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Retained Salary in 2016-17: Atlantic Division

August 21, 2016 at 7:35 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

As a new season fast approaches, it’s always nice to look back and reminisce on years and players gone by. Unfortunately for most NHL teams, those feelings of nostalgia are usually cut short by the realization that some of those past players are still on the team’s payroll. Retained salary is a fact of life in the National Hockey League, as buyouts have become commonplace and retaining a portion of an outgoing player’s cap hit is often a deal-breaker in many trades. Retained salary can last long past the playing days of a former player (see Vincent Lecavalier) or can simply be for just one year. One way or another nearly every NHL team has at least one guy who’s still being paid without having to perform. We’ve already examined the Metropolitan and the Pacific; below is a list of all the retained salary in the Atlantic Division in 2016-17:

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Boston Bruins

  • Dennis Seidenberg ($1.167MM cap hit in 2016-17, 2018-19, 2019-20; $2.167MM in 2017-18): While his buyout this summer came as a shock to Seidenberg, it did not surprise many Bruins fans, who have watched the big German blue liner’s play slip over the past few seasons. Injuries and age began to take their toll on Seidenberg in 2012-13, and it was all downhill from there. The dominant defenseman who scored 32 points in 2010-11 and made for an unstoppable postseason duo with Zdeno Chara was nowhere to be found, as he missed over 100 total games over the past four seasons and failed to score 20 points in any of those seasons. Once his defensive game started to go as well in 2015-16, the team knew it was his time to go. With two years left at $4MM per year, the Bruins bought out Seidenberg and will have to replace his production while dealing with his cap hit over the course of the next four years.

Buffalo Sabres

  • Christian Ehrhoff (no cap hit): In 2013 and 2014, teams were awarded “compliance buyouts” on contracts signed prior to the 2012-13 season, as a way to escape long, burdensome deals from prior to the new CBA. The compliance buyouts would still be used to make payments to players, but it would not count against the salary cap. No team benefited more from these buyouts than the Sabres, who used their first of two in 2014 to rid themselves of a ten-year deal with Ehrhoff. One of the top defenseman on the market in 2011, Buffalo believed that they had a bona fide top pair defenseman in the German puck-mover, and gave him a decade-long deal worth $40MM. When he wasn’t living up to their expectations after the first few years, struggling in his own end and dealing with nagging injuries, the Sabres jumped at the chance to cut ties with Ehrhoff with seven years still remaining. The result was a 14-year, $12MM buyout settlement that pays Ehrhoff about $857K each year, but doesn’t affect Buffalo’s salary cap. Ehrhoff would sign for $4MM per year again in 2014-15, but on a one-year deal with the Penguins, and split the 2015-16 season between the Los Angeles Kings and Chicago Blackhawks at a price tag of $1.5MM. While he is currently a free agent, Ehrhoff hasn’t had trouble finding work and making money, but he also hasn’t returned to his Vancouver Canucks form that the Sabres were paying him for and it is doubtful that they regret the buyout.
  • Ville Leino (no cap hit): The Sabres used a second compliance buyout in 2014 on the vastly overpaid Leino. Buffalo bought high on Leino in 2011, the same year they splurged on Ehrhoff, and gave him a six-year, $27MM deal. Leino was capitalizing on an outstanding contract year, in which he scored 53 points and excelled in all areas of the game for the Philadelphia Flyers. Buffalo was a completely different story though; Leino failed to match his 53 points in three seasons combined with the Sabres. Injuries limited him to just eight games in 2012-13, but even when he was healthy during the other two seasons, he was far from a $4.5MM player. While Ehrhoff would have at least been serviceable had the Sabres held on to him, Leino was no good to a team that was entering a rebuild and they jumped at the chance to buy him out without cap repercussions. Leino was owed $7.3MM over the course of six years in the deal, four years of which are left, but the $1.2MM yearly payout hardly phases Buffalo since it does not effect their cap space nor their active roster.
  • Cody Hodgson ($542K cap hit in 2016-17, -$458K in 2018-19, $792K from 2019-20 to 2022-23): The Hodgson buyout still stings for Sabres fans. The tenth overall pick by the Vancouver Canucks in the 2008 NHL Draft, big things were expected of the young center for years. When it seemed as though he wasn’t going to pan out in Vancouver, they flipped him to Buffalo for another young disappointment, Zack Kassian. In his first two full seasons with the Sabres, Hodgson began developing into the star that he was always supposed to be. At least that’s how it seemed. After a 34-point lockout-shortened campaign in 2012-13, Hodgson re-signed in Buffalo for six years and $25.5MM. He rewarded the Sabres for their commitment with 20 goals and 24 assists the following year. His gift in 2014-15: a shocking 13 points in 78 games. Buffalo was swift to cut loose the once-promising forward, content to deal with eight years of buyout payments rather than watch their mistake on the ice for four more years. Many were critical of how easily the Sabres bought out a 24-year-old with obvious offensive ability, but the move was confirmed when Hodgson scored only eight points in 39 appearances with the Nashville Predators last season. Hodgson is currently a free agent, and while he still holds some potential at only 26, he will likely have to settle for a PTO and/or minor league contract if he wants to work his way back into the NHL. Meanwhile, he’ll be collecting close to $800K per year from Buffalo until 2023, and the Sabres will have a reminder on their salary cap each season that they should not overpay for streaky, young players.

Detroit Red Wings

  • Jakub Kindl ($360K cap hit in 2016-17): The Red Wings and Florida Panthers struck a rarely-seen deal at the 2016 NHL Trade Deadline, as playoff-bound division rivals made a trade with each other. Kindl was dealt to Florida, and a 2017 6th-round pick was sent back. It was more or less a salary dump for the Red Wings, who had been trying to move the depth defenseman for some time. The Wings held on to 15% of Kindl’s $2.4MM yearly cap hit for last season and the final season of his deal in this upcoming year. Kindl has never been much of a point producer, nor is he a defensive juggernaut, which may explain why he’s never been given the chance to become a full-time player. If he earns that role in Florida, and the Panthers cause the Red Wings to miss or exit the playoffs, Kindl will be getting the last laugh as his former team partially pays for him to do so.
  • Stephen Weiss ($1.067MM cap hit in 2016-17 and 2017-18, $2.567MM in 2018-19, $1.667MM from 2018-19 to 2020-21): In another tale of Florida and Detroit, the Red Wings made the classic mistake in the summer of 2013 of overpaying for a player with red flags in a weak free agent market. Weiss had been a very good, if not great player for the Panthers in the late 2000’s, scoring between around 40 and 60 points in six straight seasons from 2006 to 2012. However, a lingering wrist injury limited Weiss to just 17 games in his 2012-13 contract year. The Panthers decided to move on without him, and the Red Wings decided to take a chance on an elite scorer coming back from an injury that could affect his scoring ability. They signed Weiss to a five-year, $24.5MM deal and hoped for the best. Unfortunately for Detroit, the risk did not pay off. Weiss played in just 26 games in his first year with the team and had just four points. The wrist injury was clearly keeping him from playing at his best. In 2014-15, he had just nine goals and 25 points in 52 games, and that was as close to full strength as he was going to get. The Red Wings recognized the sunk cost and bought out Weiss last off-season. The six-year buyout settlement cost the team $10MM, and will cut a decent chunk out of their cap space each year until 2020-21. Weiss has since retired, with his time in Detroit as just a sad reminder of a great career in Florida that was derailed by injury.

Florida Panthers

  • Brad Boyes ($833K cap hit in 2016-17): The buyout of Brad Boyes is somewhat inexplicable. The always-helpful veteran winger first signed with the Panthers in 2013-14 on just a one-year, $1MM deal. That year he had 36 points, including 21 goals, and was a great value to Florida. Impressed with his play, the Panthers re-upped Boyes with a two-year, $5.25MM extension, a raise from $1MM per year to $2.625MM. In 2014-15, Boyes bested his previous season’s mark with 38 points. Although his goals dropped to 14, his two-way game improved and he took on a leadership role on the team. For some reason, the Panthers were no longer enamored with the veteran and bought out the final year of his contract. They took a cap hit of nearly $1MM last year, and face a similar charge this season. Boyes meanwhile turned a PTO with the Toronto Sabres into an inexpenive one-year deal and a decent season of 24 points, and looks primed to do the same for next year with another lucky team. Why didn’t the Panther just hold on to him for a veteran boost at a relatively cheap price?

Montreal Canadiens

  • P-A Parenteau ($1.33MM cap hit in 2016-17): Coming off of an excellent 67-point season with the New York Islanders in 2011-2012, Parenteau caused quite a stir in free agency and ended up signing a four-year, $16MM pact with the Colorado Avalanche. Although his numbers were not disappointing (nearly a point-per-game in the shortened 2012-13 season and 33 points in 55 games in 2013-14), Parenteau was not the offensive star that Colorado expected and the Avs were not the contender that Parenteau hoped they would be. In need of a change of scenery, he was swapped with Daniel Briere in a trade with the Canadiens in the 2013 off-season. In his only season with the Habs, Parenteau did finally underperform relative to his contract, scoring only 22 points in an injury-plagued 56-game campaign. That was his ticket out of Montreal, as they chose not to pay $4MM for the final year of his contract, opting instead for $2.67MM over two years. The Canadiens will finish paying off the buyout this season. Parenteau has handled himself nicely; he returned to form with 41 points for the rival Toronto Maple Leafs last season on a one-year deal and heads back to the Islanders, where he played the best hockey of his career, for the 2016-17 season at just $1.25MM.

Ottawa Senators

  • NONE. Well done by the front office in the Canadian capital, as the Sens can afford to take on big contracts like that of Dion Phaneuf and hand out big extensions to the likes of Bobby Ryan when they don’t have to worry about any cap space tied up in players playing (or not playing) elsewhere.

Tampa Bay Lightning

  • Vincent Lecavalier (no cap hit): Lecavalier was a legend in Tampa. A four-time All-Star, Maurice Richard winner, and of course, a Stanley Cup champion, there was no greater icon in Tampa Bay sports at that time than the Lightning star. With one year left on a four-year, $27.5MM deal with the team, Lecavalier entered into an eleven-year, $85MM extension in 2008. The Lightning hoped that the new deal would keep their captain in Tampa for the remainder of his career, producing at an elite level for a bargain price of $7.727MM per year. However, the final year of deal one in 2008 saw the beginning of the downside of Lecavalier’s career. After seasons of 108 and 92 points in 2006-07 and 2007-08, his point total fell to 67. In year one of the new deal in 2009, it stayed about the same at 70 points. That level of production was still nothing to panic about. But when years two, three, and four ended in 54, 49, and 32 points respectively, Tampa Bay was beyond panicked. Given the chance to avoid seeing their champion continue struggle with scoring and health and essentially fall apart in front of their eyes at a premium cost to the team, the Lighting used their compliance buyout in 2013 to send their fallen hero packing. The price? A 14-year buyout plan that totals almost $33MM. Luckily for the perennial contenders in Tampa, it has no effect on the salary cap. They paid Lecavalier substantial amounts of money each year to watch him play for the Philadelphia Flyers and most recently the Los Angeles Kings, and will continue to pay him well into his retirement (until 2027 to be exact), but it will not hurt the team. Now that Lecavalier’s playing days are done, he will likely return to his legendary status in Tampa as they continue to celebrate the outstanding organization that he helped to build in the 2000’s.
  • Matt Carle ($1.83MM cap hit from 2016-17 to 2019-20): There was a resounding echo throughout the hockey world in the summer of 2012 that the Lightning had overpaid for Matt Carle. A good puck-moving defenseman coming off three straight 35+ point seasons with the Philadelphia Flyers, there was no doubt that Carle was going to get paid. However, many acknowledged his defensive deficiencies and doubted that he could continue to produce at the same offensive level. They were right on both counts. Tampa Bay signed Carle to a six-year, $33MM deal and four years in, he had not matched his Philly numbers and had continued to struggle in his own end. The past two seasons, he was used sparingly by the Lightning and was often seen as a liability. After getting just nine points in 64 games from Carle in 2015-16, the Bolts finally pulled the plug with a buyout. With two years left on his contract at $5.5MM, Tampa Bay will now be saddled with an nearly $2MM cap hit in each of the next four seasons. However, they did need the cap space and roster space, so the buyout was not all bad. Carle will try his hand at a comeback (at just $700K) with the Nashville Predators in 2o16-17.

Toronto Maple Leafs

  • Phil Kessel ($1.2MM cap hit from 2016-17 t0 2021-22): Everyone knows about the Phil Kessel trade. No, not the first one, the second one. The Toronto Maple Leafs send their best player to the star-studded Pittsburgh Penguins, who go on to win the Stanley Cup. The side story: not only did Toronto give the Pens a valuable piece to the Stanley Cup puzzle, but they also helped to fund his contributions as well. When Kessel, who hasn’t scored under 50 points in a season since his sophomore year with the Boston Bruins, was traded to Pittsburgh for a multiple picks, prospects, and players, the Leafs held on to 15% of his massive contract. Since Kessel gets paid $8MM per year, which calculates out to a $1.2MM cap hit each year until his contract ends in six years. Somewhat steep for the team that traded away the star player. Nevertheless, give the Maple Leafs some credit for this year’s Stanley Cup. They may not be able to win their own, but they can help support others’.
  • Tim Gleason ($1.33MM cap hit in 2016-17 and 2017-18): Gleason’s was a name that few knew much about outside of Raleigh, North Carolina for a long time. A mainstay on the Hurricanes’ blue line, Gleason wasn’t much of a point-producer, but could play the position with the best of them. Having already played six years in Carolina, he signed on for four more and $16MM during the 2011-12 season. However, as Gleason’s scoring slipped into the single digits and his defensive game began to weaken, the Hurricane’s attachment also began to dissipate and he was traded to the Maple Leafs for John-Michael Liles midway through the 2013-14 season. The wheels fell off for Gleason in Toronto, as he scored only one goal and was a -14 in 39 games with the Maple Leafs and ended up as their extra defenseman. Not wanting to pay $4MM for two more years for a seventh man, the Leafs bought out Gleason’s contract after just half a season with the team. The buyout settlement stretched four years and covers $5.33MM. Gleason unsurprisingly returned to Carolina for the 2014-15 season, but at least for Toronto’s sake, he played just as poorly and has since retired.
  • Mikhail Grabovski (no cap hit): After back-to-back 50+ point seasons for the Maple Leafs in 2010-11 and 2011-12, Toronto rewarded Grabovski with a five-year, $27.5MM contract. Then, during the lockout-shortened 2012-13 season, he only had 16 points and hysteria set in for the Leafs’ front office. Faced with an opportunity to cut Grabovski loose without any ill effects to the team with a compliance buyout or else face the possibility that Grabovski’s best days had come and gone, the team made the difficult choice despite much criticism. It turned out that they made the right call, as just one year later the New York Islanders signed Grabovski for four years and $2oMM and have thus far gotten two seasons of under 60 games and under 30 points at $5MM a pop. The Maple Leafs are happy they are not in that situation. If Grabovski does not turn it around this coming season, he could be collecting his $1.792MM from Toronto and a second buyout check from the Islanders in 2017.

Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| Detroit Red Wings| Florida Panthers| Montreal Canadiens| Ottawa Senators| Tampa Bay Lightning| Toronto Maple Leafs

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Snapshots: Vegas, Vesey, Yandle

August 19, 2016 at 1:00 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

After being previously reported that Night Hawks would be the name of the new Las Vegas franchise, Ken Boehlke of The Sin Bin now reports that name is actually a back-up plan for a different moniker. Fans of the Chicago Blackhawks will be happy to hear it, as many felt the name encroached on their own. The team is still expected to have Night somewhere in the nickname, but is presumably still being vetted by the NHL.

  • All day Jimmy Vesey rumors have been running rampant, with a several teams all being crowned the favorites at different instances.  Peter Fish, Vesey’s agent, put and end to the speculation, saying that a handful of teams are still involved and that all the rumors of favorites are false. Another member of the Vesey camp, Peter Donatelli, said that the group had only met once yesterday to discuss the options, and that a decision is not likely going to come down today.  Earlier today we wrote about why Vesey’s free agency has been such a hot-button issue this summer.
  • Keith Yandle is down in Florida already training for his debut with his new team, and George Richards of the Miami Herald caught up with him today. Yandle was looking for the most possible years on the free agent market, a big part of why he signed with Florida after they traded for his rights. The team offered him a seven-year deal, giving him some stability for his foreseeable future. Yandle mentioned how it’s not just him coming down early this summer, after a wonderful season last year from the Panthers: “I can’t wait to meet everyone and get things started. Guys are coming in early so you get to meet guys before training camp even starts. We’ll go out to lunch and dinner; it’s a lot of fun.”

Chicago Blackhawks| Florida Panthers| Free Agency| Snapshots| Vegas Golden Knights Jimmy Vesey| Keith Yandle

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Training Camp Invite Tracker

August 13, 2016 at 7:34 pm CDT | by Mike Furlano Leave a Comment

Over the course of the offseason more and more players will accept invitations to join team training camps. Usually these are players trying to resurrect their career or to show that they have one or two more years left before retirement. Notable training camp invites last year included Lee Stempniak and Jonas Gustavsson.

Making a team as an invitee is harder than just being one of the top-12 forwards or top-6 defensemen. Teams are usually looking for specific needs, such as a speedy second line forward or a defenseman who can eat minutes. Teams may want to save their bottom roster spots for developing prospects, so invitees risk being cut unless they meet a team’s identified need.

Here are the notable players who have been invited to training camps thus far. The list excludes players that are attending camps but are already signed to minor league contracts or prospects who are hoping to earn a minor league deal. Check here often for updates.

Training Camp Invites

Anaheim Ducks:
Sean Bergenheim
David Booth
Yann Danis
David Jones

Arizona Coyotes:
Zach Boychuk

Boston Bruins:
Peter Mueller

Calgary Flames:
Luke Adam
Jamie Devane
Matt Frattin
Nicklas Grossmann

Chris Higgins
Lauri Korpikoski

Colby Robak

Carolina Hurricanes:
Raffi Torres

Colorado Avalanche:
Gabriel Bourque
Rene Bourque
Jiri Tlusty

Columbus Blue Jackets:
Keith Aule
Marc-Andre Bergeron
Mike Brown
Aaron Palushaj

Jarret Stoll

Edmonton Oilers:
Eric Gryba
Kris Versteeg
Ryan Vesce

Florida Panthers:
Justin Fontaine
Adam Pardy

Los Angeles Kings:
Lucas Lessio
Tom McCollum
Devin Setoguchi

Minnesota Wild:
Ryan Carter
Tomas Fleischmann

New Jersey Devils:
Brian Gibbons
Anders Lindback

New York Islanders:
Steve Bernier
Stephen Gionta

New York Rangers:
Maxim Lapierre

Ottawa Senators:
Matt Bartkowski

Philadelphia Flyers:
Corban Knight

St. Louis Blues:
T.J. Galiardi
Eric Nystrom
Chris Porter
Yan Stastny
Mike Weber

Tampa Bay Lightning:
James Wisniewski

Toronto Maple Leafs:
Jeff Glass
Raman Hrabarenka
Brandon Prust

Vancouver Canucks:
Jack Skille

Tuomo Ruutu
James Sheppard

Washington Capitals:
Drew MacIntyre

Anaheim Ducks| Boston Bruins| Calgary Flames| Carolina Hurricanes| Colorado Avalanche| Columbus Blue Jackets| Florida Panthers| Free Agency| Los Angeles Kings| Minnesota Wild| New York Rangers| Ottawa Senators| St. Louis Blues| Tampa Bay Lightning| Toronto Maple Leafs| Utah Mammoth

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Off-Season To Date: Atlantic Division

August 13, 2016 at 2:00 pm CDT | by Bill Morran Leave a Comment

While there’s still business to be done, most of the major moves are over with by now. Today we’ll be providing a run down of where teams stand, along with notes on what they have left to do. We’ll start with the Atlantic division. For our purposes, lists of arrivals, departures, re-signings, and remaining restricted free agents will include players without NHL rookie eligibility. Cap numbers and roster sizes are per CapFriendly.

Boston Bruins

  • Key Arrivals: David Backes (UFA-Blues), Anton Khudobin (UFA-Ducks), Riley Nash (UFA-Hurricanes)
  • Key Departures: Maxime Talbot (UFA-KHL), Chris Kelly (UFA-Senators), Jonas Gustavsson (UFA-Oilers), Lee Stempniak (UFA-Hurricanes), Loui Eriksson (UFA-Canucks), Matt Irwin (UFA-Predators), Landon Ferraro (UFA-Blues), Brett Connolly (UFA-Capitals)
  • Re-Signings: Torey Krug, John-Michael Liles, Tyler Randell, Colin Miller
  • Unsigned RFAs: None
  • Projected Cap Space: $6,732MM
  • Roster Size: 21 (11F, 8D, 2G)
  • Notes: The Bruins lost a lot of depth this off-season, but should survive. They’ll be able to give greater roles to players like Frank Vatrano and Ryan Spooner. Should they produce as expected, that should more than make up for the losses.

Buffalo Sabres

  • Key Arrivals: Dmitry Kulikov (trade-Panthers), Justin Falk (UFA-Blue Jackets), Kyle Okposo (UFA-Islanders),  Derek Grant (UFA-Flames), Anders Nilsson (trade-Blues)
  • Key Departures:  Mark Pysyk (trade-Panthers), Carlo Colaiacovo (unsigned UFA), David Legwand (unsigned UFA)
  • Re-Signings: Johan Larsson, Jake McCabe, Casey Nelson, Marcus Foligno
  • Unsigned RFAs: Rasmus Ristolainen, Zemgus Girgensons
  • Projected Cap Space: $8.15MM
  • Roster Size: 23 (14F, 6D, 3G)
  • Notes: Still in the building stage, the Sabres aggressively pursued new talent this year. It’s hard to tell where they are now, but they’re coming off a giant leap forward. Still, look for most of their improvement to come from younger players breaking out.

Detroit Red Wings

  • Key Arrivals: Joe Vitale (trade-Coyotes), Thomas Vanek (UFA-Wild), Frans Nielsen (UFA-Islanders), Steve Ott (UFA-Blues)
  • Key Departures: Pavel Datsyuk (trade-Coyotes), Brad Richards (retired), Kyle Quincey (unsigned UFA), Joakin Andersson (UFA-Sweden)
  • Re-Signings: Brian Lashoff, Riley Sheahan, Drew Miller, Alexey Marchenko, Darren Helm, Danny DeKeyser, Luke Glendening, Petr Mrazek, Teemu Pulkkinen
  • Unsigned RFAs: None
  • Projected Cap Space: $0
  • Roster Size: 24 (16F, 6D, 2G)
  • Notes: That roster size will shrink at camp. The NHL limit is 23, so look for the Red Wings to demote at least two forwards. The team is going to look very different without Pavel Datsyuk, and GM Ken Holland hopes he can continiue using veteran depth to make up for aging and retiring legends. Dylan Larkin will also help.

Florida Panthers

  • Key Arrivals: Jared McCann (trade-Canucks), Keith Yandle (trade-Rangers), Reto Berra (trade-Avalanche), Mark Pysyk (trade-Sabres), Colton Sceviour (UFA-Stars), James Reimer (UFA-Sharks), Jonathan Marchessault (UFA-Lightning), Jason Demers (UFA-Stars)
  • Key Departures: Erik Gudbranson (trade-Canucks), Rocco Grimaldi (trade-Avalanche), Dmitry Kulikov (trade-Sabres), Quinton Howden (UFA-Jets), Dylan Olsen (unsigned UFA), Brian Campbell (UFA-Blackhawks), Jiri Hudler (unsigned UFA), Willie Mitchell (unsigned UFA), Al Montoya (UFA-Canadiens)
  • Re-Signings: Jaromir Jagr, Greg McKegg, Aaron Ekblad, Vincent Trocheck, Reilly Smith, Derek MacKenzie, Logan Shaw
  • Unsigned RFAs: None
  • Projected Cap Space: $4.329MM
  • Roster Size: 24 (14F, 7D, 3G)
  • Notes: Nobody had a busier off-season than the Panthers. They’re now analytically inclined, incredibly young, and defending Atlantic Division champions. The team will look scary as players start to break out. They prefer puck movers on defense, like Yandle and Demers, over more physical guys, like Gudbranson and Kulikov. If it works out, the Panthers are looking primed for a Cup run.

Montreal Canadiens

  • Key Arrivals: Andrew Shaw (trade-Blackhawks), Shea Weber (trade-Predators), Alex Radulov (UFA-KHL), Al Montoya (UFA-Panthers), Zach Redmond (UFA-Jets), Chris Terry (UFA-Hurricanes)
  • Key Departures: Lars Eller (trade-Capitals), P.K. Subban (trade-Predators), Michael Bournival (UFA-Lightning), Ben Scrivens (UFA-KHL)
  • Re-Signings: Sven Andrighetto, Mark Barberio, Phillip Danault, Stefan Matteau,
  • Unsigned RFAs: None
  • Projected Cap Space: $855K
  • Roster Size: 25 (14F, 8D, 3G)
  • Notes: The attention focused on the Subban for Weber trade, but watch out for Alex Radulov. The KHL has become pretty strong the last few years, and he’s kept dominating it. He’s not a kid anymore, but the Canadiens added a dynamic winger, and will have arguably the NHL’s best goalie back next year. The expectations are high in Montreal, and success will largely hinge on those two.

Ottawa Senators

  • Key Arrivals: Patrick Sieloff (trade-Flames), Mike Blunden (UFA-Lightning), Chris Kelly (UFA-Bruins), Derick Brassard (trade-Rangers)
  • Key Departures: Chris Phillips (retirement), Patrick Wiercioch (UFA-Avalanche), Alex Chiasson (trade-Flames), Scott Gomez (unsigned UFA), Mika Zibanejad (trade-Rangers)
  • Re-Signings: Mike Kostka, Mike Hoffman, Ryan Dzingel, Matt Puempel, Fredrik Claesson
  • Unsigned RFAs: Cody Ceci
  • Projected Cap Space: $8.78MM
  • Roster Size: 22 (14F, 6D, 2G)
  • Notes: There were a lot of questions about the Brassard trade, and for good reason. They got older and more expensive with very little reason. It’s easy to wonder if the Senators are just treading more water, even with a new GM and coach.

Tampa Bay Lightning

  • Key Arrivals: Michael Bournival (UFA-Canadiens), Cory Conacher (UFA-Switzerland)
  • Key Departures: Matt Carle (bought out), Mattias Ohlund (retirement), Jonathan Marchessault (UFA-Panthers)
  • Re-Signings: Cedric Pacquette, Tye McGinn, Andrei Vasilevskiy, J.T. Brown, Steven Stamkos, Victor Hedman, Alex Killorn, Vladislav Namestnikov
  • Unsigned RFAs: Nikita Kucherov
  • Projected Cap Space: $6.591MM
  • Roster Size: 20 (12F, 6D, 2G)
  • Notes: The story of the off-season was re-signing players like Stamkos, Hedman, and Killorn. If they can get Kucherov signed to a reasonable deal, no Lightning fan will have anything to complain about.

Toronto Maple Leafs

  • Key Arrivals: Frederik Anderson (trade-Ducks), Kerby Rychel (trade-Blue Jackets), Matt Martin (UFA-Islanders), Roman Polak (UFA-Sharks)
  • Key Departures: Scott Harrington (trade-Blue Jackets), Mark Arcobello (UFA-Switzerland), Stuart Percy (UFA-Penguins), Sam Carrick (UFA-Blackhawks), Brad Boyes (unsigned UFA), Michael Grabner (UFA-Rangers), Pierre-Alexandre Parenteau (UFA-Islanders), T.J. Brennan (UFA-Flyers)
  • Re-Signings: Morgan Rielly, Nazem Kadri, Frank Corrado, Martin Marincin, Peter Holland, Josh Leivo. Connor Carrick
  • Unsigned RFAs: None
  • Projected Cap Space: $435K
  • Roster Size: 24 (14F, 9D, 1G)
  • Notes: While still re-building, the Leafs added some much needed toughness in Martin, and a legitimate starting goalie in Andersen. Still, look for Toronto’s big moves to be full-time call-ups for their top prospects, like William Nylander, Mitch Marner, and Auston Matthews. After that, don’t sleep on Nikita Zaitsev, a defenseman signed out of the KHL this year.

Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| Detroit Red Wings| Florida Panthers| Montreal Canadiens| Ottawa Senators| Tampa Bay Lightning| Toronto Maple Leafs| Uncategorized

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Roster Crunch: Atlantic Division

August 10, 2016 at 12:25 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

Over the past few days, we’ve looked at the final few spots on the roster for both the Pacific and Central divisions. This time, we’ll turn our attention to the East starting with the Atlantic.  This division will be in turmoil over the next few years, with clubs like the Buffalo Sabres and Toronto Maple Leafs going through slow, deliberate rebuilds, and perennial contending squads like the Detroit Red Wings finally starting to slow down.

Florida Panthers – While the Panthers have pretty much accomplished everything they set out to do this off-season – improving the blueline with Keith Yandle and Jason Demers, getting a capable replacement for Roberto Luongo in James Reimer, and locking up their young core – they failed in one, big $5.5MM way. Dave Bolland failed his physical and therefor couldn’t be bought out. He’ll try to prove he deserves some playing time this season, but may find himself buried in the AHL to make room for Jared McCann, the prize Florida received when they dealt Erik Gudbranson to the Canucks.

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Tampa Bay Lightning – If you’d said that Steve Yzerman would get Steven Stamkos and Victor Hedman locked up long-term for less than $17MM per season, many would have laughed you out of the building.  But, he did it, and it has let him spend some of the savings to build considerable depth for his hockey club.  The team has signed a glut of forwards with NHL experience to league-minimum contracts, and will have a tryout at camp for the bottom few spots. The team already has 13 forwards (including still-unsigned Nikita Kucherov) who should get spots, meaning these new signings will have to dethrone someone to find a spot.  Cory Conacher may have the best shot, after the diminutive winger scored 52 points last season in the improving Swiss League.

Detroit Red Wings – It was easy to understand why the Red Wings let Kyle Quincey hit free agency, but otherwise they’ve made some questionable moves this summer. The team signed Steve Ott, despite not having a clear place to play him, and have filled up the center position, seemingly ensuring that Dylan Larkin remains on the wing. Their proverbial fourth line will be anchored by Luke Glendening again after extending him for four years, but who will play with him is still up in the air. Ott, Teemu Pulkkinen, Drew Miller and Andreas Athanasiou all have claims to the wings, not to mention that many expect top prospect Anthony Mantha to force his way onto the club this season.

Boston Bruins – Didn’t Joe Morrow and Colin Miller do enough to lock up their spots on the bottom pairing last season? Apparently not, as the team brought back John-Michael Liles for $2MM despite his advanced age. Morrow and Miller are both waiver eligible, meaning that they’ll probably cycle through the press box instead of playing in the AHL. Depth on defense isn’t a bad thing, but sacrificing development time might be.

Ottawa Senators – For the Sens, a young group is getting decidedly older this season, with the deal to swap Mika Zibanejad for Derick Brassard and the signing of Chris Kelly. There doesn’t seem to be enough room left for all three of Curtis Lazar, Nick Paul and Ryan Dzingel in the bottom six, unless Chris Neil decides to hang ’em up in the next few months (he won’t). Mike Kostka looks like he signed on to sit in a press box, as the team’s defense is set without him.

Montreal Canadiens – Last year when Carey Price went down to injury, it was Mike Condon that took the reins of the club and made 51 starts. While he didn’t perform to the level the club was used to, it was expected that he’d return as Price’s backup, now with a healthy amount of NHL experience. It makes the signing of Al Montoya this summer interesting, as that would seemingly push Condon back down to the AHL. In camp, the two will battle along with Charlie Lindgren, an NCAA import, for the backup (and AHL starter) job.

Buffalo Sabres – The biggest story in Sabres camp this year will be that of Evander Kane, and whether he starts the season with the team.  If he does, he’ll complete a deadly top-six, all of which come in under the age of 30. If he doesn’t (be it either through trade or team suspension), it would probably bump either Marcus Foligno or Matt Moulson into the top-six, giving an opportunity to another youngster in limited action. Perhaps that would go to Hudson Fasching, who was signed out of the University of Minnesota to play seven games for the Sabres down the stretch. Obviously, another NCAA product in Jimmy Vesey would fit in nicely if the Sabres should get him signed – he becomes an unrestricted free agent in just five days.

Toronto Maple Leafs – The Leafs may be the most interesting of training camps (sorry hockey-world) this year, just due to the number of bodies they have vying for NHL spots.  The team has veterans like Milan Michalek and Joffrey Lupul penciled in right now, but have made it clear that they are willing to go with a number of kids in their lineup next year.  With Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner, William Nylander all expected to play a full season in Toronto (not to mention Zach Hyman, Nikita Soshnikov and Connor Brown, all who played well in their short stints last season) there may not be enough room for veteran Colin Greening and newcomer Kerby Rychel on the NHL roster.

AHL| Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| Detroit Red Wings| Florida Panthers| Free Agency| Injury| Montreal Canadiens| Ottawa Senators| Tampa Bay Lightning| Toronto Maple Leafs| Uncategorized| Vancouver Canucks Al Montoya| Andreas Athanasiou| Anthony Mantha| Auston Matthews| Colin Miller| Cory Conacher| Dave Bolland| Derick Brassard| Drew Miller| Dylan Larkin| Evander Kane| James Reimer| Jason Demers| Jimmy Vesey| Joe Morrow| John-Michael Liles| Keith Yandle| Luke Glendening| Marcus Foligno| Mika Zibanejad| Nikita Kucherov| Roberto Luongo| Steven Stamkos| Victor Hedman

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Shawn Thornton Expected To Retire After Next Season

August 9, 2016 at 11:15 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Florida winger Shawn Thornton is expected to retire following the 2016-17 season, reports DJ Bean of WEEI.  Interestingly enough, last year was supposed to be his final season but when the Panthers opted to offer him an extension just before the trade deadline, he jumped at the opportunity to stick around for one more year, telling Bean that, “When they offered another year, I sprained my finger signing the thing before they changed their minds”.

Thornton has played a part-time role with Florida in the past two years after joining the team in the 2014 offseason.  In 2015-16, he suited up in 50 games for the Panthers, picking up a goal and four assists to go along with 80 penalty minutes.  He also got into four postseason contests, being held pointless.

The 39 year old was drafted by Toronto in the seventh round of the 1997 draft but never suited up for the Leafs.  He still has been well-travelled over the years, getting in 655 games with Chicago, Anaheim, Boston, and Florida, picking up 40 goals, 58 assists, and 1,036 penalty minutes.

A year ago, Thornton was planning on getting involved in sports media in his retirement but has had a change of heart and now plans to get into the business side of the game:

“As we know, things change year-to-year – this would have been a different conversation last year – but as of right now I think I’m probably leaning more towards the business side of hockey. Once the season’s over, I’ll probably move into that role in Florida.  Media, I did a lot and that’s exactly where I thought I was going to end up going, but if the opportunity is still there to get into learning something new in the business side of sports, I just see a ton of upside to that for longer in life.”

Thornton will likely once again be a part time player with Florida next season, as evidenced by the pay cut he took in his deal last February.  After earning $1.2MM in each of the last two seasons, he is only guaranteed half of that in 2016-17 with an additional $172K in games played and Stanley Cup bonuses.  When in the lineup, he’ll likely be deployed on Florida’s fourth line.

Florida Panthers| Newsstand Shawn Thornton

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Revisiting Vancouver’s Search For Scoring Line Wing

August 7, 2016 at 1:38 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

With franchise cornerstones Daniel Sedin and Henrik Sedin each nearing the end of their great careers and after missing the postseason by a whopping 12 points, it would appear the Vancouver Canucks should strongly consider tearing down then rebuilding their roster. Instead, Vancouver seems to be trying to walk the fine line between being competitive today while still trying to add youth to the organization to make them better tomorrow. The signing of Loui Eriksson and the trade for Erik Gudbranson – a deal that cost Vancouver young forward Jared McCann and a second-round pick – reinforces the idea the Canucks want to try to compete for a playoff berth this year, even if they sacrifice young talent to do so.

Along those lines, GM Jim Benning has been open about his efforts to add a scoring line winger, whether by trade or by signing one of the few remaining quality free agent forwards on the market, in an attempt to further improve his club’s chances at the postseason. The club has been linked to potential trade target Evander Kane, among others, this summer but James O’Brien, writing for NBC Sports, argues that Vancouver should steer clear of the trade market in their search for an “experienced 15-20 goal-scorer,” and instead add one of the skilled forwards left in free agency.

Vancouver likely has little chance to make the postseason in a division that includes three, near-certain playoff teams and three others who may have made enough roster improvements this summer to realistically challenge. Defending Western Conference champion San Jose should be a near lock for the playoffs, as should Los Angeles and Anaheim. Arizona, Calgary and Edmonton each made major moves that could result in postseason contention. With the playoffs unlikely, Vancouver shouldn’t give up any of the few valuable assets they have in exchange for a marginal increase in their postseason odds this year.

Considering a reunion with UFA Radim Vrbata is unlikely, signing one of Brandon Pirri or Jiri Hudler – two of PHR’s five top remaining UFA’s – would improve the Canucks on the ice for the 2016-17 campaign and won’t cost the team anything other than cash. Additionally, if either player has a productive season for Vancouver, the Canucks could move them at the deadline for future assets. Remember that Hudler, a pending free agent at the time, was dealt from Calgary to the Panthers for second and fourth-round draft choices. That’s exactly the type of move a club like Vancouver should make as opposed to dealing for a veteran player under contract long term.

Hudler, a three-time 20-goal-scorer, had a down season in 2015-16 but is just one year removed from a 31-goal campaign with the Flames. He still tallied 16 goals last year in 72 games, splitting the season with Calgary and Florida. But even in a “down” year, his goal-scoring rate was still comfortably that of a top-six winger. Hudler averaged 0.79 G/60 this past season, a total which ranked 91st overall among forwards who saw at least 500 minutes of even strength ice time. With 30 teams in the league, each with three top-line players, Hudler’s goal production ranks just outside what you would expect from a first-liner.

Pirri averaged 0.74 G/60 last season, good for the 105th best rate among forwards who played 500 minutes at even strength. As with Hudler, in terms of goal scoring alone Pirri is comfortably a second-line player. His career rate of 0.91 G/60 suggests that given more ice time, Pirri would easily exceed 20 goals in a full season.

If Vancouver is simply looking for a player who can put the puck in the net, signing Hudler or Pirri to a one-year deal makes far more sense than giving up assets to acquire a goal-scorer via trade. Considering how late in the summer we are and after seeing how much of a pay cut Sam Gagner took after a lackluster season, it’s likely Hudler is only worth around $2MM per at this point. Pirri probably would sign for less than that figure. Additionally, assuming the club signs one of those free agent wingers and they go on to produce solid numbers, the value Vancouver could extract from a contender at the deadline makes this route far and away the better option for a team that should be focusing more on the future than the present.

 

 

 

Calgary Flames| Florida Panthers| Free Agency| Players| Vancouver Canucks Brandon Pirri| Evander Kane| Jiri Hudler| Loui Eriksson

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Salary Cap Report: Atlantic Division

August 5, 2016 at 8:59 pm CDT | by natebrown Leave a Comment

As the hockey world takes its collective breath before the World Cup, training camps, and the regular season begins, most teams have checked off their boxes and marked their ledgers. There are some teams not finished, as trades or financial meandering will be necessary due to cap crunches. Others have plenty of room.

We’ll start with the Atlantic Division, which houses the team with the greatest amount of red ink in terms of cap space–the Detroit Red Wings. Some interesting notes:

  • The Canadiens inherited the Weber contract from Nashville via the Subban trade.
  • The Panthers highest cap hit, Keith Yandle, was signed in June after being acquired from the New York Rangers.
  • The Red Wings will place the contracts of Johan Franzen and Joe Vitale on the LTIR while the Maple Leafs do the same with Nathan Horton’s.
  • Steven Stamkos avoided a free agent bonanza when he re-upped with the Lightning prior to July 1.

The specifics are below:

  • Boston Bruins
    Cap Space Remaining: $6,731,666
    Greatest Cap Hit: David Krejci: $7.25MM 
  • Buffalo Sabres
    Cap Space Remaining: $8,150,476
    Greatest Cap Hit: Ryan O’Reilly: $7.5MM
  • Detroit Red Wings
    Cap Space Remaining: -$4,238,712
    Greatest Cap Hit: Henrik Zetterberg: $6.083MM
  • Florida Panthers
    Cap Space Remaining: $4,329,167
    Greatest Cap Hit: Keith Yandle: $6.35MM
  • Montreal Canadiens
    Cap Space Remaining: $855,357
    Greatest Cap Hit: Shea Weber: $7.86MM
  • Ottawa Senators
    Cap Space Remaining: $8,780,833
    Greatest Cap Hit: Bobby Ryan: $7.25MM
  • Tampa Bay Lightning
    Cap Hit Remaining: $6,591,666
    Greatest Cap Hit: Steven Stamkos: $8.5MM
  • Toronto Maple Leafs
    Cap Hit Remaining: $435,000
    Greatest Cap Hit: Nathan Horton: $5.3MM

Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| Detroit Red Wings| Florida Panthers| Montreal Canadiens| Ottawa Senators| Tampa Bay Lightning| Toronto Maple Leafs David Krejci| Keith Yandle| Shea Weber| Steven Stamkos

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Why is Jiri Hudler Still A Free Agent?

July 30, 2016 at 1:21 pm CDT | by natebrown Leave a Comment

When PHR set out to rank the top 50 unrestricted free agents, Jiri Hudler was ranked 18th and expected to be snapped up at a reasonable price. Though some reports have him possibly talking to the Vancouver Canucks, the interest for the 32-year-old forward is tepid.

So what gives?

Hudler came up with the Detroit Red Wings, and was a strong contributor to their Stanley Cup winning season in 2007-08, and then again in 2008-09 when they fell short of a repeat championship. After a one-year hiatus in the KHL during the 2009-10 season, Hudler returned to the Red Wings until the 2011-12 season. At a glance, his numbers looked like this:

  • 2007-08: 42 points (13-29)
  • 2008-09: 57 points (23-34)
  • 2010-11:  37 points (10-27)
  • 2011-12:  50 points (25-25)

Though the Red Wings didn’t offer him another contract following the 2011-12 season, Calgary did at a tune of four years, $16MM. Hudler remained a solid contributor, hitting his career high in 2014-15 with 76 points (31-45). A season prior, he registered 54 points (17-37).

Hudler’s performance fell off in 2015-16, notching 35 points (10-25) in 53 games with Calgary before being traded to Florida. There, Hudler had 11 points (6-5) in 19 games before only adding an assist in six playoff games. He had 46 points in 72 games but it was a far cry from his previous season. Florida chose to let him walk.

So why, despite boasting better numbers than several free agents already signed, does Hudler remain unemployed?

Is it Inconsistency?

Back in 2013, several writers debated whether the Red Wings should have re-signed Hudler instead of letting him go to Calgary, where he would go on to have some steady seasons. The offer from Detroit was less than what Calgary offered by $800K per season.

With Florida, he was never even offered a chance back. Despite producing well, and apparently fitting in well with the Panthers following their acquisition, there wasn’t even a hint of an extension.

Some of the problem might be his lack of defensive responsibility. Hudler was paid to put up points, so when the scoring decreased, so did the interest. Back in June, CSN Philly’s Greg Paone wrote that Hudler would have struggled in Dave Hakstol’s system should he have signed with the Flyers. Two weeks ago, Tal Pinchevsky argued in an ESPN article that he would provide production at a discount, and his playoff struggle in Florida shouldn’t be an indictment on his overall postseason performance, pointing out that Hudler had 8 points in 11 playoff games with Calgary in 2015.

Perhaps Kevin Allen summed up what most teams debated before free agency: Would they be getting the 76 point Hudler or the 46 point Hudler?

Summarizing the theories, it appears that Hudler’s decrease in production, his defensive deficiencies, and an underwhelming playoff performance with Florida all had a hand in his current predicament.

The Czech winger should find a landing spot somewhere, especially since Sam Gagner is close to a deal with the Blue Jackets. Gagner’s deal will certainly gauge what Hudler could expect. The only certainty is that it won’t come close to what he made a season ago.

Calgary Flames| Columbus Blue Jackets| Detroit Red Wings| Florida Panthers| Philadelphia Flyers| Vancouver Canucks Jiri Hudler

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Minor NHL Transactions: 7/20/2016

July 20, 2016 at 1:55 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

Here is where we will keep track of the day’s minor moves:

  • The Florida Panthers, via their team website, have announced the re-signing of forward Logan Shaw to a one-year, two-way contract. The six-foot-three, 202-pound Shaw saw action in 53 games with the Panthers in 2015-16, netting 5 goals and 7 points. He also appeared in 19 contests with the Portland Pirates (AHL) where he tallied 11 goals and 14 points. With the Panthers among the more active teams this summer, adding talent via both free agency and the trade market, it would seem the roster is pretty set meaning Shaw is likely to serve as a depth piece in 2016-17, much as he did this past season.
  • Veteran center T.J. Hensick is set to join the Ontario Reign, the AHL affiliate of the Los Angeles Kings, according to the L.A Kings Insider website. Hensick last appeared in the NHL back during the 2010-11 campaign while a member of the St. Louis Blues. He split the past campaign with Utica and Charlotte of the AHL, scoring 40 points in 65 games. Hensick played with Kings prospect Adrian Kempe for MODO in the Swedish Hockey League in 2013-14, suggesting his familiarity with one of the club’s top prospects played a role in this signing.
  • Arizona has hired former NHL goalie Doug Soetaert to be the General Manager of their AHL affiliate, the Tucson Roadrunners. Most recently, Soetaert was a professional scout in the Arizona organization covering the western region. Prior to that, Soetaert plied his trade in Europe, scouting all professional leagues on the continent as well as the AHL. Soetaert also has extensive experience in the North American junior leagues, serving as Vice President and General Manager of the Everett Silvertips of the Western Hockey League from 2002 – 2012. During his playing days, Soetaert appeared in 284 games as a member of the New York Rangers (two stints), Winnipeg Jets and Montreal Canadiens.

AHL| Florida Panthers| Free Agency| Los Angeles Kings| Montreal Canadiens| New York Rangers| St. Louis Blues| Transactions| Utah Mammoth| Winnipeg Jets

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