Morning Notes: Roy, Frattin
After spending the last two years in the KHL and Swiss NLA, Derek Roy will try his hand in another European professional league this season. The former NHL forward has signed on with Linkoping of the Swedish Hockey League for the next two seasons, which should effectively end any thoughts of a comeback. He’ll be 36 at the end of the contract, and four years removed from NHL play.
In 738 NHL contests, Roy registered 524 points including a career-high of 81 in 2007-08. Though he received Selke votes on multiple occasions, Roy was never afforded many individual accolades but still carved out quite a successful career in the NHL. His effect was felt most early in his career where he helped lead the Buffalo Sabres to an Eastern Conference Finals appearance, eventually falling to the Cup Champion Carolina Hurricanes.
- Former Toronto Maple Leafs forward Matt Frattin will follow Roy’s lead and head overseas, signing with the Kunlun KHL team for next season. Frattin has never been able to fulfill his potential as a shoot-first power forward in the NHL, though he’s been a long-time contributor at the AHL level. At just 29 there is a chance of a return, but the success he’ll likely find in the KHL may outweigh any opportunity in North America.
Nikita Gusev Signs Two-Year Deal In KHL
While it wasn’t expected that Nikita Gusev would come over to the NHL this season, any lasting hope has been extinguished. Gusev has signed a two-year deal with SKA St. Petersburg to remain in the KHL for now. Gusev was one of the assets the Vegas Golden Knights acquired from the Tampa Bay Lightning at the expansion draft, and some thought former teammate Vadim Shipachyov may be able to convince him to come to North America a bit sooner.
Drafted in the seventh-round by the Lighting back in 2012, Gusev was always a lottery ticket that was unlikely to pay off. His ability is clear—the 25-year old scored 94 points in 75 games for SKA this year, between regular season and the playoffs—but he’s never expressed much desire to come to North America. After winning a Gagarin Cup alongside Shipachyov and other stars like Ilya Kovalchuk and Pavel Datsyuk last season, Gusev is primed to become one of the very top players in the entire KHL, and probably very handsomely rewarded for it.
Because of the lack of a real player transfer agreement between the two leagues, Gusev will remain linked to the Golden Knights for the time being. Should they decide to sign him after his current contract ends, he will not be subject to the entry-level contract system*.
*This article originally wrote that his rights would expire at the normal UFA age (27), though Corey Pronman of ESPN provided details otherwise.
Stanislav Galiev Signs In KHL
Stanislav Galiev became a Group VI unrestricted free agent this summer, and after struggling to find a role for the Washington Capitals has signed in the KHL. The forward has inked a two-year contract with Ak Bars. Galiev was clear in his exit meeting with the Hershey Bears of the AHL, saying that he was ready for “something different.”
That new opportunity will come back in his home country of Russia, a place he hasn’t played hockey for nearly a decade. Galiev first came over to North America in 2008 to play in the USHL, before winning a Memorial Cup with Gerard Gallant and the Saint John Sea Dogs. Drafted in the third round, Galiev has played just 26 NHL games so far but remains an excellent AHL scoring threat. His 40 points in 56 games last season for Hershey wasn’t enough to get him a look with the Capitals, likely leading to his departure.
Ak Bars went 38-18-4 last season, and should be successful again led by young center Vladimir Tkachyov. Galiev will give them another highly talented offensive player to try and boost their goal scoring, something that they lacked at times last year. He’ll be 27 when his contract expires, and could then consider a move back to the NHL should his game mature.
Minor Moves: Enroth, Balcers, Chaput
Jhonas Enroth has found a home for the upcoming season, but it won’t be in the NHL. The free agent goaltender has signed on with Dinamo Minsk of the KHL for one season. Enroth split last season between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Anaheim Ducks organization, finding much success in the AHL with the San Diego Gulls.
Enroth is undersized for the new NHL, standing just 5’10” as one of the shortest goaltenders in the league last year. That size has limited him at times, but he’s also shown an incredible set of reflexes and actually holds a .909 career NHL save percentage. In the minors it’s even better than that and he’ll try to prove he can be that successful at the KHL level as well.
- The San Jose Sharks have signed Rudolfs Balcers to a three-year entry-level deal, calling him a “natural goal-scorer.” The Latvian forward spent last season with the Kamloops Blazers, scoring 40 goals in just 66 games. That number led all WHL rookies, though he was several years older than most with that distinction. The small Balcers will now bring his talents to the AHL where it will be even harder to find the back of the net.
- Though their hearing wasn’t scheduled for another week, the Vancouver Canucks have come to terms with Michael Chaput according to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. The two sides decided on a figure of $687,500 which is barely more than the league minimum this season. The 25-year old Chaput played 68 games for Vancouver last season, registering just eight points.
Andrei Loktionov Signs PTO With Los Angeles Kings
The Los Angeles Kings have kicked off the professional tryout season, as according to Jon Rosen of LA Kings Insider, the team has signed former NHL forward Andrei Loktionov to a PTO for this fall’s training camp. Loktionov will attend camp in search of a spot on the Kings roster after spending the last three seasons in the KHL.
Selected by the Kings in 2008, Loktionov spent one outstanding season with players like Taylor Hall, Ryan Ellis and Adam Henrique in Windsor of the OHL before making the jump to professional hockey. It wasn’t long before he got a chance in the NHL, but couldn’t seem to deliver quite the same offensive jump. After bouncing around for a few years from Los Angeles to New Jersey to Carolina, Loktionov signed in the KHL where he has turned himself into a two-way force that logs big minutes for Yaroslavl.
Though this doesn’t come with the promise of an NHL contract, it’s an easy chance to give for the Kings who could desperately use his speed down the middle. He could also add another dimension to a penalty kill that was already among the league’s best, though he still isn’t an excellent faceoff man. In Russia last season he won just 48% of his draws.
There will be more PTOs given out over the summer, many to older players looking for one last chance or European free agents. Remember it doesn’t neccessarily mean the player will sign with the team he’s working out with. Last year saw Calgary snatch Kris Versteeg out from under Edmonton’s nose, something that happens fairly often.
Friedman’s Latest: McDavid, Duchene, Kuznetsov
In his final “30 Thoughts” column for the summer, the venerable Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet left us with some interesting tidbits from around the league. First off, he launches into a long explanation of how Connor McDavid‘s eight-year, $100MM contract will affect the rest of the league. It’s clear that the shockwaves of the deal will make future deals with stars like Erik Karlsson, Auston Matthews and Jack Eichel even more expensive, but by just how much is still yet to be seen.
Friedman confirms a report that McDavid himself was the one who went after less money after an original verbal agreement put his deal at $13.25MM per season, saying he felt “skittish about the reaction to the original number” before settling on $12.5MM. Though that $750K per season won’t have a huge effect on the Edmonton Oilers salary cap, it’s a substantial amount ($6MM over the course of the contract) to leave on the table. It will be interesting to see if other superstars will be willing to take a similar cut.
- Matt Duchene is still on the market, but Friedman is clear that it’s now possible he starts the year in Colorado. That would be an unsatisfying ending to a saga that has been burning on the hot stove for months now, with seemingly half the league connected at one point or another to the Avalanche center. While obviously Duchene doesn’t lose all his value the day the season opens, the Avalanche do need to be careful here. Though he has two years left on his deal, a serious injury or another disappointing season could drastically lower his value and leave them trying to find any deal available before losing him in the summer or 2019. Duchene scored just 41 points last season, and Colorado looks like one of the worst teams in the league once again.
- Evgeny Kuznetsov was locked into a huge contract by the Washington Capitals, and part of it is because of the real threat the KHL posed. Even without the attraction of playing for Russia at the Olympics, Friedman writes that there were rumors of a $10MM per season contract for Kuznetsov a huge number to turn down. Losing Kuznetsov in a year when Kevin Shattenkirk, Karl Alzner, Justin Williams and Nate Schmidt have all found new homes would have been one of the hardest offseasons imaginable for the Capitals.
Morning Notes: Jensen, Streit, Nolan
The New York Rangers won’t be signing Nicklas Jensen this summer, despite issuing him a qualifying offer a few weeks ago. The minor league forward has signed a one-year contract with Jokerit of the KHL, which also contains an option for the 2018-19 season.
Jensen was a first-round pick back in 2011, but hasn’t been able to crack the NHL on a full-time basis yet. That didn’t slow him down last year though, as he scored 32 goals in the AHL for the Hartford Wolf Pack, easily a career high. Since the qualified him, the Rangers will retain his exclusive negotiating rights for the time being.
- There is buzz around the Montreal Canadiens and free agent defenseman Mark Streit this morning, after a report from Marc de Foy of Le Journal de Montreal said that the team had offered him a one-year deal worth $1.5MM. Though he couldn’t confirm that the team had offered it, Eric Engels of Sportsnet thinks that Streit would be silly not to take that deal if presented with it. Streit will turn 40 this season, but was still a fairly effective point producing defenseman last year with both Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. His role is obviously diminished, but he can still move the puck and contribute on the powerplay.
- Ted Nolan will be heading back to the international coaching ranks, as he’s set to take over the Polish National team. Nolan previously coached the Latvian team, and has had stops as the head coach for both New York (Islanders) and Buffalo in the NHL. Nolan has had huge success coaching young players in the junior ranks, and will try to help Poland grow their team to compete on the world stage.
Islanders Replace Goalie Coach Mike Dunham With Fred Brathwaite
In a headline that could have occurred ten years ago, the New York Islanders have replaced Mike Dunham with Fred Brathwaite. Dunham, a journeyman goalie who played ten seasons in the NHL, finished his career with the Islanders in 2006-07 and then took over as the team’s goalie coach. Brathwaite had left the NHL just three years earlier after a ten-year career of his own, and has been working as the goalie coach for Canada’s World Junior teams in recent years. Today, the Islanders announced a trade, as they have decided not to bring back Dunham and to instead hire Brathwaite as the team’s new goalie coach.
Last season, the Islanders missed the playoffs and finished 23rd in the NHL in goals against, likely leading to their new change in direction at goalie coach, moving on from Dunham, who had been there for ten years. In Brathwaite, New York adds a goalie coach with similar experience and succes to Dunham, but who also played in the KHL and in Germany. Brathwaite should be a good fit with the Isles, who boast two goalie that are more familiar with being backups than starters in Thomas Greiss and Jaroslav Halak, and have goalie-of-the-future Ilya Sorokin currently playing in the KHL and waiting in the wings to make the jump to the NHL in the near future. Brathwaite also has a connection to head coach Doug Weight, whom he played with in Edmonton in the 1990’s.
For Dunham, this could be the end of the line in his hockey career. He thanked the organization for the opportunity to play and coach and expressed his excitement with spending more time with his family.
Anton Lander Signs With KHL Club Ak Bars Kazan
After six up and down seasons with the Oilers, Anton Lander has finally moved on from Edmonton and from the NHL altogether. KHL club Ak Bars Kazan reports this morning that they have signed the 26-year-old forward to a two-year deal. A deal that has been rumored for months finally becomes official and this likely closes the door on Lander’s NHL career, unless he is able to take major developmental steps in Russia over the next few years.
A skilled center, the question was never whether Lander was talented or not, but whether he could put that talent together for a well-rounded NHL-caliber game. A 2009 second-round pick of the Oilers out of Timra of the Swedish Elite League, the swift Swede gained attention with impressive World Junior performances before making the jump across the Atlantic in 2011, at the age of 20. Edmonton was excited to have the young star and gave him every chance to be an NHL regular. Lander played in 56 games with Oilers as a first year pro, but recorded just six points. He nearly matched that total in just 14 games with the AHL’s Oklahoma City Barons. So, in the 2012-13 and 2013-14 seasons, Lander spent more time in the minors, where he put up big numbers, than with the Oilers, as he seemed ill prepared for the NHL level. Lander scored 72 points in 93 games in the AHL in those two seasons and helped to lead the team to back-to-back playoff appearances, but played in just 38 games for a struggling Oilers squad during that span, recording only two points. Nevertheless, Lander worked his way back into the NHL lineup in 2014-15 and took major steps toward reaching his potential, scoring a career-high 20 points in just 38 games in Edmonton, while adding 31 points in 29 games with Oklahoma City. Expectations were high entering the 2015-16, but again Lander faltered, scoring just three points in 61 games with the Oilers. Lander had the best pro season of his career this past year…in the AHL. He posted 55 points in 42 games with the AHL’s Bakersfield Condors and earned an AHL All-Star selection, but scored only one goal and three assists in 22 games with Edmonton. It was clear by the end of the season that both parties were tired of the back-and-forth; Edmonton was frustrated with Lander’s streaky play and inability to score at the same clip in the NHL, while Lander was tired of putting up major numbers in the minor leagues without being rewarded with more big league opportunity. A mutual split has been a long time coming.
Yet, the Oilers still issued a qualifying offer to Lander, a restricted free agent, last month, so they will retain the rights to the talented forward while he plays overseas. Although it is unlikely that Lander will make a return to the NHL, especially any time soon, it’s always a possibility. Edmonton could be rewarded for their years of dedication to developing the young scorer if he flourishes in the KHL the next few seasons and decides to come back.
KHL Confirms Kovalchuk Will Stay In Russia
The KHL tweeted today that Ilya Kovalchuk officially will stay in Russia for one more season and play for his current team, SKA St. Petersburg. As reported last week by PHR, Larry Brooks of the New York Post and Andrew Gross of The Record both reported that Kovalchuk had decided to stay one more year in Russia and come back to the United States next year when he can become an unrestricted free agent and negotiate with anyone.
Kovalchuk was still property of the New Jersey Devils and any way of playing in the NHL this season would have been reliant on the Devils trading him to another team. However, it doesn’t necessarily get easier for Kovalchuk now that he will be a free agent at age 35. Any contract he signs stays on a team’s cap regardless if he retires or is bought out. Therefore, a long-term deal is unlikely, although Kovalchuk’s asking price for this year was a three-year, $6.5MM per year deal.
The 34-year-old former first-overall pick in 2001 has played in the KHL for the past four years, putting up his best-ever season in the KHL last year when he scored 32 goals and 46 assists for 78 points. Several teams had expressed interest in the veteran, including the New York Rangers, the Florida Panthers and the Columbus Blue Jackets.
