Greg Moore Named Head Coach Of USNTDP

During the 2023 Stanley Cup playoffs, the AHL affiliate of the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Toronto Marlies, announced they would not be renewing the contracts of their coaching staff. Even after coaching the team to a regular season North Division title, and the longest stretch in the playoffs since the 2018-19 season, Greg Moore was sent packing.

Now, Moore will be leading the bench of one of the most recognizable brands in United States hockey, as the United States National Team Development Program (USNTDP) has announced Moore as the 17th coach in team history. This will be Moore’s second time involved with the program, as he was an assistant coach from 2015-18, helping coach the team to a gold medal finish during the 2017 IIHF U18 World Championship.

After serving as an assistant coach for the NTDP for several years, Moore signed on as a head coach for the Chicago Steel of the USHL from 2018-2020. In his first season as head coach, the Steel made it all the way to the 2019 Clark Cup Final, ultimately losing to the Sioux Fall Stampede.

Moore is excited to be back with the NTDP, saying, “It’s a privilege and an honor to be named a head coach at the National Team Development Program. I’m thankful to be able to continue the tremendous coaching tradition at the NTDP and I can’t wait to get started with the extremely talented group of incoming U17 players”.

As of now, 17 of the 23 rostered players have college commitments, and Moore will be in charge of bringing their game to a higher level. It may be considered a step back from the AHL level, but Moore will still have an important job for the top junior system in the United States.

Photo courtesy of the United States Development Team National Program

Winnipeg Jets Re-Sign Gabe Vilardi

The Winnipeg Jets have reached a pre-arbitration agreement on a contract extension with recently acquired forward Gabe Vilardi. They’ve inked him to a two-year, $3.4375MM AAV contract.

This agreement leaves the Jets with three more restricted free agents left to sign: a pair of former top prospects in 2016 first-rounder Logan Stanley and 2018 first-rounder Rasmus Kupariand defenseman Declan Chisholm. Winnipeg acquired both Kupari and Vilardi from the Los Angeles Kings in the Pierre-Luc Dubois trade, and have now locked in Vilardi to a bridge contract.

While some Jets fans anxious about players all-too-often looking to leave Winnipeg rather than commit there long-term might worry about Vilardi inching two years closer to unrestricted free agency, a long-term deal would likely have been very difficult to reach an agreement on.

Not only has Vilardi not yet played a game for the Jets, his NHL resume is likely a little too thin to merit a major long-term commitment.

Vilardi is a former top prospect who had some significant injury issues in his days in the OHL, but has taken some serious steps in recent years.

The soon-to-be 24-year-old didn’t make a consistent impact in his first go-around as a full-time NHLer, flashing some talent but totaling just 23 points in 54 games in 2020-21.

Vilardi played more in the AHL than NHL the following season but produced regularly in the American League, scoring 38 points in 39 games.

That AHL form carried into this past NHL season, and this most recent attempt to break into the world’s top league seems to have worked. Vilardi scored 23 goals and 41 points in 63 games, a 30-goal, 53-point 82-game pace.

Playing on Los Angeles’ first power-play unit, there is hope that Vilardi can become a difference-making offensive producer for the Jets, and their investment of nearly $3.5MM per season over the next two years reflects the Jets’ belief that Vilardi has put his inconsistent earlier NHL days behind him.

Should Vilardi manage to continue his development and put together some more productive, healthy campaigns, he’ll have placed himself in a strong position for his next contract.

For the Jets, they’ll receive Vilardi’s services at a potential discount rate should Vilardi match his 2022-23 output, let alone exceed it. That comes at the cost of getting Vilardi locked into a long-term agreement, though they’ll still have the opportunity to sign Vilardi to a long-term extension before this deal expires.

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Vegas Golden Knights Re-Sign Brett Howden

The Vegas Golden Knights have re-signed forward Brett Howden to a two-year contract extension. According to the Las Vegas Sun’s Danny Webster, the deal carries a $1.9MM AAV.

The contract walks Howden, 25, to unrestricted free agency in two years’ time, and comes after an impressive playoff run. Howden scored 10 points in 22 games during Vegas’ Stanley Cup championship run, averaging a minute on Vegas’ penalty kill and more average ice time than he received during the regular season.

He came through at an important time for Vegas, registering four points in the five-game Stanley Cup final, including two goals in Game Two.

In the regular season, Howden managed 13 points in 54 games, and averaged 13:03 TOI per game, which ranked him among the least-utilized Golden Knights regulars.

Still, Howden has nearly 300 games of NHL experience, first-round pedigree (he was the 27th pick in the 2016 draft) an impressive playoff run on his resume to lend some confidence to the idea that he can be more in the NHL than just a dime-a-dozen bottom-sixer.

The Golden Knights are clearly betting on Howden, likely hoping he can step up and play a more regular role on Vegas’ penalty kill now that Reilly Smith (who averaged the third-most minutes of any Vegas forward while short-handed) is gone.

It’s not exactly a cheap contract if Howden doesn’t take any steps forward in his game. If one views this as a reward for Howden’s contributions to the Golden Knights’ first-ever Stanley Cup, though, then the deal looks a bit more reasonable, especially if Howden can take a step forward in his game next season.

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Anaheim Ducks Sign Noah Warren

The Anaheim Ducks have signed 2022 42nd overall pick Noah Warren to a three-year entry-level contract. The financial terms of the contract were not disclosed as part of the announcement, nor have they been reported on at this time.

Although the deal technically gives Warren the right to make the NHL club and potentially play for the Ducks next season, seeing as he just turned 19 years old a few days ago, that’s unlikely to be the outcome for him this fall.

What’s more likely is Warren gets to head to NHL training camp, gain some experience there (as well as a taste of what it’ll take to eventually make a more realistic push for an NHL job) and then head back to the QMJHL to play another season of junior hockey.

The Ducks nabbed Warren in the middle of the second round of the draft in 2022, and at the time he was projected by some outlets to be right on the first-round bubble. For Warren, his draft value was all about projection.

With just 24 points in 62 games, Warren’s offensive production wasn’t what one might expect for an early draft pick out of major junior hockey. But Warren’s intriguing six-foot-five frame and impressive set of physical tools gave many scouts the impression that he could become a difference-making defenseman at the NHL level.

While the Anaheim Ducks have arguably the NHL’s best crop of left-shot defensive prospects, headlined by Olen Zellweger and Pavel Mintyukov, their right side isn’t quite as highly-regarded. Sure, they have 2020 sixth-overall pick Jamie Drysdale and QMJHL defenseman of the year Tristan Luneau on that side, but even with those two Warren won’t face as tall of a task making the NHL roster as he would if he played on the left.

This entry-level contract is an indication that the Ducks are believers in Warren’s NHL upside and a recognition of the progress he’s made to his point in his development. Now, the goal will be to develop some more offense to his game and continue to translate his impressive physical tools into all-around value.

New Jersey Devils Sign Tomas Nosek

The New Jersey Devils have bolstered their group bottom-six forwards, signing free agent Tomas Nosek to a one-year, $1MM contract.

According to CapFriendly, the deal leaves New Jersey with just over $2MM in cap space remaining, and the team still has to sign restricted free agent Kevin Bahl to a contract for next season.

This contract represents a decrease in pay for Nosek, who made $1.75MM against the cap last season. Nosek’s pay cut is far more likely to have been caused by the leaguewide lack of cap space rather than any decline in Nosek’s on-ice value from one year ago.

In fact, one could argue Nosek’s value has reached the highest point of his career. A six-foot-three undrafted Czech center, Nosek spent last season as the Boston Bruins’ main fourth-line center.

He occupied that role as the Bruins went on a historically successful regular-season run, and his defensive abilities played a part in their success. He won nearly 60% of his 597 faceoffs this past season, showcasing some value at the faceoff dot.

Nosek played the second-most minutes of any forward on Boston’s penalty kill, a unit that was the league’s best, killing penalties at an 87.3% success rate.

That 87.3% kill rate is the NHL’s second-best since the 2012-13 lockout season, and is a significant feather in Nosek’s cap. Although he’s never even reached the 20-point plateau in the NHL, Nosek brings the type of value many teams want to see from their fourth-liners. He brings size, defensive ability, the versatility to play center or wing, and significant playoff experience.

Impressively, Nosek’s teams have played playoff hockey in every single year he’s been an NHL regular. And in Nosek’s final year in the AHL, he scored 22 points in 19 postseason games for the Grand Rapids Griffins and became a Calder Cup champion.

The Devils want to take the next step in their cup contention process and go on a long playoff run. Nosek will undoubtedly help them in that pursuit.

New Jersey lost Miles Wood to Colorado in free agency, and Nosek doesn’t offer the same blend of size, speed, and scoring touch that Wood brought. But at this $1MM cost, there are few players left on the open market who can offer as meaningful an addition to the Devils’ roster as Nosek.

He could join Michael McLeod and Nathan Bastian to make a formidable fourth line for head coach Lindy Ruff. In addition, Nosek is likely to take Yegor Sharangovich‘s vacated spot on New Jersey’s penalty kill, bolstering a unit that was already among the NHL’s best last season. At this price, there isn’t really a way to view this signing as anything other than an absolute positive for the Devils.

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Minor Transactions: Roe, Mikhnov, Marcel

The reigning Calder Cup champion Hershey Bears announced this morning that they’ve signed forward Garrett Roe to a one-year AHL contract. The 35-year-old spent last season playing for the ZSC Lions in the National League in Switzerland where he collected four goals and 10 assists in 31 games while serving as one of the alternate captains for the team.

Roe was a seventh-round draft pick of the Los Angeles Kings back in 2008 and previously played two seasons in the AHL for the Adirondack Phantoms where he posted 20 goals and 46 assists in 129 career games. He has spent the past decade in Europe, including the past four years with the Lions in Switzerland. He’s been a good offensive contributor for most of his professional career but saw the offence dry up this past season as he posted numbers well below his career average.

Roe represented the United States at the 2018 Olympic Games in PyeongChang where he posted a goal and an assist in five games as the Americans fell in the quarterfinals of the tournament.

In other minor transactions from around the hockey world:

  • Former Edmonton Oilers first-round pick Alexei Mikhnov has joined Brest Albatros of the FFHG Division 1 league in France. The 40-year-old forward was selected 17th overall by the Oilers in the 2000 entry draft and played just two NHL games with the franchise, going pointless. Mikhnov took years to make the move from Russia to North America as he was impacted by the lack of a transfer agreement between the NHL and the Russian ice hockey federation. When he finally arrived, he had massive issues with his eyesight and struggled to adapt to the North American game. This will be his first year playing in France as he has spent the past four years playing professionally in Belarus.
  • Chicago Blackhawks 2023 fifth-round pick Marcel Marcel has signed a one-year AHL contract with the Blackhawks AHL affiliate the Rockford IceHogs. The IceHogs announced the deal this morning with the 19-year-old who saw his first glimpse of North American hockey this past season with the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League’s Gatineau Olympiques. In 52 games, the Pilsen, Czechia native posted 14 goals and 18 assists to go along with a +22 rating. He also helped his country win a silver medal at the 2023 IIHF World Junior Championship where he recorded two goals and four assists in seven games.

Seattle Kraken Extend Head Coach Dave Hakstol

The Seattle Kraken have announced that they’ve signed head coach Dave Hakstol to a contract extension that will keep him with the club through the 2025-26 season. No financial details have been released at this time but the two-year contract gives the 54-year-old some security coming on the heels of the first 100-point season in franchise history.

Hakstol led the franchise to a series of firsts in just their second season of existence. The Kraken made the playoffs for the first time and even knocked off the defending Stanley Cup champion Colorado Avalanche in the opening round for their first playoff series win.

Hakstol oversaw one of the most dramatic turnarounds in recent history as he took the Kraken from a 30th overall finish in 2021-22 to the second round of the playoffs. Seattle went from just 60 points in 2021-22 to 100 points this past season. The team’s point percentage nearly doubled going from .366 to .610. It was by far Hakstol’s most successful season as a head coach in the NHL with his previous best coming while he was overseeing the Philadelphia Flyers in 2017-18. That year he led the Flyers to a 98-point regular season before they were dumped in six games by the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round of the playoffs.

Hakstol might not have big-name recognition, but he fits with what Seattle has built throughout their lineup. They don’t have many big names in their lineup, but the club showed incredible resiliency and grit throughout this past season. Something Hakstol himself showed after an initially disappointing first season in Seattle.

Blues Sign Jeremie Biakabutuka To Entry-Level Contract

After attending prospect/development camp for both the Detroit Red Wings and St. Louis Blues over the past two summers, undrafted defenseman Jeremie Biakabutuka has finally landed an NHL contract. The 21-year-old received a three-year, entry-level contract from the Blues today, as announced by the team.

Passed over in the 2020, 2021 and 2022 NHL Drafts, Biakabutuka has steadily developed his offensive game throughout his junior career in the QMJHL, adding to an already formidable 6-foot-4, 203-pound frame. He played his fifth and final season of major-junior hockey with the Charlottetown Islanders last year, leading their defensemen and finishing third on the team in scoring with 42 points in 56 games. His 0.75 points per game also tied him for 13th among QMJHL defenders last year alongside San Jose Sharks prospect Jake Furlong.

The son of former NFL running back Tim Biakabutuka plays a rather all-around game and is a stronger skater and more offensively-inclined decision-maker than you’d expect for a defenseman of his size. It’s a blend of smarts and size that’s led to multiple invites from NHL teams, and with his junior career concluded, the Blues took notice of his strong finish.

His junior career was quite eventful, bouncing around between the Val-d’Or Foreurs and Rimouski Océanic before landing in Charlottetown via trade in 2022. He finished out the 2022-23 campaign on a tryout with the AHL’s Grand Rapids Griffins in the Red Wings organization, skating in three games.

Biakabutuka is destined for assignment to the minors next season, where he joins a crowded defense group in AHL Springfield that will likely include rising prospect Matthew Kessel and minor-league mainstays like Joshua Jacobs and Wyatt Kalynuk. St. Louis does not have a dedicated ECHL affiliate, so it’s unclear to which team they would loan Biakabutuka if he can’t crack the AHL roster in Springfield. He’ll be a restricted free agent when his ELC expires in 2026.

Ottawa Senators Officially Part Ways With AGM Trent Mann

In an expected move reported by Postmedia’s Bruce Garrioch over a week ago, the Ottawa Senators have officially announced their decision to part ways with assistant general manager Trent Mann. The 50-year-old has been affiliated with the Senators since joining as an amateur scout in 2011 and joined as a full-time member in the fall of 2016.

Last season was Mann’s sole campaign holding the role of assistant GM. The New Brunswick native had been the team’s director of amateur scouting for the previous five seasons before the organization promoted him to a more wide-ranging role alongside GM Pierre Dorion.

Mann has been the principal talent evaluator and most considerable organizational influence in the team’s past six draft classes. While they’ve yielded some gems, such as a trio of top-five picks in Brady TkachukTim Stützle, and Jake Sanderson, a fair amount of Ottawa’s other recent selections in recent years have come under intense scrutiny, perhaps none more than the decision to select forward Tyler Boucher with the tenth overall pick in 2021. It was viewed as quite a reach at the time, and it hasn’t looked great post-draft either – the 20-year-old has bounced around the college and junior ranks and failed to produce at a rate consistent with a top-ten forward selection.

Dorion release a notably short statement on Mann’s departure, simply saying, “We’re thankful for Trent’s contributions to the Senators and wish him the best going forward.”

His son, Matteo Mann, was selected by the Philadelphia Flyers in the seventh round of this year’s draft. His departure leaves Ottawa with just one assistant GM – Ryan Bowness, whose chief role is serving as the general manager of their AHL affiliate in Belleville.

Arbitration Breakdown: Ilya Samsonov

While many players who elected salary arbitration have already settled with their teams, several players are still headed toward hearings, which start tomorrow with the Chicago Blackhawks and forward Philipp Kurashev. Slated for Friday, though, is one of the more intriguing cases still unresolved: Toronto Maple Leafs netminder Ilya Samsonov.

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported last night that the two sides are still actively working on a short-term deal, which could get done over the next 48 hours and avoid going to arbitration. Arbitration is usually something teams look to avoid, given they’ll have to agree to any deal awarded under the $4.5MM mark per season. But in Toronto’s case, it’s a good thing – the team is already over the salary cap even with defenseman Jake Muzzin stashed on long-term injured reserve, meaning certainty around Samsonov’s cap hit next season is crucial for them to know exactly how much space to clear in follow-up moves. They’ll have financial assurance with Samsonov one way or another within the next four days.

Filings

Team: $2.4MM
Player$4.9MM
Midpoint: $3.65MM

(via Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman)

The Numbers

Last season was, far and away, Samsonov’s best performance to date. A Washington Capitals first-round selection in 2015, Samsonov had shown flashes of strong play during his time in the nation’s capital, especially during his rookie season in 2019-20 when he recorded a 16-6-2 record, .913 save percentage and finished 12th in Calder Trophy voting. After that, things went progressively downhill for the Russian netminder, though, seeing his numbers dip far below league average as injuries limited his playing time. After posting a relatively poor .896 save percentage with the Capitals in 2021-22, he was surprisingly cut loose from the team entirely, hitting the UFA market at age 25 after Washington didn’t issue him a qualifying offer.

Toronto extended him a one-year, $1.8MM prove-it deal to complete their tandem with Matt Murray, and Samsonov soon took over the de facto starting role for himself after a series of injuries kept Murray out of the crease for much of the season. While depth netminders Erik Kallgren and Joseph Woll also found their way into action, Samsonov started a career-high 40 games last year and put together the highest level of play from him in the NHL, even if he was inconsistent at times.

He may not be in the upper echelon of starting netminders, especially with only one top-flight-level season under his belt. Still, he outdueled countryman Andrei Vasilevskiy just a few months ago and was perhaps the most significant reason Toronto won their first playoff series in nearly two decades. An injury early in the Second Round kept him out of the last few games of playoff action, though.

With Toronto in a tight financial situation and Samsonov not having a proven track record, it makes sense why the Maple Leafs want to go short-term with their current starter. They do have Woll in the pipeline, who’s expected to be the full-time backup next season and could potentially be ready for the starting job in a few years. That said, Toronto would surely like to settle with Samsonov on a two- or three-year deal to solidify consistency in their crease.

Because Samsonov would be eligible for unrestricted free agency in 2024, he can only sign a one-year deal via arbitration – not two. If the two sides want a longer-term deal, they must settle before the hearing.

2022-23 Stats: 42 GP, 27-10-5, 4 SO, 2,476 mins, 2.33 GAA, .919 SV%
Career Stats: 131 GP, 79-32-13, 10 SO, 7,341 mins, 2.65 GAA, .908 SV%

Potential Comparables

Comparable contracts are restricted to those signed within restricted free agency, which means UFA deals and entry-level pacts are ineligible to be used. The contracts below fit within those parameters. Player salaries also fall within the parameters of the submitted numbers by both sides of this negotiation. 

Vitek Vanecek (Devils) – If you’re looking for the framework of a potential deal, look no further than Samsonov’s former tandem partner in Washington. After two average seasons as a tandem netminder in D.C., Vanecek’s RFA rights were traded to New Jersey last offseason before he signed a three-year, $3.4MM AAV contract with the club. Coming off seasons of 37 and 42 games played and .908 save percentages in both seasons, Vanecek might have had consistency on his side more so than Samsonov, but he hadn’t reached the level Samsonov has at times throughout his young career. The latter is a bit of a unicorn in recent RFA goalie signings, and it makes sense why he’d want more than his ex-teammate, but Vanecek’s deal falls near the midpoint of the two filings.

Alexandar Georgiev (Avalanche) – Just a few days before Vanecek signed a deal with his new team in 2022, Georgiev signed the same contract with the Colorado Avalanche. Georgiev had more experience and was perhaps a more highly-touted solution as a starter than Vanecek, but he was coming off a rough year with the New York Rangers that saw his save percentage dip below the .900 mark. Samsonov’s performance last season was much better than either Vanecek’s or Georgiev’s before they signed their deals, though, something he’ll likely leverage in his hearing to make his case for an AAV in the $3.5-$4.5MM range.

Projection

This is the first arbitration case of the summer where the filing values have been publically exchanged, so it’s a bit more challenging to project a first-of-the-offseason deal, especially when there’s a lack of solid comparables in 2023 from which to compare Samsonov’s situation.

On a one-year deal with the potential to cash in for big money on the UFA market in 2024, though, it seems unlikely the arbitrator would rule significantly in Samsonov’s favor. The filings seem pretty reasonable based on past cases, and they’re positioned to grant Samsonov a deal right around the midpoint of the filings, potentially a bit higher. Expect something in the $3.75MM range on a one-year pact for Samsonov if the two sides don’t settle before Friday’s hearing.

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