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Newsstand

Sabres Reassign Isak Rosen, Activate Tage Thompson

November 27, 2024 at 10:25 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

Nov. 27, 10:25 a.m.: Thompson will come off injured reserve and play tonight against the Wild, head coach Lindy Ruff confirmed to reporters, including Heather Engel of NHL.com.

Nov. 26, 5:50 p.m.: The Buffalo Sabres have assigned top prospect Isak Rosen back to the minor leagues, clearing up the room to activate star forward Tage Thompson off of injured reserve per Lance Lysowski of The Buffalo News. Thompson has missed Buffalo’s last five games after suffering a lower-body injury in the team’s November 11th matchup against Montreal. He returned to practice in full earlier today and shared that he’ll be good to go on Wednesday with reporters, including Jonathan Acosta of WGRZ.

Thompson will return to the lineup with an intact four-game goal streak since he scored once in the game when he sustained his injury. He has 11 goals and 18 points in 16 games this season and is still the only Sabre to cross 10 goals despite five fewer appearances. Thompson has continued to serve as the heart of Buffalo’s lineup this season, averaging over 19 minutes of ice time and a key role on the power-play. He’ll jump right back into a top role when Buffalo hosts Minnesota on Wednesday, likely between his usual wing pair of JJ Peterka and Alex Tuch.

Buffalo has persevered through Thompson’s absence, setting a 4-1-0 record in their last five games. But the offense has taken a notable hit, with Buffalo averaging just 2.8 goals-per-game without Thompson – down from the 3.44 goals they averaged in their first 16 games. It’s been defender Bowen Byram and goaltenders Devon Levi and Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen stepping up in response, with Byram averaging nearly 24 minutes of ice time and the netminders averaging 2.40 goals against without Thompson.

Meanwhile, Rosen will return to the minors after receiving 6:30 of ice time in Buffalo’s Saturday win over San Jose. He didn’t record any points in the outing, pulling Rosen through his eighth career NHL game with still no scoring. That’s despite the young Swede serving as the Rochester Americans’ leading scorer, with 13 points through 14 games this year. He ranked second on the team in scoring last year, with 50 points in 67 games as an AHL rookie. Rosen still stands as one of Buffalo’s top-shelf prospects, and will rejoin company like Konsta Helenius, Viktor Neuchev, and Anton Wahlberg in Rochester. All four prospects will fight to climb Buffalo’s call-up list before the winter break by righting a sinking Rochester lineup currently on a seven-game losing streak.

AHL| Buffalo Sabres| Injury| NHL| Newsstand| Transactions Isak Rosen| Tage Thompson

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Penguins Acquire Philip Tomasino From Predators

November 25, 2024 at 1:35 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 19 Comments

The Penguins announced Monday that they’ve acquired forward Philip Tomasino from the Predators in exchange for the Rangers’ 2027 fourth-round pick. Pittsburgh assigned center Samuel Poulin to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton minutes earlier in a corresponding transaction to make room on the active roster.

Tomasino, still only 23, gets a fresh start in Pittsburgh after having his minutes and overall usage heavily restricted in Nashville ever since the Preds drafted him 24th overall in the 2019 draft. The team confirmed he’s en route to Pittsburgh and will practice tomorrow in hopes of being available for their next game, a Wednesday tilt against the Canucks.

While Tomasino had often been an effective points-per-hour depth piece throughout his first three NHL seasons, the same can’t be said for 2024-25. The Ontario native has struggled on a Nashville team that’s struggled to finish at 5-on-5, posting just one assist in 11 games while averaging a career-low 11:18 per game.

Tomasino had stuck around on the Preds’ roster so far this season after seeing lengthy AHL assignments in both 2022-23 and 2023-24, although that was likely out of fear over losing him on waivers for nothing. This is his first season not being waiver-exempt. Instead, they at least get one asset in return, even if it’s only a mid-round pick that’s years away.

The 6’0″ winger had been a healthy scratch in 10 of 21 games this season, including a stretch of seven straight scratches between Oct. 19 and Nov. 6. He’d also been scratched in two out of Nashville’s last three games.

Given that lack of usage, it’s not at all surprising that the Preds, now fully under the control of general manager Barry Trotz after 20-plus years of David Poile at the helm, decided now was the right time to move on from Tomasino before his value dropped off even more. He still hasn’t come close to sniffing his career-highs of 11 goals and 32 points in 76 games that he set in his rookie campaign in 2021-22 despite averaging under 12 minutes per night.

Still, it stands to reason for Pittsburgh that there’s a fair amount of rebound and breakout potential in Tomasino’s game if he’s deployed in a top-nine role. The forward has 23 goals and 71 points in 159 games over his four-year career – a 12-goal, 37-point average over 82 games squarely in bottom-six usage.

Throughout his Predators career, Tomasino’s possession impacts were negligible. He boasts a career +1 rating, and Nashville controlled 49.6% of shot attempts with him on the ice at even strength since his debut, compared to 48.7% without him.

With the Pens’ offense struggling to click at 2.52 goals per game, Tomasino may get a look in the top nine or even top six alongside Sidney Crosby or Evgeni Malkin to see how he responds in a complementary role. His leash will likely be short. He signed a one-year, $825K deal at the beginning of training camp to end a months-long standoff as a restricted free agent, so he’s at risk of being non-tendered next summer if he can’t perform in Pittsburgh, especially since he’s eligible to file for salary arbitration.

Pittsburgh previously acquired the Rangers’ 2027 fourth-rounder at last year’s trade deadline in exchange for defenseman Chad Ruhwedel.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Nashville Predators| Newsstand| Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Philip Tomasino| Samuel Poulin

19 comments

Friedman: Rangers Shopping Chris Kreider, Jacob Trouba

November 25, 2024 at 10:07 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 15 Comments

The Rangers are still squarely in playoff position after last season’s Presidents’ Trophy win, placing third in the Metropolitan Division with a .658 points percentage and a 12-6-1 record. Their 5-on-5 play remains an issue, though, and their subpar shot-attempt and scoring chance shares came to a head Saturday after they allowed 40 shots in a 6-2 loss to the Oilers.

Rangers general manager Chris Drury was evidently so disturbed by their back-to-back losses against the Flames and Oilers in Alberta that he’s “made it very clear they are interested in making moves and shaking up their roster,” Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports Monday. Captain Jacob Trouba is being dangled as trade bait once again after the club aggressively tried to work out a trade for him over the summer, while star winger and lifelong Ranger Chris Kreider has also been made available, Friedman said.

They’re not the only names being considered in moves – assumedly, some cheaper and less consequential pieces could easily be leveraged along with futures for short-term upgrades. However, the fact that Drury is even considering leveraging Kreider, a lifelong Ranger with two years left on his contract, indicates quickly growing panic in New York about their skaters’ underlying play despite their 108-point pace.

Kreider is second on the Blueshirts with nine goals in 19 games but has inexplicably yet to record an assist despite even-strength linemates Mika Zibanejad and Reilly Smith combining for seven goals. He won’t play tonight against the Blues, but it’s not a trade-related scratch – he’s banged up and dealing with an upper-body injury.

After years of Kreider and Zibanejad being some of the Rangers’ most consistent players, they’ve struggled to generate much of anything at even strength. Their trio with Smith, acquired from the Penguins in an offseason trade, has generated just 2.69 expected goals per 60 minutes – the worst among the five Rangers forward combinations with at least 50 minutes together this season, per MoneyPuck. That would be at least passable if they weren’t also allowing 2.85 xG against per hour, the highest mark among those five combos.

Kreider has appeared in 834 regular-season games for the Rangers since they drafted him 19th overall in 2009, ranking third in franchise history with 313 goals and 10th with 561 points. He’s been an invaluable playoff performer for them in recent years, racking up 24 goals and 37 points in 43 postseason games since 2022.

The alternate captain has three years left on his contract at a discount $6.5MM cap hit, given he’s scored at least 35 goals for three years in a row and is on pace to do so again in 2024-25. He has a modified no-trade clause with a 15-team no-trade list, per PuckPedia, so Drury won’t have completely free rein regarding where Kreider ends up if he does end up more aggressively trying to leverage him for a piece to help improve their possession numbers.

Trouba on the trade block is no surprise. The 30-year-old defender was almost dealt to the Red Wings near the draft last summer, per multiple reports, a swap he blocked with his full no-movement clause. That NMC has downgraded to a modified no-trade clause with a 15-team no-trade list, so Drury has much more flexibility this time around in where he could find a home for Trouba’s $8MM cap hit through 2025-26, assuming they don’t retain any salary and instead take a significant amount of money back as they “shake up their roster,” as Friedman put it.

Trouba has six assists and a +3 rating through 19 appearances this season but is averaging a career-low 20:32 per game. He’s been given the most taxing defensive usage of his career, playing much less of an offensive role and starting over 60% of his even-strength shifts in the defensive end for the first time, per Hockey Reference.

New York Rangers| Newsstand Chris Kreider| Jacob Trouba

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Blue Jackets Listening To Offers For David Jiříček

November 24, 2024 at 1:30 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 8 Comments

In today’s rendition of ’Blue Jackets Sunday Gathering’, reporter Aaron Portzline of The Athletic confirms that the Columbus Blue Jackets have received trade inquiries for defenseman David Jiříček. The Blue Jackets haven’t received any firm trade offers but a deal may be on the horizon by the end of the season.

Although it’s always difficult trading away a recent top-10 draft selection, there are recent frameworks Columbus can operate from. Portzline highlights the trade last season of then-Philadelphia Flyers prospect, Cutter Gauthier, being traded to the Anaheim Ducks for Jamie Drysdale and a second-round pick in 2025. Portzline also shared the recent trade of Rutger McGroarty to the Pittsburgh Penguins this offseason for Brayden Yager.

For one reason or another, Jiříček’s time with the Blue Jackets organization hasn’t worked out as both sides would have hoped. He spent his first professional season with Columbus’ AHL affiliate, the Cleveland Monsters, scoring six goals and 38 points in 55 contests.

Jiříček hoped to have a consistent role with the Blue Jackets in his second professional season after a strong rookie campaign in the AHL. Instead, Columbus frequently moved Jiříček back and forth from the AHL, which caused some inconsistency in the young defenseman’s game.

He scored one goal and 10 points in 43 games for Columbus last season and seven goals and 19 points in 29 games for AHL Cleveland. His lack of scoring at the NHL level was unfortunate but he still proved capable on the defensive side with a 92.4% on-ice save percentage in all situations.

Jiříček became a healthy scratch through the first few weeks of the 2024-25 season collecting only six games with the Blue Jackets despite cracking the team’s roster out of training camp. The team sent down Jiříček to AHL once again a few days ago and he made his season debut with the AHL Monsters on Saturday.

One difference comparing Jiříček to Gauthier and McGroarty is that he hasn’t publicly requested a trade from Columbus. All signs indicate he’s happy staying with the Blue Jackets organization albeit with a more consistent role.

They’ll likely recoup a former top-10 selection on his entry-level contract should they trade Jiříček this season. There shouldn’t be any difficulties gauging other team’s interest in a 20-year-old right-handed shot defenseman.

Columbus Blue Jackets| Newsstand David Jiricek

8 comments

Blues Fire Drew Bannister, Hire Jim Montgomery

November 24, 2024 at 8:16 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley 28 Comments

The St. Louis Blues have fired second-year head coach Drew Bannister and replaced him with recently-fired Boston Bruins coach Jim Montgomery. The move was first reported by Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman. Montgomery has reportedly signed a five-year deal with the Blues, per Fanduel Sports Network’s Andy Strickland.

It’s a shocking coaching change. St. Louis has struggled this season, posting a 9-12-1 record on the year and a 3-6-1 record in what will now be Bannister’s last 10 games with the club. The poor showings have the Blues ranked sixth in the Central Division – but their poor start hasn’t come as too much of a surprise, especially as St. Louis deals with injuries to Torey Krug, Nick Leddy, and Philip Broberg.

But St. Louis has deemed the losing too much, and now separate from Bannister before he could coach a full 82 games. The 50-year-old head coach took over the Blues’ head coaching role from Craig Berube last December, earning a promotion after three years leading the AHL’s Springfield Thunderbirds. Bannister was quickly productive in Springfield, leading the team to a 43-24-9 record and trip to the Calder Cup Finals in his inaugural season of 2021-22, though the T-Birds would fall to the oft-champions Hershey Bears. Bannister followed the long playoff run up with a 38-26-8 record and qualifying-round exit in the following year, but seemed to have the wind behind him to start the 2023-24 campaign. He started that year 12-8-0 – on pace for 40 wins across a full season.

But Bannister didn’t get a chance to see things through in Springfield, instead jumping to a Blues roster off to a terrible start. Berube left St. Louis at 13-14-1 – again good for sixth in the Central Division, where they find themselves this year. Bannister was forced to pick up the pieces, and led St. Louis to an admirable 30-19-5 record – bringing out the best of young lineup pieces like Jake Neighbours and Scott Perunovich. But his strong run wasn’t enough to lift St. Louis above a slow start, and they’d miss the 2024 postseason by six points.

St. Louis looks to be on track to miss again this year. While they certainly have faced bad injury luck, the team has struggled to find any scoring from down the lineup – with just four Blues with 10-or-more points through 22 games this season. They haven’t been helped along by what was meant to be strong goaltending, with starter Jordan Binnington posting a .891 Sv% and 3.04 GAA in 17 games, and backup Joel Hofer recording a .893 and 3.45 in six games. That paints the picture of top-to-bottom struggles in St. Louis, despite GM Doug Armstrong pushing for a heap of overturn and new faces this season.

That change will now continue, with Bannister ousted by career-Blue Jim Montgomery. Montgomery served two seasons as a Blues’ assistant coach in 2020-21 and 2021-22, getting hired off their bench into Boston’s head coach role. He proceeded to lead one of the greatest seasons of all time, setting the single-season wins record with a 65-12-5 standing. Montgomery brought career performances out of David Pastrnak, Linus Ullmark, and Jeremy Swayman – though Boston couldn’t manage to push back the first round of the playoffs. Unbothered, Montgomery stayed red-hot through 2023-24, following his record-breaking campaign with an impressive 47-20-15 record and second-round playoff exit. Those two seasons – a combined 112-32-20 record – made it all the more surprising when Boston chose to axe Montgomery after an 8-9-3 start to the season.

Despite a bad start, Montgomery is clearly a successful NHL coach – inspiring strong play since his first year at an NHL helm, when he led the 2018-19 Dallas Stars to a 43-32-7 record. He continued with a 17-11-3 record in 2019-20 – but stepped down midseason for personal reasons. His first sighting after that was on the Blues’ bench that he’ll now head back to.

The connection between Montgomery and St. Louis runs deep. The Blues signed Montgomery as an undrafted free agent in 1993, immediately after he captained the University of Maine to their first NCAA championship in school history. It was a legendary season that saw Montgomery and Paul Kariya – another famous Blue – lead perhaps one of the greatest collegiate offenses of all time. Montgomery kept the show going into the pros, earning a quick call-up after scoring 15 points in his first 12 minor-league games. He put up six goals and 20 points in 67 games on the Blues’ roster – but couldn’t hang onto a lineup role on a lineup that routinely turned over their depth lines. That kicked off Montgomery’s journeyman career around North America. He’d go on to play 11 more professional seasons, but changed teams every year – save for a three-year stint with the AHL’s Philadelphia Phantoms from 1997 to 2000, that kicked off with a Calder Cup championship.

Newsstand| St. Louis Blues Drew Bannister| Jim Montgomery

28 comments

Jordan Eberle Out At Least Three Months

November 22, 2024 at 6:08 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

Kraken forward Jordan Eberle has missed the last week due to what was originally ruled as a lower-body injury.  It’s one that is going to keep him out of the lineup for a considerable amount of time, however, as the team announced (Twitter link) that he underwent successful surgery on his pelvis earlier today.  The recovery time from the procedure is a minimum of three months.

The 34-year-old was named as the second captain in franchise history last month.  Eberle is in his fourth season with the Kraken after being selected by them in the Expansion Draft in 2021 and has been a valuable secondary scorer for them since then.  He reached at least 17 goals and 44 points in each of his first three campaigns with them while his 63-point effort in 2022-23 was the third-best point total of his career.

Eberle was off to a strong start this season, recording six goals and five assists in his first 17 games before suffering the injury which would have had him at a 29-goal, 53-point pace over 82 appearances, a number he clearly won’t be reaching now.  A three-month (minimum) recovery timeline will likely keep Eberle out through the 4 Nations Cup in February, or at least the next 37 games.  That’s a significant blow to a Seattle team that’s around the middle of the pack offensively.

Eberle will likely be transferred to LTIR at some point in the next little while.  The Kraken have ample cap flexibility at the moment with defenseman Vince Dunn on there already so Eberle’s placement won’t happen right away.  When Dunn is able to come back – and he will be with the team on their upcoming road trip per the team’s Scott Malone (Twitter link) – that will be the time when Eberle should land on there.  That will largely eliminate any hope of banking cap space in the meantime, however.

Injury| Newsstand| Seattle Kraken Jordan Eberle

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Maple Leafs Sign Alexander Nylander, Place Matthew Knies On IR

November 22, 2024 at 2:15 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 5 Comments

The Maple Leafs have officially united the Nylanders, announcing the signing of William’s brother, Alexander Nylander, to a one-year contract. The team placed left-winger Matthew Knies on injured reserve retroactive to Wednesday with an upper-body injury in a corresponding transaction to open a spot on the active roster.

Nylander signed for the prorated league-minimum $775K, per the team. It’s a one-way deal, per Chris Johnston of TSN and The Athletic, so he’ll still be making an NHL salary if he’s placed on waivers later in the year and heads back to the minors.

Now 26, Nylander was a top-10 pick in 2016, going eighth overall to the Sabres two years after the Leafs also drafted William eighth overall. He joined the Maple Leafs organization this summer on a one-year contract with their AHL affiliate, the Toronto Marlies, but remained a free agent in the NHL’s eyes.

Nylander has been off to a hot start, posting eight goals and four assists for 12 points through his first 14 games. He’s second on the team in goals and is tied with Alex Steeves for the team lead in points.

It’s part of a resurgence for Nylander, who hasn’t been a full-time NHL player since the pre-pandemic days with the Blackhawks. After missing all of the 2020-21 campaign with a left meniscus tear, Nylander was assigned to the AHL to kick off the 2021-22 campaign and had 12 points in 23 games with Rockford before Chicago, who had initially acquired him from Buffalo for Henri Jokiharju, traded him to the Penguins for depth forward Sam Lafferty.

While Nylander got into a few games with Pittsburgh over the following couple of years, he spent most of his time in the minors with Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. That changed when the Pens traded him and a sixth-round pick to the Blue Jackets for Emil Bemström in February. He finished last season back in the NHL with Columbus and did quite well, thrust into a top-nine role and scoring 11 goals and 15 points in 23 games while averaging 16:46 per game, a career-high by a wide margin.

He’ll now get another crack at NHL minutes in Toronto, although it may be brief, with the Leafs hit hard by short-term injuries. Knies is the latest regular forward to exit the lineup after being hit hard by Golden Knights defenseman Zach Whitecloud on Wednesday. He’d already been ruled out for Sunday’s game against Utah, which will likely mark Nylander’s Leafs debut, but is eligible to come off IR for their following game, a mid-week battle against the Panthers.

Calle Järnkrok, Auston Matthews and Max Pacioretty were all already dealing with injuries entering last week, while Max Domi and David Kämpf landed on IR before the Vegas game and Ryan Reaves was suspended five games for a hit against Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse last weekend. Knies becomes the seventh forward ineligible or ruled out for this weekend’s tilt, joining the rash of injuries that has led to AHL regulars like Steeves and prospects like Nikita Grebenkin and Fraser Minten getting the call in the past week or so.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Newsstand| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions Alexander Nylander| Matthew Knies

5 comments

Golden Knights Sign Brett Howden To Five-Year Extension

November 22, 2024 at 10:07 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

The Golden Knights announced Friday that they’ve signed forward Brett Howden to a five-year extension, keeping him in Vegas through the 2029-30 season. The deal is worth $2.5MM per season and will pay him $12.5MM in total.

Howden, 26, was set to become an unrestricted free agent next summer. He was in the final season of a two-year, $3.8MM pact he inked with the Knights as a restricted free agent in 2023.

The Alberta native has never scored more than 10 goals in a season, but he’ll do so in 2024-25, barring anything unforeseen. He’s gotten more consistent top-nine usage in the early going this season with injuries to Victor Olofsson and Mark Stone, responding with eight goals in 20 games to tie with Ivan Barbashev for second on the team.

It’s a significant breakout for the 6’2″ center, who was on the road to becoming a bust a couple of years ago. Drafted 27th overall by the Lightning in 2016, he was traded to the Rangers in the 2018 blockbuster involving Ryan McDonagh and J.T. Miller heading south before he made his NHL debut.

Howden jumped directly from major junior to the NHL the following season, recording a career-best 23 points in 66 games for the Blueshirts during his rookie season. He spent two more seasons in New York as a bottom-six pivot but saw his point totals and ice time steadily decline, culminating in a brutal 2020-21 campaign that saw him score just once on 33 shots in 42 games. He also struggled on draws, winning 46.6% of his faceoffs, and continued a run of poor possession impacts that had plagued him since entering the league.

The Rangers cut bait with Howden the following offseason, dealing him to Vegas for a fourth-round pick and depth defenseman Nick DeSimone. It’s turned out to be a frugal move for the Knights, who’ve slowly shifted him over to the wing and turned him into a slightly more dependable offensive presence.

Howden was quite valuable in Vegas’ run to the 2023 Stanley Cup, posting five goals and five assists for 10 points in 22 playoff games while finishing third on the team with 63 hits. His possession numbers remain a concern, with just a 44.8% shot attempt share at even strength since joining Vegas, but he’s totaled 31 goals and 61 points in 190 appearances as a Knight. He’s responded to increasing usage with correspondingly increasing point totals.

His extension is the third that general manager Kelly McCrimmon has gotten over the finish line for a pending UFA in the last month. Day-one defensemen Shea Theodore (seven years, $51.975MM) and Brayden McNabb (three years, $10.95MM) have each inked multi-year deals to keep them in Nevada past this season in the past few weeks.

The Golden Knights have now committed just north of $76.25MM in projected cap hits to 15 players for the 2025-26 campaign, per PuckPedia. That leaves roughly $16.25MM in space for eight roster spots, assuming a conservative upper limit increase to $92.5MM next season, with Nicolas Hague, Keegan Kolesar and Victor Olofsson among their other notable pending free agents.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Newsstand| Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights Brett Howden

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Alex Ovechkin Out 4-6 Weeks With Left Fibula Fracture

November 21, 2024 at 4:41 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 19 Comments

Nov. 21, 4:41 p.m.: Additional testing revealed a left fibula fracture for Ovechkin, per the team. He’ll miss the next four to six weeks, putting his return around Christmas at the earliest. He was already moved to injured reserve.

Nov. 19, 11:33 a.m.: It’s a lower leg injury for Ovechkin that will leave him out on a week-to-week basis, the Caps announced. He’ll undergo additional evaluation tomorrow.

Nov. 19, 8:59 a.m.: Capitals star Alex Ovechkin is being evaluated for a lower-body injury after leaving last night’s game against Utah following a knee-on-knee collision with Jack McBain, head coach Spencer Carbery told reporters postgame, including Tarik El-Bashir of Monumental Sports Network.

The Capitals will likely issue a further update on Ovechkin’s status at some point on Tuesday, Carbery said. He left the game early in the third period after his and McBain’s left legs inadvertently collided while Ovechkin was attempting to carry the puck out of the Washington zone (video via Sportsnet). The 39-year-old tried to remain on the bench, but after testing out his leg during a stoppage in play, he went to the room.

It puts a significant damper on a monster season for the future Hall-of-Famer. After scoring twice last night, Ovechkin had five goals in his previous two outings to accelerate him to the top of the NHL leaderboard with 15 in just 18 games. Not only is he on pace to break Wayne Gretzky’s record of 894 career goals this season, he’s currently tracking to become the oldest player ever to lead the NHL in goals while also breaking Gordie Howe’s record for most goals by a player in their age-39 season with 39.

Ovechkin missing any length of time puts all those marks in jeopardy. Injuries have been a rare occurrence for the 2004 first-overall pick, who’s played in 1,444 of a possible 1,503 regular-season games over his 20-year career. His last injury absence was a three-gamer in January 2024 due to a lower-body issue, and he’s never missed more than six consecutive games in his career.

In addition to his 868 overall goals, Ovechkin is also the active leader in even-strength goals (547) and game-winning goals (132). His 316 power-play goals and 6,690 shots on goal are already league records.

His potential injury also deprives the Caps of their best goal-scoring weapon amid an incredibly resurgent start to the season. After barely making the postseason in 2023-24 with a shocking -37 goal differential, Washington is 13-4-1, has the league’s best offense and eighth-ranked defense, and ranks second in the Metropolitan Division with a .750 points percentage.

If Ovechkin is set to miss any length time, all eyes will immediately turn to Dylan Strome, who leads the team with 22 assists and 28 points and a +18 rating. While his breakout has certainly helped The Great Eight along in his chase for the all-time record, Strome’s point totals have almost certainly benefitted in kind from having the Russian on his wing. How much of that pace he can keep up remains to be seen, while others like Connor McMichael (12 goals, 19 points) and Aliaksei Protas (seven goals, 18 points) will need to keep up their scorching pace to help the Caps stay in contention for the Metro title.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Injury| Newsstand| Washington Capitals Alex Ovechkin

19 comments

Frederik Andersen To Undergo Knee Surgery, Out 8-12 More Weeks

November 21, 2024 at 11:22 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

11:22 a.m.: Andersen will undergo knee surgery as reported on Friday, the team confirmed. They issued a slightly less optimistic return timeline of eight to 12 weeks.

10:11 a.m.: Hurricanes goaltender Frederik Andersen will undergo a minor knee procedure that will keep him sidelined for an additional eight weeks, Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic reports Thursday.

Andersen, 35, has not played since Oct. 26 with what the team initially termed as a lower-body injury. He was subsequently ruled out week-to-week before being downgraded to indefinite last Friday.

Over the weekend, Cory Lavalette of the North State Journal confirmed that Andersen’s injury was unrelated to the deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism that kept him out for most of the 2023-24 campaign. Lavalette also said that the team was still determining whether surgery would be required, a decision they’ve now made considering today’s report.

Andersen is still on the Canes’ active roster, but he can be flexed to injured reserve or long-term injured reserve if necessary. The first goaltender in NHL history to hail from Denmark was excellent to start the season, posting a 3-1-0 record, 1.48 GAA and .941 SV% in four appearances.

LeBrun called the procedure a “clean-up” surgery, potentially stemming from the knee injury that kept him out for half of the shortened 2020-21 campaign while with the Maple Leafs. It will mark the fifth straight season in which Andersen has been sidelined for over a month due to an injury.

Despite the health issues, Andersen, a two-time Jennings Trophy winner, is still one of the league’s premier netminders. Since arriving in Carolina as a free agent in 2021, his .919 SV% is tied with the Islanders’ Ilya Sorokin for third in the league among goaltenders with at least 100 starts. His 2.19 GAA is the lowest by a wide margin, ahead of Linus Ullmark’s 2.33.

An eight-week return timeline makes Andersen available in late January, weeks ahead of the trade deadline. Where he is in his recovery around New Year’s will likely influence Hurricanes general manager Eric Tulsky’s aggressiveness in adding goaltending help on the trade market.

For now, though, it will remain a Pyotr Kochetkov–Spencer Martin tandem in Carolina. The former has been stellar lately, posting a .930 SV% or higher in four of his last five starts. He has a 10-2-0 record, .907 SV%, 2.30 GAA, and 1.8 GSAA in 12 starts this year, while his 5.0 goals saved above expected rank 16th in the league, per MoneyPuck.

Andersen will be an unrestricted free agent next summer after completing the two-year, $6.8MM deal he signed to return to the Canes in 2023.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Carolina Hurricanes| Injury| Newsstand Frederik Andersen

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