Atlantic Notes: Lomberg, Ostlund, Lodin
Panthers winger Ryan Lomberg has resumed skating as he works his way back from an upper-body injury, relays David Dwork of WPLG Local 10 (Twitter link). The 28-year-old was injured in the playoff opener against Boston but suited up in three more games before being shut down for the fifth game of that series. Lomberg, who had a career year during the regular season with 12 goals and 20 points in 82 games, is still listed as week-to-week so it’s unlikely that he’ll be able to suit up during their second-round series against Toronto.
Elsewhere in the Atlantic:
- While Sabres prospect Noah Ostlund was recently re-assigned to AHL Rochester, he won’t be suiting up for them in the playoffs due to a foot injury, notes Lance Lysowski of The Buffalo News. The 19-year-old was the 16th overall pick last year and had a good season with Djurgardens of the Swedish Allsvenskan, collecting 26 points in 37 games. Lysowski adds that Buffalo would like Ostlund to play with the Americans next year but are open to the idea of him playing at home for one more season if that’s his preference.
- Viktor Lodin’s recently rumored deal with Oskarshamn in Sweden is now official, per a team release. The Senators prospect had 15 points in 28 games with AHL Belleville this season while making his NHL debut at the end of the 2021-22 campaign. It’s a two-year agreement for the 23-year-old, meaning he’ll still be RFA-eligible at its expiration. Accordingly, it’s likely that Ottawa will still tender the forward a qualifying offer next month, allowing them to retain his NHL rights in case Lodin’s production takes off in the SHL.
Latest On Matt Dumba
The Minnesota Wild’s 2022-23 season ended with yet another first-round playoff loss last week, beginning the offseason work of general manager Bill Guerin. Guerin has a tall task ahead of him, as his mandate is to build a Stanley Cup contender around superstar Kirill Kaprizov but he must do so with the cap penalties charged for the Zach Parise and Ryan Suter buyouts set to rise to nearly $15MM combined.
One of the first cap casualties the Wild are anticipated to face due to the cost of those buyouts regards longtime Wild blueline staple Matt Dumba. The five-year, $6MM AAV contract Dumba signed in 2018 is set to expire, leaving his future in Minnesota in uncertain territory. Yesterday, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported on the 32 Thoughts podcast that it is “much more likely than not [Dumba] tests the market” when the new league year begins in the summer.
While Dumba may not reach the $6MM on his next contract that he earned on his last, it seems as though the Wild simply will not have the financial bandwidth to offer Dumba a market-rate contract. Friedman did add that the Wild are not yet closing the door on finding a way to retain Dumba, due to how much they respect and appreciate the player, but that his return has to be considered highly unlikely.
The upcoming class of free agent right-shot defensemen isn’t exactly overflowing with talent, and Dumba fits in as one of the top names set to be available, next to teammate John Klingberg and New Jersey Devils rearguard Damon Severson. While Dumba’s play has definitely declined since his 50-point peak in 2017-18, and his offensive production hit career-lows this past season, the 28-year-old still gave head coach Dean Evason over 21 minutes a night, including nearly two minutes short-handed.
21 minutes a night is, to be fair, a noticeable decline from the past few years as Dumba hadn’t averaged below 22 nightly minutes since he was in his first few seasons as an NHL regular. As a result, this decline in tangible returns for Dumba’s play (the decrease in ice time, points production) has left the 28-year-old’s ultimate value in a relatively nebulous place.
Is he still the dynamic, at times game-changing blueliner he was in the past? Can he still reach that point on his next contract?
Or is he a defense-only blueliner at this point in his career, and if that’s the case how much value in his own end will he bring?
Those are the questions teams will have to answer for themselves when they ponder extending Dumba a contract offer in the offseason.
It’s unclear at the current moment the level of wider leaguewide interest there is in Dumba, though it’s worth noting that all it really takes is one “believer” for Dumba to get a nice payday on his next deal.
Based on the fact that the Wild remain passionate supporters of Dumba’s overall value, and the fact that the team is still reportedly holding out hope they can find a way to retain him despite their dire cap situation, it’s entirely possible that another front office holds Dumba in a similarly high regard. If that’s the case, though, then his time in Minnesota (which has thus far lasted nearly 600 games played) is likely over.
Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
2023 Jack Adams Award Finalists Announced
The 2023 finalists for the Jack Adams Award, presented to the coach who has “contributed the most to his team’s success” and voted on by the NHL Broadcasters Association, were announced tonight.
The finalists are Dave Hakstol of the Seattle Kraken, Lindy Ruff of the New Jersey Devils, and Jim Montgomery of the Boston Bruins.
Of the three finalists, only Ruff has already won the award earlier in his career. Ruff won it in 2006 on the back of an impressive 52-win campaign. In his third season as the Devils’ bench boss, Ruff has guided a young team out of their rebuilding phase and into Stanley Cup contention. Under his guidance, Jack Hughes and Nico Hischier have emerged as superstar talents and the Devils won their first playoff series since their 2011-12 run to the Stanley Cup Final.
Hakstol, a longtime college hockey coach at the University of North Dakota, is a finalist thanks to a stellar second season behind the bench of the expansion Seattle Kraken.
While Seattle did not enjoy the type of instant success the Vegas Golden Knights had in their first season, 2022-23 has been more kind to Hakstol’s squad.
The former Philadelphia Flyers coach has overseen the rise of one of the NHL’s deepest teams and led them to an upset victory over the defending Stanley Cup champions in their first-ever playoff series.
New York Rangers head coach Gerard Gallant won the Jack Adams for his work managing the expansion Vegas Golden Knights, and one of the most important factors leading to his win was to just how many players reached new heights in their careers with Gallant as head coach.
Hakstol has overseen similar career elevations in Seattle, with players such as Jared McCann, Vince Dunn, Daniel Sprong, and Eeli Tolvanen authoring career-best years in 2022-23. Now, with a chance to win a Stanley Cup for Seattle, Hakstol has a chance to take home some individual hardware as well.
Although Ruff and Hakstol are both exceptionally qualified candidates for the award, the favorite has to be Montgomery, the Bruins’ head coach. Despite the disappointment of the Bruins’ first-round playoff exit, Montgomery’s work with the Bruins is undeniably worthy of recognition. He managed the veteran team to the winningest regular season in NHL history, breaking numerous records en route to the Presidents’ Trophy.
Making that success even more impressive is the fact that this year was Montgomery’s first behind the bench in Boston. He took on the challenge of filling 2020 Jack Adams Award winner Bruce Cassidy’s shoes and delivered an all-time great regular season.
Although a Stanley Cup would undoubtedly have been the more desirable reward for his efforts this season, Montgomery nonetheless is in a prime position to take home one of the highest individual honors an NHL coach can receive.
Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Minor Transactions: 05/05/23
The NHL second round continues today with Game Two between the New Jersey Devils and Carolina Hurricanes. After a disheartening 5-1 loss in Game One, tonight is an important opportunity for the Devils to tie the series and head back to New Jersey on stable ground, while the Hurricanes will look to take a convincing 2-0 series lead into their set of away games in Newark.
The AHL playoffs are also underway, and their slate of games is highlighted by an all-important fifth game between Seattle Kraken affiliate Coachella Valley Firebirds and the Colorado Eagles, the Colorado Avalanche’s affiliate. Elsewhere in the hockey world, Great Britain earned promotion to the 2024 IIHF World Championships via a gold medal-winning victory over Italy in the IIHF Division 1A World Championships.
As these North American playoffs continue, many teams across the hockey world have begun their offseason work. We’ll keep track of those moves here.
- Former Vancouver Canuck Linden Vey, a two-time KHL All-Star and champion in both Russia and Switzerland, is moving on to Germany to continue his professional career. Adler Mannheim have signed the 31-year-old forward to a one-year contract. Vey hasn’t played in North America since 2016-17 but has firmly established himself as a star in the Euro hockey circuit. He led the KHL’s Kazakh club Barys Astana in scoring with 41 points in 57 games this season and will now join other former NHLers in Jyrki Jokipakka, John Gilmour, and Tom Kuhnhackl as a new Mannheim signing.
- Ottawa Senators prospect Viktor Lodin is reportedly headed back to Sweden, according to SportExpressen’s Johan Svensson. Svensson reports that the SHL’s IK Oskarshamn will sign Lodin to a two-year contract, completing his return to Sweden after a little over one season in North America. Lodin, a 2019 fourth-round pick, signed an entry-level deal with the Senators in 2021. Lodin was a key piece helping Timra IK earn promotion to the SHL that year, so following his entry-level contract signing the Senators loaned Lodin back to Timra, where he would help them avoid relegation back to HockeyAllsvenskan. He then crossed the Atlantic and had a blistering hot start to his North American career, potting eight points in 10 AHL games and earning his first NHL game. But now he’s headed back to his home country after enduring a difficult campaign this year, a season that ended in February and included enduring a hard hit from Arber Xhekaj in a rookie tournament preseason game.
- IK Oskarshamn also officially signed a player today, acquiring former Vancouver Canucks prospect Lukas Jasek. The 25-year-old Czech winger is fresh off of a strong two-year run with Liiga’s Lahti Pelicans, including these past Liiga playoffs where his 13 points in 17 games helped the Pelicans reach the Liiga finals. Jasek spent parts of four seasons playing in the AHL with the Utica Comets but ultimately made the choice to return to Europe after failing to gain traction in the American league. Now, he’s headed to the SHL where he could be counted on as one of his team’s top scorers.
- Recently-promoted SHL side MoDo Hockey Ornskoldsvik have made a significant signing to support their efforts next season to avoid relegation back down to HockeyAllsvenskan. They have added former NHL top prospect David Rundblad on a two-year contract. The 32-year-old blueliner spent this past season playing for Karpat in the Finnish Liiga, where he scored 26 points in 60 games. Rundblad is a former Salming Trophy winner, which is the award given to the SHL’s defenseman of the year, and will be one of the top defensemen in MoDo’s lineup next season. The 2014-15 Stanley Cup Champion has scored 73 points in 153 career games at Sweden’s top level and before 2022-23 had spent six consecutive seasons in the KHL.
- After failing to carve out a consistent role in a crowded crease with the AHL’s Wilkes-Barre Scranton Penguins, Pittsburgh Penguins goalie prospect Filip Lindberg has made the choice to head overseas. The 24-year-old starred in the UMass Minutemen’s NCAA championship season in 2020-21 but struggled this season after a strong start to his AHL career last year. He posted a .896 save percentage in 20 games this season, the worst of the Penguins’ three main AHL goalies. He’s now made the choice to sign in a top European league, inking a two-year deal with TPS Turku in Finland’s Liiga. A strong performance in Turku could help him return to North America on stronger footing, should he still want to chase down eventually becoming an NHL goaltender.
- Former QMJHL star netminder Samuel Harvey has signed with Lukko of the Finnish Liiga, finalizing a significant step up for his career after he led HC Bolzano on a run to the ICEHL finals this past season. It’s a significant opportunity for Harvey, as the competition level in Liiga is higher than what he faced in Italy. Harvey’s campaign in Bolzano was his first as a European pro, having split 2021-22 between the ECHL’s Fort Wayne Komets and AHL’s San Jose Barracuda.
- Lukko has made another signing, inking twin brothers Pathrik Westerholm and Ponthus Westerholm to contracts for next season. The pair have a sort of Sedin-like chemistry that has established them as quality contributors in the SHL, where they have spent the last three seasons playing for the Malmo Redhawks. The pair has played for Lukko before, a strong 2019-20 campaign that saw them rank second and third in team scoring behind current Columbus Blue Jacket Justin Danforth. Now, they’ll head back to Liiga hoping to help Lukko win a league title.
- Grizzlys Wolfsburg have made an aggressive push to improve their team after losing in Game Seven of the DEL Semifinals to the league’s eventual champions. The team has announced that they have signed two-time DEL champion and Eisbaren Berlin star Matt White to a one-year contract. White, 33, has scored at a point-per-game rate in Berlin for the last three seasons and has extensive professional experience. He’s a former Nashville Predators farmhand who was a solid scorer in the AHL and has brought offensive production nearly everywhere he’s played. While a return to North America for the former USA Hockey Junior Player of the Year is likely off the table at this stage of his career, this signing gives White the chance to add some more hardware to his trophy cabinet in Germany’s top pro league.
- Liiga’s Assat Pori have signed former Quebec Rampart Martin Lefebvre to a one-year contract. Lefebvre is coming off of an extremely successful season, a year where he won a Norwegian Championship with the Stavanger Oilers and also was named the league’s Player of the Year. The 30-year-old blueliner’s highest-level professional experience came in 2018-19 when he played for Krefeld Pinguine in the DEL, and now his run of success in one of Europe’s lower-level pro leagues has earned him a chance in one of the continent’s top competitions.
Washington Capitals Sign Michael Sgarbossa To Two-Year Contract Extension
The Washington Capitals have signed forward Michael Sgarbossa to a two-year, two-way contract extension, according to CapFriendly. The deal reportedly has a league-minimum $775k AAV and a hefty $525k min0r-league salary. It represents a small raise for Sgarbossa, who took home a $500k AHL salary this past season.
This contract is a significant guarantee to a player who has been the best player on the Capitals’ AHL affiliate, the Hershey Bears, for several years. The 30-year-old is a two-time AHL All-Star who has 393 points in 530 career games in the American league. The former Sudbury Wolves star has filled in as NHL depth on 65 occasions across his 11-year professional career, and scored 16 career NHL points.
This season, Sgarbossa has been the Bears’ top scorer with 58 points in 60 games. He’s led Hershey to the AHL’s Atlantic Division Finals, with his three points helping push Hershey past the Charlotte Checkers. Sgarbossa has played for the Bears since 2018-19, and seems to have found his long-term role as a top-of-the-lineup Hershey Bear and priority call-up for the Capitals.
In a league where stability can be hard to find, this two-year contract extension serves as a nice reward for Sgarbossa’s strong play, as well as an important investment by the Capitals and their AHL affiliate in the success of Washington’s player development pipeline.
Tampa Bay Lightning Sign Michael Eyssimont To Two-Year Contract Extension
The Tampa Bay Lightning have announced that forward Michael Eyssimont has been re-signed to a two-year, one-way contract extension. Per the team release, the deal carries an $800k AAV.
The Lightning acquired Eyssimont, 26, in a trade with the San Jose Sharks a few months ago. Before that point, Eyssimont had been claimed off of waivers from the Winnipeg Jets by San Jose. He was set to become a Group Six unrestricted free agent, meaning this contract extension keeps Eyssimont from testing the open market.
Eyssimont is a 2016 fourth-round pick who brings considerable energy to any line he plays on. A former top scorer at St. Cloud State in the NCAA, Eyssimont three middling seasons with the Ontario Reign in the AHL, seasons where he failed to establish himself as a true NHL option.
Eyssimont signed with the Jets in the summer of 2021 and took a step forward with their AHL affiliate, the Manitoba Moose. Eyssimont scored 42 points in 58 games with Manitoba and earned the right to make his NHL debut. This season, Eyssimont only spent nine games in the AHL before being called up to Winnipeg in November. After earning another shot in the NHL, Eyssimont didn’t look back, turning in quality play for the Jets.
Winnipeg attempted to send him back down to the Moose in January but at that point, Eyssimont had shown enough at the NHL level to entice another club to claim him on waivers. The Sharks did exactly that, and Eyssimont turned in a healthy eight points in 20 games in San Jose before being dealt to the Lightning, a team with designs on competing for the Stanley Cup.
While the Lightning fell in the first round to the Toronto Maple Leafs, Eyssimont’s individual season was far from a disappointment.
In just one season Eyssimont went from little-known AHLer to a well-regarded bottom-six energy player for one of the NHL’s most highly-regarded franchises.
His new contract is a one-way deal, helping his odds of remaining in the NHL for next season, although if he continues to play as he has recently finding a spot on coach Jon Cooper’s roster shouldn’t be a major issue.
For Tampa Bay, this contract locks in a bottom-six player at a highly affordable price. Should Eyssimont take another step forward in his game next season, the two-year term of this contract allows the Lightning to retain him on their roster at an $800k price tag.
It’s a solid bet for Tampa Bay’s front office to make, as well as a nice reward for a hard-working player who has only recently established himself as an NHLer.
Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Nashville Predators Sign Fedor Svechkov To ELC
The Nashville Predators have signed one of their top prospects, inking 2021 19th overall pick Fedor Svechkov to a three-year entry-level deal. The financial terms of the contract were not included in the official announcement.
Svechkov, who turned 20 last month, is a Russian center who has thus far spent his entire hockey career in his home country. Up until his first season as a Nashville prospect, Svechkov played for Lada Togliatti in his home city of Tolyatti. In his draft season, he scored 15 points in 15 games at Russia’s junior level and potted an impressive 15 points in 38 games playing against men in the VHL, Russia’s second-highest level of hockey.
Svechkov’s positive traits (namely his polished two-way game) made him a highly-touted prospect at that year’s draft, and he was ranked sixth among international skaters by NHL Central Scouting. After he was selected 19th overall, Svechkov was traded to SKA St. Petersburg, where he made his KHL debut and scored 31 points in 30 VHL games.
In a move that helped him see more regular time in the KHL, Svechkov was traded last summer to Spartak Moscow in a major trade that landed top Carolina Hurricanes prospect Alexander Nikishin in St. Petersburg. The move allowed Svechkov to play in 27 KHL games this past season, and although he registered just four points it’s worth noting that Svechkov’s role steadily increased as the year went on.
Now with this entry-level deal signed, Svechkov will begin his career with the Predators’ organization and begin to acclimate himself to North American ice. While he’ll in all likelihood get a chance to compete for a roster spot in Nashville, it seems the most prudent choice for his development would be to get some experience under his belt beforehand in the AHL with the Milwaukee Admirals.
Regardless of where he ultimately begins his season in the fall, this signing brings a talented player into the fold for a re-tooling Predators team and could give AHL fans in Milwaukee the chance to watch one of Nashville’s top prospects in action.
Boston Bruins Sign Matthew Poitras To ELC
The Boston Bruins have signed forward Matthew Poitras to a three-year entry-level contract starting next season with a cap hit of $870,000, the team announced today.
Poitras, 19, is coming off a wildly successful season with the OHL’s Guelph Storm, where he recorded 95 points (16 goals, 79 assists) in 63 games. He ranked second in the league in assists and was tied for fifth in scoring.
Poitras also had a productive rookie season with Guelph in 2021-22, tallying 50 points (21 goals, 29 assists) in 68 games. The 5-foot-11, 180-pound forward was selected by the Bruins in the second round, 54th overall, of the 2022 NHL Draft.
Born in Brooklin, Ontario, Poitras is an incredibly cerebral center that plays a surgical game, identifying small gaps in the ice to escape defenders and make passes. It’s a style that tracks to translate well to NHL ice, where Poitras will have much less space and time to maneuver around the rink.
Poitras has only played two seasons of junior hockey, however, with his rookie campaign stripped due to the COVID pandemic. In all likelihood, he’s headed back to Guelph for another season of OHL hockey, looking to potentially surpass the 100-point mark in a single season. He would be the first Storm player to do so since Nate Schnarr in 2018-19.
Poitras’ contract is eligible for an entry-level slide due to his age, meaning if he plays less than 10 NHL games next season, the beginning of his contract will defer to the 2024-25 season.
Matthew Knies Likely Out For Second Round
Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe told reporters today that forward Matthew Knies sustained a concussion in Game 2 of the team’s Second Round series against the Florida Panthers and is unlikely to return for the remainder of the series.
Keefe has already ruled Knies out for Games 3 and 4 as Toronto tries to battle back from a 2-0 series deficit. Knies was injured on contact with Panthers forward Sam Bennett in the first period of last night’s game, skating one shift before leaving the game for good. Bennett was assessed a fine today for a separate incident in the game involving Toronto winger Michael Bunting.
Knies, who just played his 10th NHL game combined between the regular season and playoffs, had registered four points through six previous games for Toronto in the postseason. He’d moved further and further up the lineup with strong play, earning ice time alongside Auston Matthews. Needless to say, it’s a significant loss for Toronto.
The injury opens up opportunity for Calle Jarnkrok to slot back into a top-line role alongside Matthews. Jarnkrok looked more than comfortable in that role down the stretch of the regular season and for a few games against the Tampa Bay Lightning in the first round, helping Toronto gain some of their most dominant shifts of the series.
Hockey Canada Releases Initial 2023 World Championship Roster
Hockey Canada has released the initial complement of 20 players that will represent their country at the 2023 IIHF Men’s World Championships next week in Finland.
It’s a more experienced roster than their American counterparts released, at least in terms of current NHL caliber. In net, they’re likely the most well-set team in the tournament, with projected rookie sensation Devon Levi sharing the crease with Montreal Canadien Sam Montembeault, who had a strong season in a tandem role with Jake Allen.
While 2023 presumptive first-overall selection Connor Bedard won’t join the team, likely to avoid risking injuries prier to his rookie season in the NHL, projected second-overall pick Adam Fantilli will. After capturing the Hobey Baker award in what’s likely his only season at the University of Michigan, Fantilli will join seasoned NHL veterans such as Milan Lucic, Scott Laughton, and Tyler Toffoli as Canada goes for gold at the Worlds.
Their defense is highlighted by MacKenzie Weegar. Although he had a tough season in Calgary, he’s not far removed from being a top 20 defender in the world and should make a significant impact at the tournament. Youngsters Pierre-Olivier Joseph and Justin Barron will also get a chance to shine for the Canadians.
The full 20-player roster is as follows:
F Cody Glass
F Jack McBain
F Milan Lucic
F Peyton Krebs
F Scott Laughton
F Jack Quinn
F Jake Neighbours
F Lawson Crouse
F Tyler Toffoli
F Sammy Blais
F Joe Veleno
F Adam Fantilli
D Pierre-Olivier Joseph
D Justin Barron
D MacKenzie Weegar
D Tyler Myers
D Ethan Bear
D Jake Walman

