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Wild Acquire Martin Hanzal From Coyotes

February 26, 2017 at 6:12 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 6 Comments

The rich just got richer in Minnesota, as the Wild have reached an agreement with the Arizona Coyotes on a trade to bring in talked-about deadline target Martin Hanzal. The Wild are “all-in” this season, as Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports that Minnesota will send a first-round pick, second-round pick, and conditional pick that can go as high as another second-rounder to Arizona. The deal has since been confirmed as a 2017 first-rounder, 2018 second-rounder and 2019 conditional pick for Hanzal, Ryan White, and a 2017 fourth-rounder. The condition for the pick is as follows: if Minnesota wins one playoff round this year, it becomes a third-rounder and if they win two, it becomes a second-rounder. TSN’s Bob McKenzie adds that minor leaguer Grayson Downing will also head to Arizona and that the Coyotes will also retain 50% of Hanzal’s salary cap hit in the deal.

Hanzal is a big addition for the Wild, who have been so dominant this season that many did not expect them to make a major move at the deadline. Instead, GM Chuck Fletcher adds Hanzal to a lineup that already has Mikko Koivu and Eric Staal down the middle. One of the top names on the market, Hanzal could have slotted into the first line on a team like the Montreal Canadiens, who were long rumored to be his likely destination, but will likely skate on Minnesota’s third line, showcasing the depth that this team has. Hanzal was leading the Coyotes in goals this season with 16 and is coming off a 41-point campaign in 2015-16. A big pivot who can crash the net and play a hard-nosed game, Hanzal will add a physical element that has sometime been missing for the Wild.

The cost for the career Coyote center is a steep one though. Not many people expected the Wild to be where they are in 2016-17; they have 84 points and have a significant lead in points and games on the Chicago Blackhawks for the top spot in the Central Division and Western Conference. With that in mind, the Wild brass have clearly bought in to the Stanley Cup hype this season. To acquire Hanzal, a mere 26-point scorer this season, they have mortgaged the future with first, second, and to-be-determined selections. Granted, the Wild’s first-rounder this season will likely be somewhere between #26 and #31 and their second-round selection next season could be pretty far down as well, but it is still a steep price to pay, especially considering Minnesota was already without a second-round pick in 2017 due to their acquisition of Chris Stewart. More than anything, the deal has also set the bar for the forward market as we approach the deadline. If you already considered this to be a quiet trade season, the Hanzal deal has set a market price that could silence quite a few more deals between now and Wednesday.

Minnesota Wild| Newsstand| Transactions| Utah Mammoth Bob McKenzie| Martin Hanzal

6 comments

Lightning Trade Ben Bishop To Kings

February 26, 2017 at 5:35 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 31 Comments

Superstar goalie and impending free agent Ben Bishop has been traded by the Tampa Lightning to the Los Angeles Kings. TSN’s Bob McKenzie was the first to break the news. The return for Tampa is confirmed to be 2016-17 surprise Peter Budaj, 2015 second-round defenseman Erik Cernak, a 2017 seventh-round pick, and another conditional 2017 pick. Details of the conditional pick are complicated, but in essence there is no pick if the Kings miss the playoffs and can go as high as a second-rounder depending on L.A.’s postseason success and Bishop’s play.

If this trade confuses you, you’re not alone, as it is officially the biggest surprise of the 2017 NHL Trade Deadline to date and will be tough to beat. The Kings just got back starter Jonathan Quick last night, after he had missed all but one game this season with injury. This is the same Quick that led the team to Stanley Cup championships in 2012 and 2014 and has a career 2.26 goals against average, a Conn Smythe, a Jennings, and an All-Star appearance. In his return, Quick allowed just  one goal on 33 shots against the rival Anaheim Ducks and looked like he was fully healthy and ready to lead the Kings back into a playoff spot. So is Bishop an insurance policy for the stretch run? It’s possible. Bishop is an impending unrestricted free agent at the end of the season and would be, without question, the top goaltender on the open market. As far as deadline deals go, the Kings did not give up that much either. As good as Budaj has been, the 34-year-old was not in L.A.’s long-term plans. Cernak is a solid defensive prospect, playing for the OHL’s Erie Otters, who has a smart, responsible defensive style, but Cernak also lacks much offensive punch and was the King’s third or fourth-best defensive prospect at best.

The truly strange situation is that the Kings are currently fifth in the Pacific Division and sitting outside of a playoff spot and if they are going to get in, need scoring and not better goaltending. Budaj has been stellar and Quick is finally healthy. So why give up anything for Bishop when you may not even make the playoffs. It seems like Los Angeles could possibly have future plans for Bishop then. So does that mean Quick is on the trade block? Bishop’s career numbers are slightly superior to Quick’s, but Quick is the established goalie in Los Angeles and is signed long-term with a decent $5.8MM cap hit until 2022-23. Bishop would more than likely command a greater salary than that on the open market. So what’s the next move for GM Dean Lombardi and the L.A. Kings.

Meanwhile, the Lightning have received a solid backup to Andrei Vasilevskiy for the remainder of the season and possibly beyond, a young defenseman (which they are in need of), and some picks for a player they were willing to let walk in free agency. While many will debate this trade from the Kings side for the next month plus, GM Steve Yzerman can rest easy that he got something for nothing at this deadline in a time where Tampa Bay needs any good news they can get.

Anaheim Ducks| Free Agency| Los Angeles Kings| Newsstand| Steve Yzerman| Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions Andrei Vasilevskiy| Ben Bishop| Bob McKenzie| Jonathan Quick| Peter Budaj

31 comments

Vermette Issues Statement On Suspension

February 25, 2017 at 9:39 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 5 Comments

Upon the news that Antoine Vermette’s 10-game suspension has been upheld, the Anaheim Ducks center was quick to respond to the decision today:

“First and foremost, I have great respect for the officials and the integrity of the game. Also, I agree that I deserve a suspension. I should never make contact with an official. At the earliest possible opportunity, I apologized to Mr. Shandor Alphonso. I was trying to get his attention and was not trying to hurt him. However, using my stick was a mistake and I accept full responsibility for my actions. I certainly hope my track record in the NHL will earn me the benefit of the doubt regarding this incident. I feel a 10-game suspension is excessive and will be reviewing my options. I look forward to returning to the lineup as soon as possible.”

Although Vermette references “reviewing my options”, the NHL appeals process is over and any legal action seems highly unlikely. More probable than not, Vermette will simply have to sit for the ten games and take the accompanying salary loss. Vermette’s comments show genuine remorse for his actions, though his concerns over the suspension’s length are also valid for an act that was without malice and did not result in any actual harm. Regardless, the NHL has made a strong, swift point that any abuse of officials will not be tolerated by upholding the original automatic ten-game suspension.

Meanwhile, the Ducks have already begun to cope with Vermette’s absence by trading a conditional second round pick to the Dallas Stars yesterday for Patrick Eaves. Although Anaheim had been on the hunt for another top-six scorer prior to Vermette’s suspension, the need became more urgent due to the recent events, and GM Bob Murray pulled the trigger on the deal as soon as he could. Vermette began sitting out last Friday, and is already halfway through his suspension, but the team is also 2-3 in that span with tough losses to the Florida Panthers, Arizona Coyotes, and Los Angeles Kings, and easily could be 0-5 with wins versus the Kings and Boston Bruins in which they were outplayed. The Ducks hope that the addition of Eaves can get them back on the right track following their bye week, and Vermette is set to re-join the club on March 10th against the St. Louis Blues if nothing else changes.

Anaheim Ducks Antoine Vermette| League News| Patrick Eaves

5 comments

Lightning, Coyotes Swap Minor Leaguers

February 25, 2017 at 8:37 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

Though not quite as exciting as the two deals yesterday, another trade has gone down in the NHL today. As the Tampa Bay Times reports, the Lightning and Arizona Coyotes have agreed on a swap of forward prospects. Heading to Tampa is Stefan Fournier, while Jeremy Morin heads to Arizona. Neither minor leaguer is much of a threat to become an impact NHL contributor any time soon, but may be able to help their respective AHL franchises.

It’s not the first time that Morin has been on the move; far from it in fact. The 25-year-old winger was a second-round pick of the Atlanta Thrashers back in 2009, but was traded not long after in the summer of 2010. Following an 83-point season with the OHL’s Kitchener Rangers, Morin was one of the main pieces that went to the Chicago Blackhawks in exchange for Dustin Byfuglien. Morin then broke into the NHL in 2010-11 at the age of 19. However, he was used sparingly in five seasons in Chicago, recording 16 points in just 54 games. Believing that Morin had stopped developing, the Blackhawks flipped him to the Columbus Blue Jackets midway through the 2014-15 season for another struggling prospect, Tim Erixon. After just a half-season in Columbus, Morin was on the move again, heading back to Chicago alongside Artem Anisimov in the Brandon Saad trade. Chicago wasted no time in trading Morin yet again, this time in a deal that worked out much better than Erixon, a swap with the Toronto Maple Leafs for Richard Panik. Only two months later, Morin was part of a deadline deal that shipped him out of Toronto to the San Jose Sharks along with James Reimer. Finally in charge of his own fate, Morin signed a one-year, two-way deal with the Lightning when free agency opened on July 1st of this summer. In 43 games this season with the AHL’s Syracuse Crunch, Morin has 21 points, his best minor league season since 2013-14. However, that clearly hasn’t helped him find a permanent home, as he’s on the move yet again. Morin will report to the AHL’s Tuscon Roadrunners and will likely finish the season with the team before searching for a new opportunity once again this off-season.

Fournier has not had to endure quite the same treatment. The 24-year-old signed with the Montreal Canadiens in 2013 after a strong junior career in the QMJHL and played three seasons with the organization, in the AHL and ECHL, before being traded to the Coyotes alongside Jarred Tinordi in a three-team deal last season. Fournier has done little to help the Coyotes, or Roadrunners for that matter, in 2016-17 with just four points in 29 AHL games. With the move to Tampa Bay, more accurately the AHL’s Syracuse Crunch, perhaps Fournier can find the scoring touch he had in juniors that he has been unable to find in the pros. Fournier will be an unrestricted free agent this summer, so the remainder of the season should act as a tryout for an extension with the Lightning.

AHL| Chicago Blackhawks| ECHL| OHL| QMJHL| Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions| Utah Mammoth

1 comment

Mike Smith Sick; Coyotes Recall Adin Hill

February 24, 2017 at 8:08 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

Ahead of their match-up tonight with the Dallas Stars, the Arizona Coyotes announced that they had called up goaltender Adin Hill on an emergency basis. Starter Mike Smith is reportedly sick and the team must not have believed he was even in condition to serve as Louis Domingue’s backup tonight. It’s the first career promotion for 20-year-old Hill, a 2015 third-round pick who is in his first full pro season.

Don’t worry Coyotes fans, Smith doesn’t have the mumps. It’s unclear what Smith does have, but the sickness isn’t considered serious. The All-Star keeper should be healthy and back in net shortly; he’s posted a .915 save percentage and 2.92 goals against average in 40 appearances thus far this season.

However, his short absence will give the Coyotes a chance to take a look at Hill, who is possibly the best goalie prospect in the system. Hill was a third-round pick from the WHL’s Portland Winterhawks (could he return to Portland with his NHL franchise in the near future?) and is in his first full pro season, playing mostly with the AHL’s Tuscon Roadrunners. Hill has a .916 save percentage and 2.84 goals against average in 26 AHL games and has out-shined Marek Langhamer, who was recently demoted by the Coyotes. Getting the young Hill a look at NHL action, even if it just from the bench, can only serve to benefit his development at this point. With Domingue struggling mightily this season and Smith still under-performing relative to his contract, the net may be Hill’s for the taking sooner rather than later.

AHL| Utah Mammoth| WHL Louis Domingue| Mike Smith

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Stanislav Galiev On The Trade Block

February 24, 2017 at 7:12 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

As predicted in our Washington Capitals Deadline Primer, the team is indeed ready to move on from young forward Stanislav Galiev. The Washington Post’s Isabelle Khurshudyan reports that the Russian winger is likely to be moved ahead of the NHL Trade Deadline this Wednesday. Galiev has 15 goals and 11 assists in 33 games with the AHL’s Hershey Bears this season, but has yet to earn a call-up to the Caps in 2016-17.

No one is doubting that Galiev is a skilled hockey player. The 25-year-old had 45 points in 67 games in the AHL in his first pro season in 2014-15 and then spent the entire season in Washington last year. However, he recorded just three assists in 24 NHL games in 2016-17. The Capitals did not want to use a roster spot on that production again this season and opted again to send Galiev back to Hersey, by way of clearing waivers. With the likes of Zachary Sanford and Jakub Vrana getting the bulk of the recalls this season, along with Washington’s astonishing streak of being healthy, Galiev has not had any opportunity to earn NHL minutes again.

Rather than frustrate the young forward any further and force him back to Russia, it sounds as if the Capitals’ brass had decided to move on from Galiev and get what they can for him. Unlike the Ottawa Senators and Curtis Lazar, it seems likely that Washington could simply settle on their best offer rather than wait to be blown away. Whether they trade Galiev straight up for a pick or prospect or throw him into a deal for a veteran forward or third-string goalie, it seems as if the young winger’s time with the Capitals is soon coming to a close.

AHL| Deadline Primer 2017| Washington Capitals Jakub Vrana

1 comment

Predicting The Next “Bartkowski Deal”

February 24, 2017 at 6:17 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

The genius that was the Matt Bartkowski signing should not be understated. By now, the extension for the purpose of Expansion Draft exposure has become commonplace, but what GM Brad Treliving and the Calgary Flames did was unique. They went outside the organization to sign a player to a multi-year deal who fulfilled the criteria of having played in 40 games this season or 70 games over the past two years. Except Bartkowski hadn’t played a single NHL game this season; he had been on a minor league contract with the AHL’s Providence Bruins. What that means is Bartkowski had to have played in over 70 games last season alone, and indeed he had skated in 80 games with the Vancouver Canucks in 2015-16. In fact, Bartkowksi was the only defenseman on the planet who played in over 70 games last season yet was not signed to an NHL contract this season. Therein lies the genius that was the unassuming signing of Bartkowski. The Flames picked up the only player on the market who could automatically fill their need for an exposure-eligible defenseman.

With a reportedly quiet trade market this season, there are bound to be teams facing expansion protection problems after the March 1st Trade Deadline comes and goes, whether it’s on the blue line or up front. Will someone follow in Treliving’s footsteps and scoop up a player who played in 70 or so games last season but remains unsigned as of now? The short answer is probably not.

Looking at the short list of players who meet the games played criteria, it very well could be that Bartkowski stands alone as an unsigned player looking to continue playing hockey, even if that means signing a two-year, two-way contract and likely logging major AHL minutes. Especially on defense, a team like the Carolina Hurricanes is likely out of luck if they want to replicate the Bartkowksi maneuver. The only unsigned player who qualifies for exposure is Matt Carle, who played in 64 games with the Tampa Bay Lightning last year and six earlier this year with the Nashville Predators. However, Carle announced his retirement in November when he cleared waivers and was likely going to be moved to the AHL. Carle seems content with collecting buyout checks from the Lightning and almost certainly would have no interest is returning to hockey with a two-year, two-way deal. There are really no other defensemen that even have a reasonable chance of meeting the 40/70 criteria. Bartkowski was essentially it.

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For forwards, the situation is a little different. 36-year-old David Legwand played in 79 games with the Buffalo Sabres in 2015-16, but it’s hard to imagine that he would want to come back for not only this season, but next as well. Jarret Stoll played in 80 games last season between the New York Rangers and Minnesota Wild, but the 34-year-old grinder has some off-the-ice issues he’s dealing with. Mike Santorelli is just 30 years old and fresh off of a 70-game season with the Anaheim Ducks, but he retired mid-season from the NLA late in 2016, citing injury concerns as the reason. However, other options remain. 34-year-old center Paul Gaustad was unable to find a home in the NHL this season and instead called it quits on his career. A team may be able to entice Gaustad to sign on for another few years if he has remained in game condition. However, Gaustad played in only 63 games with the Nashville Predators last season and would need to play in at least seven contests before the end of the season. Luckily, Gaustad played with a toughness and tenacity that could help some clubs down the stretch and in the postseason this year and could be a useful mentor in the AHL next season. Gregory Campbell is definitely in game shape, having played in all 82 games with the Columbus Blue Jackets in 2015-16 and was with the team as recently as mid-December, but Campbell asked for his release and subsequently cleared unconditional waivers when the Jackets announced their plan to send him to the minors. Campbell is a good two-way energy line player that could help out quite a few NHL teams, but his dismissal of the idea of playing in the AHL may make inking him to a two-year deal difficult. The fact that no teams have reached out to Campbell thus far makes a signing seem unlikely, but enough desperation could change that. Kyle Chipchura is not only in game shape, he’s actively playing. Chipchura signed with HC Slovan Bratislava this summer after skating in 70 contests with the Arizona Coyotes last year. Whether or not Chipchura could, or would want to, find a way out of his KHL contract is unknown, but if that won’t stop teams from inquiring. The big 31-year-old forward has 13 goals and 13 assists in 59 games this year.

While Chipchura, Campbell, and Gaustad are all options, perhaps the best possible choice and most likely the next “Bartkowski” is winger David Jones. Jones had a down year in 2015-16, scoring just 15 points in 59 games with the Calgary Flames before a deadline deal sent him to the Minnesota Wild, where he put up only three points in 16 games. After some initial interest from NHL teams this summer, the market for Jones’ services dried up and he was unable to find a contract. He joined the Anaheim Ducks on a PTO this fall, but was cut prior to the season. Interestingly, Jones has not signed a deal anywhere this season, but it’s hard to believe that the 32-year-old has given up completely on his career. Jones is just two years removed from a 30-point season and has never had recorded less than 30 points in a full season, including back-to-back 20-goal campaigns not that long ago. Much like Bartkowski, Jones has been written off and forgotten, but has a willingness to keep playing. Whether or not Jones can contribute is irrelevant; he meets the games played quota and, if approached, will probably take any deal offered, including the two-year, two-way deal that the Flames offered Batrkowski to make him Expansion Draft exposure-eligible. If any GM finds themselves struggling to find a solution to their expansion issues following the upcoming trade deadline, expect the next “Bartkowski deal”, if any, to go to David Jones.

Brad Treliving| Calgary Flames| Carolina Hurricanes| Expansion| NLA| Waivers David Legwand| Gregory Campbell| Jarret Stoll| Kyle Chipchura| Matt Bartkowski| Matt Carle| Mike Santorelli| Paul Gaustad| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Deadline Primer: Carolina Hurricanes

February 23, 2017 at 7:00 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

With the trade deadline now just a week away, we continue to take a closer look at each team.  Where do they stand, what do they need to do, and what assets do they have to fill those needs?

If the Carolina Hurricanes as deadline sellers wasn’t a foregone conclusion before, it is now after today’s trade of Ron Hainsey to the Pittsburgh Penguins. Although Hainsey, who will finally get to play in the first postseason game of his 14-year NHL career, was a candidate to be traded regardless, the move is even less surprising given Carolina’s recent performance. After shocking many who believed they could be one of the worst teams in the NHL this season with a strong first half, the wheels have fallen off in Carolina since the calendar flipped to 2017. The Hurricanes are just 8-11-1 in the new year and haven’t had a regulation win since February 3rd. Facing an uphill battle as it was in the powerhouse Metropolitan Division, it didn’t help that Carolina was unable to get consistent play and fell from a playoff spot into the basement of the Eastern Conference in short order.

The ’Canes are loaded with talented young defensemen and some great young depth up front as well. They also hold a king’s ransom in draft picks and have an inordinate amount of cap space going into next season. There’s good reason behind the rumors connecting them to big-ticket trade bait like the Colorado Avalanche’s Matt Duchene and Gabriel Landeskog. However, deals of that magnitude typically occur in the off-season. Don’t expect any different this year. The Hainsey trade either signals the beginning of a small-scale fire sale or potentially could be the only move for the Carolina at the deadline.

Record

24–24–8, last in the Metropolitan Division/Eastern Conference

Deadline Status

Seller

Deadline Cap Space

Current Cap Space: $63,619,668

Deadline Cap Space: $71,572,127

46/50 contracts, via CapFriendly

Draft Picks

2017: CAR 1st, CAR 2nd, NYR 2nd, PIT 2nd, CAR 3rd, conditional NJ 3rd, CAR 4th, BOS 5th, CAR 6th, CAR 7th
2018: CAR 1st, CAR 2nd, CAR 3rd, CAR 4th, CAR 5th, CAR 6th, CAR 7th

Trade Chips

Carolina’s best trade chip at the deadline was Ron Hainsey and GM Ron Francis did a great job in getting a strong return for the defenseman in a second-round pick and a prospect. Hurricanes fans should be happy about that haul, because that may be all they get. The reason that the Hainsey trade may be the only move that the ’Canes make at the deadline is because they lack a wealth of attractive veterans on expiring contracts. Among their impending free agents are Viktor Stalberg, Jay McClement, and Matt Tennyson and it’s doubtful that any of that trio have drawn much interest around the league. Stalberg and McClement have just 17 points combined despite playing in nearly every game and Tennyson is hardly even an NHL-caliber player. The one outlier is Derek Ryan. Seemingly out of nowhere, Ryan has finally developed into an NHL regular in Carolina at the age of 30 and would cost almost nothing against the cap with a salary of just $600K (about a $125K pro-rated cap hit on March 1st). For cap-strapped contenders facing difficulties adding players, Ryan could be very attractive as a bottom-six depth forward. He has eight goals and ten assists in 42 games and has shown some versatility within the lineup. However, are the Hurricanes willing to let their diamond in the rough go that easily? Unless Ron Francis is given a fair-value offer, he may look to bring back Ryan for next season instead as a nice complementary player.

Players To Watch

F Derek Ryan, F Viktor Stalberg, F Jay McClement, D Matt Tennyson, F Andrej Nestrasil

Team Needs

1) Franchise Forward – The rebuild in Carolina has been much faster and more successful than anyone could have expected and the organization has put together a solid young core of forwards and defensemen. The list of impact starters age 24 or younger is unreal: Jeff Skinner, Victor Rask, Elias Lindholm, Teuvo Teravainen, Justin Faulk, Jaccob Slavin, Brett Pesce, Noah Hanifin and more. That doesn’t even include top prospects on the blue line like Jake Bean, Haydn Fleury, and Roland McKeown, 2016 first-round forward Julien Gauthier, and a near-guaranteed top-five pick this June. It’s an embarrassment of riches in the youth department in Raleigh, but if the ’Canes want to climb the ranks of the Metropolitan, they need to move some young pieces to add a top forward. Not just a nice top-six player either; a star scorer. Colorado’s Duchene or Landeskog have specifically been mentioned, while Jordan Eberle, James van Riemsdyk, or Evander Kane, all reportedly available depending on who you ask and when, might be a nice addition to the “Redvolution” as well. With that said, a mega-deal like this seems very unlikely to form in the next week and could instead happen this summer.

2) Depth Defenseman – So what of the deadline? Don’t be surprised to see the Hurricanes sneak another defenseman on to the roster as part of any other moves they make. As discussed earlier this month, Carolina is in an Expansion Draft predicament with their blue liners, most of whom are so young that they don’t qualify for exposure. As of now, only the All-Star Faulk would fill the quota, and that certainly won’t be happening. The simplest move for Francis is to re-sign Tennyson or Klas Dahlbeck and simply expose one of them, but if Tennyson is traded or the team doesn’t want to keep either player around, a small trade to bring in a qualifying veteran would make sense.

Carolina Hurricanes| Deadline Primer 2017| Expansion Derek Ryan| Elias Lindholm| Gabriel Landeskog| Jeff Skinner| Justin Faulk| Klas Dahlbeck| Matt Duchene| Matt Tennyson| Noah Hanifin| Ron Francis

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Ryan Carter Signs PTO With AHL’s Iowa Wild

February 18, 2017 at 2:53 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

Ryan Carter’s comeback continues. After the report last week that Carter had begun practicing with the Minnesota Wild in an attempt to return to the NHL, he has taken another step toward that goal today by inking a professional tryout agreement with the Wild’s AHL affiliate in Iowa. The Iowa Wild announced the deal today, and Carter is expected to see his first ice time of the 2016-17 season in their next two games.

It’s been a long, strange road for Carter to get back to the NHL, and it’s not over yet. The Minnesota native played for the Wild for the past two years, recording 25 points in 113 games in a bottom-six role. However, when his contract expired at the end of last season and he hit free agency this summer, he made the executive decision that he would either sign with his hometown team or hang up his skates for good. The Wild were unable to commit to a contract for the 33-year-old, but didn’t want to rule out a return for the hard-working forward who grew up in White Bear Lake and played college hockey for Minnesota State – Mankato. They decided to invite Carter to camp this fall, giving him a chance to earn a contract instead. However, he was released not long after the action began due to issues with a lingering shoulder injury. Carter underwent a procedure on a torn labrum in his right shoulder four months ago, and many expected that to be the end of his career. Carter was not ready to call it quits just yet though, and rehabbed and work his way back into game shape, before going to the Wild brass with hopes of rejoining the team.

He’s well on his way, now. After more than a week of practicing with the NHL Wild, this PTO gives Carter the chance to finally see some game action with the AHL Wild. If the coaches and executives like what they see, expect Carter’s hard work to pay off in a contract by the end of the month. As long as he is signed by March 1st, the NHL Trade Deadline, Carter will be eligible to play in the postseason for the West-leading Wild. With Tyler Graovac recently clearing waivers and being demoted to the AHL and the utter lack of production from Kurtis Gabriel and Zack Mitchell, the need for another reliable player on Minnesota’s fourth line is more apparent now than ever. Carter gives them an option that costs nothing in trade capital, is familiar with the team, and can be counted on for hard work and dedicated play.

AHL| Injury| Minnesota Wild Ryan Carter| Tyler Graovac| Zack Mitchell

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Devils Trade Kalinin To Leafs For Loov

February 18, 2017 at 2:21 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 2 Comments

The New Jersey Devils had lost faith in Russian center Sergey Kalinin and had not been able to trade him, so they placed him on waivers yesterday. Not long after it was announced he had cleared this afternoon, the trade they were looking for came together. The New Jersey Devils announced that they had found a trade partner in former GM Lou Lamoriello and the Toronto Maple Leafs and that Kalinin had been exchanged for defenseman Viktor Loov. 

A new home for Kalinin is very unsurprising, and in fact was predicted in the Devils’ Deadline Primer. After showing some promise in the KHL at a young age and in his rookie year in North America in 2015-16, Kalinin seemingly hit a wall in his development this year. Kalinin has just four points in 42 games this season, and his valuable two-way game has disappeared. Kalinin was providing no value to a struggling New Jersey squad that would be better served to play younger players that actually have some potential. It was predictable that Kalinin would clear waivers, but also a shrewd move by GM Ray Shero to still get something for him.

By trading for Kalinin after he had cleared waivers, the Maple Leafs no longer have to worry about keeping him in the NHL. Kalinin is expected to report to the AHL’s Toronto Marlies, and may not even see action with the Leafs before his contract expires at the end of the year. Kalinin gives Toronto a player who can be physical and has some big-league experience, but his numbers in 2016-17 inspire little confidence to give him substantial ice time down the stretch or in the postseason. The Maple Leafs’ fourth-line center Ben Smith hasn’t been much better this season, but he is just six games away from becoming Expansion Draft eligible and will likely hold on to his spot, at least for the time being. Kalinin will be a restricted free agent at year’s end and the Leafs could retain his services if they so choose.

And what of the return? Loov was a seventh-round pick of the Maple Leafs in 2012 and has exceeded his low expectations thus far in his pro career. The 24-year-old Swedish defenseman is having a down season though, after admirable efforts with the AHL’s Marlies in each of the past two years. Loov even skated in four games with Toronto in 2015-16, contributing two assists and a +4 rating. However, any defenseman unable to supplant the likes of Matt Hunwick and Roman Polak, even for just a few games, has a questionable future at best. Loov is a physical player who skates pretty well, but is a ways off from an NHL gig if he doesn’t work on his vision and puck-moving. Loov is a restricted free agent at the end of the season and New Jersey will use his performance from here on out with the AHL’s Albany Devils as a tryout to gauge if he warrants another contract.

AHL| KHL| New Jersey Devils| Ray Shero| Toronto Maple Leafs| Waivers Ben Smith| Matt Hunwick

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