Minor Transactions: 6/22/23
We’re now less than a week away from the draft. Trades and extensions are set to dominate the news wire over the coming weeks, but we’re still taking a moment to check in on some notable moves outside of the NHL. Today’s notable minor transactions will be displayed here:
- Former Anaheim Ducks winger Giovanni Fiore is on the move overseas, joining KHL club Admiral Vladivostok on a one-year deal for 2023-24. Since leaving the North American circuit in 2020, the Canadian had three productive seasons in Germany with the DEL’s Eisbaren Berlin, totaling 46 goals and 86 points in 133 games. An undrafted free agent signing out of the QMJHL by the Ducks, Fiore played his sole NHL game back in 2017-18, his first season of pro hockey.
- Ex-Los Angeles Kings prospect Cole Hults will play in his second European league in as many years, signing a one-year deal with Slovak club HKM Zvolen. A 2017 fifth-round pick, the bruising two-way defender had a very successful stint at Penn State before turning pro, where, unfortunately, his offense never translated. He spent just one season in the Kings organization, recording five points in 19 games with the AHL’s Ontario Reign before he was traded to the Arizona Coyotes in 2021. The team opted not to qualify him when his contract expired a year later, and he continued his pro career overseas with Italian club HC Bolzano, where he dominated defensively in the ICEHL.
- 2018 Stanley Cup Champion Shane Gersich won the Calder Cup in dramatic fashion last night, and now could be headed to play in Europe for the first time in his career. The 26-year-old longtime Washington Capitals farmhand reportedly has an agreement with Vasteras IK, a team in Sweden’s HockeyAllsvenskan, per SportExpressen’s Johan Svensson. Gersich has 113 points in 277 career AHL games across five seasons but had fallen out of the regular lineup in Hershey, only playing in six total playoff contests.
- After fifteen seasons with the Vaxjo Lakers, where he helped the club earn their promotion from the second-division HockeyAllsvenskan, four SHL titles, and reach the Champions Hockey League final, team captain Erik Josefsson, 36, has announced his retirement. A staple for a consistently competitive SHL side for the past fifteen years, Josefsson played over 750 games for Vaxjo and scored nearly 150 points at the top level of Swedish hockey. He captained them to a league championship this spring and now retires as the club’s all-time leader in games played.
- Former Buffalo Sabre Nick Baptiste has signed a one-year contract with reigning Liiga and Champions Hockey League champions Tappara Tampere. Baptiste heads to Nokia Arena from Cologne in the DEL, where he scored 14 goals and 34 points in 46 games. This won’t be Baptiste’s first time playing in Tampere, as he scored 21 goals and 35 points for Tappara’s neighbors, Ilves Tampere, in 2021-22. Baptiste last played in North America in 2020-21 with the AHL’s Texas Stars, scoring 12 goals and 23 points in 34 games in Cedar Park.
- 2014 Dallas Stars second-round pick Brett Pollock had an extremely successful run with Slovakia’s HC Kosice after his mid-season transfer from the KHL’s Kunlun Red Star, and now he’s extended his contract with Kosice. Pollock left China to sign in Slovakia in December of last season and made an instant impact. He scored 11 goals and 19 points in 24 regular-season contests and led Kosice to a Slovakian championship leading their league’s playoffs in goals with seven in 17 games. Pollock is a former ECHL All-Star who has found success as a journeyman scorer in recent years, with stops in Germany, Sweden, and China. He last played in North America in 2019-20 in the ECHL with the Allen Americans and will now get some more stability and continuity in his career thanks to this extension with Kosice.
- Former University of Denver star defenseman Joey Laleggia signed a two-year contract with Switzerland’s HC Lugano, joining a whole host of former NHLers such as Mikko Koskinen, Markus Granlund, and more. While Laleggia never made the NHL himself, he was a productive offensive blueliner at the AHL level and a highly-decorated player in his days in the NCAA. He was a Hobey Baker Award finalist and was his conference’s player of the year. He has played the entirety of his overseas pro career in the SHL, and led all HV71 blueliners with 33 points in 40 games last season.
- While Anaheim Ducks prospect Sasha Pastujov prepares to make his professional debut in North America, his two brothers Nick Pastujov and Michael Pastujov have made the choice to continue their pro careers overseas. The pair have signed contracts with the ICEHL’s Pioneers Vorarlberg, joining the league’s worst-performing club from last season. Pioneers struggled mightily to score goals last season, with their season-long total of 92 goals, well below the league-average mark of 140. The hope is that the Pastujov brothers can help in that regard, as Nick captained the ECHL’s Kansas City Mavericks and scored 35 points in 42 games last season while Michael contributed a solid 26 points in 37 games for the ECHL’s Iowa Heartlanders.
This page will be updated throughout the day.
Latest On The Calgary Flames
2023 is quickly shaping up to be one of the most monumental summers on the trade market in a while, especially for the Calgary Flames. The team has a star class of players destined for unrestricted free agency in 2024, and uncertainty looms over many of their potential extensions.
They did have some clarity on the plans of defenseman Noah Hanifin, who’s not expected to re-sign and is likely destined for a trade at some point before next year’s deadline. Today, Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli comes bearing concerning news: Elias Lindholm did not accept a high-paying, long-term extension, and the Flames remain in the dark on what his future plans are, although he notes general league speculation is leaning toward Lindholm not extending.
Not only that, but Seravalli also believes potential captaincy candidate Mikael Backlund is also leaning toward not re-signing in Calgary, although the situation is fluid.
Lindholm is solidly the team’s number-one center and was a linchpin of their success in 2021-22, helping guide them to a Pacific Division title with a career year. He maintained some strong all-around play this year despite losing both his linemates from that season, Johnny Gaudreau and Matthew Tkachuk, but his offense dipped to 22 goals and 64 points in 80 games after a 40-goal campaign the year before. He’s still a bona fide top-six center in his prime – someone that Calgary would love to have down the middle for the next few seasons without much center help on the way. He’s entering the final season of a bargain bin deal that pays him $4.85MM per season.
The news around Backlund is certainly the more surprising item here. Drafted in 2007, the 34-year-old is a true Flames lifer and has played in over 900 games in a Calgary jersey. He managed a career year offensively last season with 56 points in 82 games, and he remains one of the best shutdown centers in the game.
If he does end up on the move and opts not to re-sign with Calgary, Backlund has a modified no-trade clause that permits him to name 10 teams he’ll accept a trade to. He’s in the final season of a contract paying him $5.35MM per year.
While it’s not the direction the franchise envisioned after locking up Jonathan Huberdeau, MacKenzie Weegar, and Nazem Kadri last season, they’re under new management with Craig Conroy at the helm of the front office. He’s got a unique opportunity here to jumpstart a rebuild in a massive way, as he should be able to garner multiple first-round picks and high-end prospects if Backlund, Hanifin, and Lindholm all end up on the trade market.
One thing’s for sure – the only any of these players could avoid a trade is by signing an extension. After losing Gaudreau for nothing to the open market last season, Calgary won’t be willing to take that same risk with any of their 2024 unrestricted free agents.
Chicago Blackhawks Re-Sign Joey Anderson
Forward Joey Anderson has re-signed with the Chicago Blackhawks, earning a one-year, two-way extension. The 25-year-old’s new contract carries a $800K cap hit.
A pending restricted free agent, the Blackhawks acquired Anderson from the Toronto Maple Leafs as part of the return for defenseman Jake McCabe and forward Sam Lafferty in late February. He looked effective while skating in a career-high 38 NHL games this season, split between Chicago and Toronto.
A third-round pick of the New Jersey Devils in 2016, Anderson played 34 games during his rookie season with New Jersey in 2018-19 but largely slipped to a top-six AHL role in the following years. After earning more of a look with Toronto this year when injuries struck, though, he gave the Blackhawks something to think about after the McCabe deal. He stayed in the NHL through the end of Chicago’s season, recording four goals and six points in 24 games before heading to AHL Rockford for the last few games of their 2022-23 campaign.
Anderson was due a qualifying offer of $840K after completing a three-year, $750K average annual value extension signed with Toronto in 2020. His contract was one-way in nature last season, entitled to an $800K salary wherever he played. If he gets demoted to the minors at all in 2023-24, he’ll be taking a pay cut (PuckPedia reports his AHL salary is $475K).
Washington Capitals Expected To Hire Mitch Love
The Washington Capitals are set to add back-to-back AHL Coach of the Year Mitch Love to their coaching staff as an assistant, Sportsnet’s Jeff Marek reports.
It’s the first notable coaching move made by the Caps since naming Spencer Carbery their next head coach last month. The team parted ways with Peter Laviolette (now with the New York Rangers) immediately after the season’s end in April, but it’s unclear which assistants from last year they have or have not retained.
Love joins Washington after two seasons behind the bench of Calgary’s AHL affiliate (the Stockton Heat in 2021-22 and the Calgary Wranglers in 2022-23), guiding the team to two first-place finishes in the Pacific Division. His departure from the Flames organization is far from surprising – he was a top candidate for the team’s head coaching role, but he was passed over for former Heat head coach and Flames assistant Ryan Huska.
With Washington needing to retool on the fly to stay competitive during the end of Alex Ovechkin‘s career, their coaching moves support a progressive philosophy and make it clear their organizational focus is getting what they can out of their young players, especially without a particularly high-end prospect pool. Love has certainly done that in the minors, helping a strong handful of Flames prospects find the right development track.
Colorado Avalanche Not Expected To Re-Sign Erik Johnson
The longest-tenured player on the Colorado Avalanche roster is expected to enter free agency next week. Defenseman Erik Johnson isn’t likely to re-sign with the team, per ESPN’s Emily Kaplan, ending a 13-season run in Denver.
Given his age and injury history, it wouldn’t surprise many if the 35-year-old Minnesotan has played his last NHL game. While he didn’t live up to his first-overall billing after the St. Louis Blues made him the first player selected in the 2006 NHL Draft, he was one of the more capable two-way defenders in the league during his minute-munching prime early during his time in Colorado. He’s been a member of the Avalanche for more than 12 years, coming over via trade from the Blues in February 2011.
Coming back from multiple significant injuries throughout his career, Johnson’s excellence in a shutdown role in his latter years made him an underrated crucial piece in Colorado’s 2022 Stanley Cup victory. Averaging just over 17 minutes per game, he recorded five points and a +10 rating in 20 games en route to the championship.
His effectiveness looked diminished this season, though. He struggled to keep up at times and managed just eight assists in 63 games on the year. With the emergence of Bowen Byram as being able to play both left and right defense this year, it muddied Johnson’s role for the future.
He just completed a seven-year, $42MM extension that kicked in for the 2016-17 campaign. If he does opt to extend his NHL career and finds a home with a contender on the open market, it’s hard to imagine a deal worth much more than the league minimum of $775K.
Morning Notes: Hershey, Walsh, MacKenzie
Many on the East Coast woke up this morning to the news that the AHL’s Hershey Bears emerged victorious as the champions of the 2023 Calder Cup, outlasting the expansion Coachella Valley Firebirds on the road in a Game 7 overtime win. The Washington Capitals affiliate captured their league-record 12th championship thanks to the efforts of alternate captain and AHL veteran Mike Vecchione, who did get one game with the Caps in 2021-22.
It was a strong postseason for a few of Capitals prospects – namely 2019 first-round pick Connor McMichael, who led the team with six goals in 20 games. It was the team’s depth that carried them through the many tribulations a postseason brings, though, with seven players recording 10 or more points. 27-year-old Hunter Shepard, who excelled in his first full AHL campaign after signing with Hershey in 2020, won MVP honors after posting a 2.27 goals-against average, .914 save percentage, three shutouts, and a 14-6-0 record in 20 playoff games.
More from the hockey news cycle this morning:
- New Jersey Devils restricted free agent defenseman Reilly Walsh is set to lose his waiver-exempt status next season after three strong campaigns in the minors. In an interview with NJ.com’s Ryan Novozinsky, Devils assistant general manager Dan MacKinnon revealed the team is preparing to lose Walsh, either via trade early in the season or a possible waiver claim. A third-round pick of the team in 2017, Walsh has recorded back-to-back 40-plus point seasons with the AHL’s Utica Comets and notched an assist in his lone NHL appearance in 2021-22. With a logjam of elite defense prospects in the Devils organization that includes Luke Hughes and Simon Nemec, though, there isn’t a clear path to sustained NHL time for Walsh.
- The Nashville Predators have hired Derek MacKenzie as an assistant coach, the team said this morning. MacKenzie had previously worked with new Predators head coach Andrew Brunette for a three-year period with the Florida Panthers, concluding with a President’s Trophy win in 2021-22 with Brunette as head coach. MacKenzie had spent the 2022-23 campaign as head coach of the OHL’s Sudbury Wolves after the Panthers revamped their coaching staff last offseason, where he guided prospects such as forward Quentin Musty (who could be available with Nashville’s first-round selections) to high-end seasons.
Dalibor Dvorsky Signs Two-Year Deal In SHL
This morning, there’s a notable bit of transaction news involving one of the top prospects available in next week’s draft. Slovak talent Dalibor Dvorsky has signed a two-year contract with SHL club IK Oskarshamn, the team announced this morning.
The move doesn’t prevent Dvorsky from signing his entry-level contract with an NHL team after getting drafted or even heading to play in the NHL before the expiration of the contract, per the league’s transfer agreement with the SHL. Instead, the move ensures Dvorsky has a home to play top-flight professional hockey from his draft year onward.
Dvorsky did play in a pro league for most of this season, although it was in the second division of Swedish hockey, HockeyAllsvenskan. The consensus top-20 pick recorded six goals and 14 points in 38 games with the Solna-based club AIK, although he was held off the scoresheet in seven SHL qualification games. It’s a tough blow for AIK, who won’t have the 18-year-old back in the fold next season as they again try to gain promotion to the SHL.
He joins an Oskarshamn club that’s steadily improved since gaining promotion from the Allsvenskan in 2019, coming off back-to-back playoff appearances in 2021 and 2022. Whichever NHL team selects him next Wednesday will need to keep a careful watch on his usage there, ensuring he’s getting ample chances to develop and isn’t just sitting at the bottom of the lineup – a common occurrence for youngsters in European pro leagues. If he doesn’t succeed in his rookie SHL season, expect his future NHL team to sign him to an entry-level contract next summer and bring him to North America. He would be eligible for AHL designation, given he was a first-round selection.
Stars Unlikely To Bring Back Both Domi And Dadonov
Saad Yousuf of The Athletic wrote today that the Dallas Stars will be hard pressed to bring back both Max Domi and Evgenii Dadonov. Both forwards are unrestricted free agents who came over to the Stars in trade deadline moves and they were able to fit in well in their new environment. Dadonov had three goals and 12 assists in 23 games after coming over in a trade from the Montreal Canadiens while Domi had two goals and five assists in 20 games after the trade from the Chicago Blackhawks.
Both players had a similar journey to end up in Dallas, albeit at much different points in their careers. The 34-year-old Dadonov spent six seasons in Florida where he was quite productive putting up 202 points in 280 games before he signed with the Ottawa Senators as a free agent. He was traded three times in the span of a year before ending up in Dallas where he played quite well down the stretch.
28-year-old Domi on the other hand spent three seasons with the Arizona Coyotes where he posted 135 points in 222 games before he was dealt to Montreal, then the Columbus Blue Jackets and the Carolina Hurricanes. He signed a one year contract this past offseason with the Chicago Blackhawks before he was traded to Dallas at the deadline.
Yousuf writes in the article that Dallas general manager Jim Nill would love to have both players back, but cap space will likely be an issue. Dallas has just $7.4MM available for next season and based on the projections of Evolving Hockey Domi figures to get a contract around $4.4MM per year while Dadonov is projected to get $2.7MM. Those numbers would leave Nill with $300K to fill out two roster sports, not something that would be possible.
Yousuf sums up his article by saying that he expects Dadonov to be the likelier or the two to return to the club but doesn’t dive too deep into his logic. While cost is always a factor, Dadonov has struggled to fit in with previous clubs and really thrived under head coach Pete DeBoer. Given that close relationship between player and coach it is possible that Dadonov will select comfort level over money on his next contract. Especially after he was dealt four times during his previous deal.
Evening Notes: Salary Cap, Bailey, Graovac
Chris Johnston of NorthStar Bets is reporting that the NHL and NHLPA will not be negotiating a higher increase to the 2023-24 NHL salary cap meaning that it appears the cap will be set at $83.5MM. The $1MM increase will be a disappointment to a lot of teams that are pressed up against the cap, while teams with ample room under it will have an opportunity to weaponize their space and acquire assets for bad contracts.
Two weeks ago, Joe Smith of The Athletic laid out the case for a larger cap increase this offseason but it appears the NHL and the players association have opted for one more season with a modest increase. The players are expected to pay off the debt they incurred from the 2020-21 and with that there are a lot of people in the hockey community who believe that the cap could increase by more than $4MM for the 2024-25 season, which would be an absolute boon for players hitting free agency 12 months from now.
In other evening news:
- Craig Morgan of PHNX Sports tweeted today that there is no truth to the rumors that the Arizona Coyotes have interest in New York Islanders forward Josh Bailey. While a cap dump to Arizona does make sense for the Islanders given Bailey’s recent play, they might have to cough up significant assets in order to facilitate a trade to move on from Bailey. The once productive forward struggled last season posting just eight goals and 17 assists in 64 games and has become a regular on most pundits lists of players who will be bought out. Bailey’s contract was frontloaded so while his cap hit will be $5MM next season, his actual salary owed is just $3.5MM.
- The KHL’s Admiral Vladivostok announced today that they have signed Canadian forward Tyler Graovac to a one-year contract. The Brampton native was drafted in the seventh round of the 2011 NHL entry draft by the Minnesota Wild and spent four seasons in their system split between the AHL and NHL putting up 12 goals and three assists in 84 NHL games. He will be entering his third season in the KHL after spending last year with Podolsk Vityaz where he put up nine goals and 11 assists in 49 games.
New York Rangers Hire Phil Housley
Earlier today, there were reports indicating that Peter Laviolette and the New York Rangers had an interest in bringing in Phil Housley as an assistant coach for the team’s upcoming season, and that’s exactly what they did. Arthur Staple of The Athletic reports that Housley will indeed be joining Laviolette’s staff as an assistant coach for the Rangers.
Before the Nashville Predators brought in Laviolette prior to the 2014-15 season, Housley had actually already spent a season on Nashville’s bench. The two would go on to coach the next three years with each other, helping the Predators to the 2017 Stanley Cup Final against the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Because of his success in Nashville, the Buffalo Sabres were the first team to give Housley a shot at head coaching, beginning before the 2017-18 season. In 164 games spent manning the bench in Buffalo, Housley would produce a record of 58-84-22, well outside the playoff picture in both years.
After being fired from the Sabres after the 2018-19 season, the Arizona Coyotes, along with then-head coach Rick Tocchet signed Housley to a multi-year deal. During his time with the Coyotes, which ended after the 2021-22 season, Housley was primarily used as the team’s defensive and power play coach.
Aside from Laviolette bringing in some familiar faces to his coaching staff, this is quite the shrewd move for Housley as well. Since the run to the Stanley Cup Final in 2017, Housley has failed to be on the bench of a competitive team. During those separate times with the Sabres and Coyotes, Housley did not manage to find any success at all. Joining a Rangers team that is expected to contend for the Cup next year, this will be an opportunity for Housley to gain back confidence and strengthen his resume.
