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KHL

Parker Foo Re-Signs In KHL

August 12, 2022 at 6:59 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 4 Comments

Among NHL reserve lists, there are plenty of teams that own exclusive rights to players who have never suited up for them. Unsigned draft picks are the most common types of these but in most cases, those rights expire eventually – usually two or four years after they are drafted.

Some others though are maintained indefinitely, as they play in a league without a current transfer agreement. That’s the case for Parker Foo, whose rights are still owned by the Chicago Blackhawks, despite being drafted more than five years ago.

Selected 144th overall in 2017, Foo was a junior teammate of Cale Makar with the Brooks Bandits of the AJHL. He then went to the NCAA to play for Union College, before leaving for the KHL in 2020.

That move, which took him to join Kunlun Red Star, helped him qualify for the 2022 Olympics for China. The country used that KHL team as their entry in the Games, which they hosted earlier this year. Foo also played for China at the World Championship, though they competed in the lower division tournament.

Now, the 23-year-old has re-signed with Kunlun, meaning any potential return to North American hockey will have to wait. Foo’s rights, meanwhile, will stay with Chicago indefinitely while he plays in the KHL.

Interestingly enough his brother, Spencer Foo, was also part of Kunlun the last few years and on that Olympic squad but he signed a contract with the Vegas Golden Knights last month. In an ironic twist, Spencer went undrafted in his youth and is now on his second NHL contract (playing four games with the Flames a few years ago), while fifth-round pick Parker has never signed.

Chicago Blackhawks| KHL| Vegas Golden Knights Parker Foo

4 comments

Rodion Amirov Hopes To Return To Hockey By November

August 12, 2022 at 11:52 am CDT | by John Gilroy 1 Comment

In a lengthy interview with Russian newspaper Sports Express, translated by Sports Illustrated and discussed by David Alter, Toronto Maple Leafs prospect Rodion Amirov spoke about his brain tumor diagnosis and treatment, as well as his planned return to hockey. Amirov explained that he received a hit to the head while playing for Ufa Salavat Yulaev of the KHL early last season and began to experience symptoms typical of a head injury. With the issue persistent, Amirov sought the help of specialists in Germany back in October who, after several months, confirmed the worst to him in January: a brain tumor.

The forward added that after the diagnosis, he and those close to him, chose to keep the diagnosis private, not wanting anyone to feel sorry for the 20-year-old. Ultimately, they chose to disclose the diagnosis publicly, and the Maple Leafs issued a statement on February 23rd, confirming. Since then, Amirov has received an outpouring of support on his road to recovery. Now it appears he has his sights set on hockey once again, already skating with a trainer and eyeing a November return to the sport.

The return to hockey is surely a positive sign, not only that Amirov can play and continue to develop, but being able to do so and focus on it a positive sign for his health. It’s unclear if any of this will pose any long-term effects on the young winger, though the time off at least will serve to set his development back to some extent. That setback is one Toronto would be more than happy to deal with if it means Amirov’s health and well-being are being served. As much support as Amirov has off the ice, and as uplifting as his story seems to be becoming, it’s worth keeping in mind how strong of a prospect he still is. In three seasons in the KHL, Russia’s top league, Amirov has held his own at his young age, putting up 18 points in 70 games, most of which came as a teenager.

Injury| KHL| Toronto Maple Leafs

1 comment

Minor Transactions: 08/07/22

August 7, 2022 at 1:52 pm CDT | by John Gilroy Leave a Comment

It’s been another fairly quiet Sunday around the NHL as is generally customary for August, with just one player, Mason Appleton, avoiding arbitration and inking an extension. There’s still been plenty going on in the world of hockey outside of the NHL, primarily on the ice, however, with the Hlinka Gretzky Cup and the upcoming World Junior Championships. Today though has been quiet, with the former tournament wrapping up last night in Red Deer and the latter set to begin Tuesday in Edmonton. Still, there has been some buzz off the ice and we’ll take care of that here.

  • According to their Twitter, Kunlun Red Star of the KHL have made a pair of North American signings, the first of these being defenseman Vincent LoVerde to a two-year contract (link). LoVerde began his hockey career with the Waterloo Blackhawks of the USHL before spending four years at the University of Miami (Ohio). Now 33, LoVerde has spent the majority of his career in the AHL as a steady veteran defenseman, helping the Manchester Monarchs and Toronto Marlies each to a Calder Cup Championship. The defenseman took his talents to Europe last season, playing with Salzburg of the ICEHL in Austria, winning a championship with them as well. While LoVerde may not be the most high-profile name, he brings with him plenty of professional playoff experience and an invaluable championship pedigree, valuable to any team.
  • In addition to LoVerde, Kunlun is also bringing in goaltender and fellow Illinois-native Matt Jurusik, also on a two-year deal (link). Jurusik has bounced around a good bit in his career, playing two seasons at the University of Wisconsin before leaving college hockey to play with the Sioux City Musketeers of the USHL in 2017-18. Following his season with Sioux City, Jurusik headed back to college, spending two years with Michigan Tech, turning pro prior to 2020-21. This season, Jurusik spent time in both the ECHL and AHL, getting into games with the Idaho Steelheads of the ECHL and the Scranton-Wilkes Barre Penguins and Texas Stars, both of the AHL.

This post will be kept updated throughout the day.

AHL| ECHL| KHL| Transactions

0 comments

Matvei Michkov Suffers Injury

August 5, 2022 at 9:20 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

August 5: In an official statement from Russia’s hockey federation, Russia Hockey states that Michkov will miss just two weeks of action, rather than the two months that was initially reported.

They state that they plan on Michkov participating in a tournament that is set to begin on August 22nd, which makes this a far better timeline for Michkov than the one he appeared to be on just yesterday.

August 4: After suffering a lower-body injury in a KHL preseason game as the result of a hit from former NHL defenseman Alexei Emelin, top 2023 NHL Draft prospect Matvei Michkov will miss two months of game action, as reported by The Athletic’s Corey Pronman.

Michkov is likely to miss at least the first month of the KHL’s regular season, if not more.

Widely regarded as a surefire top-three talent in next year’s draft (if not top-two), Michkov is a bit of a controversial prospect for a lot of circumstances out of his control. Breaking into the KHL on one of the best teams in the league last season as a 17-year-old, Michkov was able to show what he can do professionally in the season before his draft year with five points in 13 games. His production in Russia’s junior league was equally as outstanding, racking up 51 points in just 28 MHL games.

But with Michkov under contract until 2026 with his KHL team (SKA St. Petersburg), and with the increased uncertainty about whether he’d even be able to leave the country if he got out of the contract, Michkov may go lower in the draft than his talent level suggests.

Hopefully, it’s not a severe loss of development time for Michkov, who remains one of the most electric prospects in hockey.

Injury| KHL| Prospects

0 comments

Offseason Notes: Necas, Celebrini, Barberio

August 4, 2022 at 8:00 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu Leave a Comment

Martin Necas is one of the biggest-name restricted free agents still out there on the market. The 2017 12th overall pick had a disappointing year in 2021-22, but in 2020-21 had the makings of a future star, scoring 41 points in 53 games, a 63-point pace. Necas didn’t have the game-by-game impact many expected him to have last year,  though, and he was supplanted in the Hurricanes’ forward pecking order by fast-rising rookie Seth Jarvis. He needs a new contract, and despite many speculating that he may need a change of scenery, Hurricanes GM Don Waddell remains focused on ironing out an extension.

Per Chip Alexander of the Raleigh News & Observer, Waddell is nearing that goal. Waddell is quoted as saying that the team and Necas’ camp are negotiating on an “almost a daily basis” and that a deal is “getting close.” Waddell even takes it a step further, saying definitively that “it’s going to get done.” Despite a disappointing most recent season, it’s in the best interest for the Hurricanes to get Necas locked into an extension. While he’s mostly played as a winger in the NHL, Necas has prior experience as a center and could be in a position to seize a top-six center spot should Jesperi Kotkaniemi struggle in that role.

Now, for some other notes from across the NHL:

  • Canadian forward Macklin Celebrini, a player currently projected to be a top prospect for the 2024 NHL draft, has committed to an NCAA school. Per NBC Sports Chicago’s Colby Cohen, Celebrini has committed to the Boston University, and will play there after spending next season with the USHL’s Chicago Steel. Celebrini has spent the past two seasons at minor hockey powerhouse Shattuck St. Mary’s, a school in Minnesota that has an impressive list of NHL alumni including Sidney Crosby, Kyle Okposo, and many others. Celebrini is expected to be a top player in the USHL before he heads to the NCAA.
  • Yesterday, we covered how former NHL defenseman Mark Barberio had agreed to a mutual contract termination with his club, Lausanne HC. Now, we know where Barberio will be spending 2022-23. Per a team announcement, KHL club HC Dynamo Minsk has signed Barberio to a one-year deal. Barberio last appeared in the NHL in 2019-20, getting into 21 games with the Colorado Avalanche. 2022-23 will mark his return to the KHL after spending six games with HC Ak Bars Kazan last season, where he scored three points.

Carolina Hurricanes| KHL Macklin Celebrini| Mark Barberio| Martin Necas

0 comments

Minor Transactions: 08/03/22

August 3, 2022 at 2:13 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

It’s been a busy start to the month of August, with the Calgary Flames and New Jersey Devils both getting some of the biggest RFAs left on the board signed within the past 48 hours. It’s busy elsewhere in the hockey world, too, and former (or possibly future) NHLers are making their way around the minor leagues in North America and professional leagues in Europe. We’ll keep track of those moves today right here.

  • After splitting last season between the AHL’s Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins and Chicago Wolves, former Colorado Avalanche defense prospect Chris Bigras will try his hand in Europe for the first time. Per the team, the KHL’s only Kazakhstani club, Barys Nur-Sultan, has signed him to a one-year deal for the 2022-23 season. Bigras hasn’t suited up for an NHL game since he appeared in 15 with Colorado during the 2017-18 season.
  • Defenseman Cole Hults is heading to the Italian club HC Bolzano in the ICEHL after just two seasons in the AHL, per a team release. Hults played in 54 games last season with the Tucson Roadrunners while under contract with the Arizona Coyotes, registering 17 points. He’ll join his older brother Mitch on the team.

This page will be updated throughout the day

AHL| Calgary Flames| Colorado Avalanche| KHL| NHL| New Jersey Devils| Pittsburgh Penguins| RFA| Transactions| Utah Mammoth

0 comments

Nick Merkley Signs In KHL

August 1, 2022 at 12:05 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 2 Comments

Fresh off of a successful AHL season, 2015 first-round pick Nick Merkley is headed to Europe. The Calgary native has signed a one-year contract of KHL side Dinamo Minsk, per a team announcement.

Merkley, 25, has been a talented, high-end scorer at every level of hockey he’s played in besides the NHL. At the AHL level, Merkley has 157  points in 201 career games. At that level, he’s a line-driving playmaker with a knack for setting up his linemates and finding his way onto the scoresheet. At the NHL level, Merkley has struggled to make his mark, and his lack of size (he’s just five-foot-ten, 195 pounds) combined with his lack of breakaway skating talent has combined to make him ineffective in an NHL role.

Merkley was actually part of a trade last season, being shipped from the San Jose Sharks organization to the New York Rangers, in exchange for depth defenseman Anthony Bitetto. Merkley heads to the KHL, one of the most challenging leagues in the world outside of the NHL, with at least some success in Europe on his resume. Merkley played 19 games for Assat Pori of the Finnish Liiga in 2020-21, scoring a healthy 13 points in 19 games in what can sometimes be an overly conservative league.

Merkley joins a Dinamo Minsk side that is eager to improve its offensive attack after a middling 2021-22 campaign, a season where they finished in the middle of the KHL standings. Merkley will join fellow former NHLers John Gilmour, Alexei Emelin, Ryan Spooner, and Nikolai Zherdev in Belarus, with the hope that a productive campaign there can earn him a chance at another NHL training camp and perhaps the opportunity to finally emerge as the type of regular NHL-er he was projected to become at the 2015 draft.

KHL Nick Merkley

2 comments

Alexander Nikishin, Fyodor Svechkov, Nikita Chibrikov Traded In The KHL

July 31, 2022 at 9:12 am CDT | by John Gilroy 5 Comments

In what has been a quiet day for North American hockey so far, a blockbuster trade went down over in the KHL, involving Alexander Nikishin, one of the Carolina Hurricanes’ top prospects. In exchange for sending the young defenseman to SKA St. Petersburg, Spartak Moscow receives forwards Fyodor Svechkov, Nikita Chibrikov, Pavel Kukshtel, and Maxim Krovyakov, defenseman Nikita Sedov, as well as the KHL rights to forwards Mikhail Maltsev, German Rubtsov, Ivan Morozov, and Kirill Marchenko. The deal was announced by Spartak Moscow on Twitter, and confirmed in North America by The Athletic’s Corey Pronman, who adds that its expected Nikishin will sign an extension with SKA.

Though the trade does not contain any one superstar player in the KHL, it’s a trade of plenty of young talent for one very talented young player. Outside of Sedov, Moscow is receiving players with little to no KHL experience, but mostly all standouts in the lower VHL and MHL levels in Russia. Sedov, on the other hand, does have KHL experience, getting into 67 games at the KHL level over the past two seasons between SKA and Sochi, but like the rest of the players in this trade, is quite young, at just 21 years of age. One thing worth considering when looking at the size of the haul that Spartak is receiving, is that some of these players, like Svechkov and Chibrikov, have very real NHL futures and could head to North America when their contracts expire. Thus, while Spartak receives a bevy of young talent, it’s a group they will have to comb through to see who will be their building blocks. Regardless, they will be able to hold onto their KHL rights should the players leave for another league. By making this trade, SKA parts with a lot of talent, but receives a reliable young defenseman who is expected to sign an extension, which should give some predictability for the organization.

From an NHL perspective, the players of note include Nikishin, Svechkov and Chibrikov – very real NHL prospects under contracts in Russia. A third-round pick of the Hurricanes in 2020, Nikishin has spent parts of the past three seasons at the KHL level with Spartak, totaling nine goals and 11 assists in 95 games as a defenseman, and even appeared in six games on Russia’s Olympic team this winter. Signing an extension overseas does complicate things for Carolina, but doesn’t foreclose any possibility of the young blueliner ever coming to North America. If anything, playing regularly for one of the better teams in Russia’s top league should greatly assist in his development.

Svechkov was the Nashville Predators first-round selection, 19th overall in 2021. The forward made his KHL debut in 2021-22, getting in four games, but was primarily a dynamic playmaker for SKA’s VHL team, where he had nine goals and 22 assists in 30 games. The 50th overall selection in 2021, to the Winnipeg Jets, Chibrikov is another dynamic forward who spent time at the KHL, VHL, and MHL levels this season with SKA. The majority of his time was also spent with Svechkov in the VHL, where he had an impressive 15 goals and 16 assists in 28 games.

The amount of talent in this transaction is surely eye-popping and does have NHL impact, not only with these three but also with the players who’s KHL rights were traded. What the exact impacts on these players and their respective NHL clubs winds up being is yet to be determined, but does provide an interesting wrinkle in their development.

Carolina Hurricanes| KHL| NHL| Nashville Predators| Prospects| Winnipeg Jets German Rubtsov| Ivan Morozov| Kirill Marchenko| Mikhail Maltsev

5 comments

Tyler Graovac Re-Signs In KHL

July 27, 2022 at 12:47 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

After a relatively successful debut in the KHL, Tyler Graovac is going to stay overseas. The free agent forward has signed a new contract with Vityaz Podolsk for the upcoming season, ruling out any return to North America this summer.

Graovac, 29, last played in the NHL during the 2020-21 season, when he suited up for 14 games with the Vancouver Canucks. The 6’5″ forward scored three goals during that short stint, while also putting up nine points in nine games while on loan to the Manitoba Moose. Prior to that, he had played in 70 other NHL games, most notably during 2016-17 with the Minnesota Wild, when he appeared 52 times.

The 2011 seventh-round pick spent last season with Dinamo Minsk, scoring 26 points in 44 games, while averaging over 17 minutes a night. That’s way more playing time than he ever experienced in the NHL, where he was limited to fourth-line duty even at the best of times. It appears as though his time at that level is in the past, with this new contract moving him even further away from his last appearance.

KHL Tyler Graovac

0 comments

Sasha Chmelevski Signs In KHL

July 26, 2022 at 8:46 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

The San Jose Sharks no longer have to worry about negotiations with Sasha Chmelevski but it’s not because they’ve reached an agreement. Instead, the restricted free agent has signed a contract with Ufa Salavat Yulaev in the KHL, according to his agent Dan Milstein.

Because they gave him a qualifying offer this summer, the Sharks will retain Chmelevski’s rights for the time being, though it is unclear what his plans are moving forward. The 23-year-old forward played in 19 NHL games this season scoring eight points in the process and was a strong performer at the minor league level.

Originally selected in the sixth round of the 2017 draft, making it to the NHL was already an impressive feat. Now, with a handful of games under his belt, he’ll pursue a bigger opportunity elsewhere.

The Sharks will hold Chmelevski’s rights until his 27th birthday, which is still almost four years away. Whether he returns in that time or gets another chance with them at the NHL level, remains to be seen.

KHL| San Jose Sharks

2 comments
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