and ended up poking home one of the most memorable game-winning tallies of the entire postseason.

2019 Preseason Schedule

The Stanley Cup has been handed out to the St. Louis Blues, and the rest of the league is already preparing for 2019-20. The offseason will really get kicked off later this month when the league gathers in Vancouver for the 2019 Entry Draft, and free agency is right around the corner. Development camps will also kick off later this month, before NHL training camps get going a little later in the summer. For some fans, there is already a definite schedule for the 2019 preseason.

Originally published on June 18, it has been updated with the full schedule release today:

All times central, some games played with a split-squad

Sunday, September 15:

Arizona at Vegas, 5:00pm

Monday, September 16:

Florida at Nashville, 3:30pm
Chicago at Washington, 6:00pm
New Jersey at Montreal, 6:00pm
Boston at New Jersey, 6:00pm
NY Islanders at Philadelphia, 6:00pm
Pittsburgh at Buffalo, 6:00pm *At Penn State University
Florida at Nashville, 7:00pm
St. Louis at Dallas, 7:30pm
Winnipeg at Edmonton, 8:00pm
Vancouver at Calgary, 8:00pm
Calgary at Vancouver, 9:00pm *In Victoria, British Columbia

Tuesday, September 17:

Ottawa at Toronto, 4:30pm *In St. John’s, Newfoundland
Philadelphia at NY Islanders, 6:00pm
Buffalo at Columbus, 6:00pm
Carolina at Tampa Bay, 6:00pm
Chicago at Detroit, 6:30pm
Dallas at Minnesota, 7:00pm
Vegas at Colorado, 8:00pm
Edmonton at Vancouver, 9:00pm
Los Angeles at Arizona, 9:00pm
Arizona at Los Angeles, 9:30pm
Anaheim at San Jose, 9:30pm

Wednesday, September 18:

Tampa Bay at Carolina, 6:00pm
St. Louis at Washington, 6:00pm
Montreal at Florida, 6:00pm *In Bathurst, New Brunswick
New Jersey at NY Rangers, 6:00pm
Toronto at Ottawa, 6:30pm
Minnesota at Winnipeg, 7:00pm
Detroit at Chicago, 7:30pm
San Jose at Calgary, 8:00pm

Thursday, September 19:

Florida at Montreal, 6:00pm
Boston at Philadelphia, 6:00pm
Columbus at Pittsburgh, 6:00pm
Dallas at Colorado, 8:00pm
Vancouver at Edmonton, 8:00pm
Vegas at Los Angeles, 9:30pm

Friday, September 20:

Nashville at Tampa Bay, 6:00pm
Buffalo at Toronto, 6:00pm
NY Rangers at New Jersey, 6:00pm
NY Islanders at Detroit, 6:30pm
St. Louis at Winnipeg, 7:00pm
Calgary at Edmonton, 8:00pm

Saturday, September 21:

Pittsburgh at Columbus, 1:00pm
Colorado at Minnesota, 5:00pm
Carolina at Washington, 6:00pm
NY Rangers at Philadelphia, 6:00pm
Toronto at Buffalo, 6:00pm
NY Islanders at New Jersey, 6:00pm
Montreal at Ottawa, 6:00pm
Tampa Bay at Nashville, 7:00pm
Vegas at San Jose, 7:00pm
Florida at Dallas, 7:00pm *In Tulsa, Oklahoma
Boston at Chicago, 7:30pm
Vancouver at Los Angeles, 8:00pm *In Salt Lake City, Utah
Anaheim at Arizona, 8:00pm

Sunday, September 22:

Columbus at St. Louis, 2:30pm
Pittsburgh at Detroit, 4:00pm
Minnesota at Colorado, 6:00pm
Calgary at Winnipeg, 7:00pm

Monday, September 23:

Toronto at Montreal, 6:00pm
Philadelphia at Boston, 6:00pm
Detroit at NY Islanders, 6:00pm
Ottawa at Vancouver, 9:00pm *In Abbotsford, British Columbia
Anaheim at Los Angeles, 9:30pm

Tuesday, September 24:

Tampa Bay at Florida, 6:00pm
NY Islanders at NY Rangers, 6:00pm
Dallas at St. Louis, 7:00pm
Winnipeg at Calgary, 8:00pm
Arizona at Edmonton, 8:00pm
San Jose at Anaheim, 9:00pm

Wednesday, September 25:

Montreal at Toronto, 6:00pm
Columbus at Buffalo, 6:00pm
Detroit at Pittsburgh, 6:00pm
New Jersey at Boston, 6:00pm
Carolina at Nashville, 7:00pm
Washington at Chicago, 7:30pm
Colorado at Vegas, 9:00pm
Ottawa at Vancouver, 9:00pm
Los Angeles at Anaheim, 9:00pm

Thursday, September 26:

Tampa Bay at Florida, 6:00pm
Philadelphia at NY Rangers, 6:00pm
St. Louis at Detroit, 6:00pm *In Calumet, Michigan
Edmonton at Winnipeg, 7:00pm
Minnesota at Dallas, 7:30pm
Arizona at Vancouver, 9:00pm
Calgary at San Jose, 9:30pm

Friday, September 27:

New Jersey at Columbus, 6:00pm
Nashville at Carolina, 6:30pm
Toronto at Detroit, 6:30pm
St. Louis at Washington, 8:00pm
Los Angeles at Vegas, 9:00pm

Saturday, September 28:

Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 2:00pm
Chicago at Boston, 2:00pm
Colorado at Dallas, 5:00pm
Florida at Tampa Bay, 6:00pm
Ottawa at Montreal, 6:00pm
Detroit at Toronto, 6:00pm
NY Rangers at NY Islanders, 6:00pm *In Bridgeport, Connecticut
Edmonton at Calgary, 8:00pm
Arizona at Anaheim, 9:00pm

Sunday, September 29:

Washington at Carolina, 12:30pm
Chicago at Eisbaren Berlin, 12:30pm *In Berlin, Germany
Winnipeg at Minnesota, 1:00pm
St. Louis at Columbus, 4:00pm
San Jose at Vegas, 7:00pm

Monday, September 30:

Philadelphia at Lausanne HC, 1:00pm *In Lausanne, Switzerland

Minor Transactions: 08/05/19

As August begins and we get closer to the end of arbitration and contract holdouts, teams continue to fill our their organizational depth charts. Here are some minor moves from around the league. We’ll keep updating as more come in:

  • Pro enforcer Bobby Farnham has decided to take his talents to the EIHL, signing a one-year deal with the Belfast Giants. Farnham has bounced up and down between the AHL and NHL for years, mostly as an imposing physical presence. Despite being just 5’10” the 30-year old Farnham has always been willing to drop the gloves or go after a player in the corner. In 67 NHL games he has 138 penalty minutes a total dwarfed by the 1,044 he has received through 404 AHL games.
  • Farnham will be joined in Belfast by former NHL player Liam Reddox who has spent the last eight seasons with the Vaxjo Lakers. Reddox actually served as captain of the Swedish team for the last four years, but will be looking for a new challenge in 2019-20. Once the 112th pick of the 2004 draft, Reddox played 100 NHL games with the Edmonton Oilers before leaving for the SHL in 2011.
  • There was a trade in the ECHL this morning, with the Maine Mariners acquiring the rights of Jordan Klimek in exchange for Derek Pratt and Garrett Cecere. All three are former NCAA players looking to make their way in professional hockey.

Poll: Who Are The Best Centers In The NHL?

NHL Network certainly knows how to throw the hockey world into a tizzy when it comes to ranking the best players in the league. Last night the network revealed their annual list of the Top-20 Centers in the NHL and once again Connor McDavid found himself edging out Sidney Crosby in the top two spots. Last season’s bronze recipient Evgeni Malkin fell all the way to #13 however, allowing Colorado Avalanche superstar Nathan MacKinnon to jump a couple of spots up the list.

The Pittsburgh Penguins (Crosby, Malkin), Toronto Maple Leafs (John Tavares, Auston Matthews), Tampa Bay Lightning (Steven Stamkos, Brayden Point) and Washington Capitals (Evgeny Kuznetsov, Nicklas Backstrom) all have a pair of names on the list, giving the group a very Eastern Conference flavor. Despite Jonathan Toews‘ resurgence in 2018-19 he was left off the list again along with potential snubs like Sean Couturier, Dylan Larkin and Mathew Barzal among many others.

Like last year, when our community actually crowned Crosby as top dog, we thought we’d do our own tally here at PHR. In the poll below we’ve listed many options and are asking you to vote for your top group by selecting 10 names. Do Stamkos and Tavares stay ahead of their younger teammates? Will Malkin get back into the top 10? Can Elias Pettersson climb even higher? Cast your votes below and make sure to leave a comment explaining your choices.

Who are the best centers in the NHL?
Sidney Crosby 11.39% (853 votes)
Connor McDavid 11.20% (839 votes)
Nathan MacKinnon 8.22% (616 votes)
Auston Matthews 6.91% (518 votes)
Patrice Bergeron 6.65% (498 votes)
John Tavares 6.09% (456 votes)
Steve Stamkos 4.75% (356 votes)
Evgeni Malkin 4.19% (314 votes)
Ryan O'Reilly 4.00% (300 votes)
Aleksander Barkov 3.88% (291 votes)
Jonathan Toews 3.58% (268 votes)
Mark Scheifele 3.28% (246 votes)
Brayden Point 2.83% (212 votes)
Jack Eichel 2.79% (209 votes)
Nicklas Backstrom 2.35% (176 votes)
Tyler Seguin 2.26% (169 votes)
Sebastian Aho 1.82% (136 votes)
Evgeny Kuznetsov 1.79% (134 votes)
Anze Kopitar 1.60% (120 votes)
Elias Pettersson 1.31% (98 votes)
Sean Couturier 1.21% (91 votes)
Logan Couture 1.20% (90 votes)
Mathew Barzal 1.13% (85 votes)
Dylan Larkin 0.89% (67 votes)
Mika Zibanejad 0.63% (47 votes)
Matt Duchene 0.59% (44 votes)
Sean Monahan 0.49% (37 votes)
Ryan Getzlaf 0.44% (33 votes)
William Karlsson 0.36% (27 votes)
David Krejci 0.36% (27 votes)
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins 0.32% (24 votes)
Ryan Johansen 0.31% (23 votes)
Bo Horvat 0.28% (21 votes)
Pierre-Luc Dubois 0.28% (21 votes)
Vincent Trocheck 0.24% (18 votes)
Max Domi 0.20% (15 votes)
Tomas Hertl 0.17% (13 votes)
Total Votes: 7,492

[Mobile users click here to vote]

Though Leon Draisaitl was included in the 2018 list, his absence suggests that the NHL Network considered him a winger this season. The same can be said about other part-time centers that haven’t been included in the poll above. The list is not exhaustive, and write-in votes are encouraged in the comment section.

Tampa Bay Lightning Sign Kevin Shattenkirk

The Tampa Bay Lightning have added another former New York Rangers player to the mix, signing recently bought out Kevin Shattenkirk to a one-year contract. The deal carries a $1.75MM salary and a full no-trade clause.

Shattenkirk, 30, saw his performance and role with the Rangers decline over his two years in New York and when it came time for them to clear salary to accommodate Artemi Panarin and Jacob Trouba, he was one of the first to go. As we wrote when he was bought out last week it took him very little time to find a landing spot given his history of success and the lack of available depth at the positions. The defense market has been all but picked clean (except perhaps for Jake Gardiner who remains unsigned) meaning Shattenkirk immediately became a desirable asset despite his recent play.

For $1.75MM, the Lightning are betting he’ll be able to rediscover some of the magic he had with the St. Louis Blues. During parts of six seasons in St. Louis Shattenkirk was one of the most productive offensive defensemen in the league, recording 258 points in 425 games. A powerplay dynamo who also logged big minutes at even-strength, Shattenkirk even received Norris Trophy votes on three different occasions. Even in New York he was still able to record 51 points in 119 games, though his all-around performance declined and he was sheltered heavily away from tough defensive matchups.

Tampa Bay already has two elite defensemen in Victor Hedman and Ryan McDonagh along with an impressive group that also includes Mikhail Sergachev, Erik Cernak and Braydon Coburn. Shattenkirk will essentially be replacing outgoing veterans (and former Rangers) Dan Girardi and Anton Stralman, though he obviously plays a bit different role than either one.

The signing is obviously a bargain for a player that was once one of the most dynamic defensemen in the league, but it also does tighten the purse strings a little bit further in Tampa Bay. The team still has Brayden Point and Adam Erne sitting as unsigned restricted free agents with now just over $9.3MM in cap space. Though there are ways to add a bit to that total—Anthony Cirelli, Mathieu Joseph and Cernak are all still waiver-exempt, for instance—it still doesn’t leave a lot of wiggle room to fit in a long-term deal with Point that could approach $10MM per season depending on term. If the team decides to do a bridge deal like they have with several other high profile RFAs however, there shouldn’t be a cap issue in Tampa Bay this year.

Pro Football Rumors Seeking Part-Time Writers

We’re looking to add part-time contributors to the Pro Football Rumors Rumors writing team. The position pays on an hourly basis. Applicants must meet ALL of the following criteria:

  • Exceptional knowledge of all 32 NFL teams, with no discernible bias.
  • Knowledge of the salary cap and transaction-related concepts.
  • At least some college education.
  • Extensive writing experience, with professional experience and a background in journalism both strongly preferred.
  • Keen understanding of journalistic principles, ethics and procedures. Completion of basic college-level journalism classes is strongly preferred.
  • Attention to detail — absolutely no spelling errors, especially for player and journalist names.
  • Ability to follow the site’s style and tone.
  • Ability to analyze articles and craft intelligent, well-written posts summing up the news in a few paragraphs. We need someone who can balance quick writing with thoughtful analysis. You must be able to add value to breaking news with your own insight, numbers or links to other relevant articles.
  • Ability to use an RSS feed reader. Ability to use Twitter. Both of these are crucial.
  • Strong weekend availability is crucial. You must be available to work between 1pm-5pm central time on Sundays and frequently be available to work between 5-11 pm CT on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays.
  • Flexibility. You must be available to work on short notice.

If you’re interested, email pfrapplications@gmail.com by August 12 (11:00pm central time) and take a couple of paragraphs to explain why you qualify and stand out. Many will apply, so unfortunately we cannot respond to every applicant.

Toronto Maple Leafs Sign Matt Read To PTO

The Toronto Maple Leafs have added some more veteran depth for training camp, signing Matt Read to a professional tryout. Read spent last season in the Minnesota Wild organization, though most of his actual playing time came at the minor league level.

Now 33, Read has had quite the tumultuous last few seasons. Signed to a four-year, $14.5MM extension by the Philadelphia Flyers in 2013, he responded brilliantly with a 22-goal, 40-point campaign in 2013-14. Read looked like he might be one of the best undrafted college free agents in history, but things quickly fell off a cliff. He scored just 30 NHL goals in the following four seasons combined, and found himself in the minor leagues with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms to finish his time in the Flyers organization.

Agreeing to a one-year, two-way deal with Minnesota last season he must have known he was headed for the minor leagues once again. Read was an excellent leader for the Iowa Wild, scoring 37 points in 61 games and helping them to the first playoff appearance in franchise history. It’s surprising that the team wouldn’t bring him back, but perhaps Read believes the Maple Leafs provide a bigger opportunity.

Whether that opportunity really exists is unclear. The Maple Leafs have brought in a huge number of NHL forwards to compete for just a few spots at the bottom of the roster, including names like Pontus Aberg, Nick Shore, Garrett Wilson, Kenny Agostino and Kalle Kossila. Read provides just another option for Mike Babcock and the Maple Leafs’ coaching staff, and Toronto could perhaps be a path to redemption for the winger.