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Blackhawks Rumors

Snapshots: Three Stars, World Junior Captains, Iginla

December 19, 2016 at 12:30 pm CDT | by Brett Barrett Leave a Comment

The NHL has named Artemi Panarin, Henrik Lundqvist, and Eric Staal as its Three Stars of the Week.

Panarin had three goals and seven assists for 10 points in four games. He bookended two thee-point performances with a pair of two-point nights as the Blackhawks continued their five-game winning streak. Panarin now has 34 points in 34 games this season

This week marks the second consecutive week with a New York Rangers goaltender as the second star. Last week, Antti Raanta was the second star as he temporarily took over the starting role from Lundqvist, but now the man they call The King has taken back over. Lundqvist went 3-0-0 and allowed just three goals to go with his 0.967 SV%. He and Raanta combined for a shutout when Lundqvist was forced to leave a game after being run over by Cody Eakin (for which he was suspended).

Staal had four goals and five points in three games as part of a 3-0-0 week. The Wild have now won seven straight and Staal is leading the team in goals, assists, and points; he has 24 points in 30 games in his first year in Minnesota.

  • Hockey Canada has named its leadership core for the upcoming World Junior Championships. Arizona Coyotes prospect Dylan Strome will wear the C for Canada, while Mathew Barzal and Thomas Chabot will serve as alternate captains. All three players played for Canada at last year’s tournament and appeared in the NHL at the start of the season. While they combined for just 10 games and one assist in the NHL, all three are 2015 first-round picks and dominant CHL players. Strome has 295 points in 191 games with the Erie Otters; Islanders sixteenth-overall pick Barzal has 281 points in 174 games with the Seattle Thunderbirds; Chabot, a defenseman picked eighteenth overall by Ottawa, has 128 points in 182 games with the Saint John Sea Dogs.
  • The Vancouver Canucks most recent first-round pick, Olli Juolevi has been named captain of Team Finland. Juolevi had nine assists in seven games in last year’s tournament, as Finland won gold. So far, Juolevi has 21 points in 26 games with the London Knights.
  • Today marks 21 years since the Calgary Flames acquired Jarome Iginla from the Dallas Stars for Joe Nieuwendyk. The trade worked out pretty well for both teams: the Stars won the Stanley Cup four years later with Nieuwendyk playing a key role, and Iginla became the face of the Flames franchise. Nieuwendyk was in the prime of his career, while Iginla was an eleventh-overall pick playing for the Kamloops Blazers. Amalie Benjamin of NHL.com tweeted that Iginla initially thought he had been traded to the WHL’s Calgary Hitmen. After turning pro, Iginla scored 1095 points in 16 years with the Flames, leading them to the Stanley Cup Finals in 2004. He’s bounced around between Pittsburgh, Boston, and Colorado in the four years since he was traded. Iginla could be on the move again this year, as the Avalanche are one of the worst teams in the NHL and he could want to go to a contender for the end of his career.

CHL| Calgary Flames| Chicago Blackhawks| Dallas Stars| Minnesota Wild| New York Islanders| New York Rangers| Ottawa Senators| Snapshots| Team Canada| Team Finland| Utah Mammoth| Vancouver Canucks Antti Raanta| Artemi Panarin| Dylan Strome| Eric Staal| Henrik Lundqvist| Jarome Iginla| Mathew Barzal| NHL Three Stars| Olli Juolevi| Thomas Chabot

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Snapshots: Crawford, Tavares, Lucic

December 19, 2016 at 11:29 am CDT | by Brett Barrett 2 Comments

The Chicago Blackhawks could be getting a nice early Christmas gift on Friday night.

Despite having an appendectomy just two weeks ago, Corey Crawford has progressed enough in his recovery that he may start on Friday night against the Colorado Avalanche. Coach Joel Quenneville told Chris Hine that he would like to see Crawford get in a full practice before returning to the lineup.

The Blackhawks are off on Monday after playing back-to-back on the weekend, however Crawford will skate on his own. Backup Scott Darling has played the majority of games since Crawford has been out, including both games over the weekend. Darling is 6-2-1 since taking over from Crawford, which includes his current five-game winning streak.

  • Glen Schiller and Jamie McLennan on TSN’s That’s Hockey 2Nite discussed if there is any reason why John Tavares would want to re-sign with the Islanders. The Islanders have been “a mess” this year, following up a 100-point season with a 74-point pace. With the Metropolitan Division being the best division in hockey this year, there’s essentially no way the Islanders can climb back into the playoff picture without a 15-game winning streak. McLennan points to the free agency departure of Kyle Okposo, who had great chemistry with Tavares, and the struggles of his replacement, Andrew Ladd. Both players signed for similar contracts, but the Islanders chose the older player with no history with their superstar over the younger, right-handed player with years of success on Tavares’ wing. Tavares, McLennan argues, must be wondering who he would play with consistently and could look forward to playing with years from now if he signed an eight-year contract.
  • Over at OilersNation, Jonathan Willis wonders why the Oilers have not tried separating Milan Lucic and Connor McDavid to boost McDavid’s scoring. While he’s still leading the NHL in scoring by two points with 39 points in 33 games, he has just one even-strength assist in his last eight games. Lucic has just one goal in nine games this month. Despite Lucic’s struggles, the only changes made on the top line have been on the right side. Jesse Puljujärvi, Drake Caggiula, Jordan Eberle, Tyler Pitlick, and Leon Draisaitl have all had time with Lucic and McDavid, with varying degrees of success. Willis suggests moving Lucic to play with Draisaitl on the second line and bumping one of Benoit Pouliot or Patrick Maroon up to the top line; Willis points to chemistry between Draisaitl and Lucic and the dramatically better scoring numbers of when playing with McDavid as evidence of the merit of his suggestion.

Chicago Blackhawks| Edmonton Oilers| Injury| Joel Quenneville| New York Islanders| Snapshots Andrew Ladd| Connor McDavid| Corey Crawford| John Tavares| Kyle Okposo| Leon Draisaitl| Milan Lucic| Scott Darling

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Evening Snapshots: Campbell, Tortorella, Panarin

December 18, 2016 at 8:39 pm CDT | by Mike Furlano Leave a Comment

News and notes from around the NHL this evening:

  • Gregory Campbell passed through unconditional waivers today and the Columbus Blue Jackets immediately terminated his contract, reports the Columbus Dispatch’s Aaron Portzline. Campbell is now an unrestricted free agent able to sign with any team that expresses interest. Campbell initially refused to accept reassignment earlier in the season so the Blue Jackets suspended him without pay. It is thought that a team has finally expressed interest in Campbell, prompting Campbell’s agent to ask the team to place him on waivers.
  • Staying with Columbus, the Blue Jackets’ Head Coach John Tortorella won his 500th career game behind the bench today when his team beat the Vancouver Canucks 4-3 in overtime. He becomes the first American-born coach to reach the 500-win milestone. Tortorella must be relishing this moment after having a tumultuous start to the season. He joined the Blue Jackets after leading the U.S team to a disappointing 0-3 record in the World Cup of Hockey, before losing his first two games with Columbus. Despite that, however, Tortorella has turned the Blue Jackets into a team that has won nine straight. The team sits 3rd in the Metropolitan Division, but only one point away from league-leading Pittsburgh with three games in hand.
  • Artemi Panarin moves closer to unlocking his Schedule B bonus and costing the Chicago Blackhawks an additional $1.75MM. Panarin’s ELC outlines that the Blackhawks will pay him an additional $1.75MM if he finishes in the top-10 for goals, assists, points, or points-per-game—or wins a major NHL award. He scored two points tonight (1G and 1A) to put him comfortable within the top-10 in both goals and assists. Should he reach his bonus target, the Blackhawks will have to shoulder any salary cap overage next season.

Chicago Blackhawks| Columbus Blue Jackets| John Tortorella Artemi Panarin

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Snapshots: Anisimov, Crawford, Kennedy

December 18, 2016 at 5:05 pm CDT | by Mike Furlano Leave a Comment

News and notes from around the NHL this evening:

  • Chicago Blackhawks forward Artem Anisimov is out tonight against the San Jose Sharks, reports TSN’s Mark Lazerus. Anisimov misses the game with an undisclosed injury and is considered day-to-day. The centerman is tied for 19th in NHL scoring this season, and the Blackhawks hope that his injury is nothing serious.
  • Staying with the Chicago Blackhawks, coach Joel Quenneville told reporters that goalie Corey Crawford could return as early as December 23rd. Crawford is currently recovering from an emergency appendectomy suffered on December 3rd. Backup goaltender Scott Darling had been holding down the fort admirably until recently, stringing together a streak of starts without letting in more than two goals. In his last two games, however, he’s let in four goals apiece. Chicago won both those games but it seems that Darling’s play is coming back down to earth.
  • Tim Kennedy’s profession situation gains some clarity today. Earlier, Kennedy signed a minor-league deal with the Rochester Americans—AHL affiliates of the Buffalo Sabres—but was claimed by the Carolina Hurricanes because any player playing overseas must first pass through waivers before rejoining an NHL organization. It was unclear whether Kennedy would report to Carolina (or Charlotte, where the Hurricane’s AHL affiliate plays), but now Jon Vogl of the Buffalo News reports that the Hurricanes have loaned Kennedy to Rochester. Before signing with Rochester—and being claimed by Carolina—Kennedy played in Sweden for Lulea of the Swedish Elite League.

Carolina Hurricanes| Chicago Blackhawks Artem Anisimov| Corey Crawford

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Should The Red Wings Embrace a Full Rebuild?

December 17, 2016 at 8:02 pm CDT | by natebrown 18 Comments

Hockeytown is hurting.

The Detroit Red Wings have been moribund at home. They are listless offensively.  The Arizona Coyotes came into the Joe Louis Arena and pummeled them 4-1. Playoff hopes are precarious. And their power play is more of an advantage to their opponent.

The mainstream media has taken note, as Sportsnet’s Dimtri Filipovic has a lengthy write up on how the Red Wings’ inevitable downfall in a parity based league was coming. 25 straight years of making the playoffs, including 11 of those seasons being in a salary cap era is unbelievably impressive. But over the last five seasons, the Red Wings have only made it out of the first round once, losing by an eyelash to the eventual champion Chicago Blackhawks in seven games–after blowing a 3-1 series lead.

Already through the midway point of December, the Red Wings hardly appear to be a playoff bound team. Should their current streak of poor play continue, it has to be a message to general Ken Holland and company that a true rebuild must be embraced. The “rebuild on the fly” strategy Holland has embraced no longer looks feasible.

Reading the tea leaves, however, the Wings don’t act like a team looking to change strategies. The fear in Detroit by many is that the Wings could hang around and make another puzzling trade for a washed up veteran to try and get them over the hump. Deals for David Legwand and Erik Cole were damaging since they lost prospects and neither had any impact on the playoff push. Damien Cox wrote at length about this as well, wondering why the brass is so hesitant to build a stronger future when right now, the team is a few matches short of a tire fire.

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More curious was Holland on a radio show the other day. Appearing on Sirius XM, Holland kept repeating the company line of “draft and develop” through the 15 minute segment. The problem? When he points out Henrik Zetterberg and Pavel Datsyuk, who Holland said didn’t reach their true abilities until 25, he forgets that Datsyuk at 23, was surrounded by a roster of hall of famers from Steve Yzerman to Nicklas Lidstrom. Zetterberg, who came up full time in 2002-03, also was flanked by all-stars. Being around that type of pedigree certainly helps develop talent. But it was also nearly 20 years ago, when the Red Wings were mining talent in Europe (and Russia) thanks to Hakan Andersson, that the Wings drafted that talent.

But in this league, it’s not possible unless you have that talent surrounding you. Which they don’t.  Teams can’t afford to have that collection of talent anymore.

Sep 28, 2016; Boston, MA, USA; Detroit Red Wings center <a rel=Holland has crippled the team with a number of contracts that are long in duration and high in compensation. It’s long been said that Holland falls in love with his own players and his re-signing of Darren Helm was example of that. Helm, who for several seasons couldn’t stay healthy, has never scored 20 goals in a season or exceeded 33 points. Instead of letting him go, Holland re-upped with Helm for five seasons at $3.85MM per year. Though he boasts speed and is productive on the penalty kill, Helm’s output is hardly worth nearly $4MM AAV. Helm’s contract is just one of many examples of Red Wings paid for loyalty instead of skill. Justin Abdelkader ($4.25MM AAV), Jonathan Ericsson ($4.25MM AAV) Danny DeKeyser ($5MM AAV), and Luke Glendening ($1.8MM AAV starting next season) are examples of loyalty over value. Glendening, an undrafted signee, has one goal this season. Yet he’s due nearly $2MM annually for the next four seasons.

This doesn’t factor in Frans Nielsen, Zetterberg, Niklas Kronwall, or Jimmy Howard, who are all owed substantial amounts of money, too. Holland has painted himself into a corner, and those contracts, should he try to move them, will not give them much in return for salary dumps.

Holland has always believed in loyalty since he took the reins in 1998. This is not necessarily a bad thing. But in their case, it certainly handcuffs them for seasons to come.

In addition to liberal spending, the Wings have insisted on playing players like Glendening, Drew Miller and Steve Ott instead of giving more time to Andreas Athanasiou, and Anthony Mantha, players who have added a spark when given the chance. This may be more on Jeff Blashill, but at the end of the day, he can only use what he’s provided.

Change is difficult–but often it’s necessary. In Detroit’s case, it’s certainly looking more like the latter is needed. It’s almost as if the Red Wings are scared of realizing that their plan isn’t working. And maybe, that’s just it. Maybe it’s the idea that what’s worked for so long doesn’t anymore.

One thing is for certain: if the Red Wings brass continue to keep their heads in the sand, not only will the playoff streak come to an end. So too, will future success in Hockeytown.

All photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images. 

Chicago Blackhawks| Detroit Red Wings| NHL| Uncategorized| Utah Mammoth Salary Cap

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Daley Week-To-Week With Upper-Body Injury

December 17, 2016 at 5:45 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

Already down Kris Letang for at least two weeks, the Pittsburgh Penguins are going to have to make due without another important blue liner as well. According to Christine Simpson of Sportsnet, Trevor Daley has an upper-body injury and is considered week-to-week.

The 13-year veteran has registered three goals and 11 points in 30 appearances on the season, averaging 20:40 of ice time per game. His acquisition from Chicago last season, along with a few other savvy moves made by the Penguins, keyed a resurgence in Pittsburgh that culminated in the team claiming the Stanley Cup in June. Pittsburgh was 15 – 11 – 3 when they dealt Rob Scuderi to the Blackhawks for Daley. After the trade the Penguins went 33 – 15 – 5 and skated off the ice with Lord Stanley’s trophy.

Pittsburgh recalled Chad Ruhwedel from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton of the AHL earlier today when the club placed Letang on IR. Ruhwedel gives the Penguins seven healthy blue liners and it likely means the club will not need to make another call-up in Daley’s absence.

This is the 26-year-old Ruhwedel’s first season in the penguins organization after spending the previous four years with Buffalo. The native of San Diego, California has appeared in 33 NHL games, all with Buffalo, netting two points and four penalty minutes.

AHL| Chicago Blackhawks| Injury| NHL| Pittsburgh Penguins Kris Letang| Trevor Daley

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Injury Updates: Crawford, Palat, Kucherov, Vatrano, Honka

December 16, 2016 at 4:45 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

Blackhawks goaltender Corey Crawford underwent an emergency appendectomy back on December 3rd and it was said then that he was likely to miss two-to-three weeks as a result. Thirteen days later, the 31-year-old is back on the ice skating with his team, reports Tracy Myers of CSN Chicago. Myers adds that Crawford also took some shots today and head coach Joel Quenneville is waiting to see how their #1 net minder is doing when the team returns home from their current road trip.

The team has fared pretty well in Crawford’s absence. After dropping his first two games, Crawford’s understudy, Scott Darling, has won four of his last five starts, allowing just six goals during that time. He is likely at this point to get the call in both of Chicago’s weekend games, at St. Louis on Saturday and in Chicago against the Sharks on Sunday.

Elsewhere on the injury front:

  • Joe Smith of the Tampa Bay Times reports that the Lightning will be without forwards Ondrej Palat and Nikita Kucherov for tonight and likely for the team’s game tomorrow as well (Twitter link). Additionally, Ryan Callahan is not going to play tonight as Tampa Bay travels to Vancouver to take on the Canucks. In a follow-up tweet, Smith adds that Palat is considered day-to-day while Kucherov has not been placed on IR, suggesting he is also day-to-day. While it’s never a good thing to be without three regular forwards, even if it’s just for a game or two, a prolonged absence of Kucherov would be especially bad news for the Lightning. The fourth-year winger leads the team in both goals (13) and points (30) this season and also topped the club in scoring last season. Palat has tallied 13 points in 30 games for Tampa Bay, while Callahan has added just four points in an injury-marred campaign for the gritty veteran winger.
  • Frank Vatrano, who has been out since September with a foot injury, was activated by Boston and assigned to Providence of the AHL, according to Joe Haggerty of CSNNE. Haggerty states that the young winger needs to play to get back up to speed. Vatrano exploded on the scene as a prospect last year after registering 36 goals in just 36 AHL games and earned his first call up to Boston. While not as successful in the NHL, Vatrano did net eight goals in 39 games for the Bruins, demonstrating the ability to be a solid performer at this level.
  • Finally, the Dallas Stars activated defenseman Julius Honka from IR and reassigned the young Finn to Texas of the AHL, the team announced today. Honka had missed the last five games with an upper-body injury. The team’s first-round draft choice in 2014, the 21-year-old blue liner made his NHL debut this season and in eight games recorded three points. In 16 contests earlier this year with Texas, Honka tallied three goals and 12 points. Dallas already has a roster full of capable NHL defensemen, leading one to wonder when or if the team will recall Honka, as some have suggested the constant shuffling on the back end has contributed in part to the Stars struggles this season.

AHL| Boston Bruins| Chicago Blackhawks| Dallas Stars| Injury| Joel Quenneville| NHL| San Jose Sharks| Tampa Bay Lightning| Vancouver Canucks Corey Crawford| Julius Honka| Nikita Kucherov| Ryan Callahan| Scott Darling

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Blackhawks Notes: Kempny, Trade Possibilities

December 15, 2016 at 8:19 pm CDT | by natebrown 1 Comment

The Chicago Tribune’s Chris Hine answers a number of questions about the Blackhawks and begins with Michal Kempny’s status as a consistent healthy scratch. Hine indicates it’s a common question and he defers to head coach Joel Quenneville:

“I just think that consistency without the puck and how he defends in his own end is probably the area (where) there’s (room for) growth in his game,” Quenneville said. “But I still think our defense is pretty good and we’ve got some tough decisions on a game to game basis. He adds one more guy we feel can play. But I think the depth, that’s a strength, and sometimes that’s part of the decision.”

Hine writes that Kempny is young and will experience ups and downs. He adds that he expects him to find his way back into the regular rotation again, but that with a roster fortunate with depth, it’s the nature of the beast. However, Kempny found his way into the lineup tonight, but through nearly two periods, his ice time lagged significantly behind those of the other five defenseman. He was also a -3 with just under seven minutes of ice time.

  • Hine also addresses potential trades that the Blackhawks could make. He doesn’t see Trevor van Riemsdyk going anywhere, but indicates that the Hawks could make a deal or two at the trade deadline. The caveat is that they will refrain from trading a first round pick because of the draft being held in Chicago. He also believes that since Bowman has relinquished two picks the last two seasons, it’s unlikely, regardless of draft location, that he would give this year’s pick up.

Chicago Blackhawks| Joel Quenneville Michal Kempny| Trevor Van Riemsdyk

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Snapshots: Best Player, Lightning, Darling

December 14, 2016 at 11:29 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

Who is the best player in the NHL right now? If you were to ask 100 people, in 100 different cities you might get 100 (okay, maybe you’d get five) different answers. The debate between Sidney Crosby and Connor McDavid has been raging since the young Oiler hit the ice last season. Could he immediately take the mantle of the NHL’s top dog?

ESPN posed the question to several other players around the league, and it’s a resounding win for the old-timer. Here is a taste of some of the quotes:

Oh, Sidney Crosby. I’m a Sidney Crosby fan. He’s ultracompetitive. Great speed, great shot, great passer. — Joe Thornton, San Jose Sharks

Sid is playing great, but man, Connor McDavid is good, oh my God. But I still think today. … I’ve got to say I still think Sid. It’s tough but I really do. — Zach Parise, Minnesota Wild

I think Sidney Crosby has established himself with what he’s doing right now. It’s amazing to see how he just does whatever he needs to do. — Shane Doan, Arizona Coyotes

While McDavid does get some love, the overwhelming sentiment seems to be that Crosby is still at the top of the NHL food chain. Perhaps in a year or two things will be different, but for now it’s still the soft spoken kid from Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia.

  • In a piece for the Chicago Sun Times, Mark Lazerus profiles backup goaltender Scott Darling and the Blackhawks upcoming decision on whether they can afford to extend him in the summer. Darling will be an unrestricted free agent for the first time in his career, and is showing that he may be ready to be a starter somewhere in the league. While even Darling says Chicago is “bar none, the best place to be” a backup, the intrigue of perhaps becoming “the guy” somewhere else is still there. With Corey Crawford entrenched as the starter in Chicago, and the team needing every penny it can save to re-sign sniper Artemi Panarin this summer, Darling’s time is likely running out.
  • Pierre LeBrun of ESPN caught up with Steve Yzerman for his latest piece, discussing the struggling Tampa Bay Lightning and what they may be after on the trade market. While Yzerman knows better than to say exactly what he wants, LeBrun opines that the team is after a top-four defenseman. It doesn’t seem like anything is imminent however, as Yzerman frustratingly tells LeBrun, “as I’ve said time and time again, I’ve got to find someone who’s willing to work with me.” For the Stamkos-less Lightning, it has been a struggle of late, losing seven of their last eight games with only a shootout victory over the Capitals during that stretch. At 30 points, they’re only four points behind Boston for a playoff spot, but also only two from last place in the division.

Chicago Blackhawks| Minnesota Wild| NHL| Players| San Jose Sharks| Snapshots| Steve Yzerman| Tampa Bay Lightning| Utah Mammoth| Washington Capitals Artemi Panarin| Connor McDavid| Corey Crawford| Joe Thornton

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Comparative Standings: One Year Ago

December 12, 2016 at 4:18 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

With the first third of the season completed for all but Columbus (who have amazingly played just 26 games, six fewer than the Winnipeg Jets), there have been some huge swings from a year ago.

Those Blue Jackets are the league’s most improved team, with a staggering 18 more points through 26 games than last season. Their huge swing is only matched by the Dallas Stars equally amazing drop-off of 18 points the other way. The Jackets can attest their improvement to the development of young players like Zach Werenski and Alexander Wennberg, while the Stars have seen a litany of injuries to their star players including Jason Spezza, Patrick Sharp and Johnny Oduya.

The Central Division as a whole is off to a slower start this year, with only the Chicago Blackhawks bettering their 2015-16 record. The Colorado Avalanche, expected to take a step forward with their young core has suffered the exact same fate with 23 points through 27 games.

The two biggest Canadian rebuild stories, Edmonton and Toronto have both improved, though not as largely as the fan bases in each city might have you believe. Four points for the Maple Leafs and five for the Oilers lend credence to the idea that it’s not how you start, it’s how you finish that counts. Though both franchises have a lot to look forward to, keeping up an advanced pace for an entire season is extremely difficult. The two teams finished last season with just 69 and 70 points respectively.

Below are the current standings. In parenthesis is the difference in points through the same amount of games last year.

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Montreal Canadiens: 28 GP, 41 pts (even)
Ottawa Senators: 29 GP, 34 pts (-1)
Boston Bruins: 29 GP, 32 pts (-4)
Tampa Bay Lightning: 29 GP, 30 pts (-1)
Florida Panthers: 29 GP, 30 pts (-2)
Detroit Red Wings: 29 GP, 30 pts (-5)
Toronto Maple Leafs: 27 GP, 27 pts (+4)
Buffalo Sabres: 27 GP, 26 pts (+1)

New York Rangers: 30 GP, 41 pts (+2)
Pittsburgh Penguins: 28 GP, 39 pts (+6)
Philadelphia Flyers: 31 GP, 39 pts (+7)
Columbus Blue Jackets: 26 GP, 38 pts (+18)
Washington Capitals: 27 GP, 37 pts (-3)
New Jersey Devils: 28 GP, 30 pts (-2)
Carolina Hurricanes: 28 GP, 28 pts (+4)
New York Islanders: 27 GP, 27 pts (-7)

Chicago Blackhawks: 30 GP, 40 pts (+4)
St. Louis Blues: 29 GP, 36 pts (even)
Minnesota Wild: 27 GP, 34 pts (even)
Winnipeg Jets: 32 GP, 29 pts (-3)
Nashville Predators: 27 GP, 28 pts (-4)
Dallas Stars: 30 GP, 28 pts (-18)
Colorado Avalanche: 27 GP, 23 pts (even)

Anaheim Ducks: 29 GP, 35 pts (+8)
Edmonton Oilers: 31 GP, 35 pts (+5)
Calgary Flames: 31 GP, 34 pts (+2)
San Jose Sharks: 28 GP, 33 pts (+4)
Los Angeles Kings: 27 GP, 30 pts (-7)
Vancouver Canucks: 29 GP, 26 pts (-2)
Arizona Coyotes: 27 GP, 23 pts (-4)

Anaheim Ducks| Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| Calgary Flames| Carolina Hurricanes| Chicago Blackhawks| Colorado Avalanche| Columbus Blue Jackets| Dallas Stars| Detroit Red Wings| Edmonton Oilers| Florida Panthers| Los Angeles Kings| Minnesota Wild| Montreal Canadiens| Nashville Predators| New Jersey Devils| New York Islanders| New York Rangers| Ottawa Senators| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Players| San Jose Sharks| St. Louis Blues| Tampa Bay Lightning| Toronto Maple Leafs| Utah Mammoth| Vancouver Canucks| Washington Capitals| Winnipeg Jets Jason Spezza| Johnny Oduya| Patrick Sharp

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