Lightning Notes: Hedman, Cernak, Eyssimont, Cirelli
Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman is classified as a game-time decision for tonight’s third game against Toronto, head coach Jon Cooper told reporters including Eduardo A. Encina of the Tampa Bay Times. The veteran, who took part in line rushes with Nick Perbix in the morning skate, will take the pregame skate, a step he was unable to do in Thursday’s second game. While his production was down sharply this season, he still managed 49 points in 76 games while logging nearly 24 minutes a night and he would certainly be a significant boost to a back end that struggled considerably on Thursday night.
More from Tampa Bay:
- Encina also notes that blueliner Erik Cernak isn’t expected to return tonight. He was injured in the opening game of the series after taking a hit to the head from Michael Bunting, a play that earned the winger a three-game suspension. Cernak did not take part in the morning skate. The 25-year-old averaged nearly three hits per game this season while chipping in with 14 points in 70 games. Notably, Cernak also led all Lightning blueliners in shorthanded playing time per game.
- While they won’t get Cernak back, Encina relays that the Lightning will have the option of putting forward Mikey Eyssimont back in the lineup. The 25-year-old suffered a head injury in the series opener. Eyssimont has been a regular most nights on Tampa Bay’s fourth line but with Tanner Jeannot returning on Thursday, it’s not a guarantee that he’ll be suiting up even after being cleared to return.
- TVA Sports’ Renaud Lavoie mentions (Twitter link) that center Anthony Cirelli took part in the morning skate today, a sign that he should be able to suit up tonight. He took a hit from Auston Matthews late in the third in Game Two but it appears it won’t keep him out of action.
Offseason Checklist: Anaheim Ducks
The offseason has arrived for half of the league’s teams that aren’t taking part in the playoffs. It’s time to examine what they will need to accomplish over the coming months. First up is a look at Anaheim.
After a 2021-22 campaign where things didn’t go well, there was hope that the Ducks would take a step forward with their young core continuing to improve. While some of those players did show improvement, it didn’t lead to much success on the ice with some changes already happening. Here’s a look at what’s on the horizon for Anaheim this summer beyond what’s expected to be an exciting draft lottery for them next month with the top odds in the proceedings.
Hire New Coaches
It didn’t take long after the regular season for the Ducks to part ways with Dallas Eakins, a move that many anticipated with the way the year went and the fact his contract came to an end. Anaheim allowed 4.09 goals per game this season, the highest goals-allowed average since the mid-90s which played a big role in them finishing last. That dropped Eakins’ record with Anaheim to 100-147-44 over four seasons which helped lead to the coaching change.
As is typically the case in a situation like this, GM Pat Verbeek is faced with two options. The first is to look for a first-time coach with an eye on being more development-focused to take the team through the rest of their rebuild and perhaps beyond. The other is looking for more of a win-now option to try to coax shorter-term success. That type of hire would need to coincide with the team becoming bigger spenders in free agency this summer which doesn’t seem likely. A first-time or relatively inexperienced bench boss seems like the probable outcome here.
Meanwhile, an NHL head coach isn’t the only vacancy they’ll be looking to fill as for the second straight season, Verbeek will be searching for an AHL bench boss while it’s the third time in a row the franchise has been seeking one. A year ago, he fired Joel Bouchard who had been on the job for just a single season while Roy Sommer opted to retire after one season with the team. They’ll certainly be hoping that the third time will be the charm on that front.
Sign Key RFAs
Anaheim finished this season near the bottom in spending among all NHL teams. That probably won’t be the case in 2023-24 as they have three key restricted free agents to deal with this summer in winger Troy Terry, center Trevor Zegras, and defenseman Jamie Drysdale.
Terry is an example of a bridge contract going as well as possible. Three years ago, he had a total of 81 games under his belt with all of 28 points. Now, he has established himself over the last two seasons as a reliable key scorer, reaching the 60-point mark in each of them, giving him a much better platform to his first year of arbitration eligibility. There aren’t a lot of comparables for players that were role players for a few seasons before emerging as top-line threats but it wouldn’t be surprising to see Terry’s next deal wind up above the $7MM mark on a long-term agreement that buys out several UFA seasons. He won’t be on a heavily team-friendly contract anymore.
As for Zegras, he has positioned himself to try to bypass the bridge deal altogether. While he has had plenty of highlight-worthy plays, he isn’t just good at those as he has also emerged as a legitimate top-six center. Zegras has surpassed the 60-point mark in back-to-back years as well while playing the more premium position down the middle. We’ve seen post-ELC centers around his point total signing around the $8MM mark over the last couple of years so it stands to reason that a long-term deal for Zegras should be near that point as well. Notably, he still has five RFA years remaining; most players coming off their entry-level agreements typically have four years left.
While Zegras should avoid a bridge agreement, the same can’t be said about Drysdale. Injuries limited the 21-year-old to just eight games this season and his rookie campaign saw him suit up just 24 times. Accordingly, he doesn’t even have a year and a half of NHL contests under his belt which would make a long-term agreement that much more difficult. Drysdale figures to be a key cog in Anaheim’s future plans but more time is needed to see how he’s going to develop. A short-term second agreement makes sense all around and he, too, has five RFA years remaining.
Qualify Or Cut
A couple of years ago, it looked like winger Max Comtois was going to be a big part of Anaheim’s future. He was coming off a 33-point season in 55 games, showing signs of becoming a capable power forward along the way. Even so, then-GM Bob Murray opted for caution, giving him a two-year bridge deal.
It’s safe to say that decision worked out for Anaheim as the 24-year-old has struggled considerably since then. This season, Comtois potted just nine goals and ten assists in 64 games with his playing time dipping to a career low while also spending time as a healthy scratch.
Accordingly, at a time when he was supposed to be cementing his case for a long-term agreement, his performance has called into question his future with the team. Comtois is owed a qualifying offer of $2.45MM this summer. Two years ago, it would have seemed unthinkable that the Ducks might want to consider not tendering it but now, it’s something Verbeek will have to consider.
It was previously reported that Comtois was available at the trade deadline with there not being much interest at the time so on the surface, a non-tender might make sense. But is it worth giving him one last look with the hopes that a new coach can help him return to the form of 2021-22 and avoid the potential of him taking that step in another uniform? They have a couple of months to make that choice.
Goalie Decision
The future of John Gibson has been in question for the last few seasons. Here’s a player who was signed to be Anaheim’s long-term franchise goaltender but since that deal kicked in, things just haven’t gone very well for him and while playing for a rebuilding franchise doesn’t help, Gibson has certainly struggled as well.
Over the four years that he has played on this deal, Gibson has a 3.32 GAA and a SV% of .902. He also has led the league in losses in three of those four seasons. Suffice it to say, he hasn’t provided a great return on his $6.4MM AAV. On top of that, the 29-year-old has four years left on that agreement.
Generally speaking, an underachieving player with four years left on his deal wouldn’t have much value on the trade market but are there teams convinced that in a different system and working with a different goalie coach, they can turn him around? It’s possible, especially in a year when the free agent market isn’t exactly booming with plentiful high-end options.
If that’s the case, is the time right for Verbeek and the Ducks to explore a move? Would Gibson himself be open to a move? With the way things are currently trending, it’s definitely a possibility. His value likely isn’t super high with his recent struggles and the remaining term on his contract but if a decent swap presents itself, it wouldn’t be shocking to see them make a move.
If that happens, Anaheim will have to look to add a veteran replacement, either as part of the trade or in a separate acquisition or signing. Lukas Dostal is viewed as their goalie of the future but has just 23 NHL appearances under his belt. Gibson was supposed to be his playing partner for a while to allow Dostal to get acclimated to being a full-time NHL player and if he’s no longer going to be part of the equation, they’ll need another veteran to fill that role, even in a summer where Verbeek will be looking to add young core pieces.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.
Central Notes: Brown, Ehlers, Meyers
When St. Louis picked up Logan Brown in 2021, the hope was that a change of scenery could help get the 2016 first-round pick going. However, he has managed just six goals in 69 games since the swap and has been a frequent healthy scratch. Accordingly, Matthew DeFranks of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch wonders if the Blues will even bother tendering the 25-year-old a qualifying offer this summer. He’s arbitration-eligible and while his offensive numbers aren’t great, he could still ask for a bit more than the minimum in a hearing which might be more than they can realistically afford with a likely tight salary cap situation coming in 2023-24.
More from the Central:
- The Jets are hopeful that winger Nikolaj Ehlers will be available for today’s third game against Vegas, relays Scott Billeck of the Winnipeg Sun. Ehlers, who last weekend declared that he expected to be ready to start the playoffs, hasn’t suited up in the first two games of the series. He’d be a welcome addition to Winnipeg’s lineup as, when healthy, Ehlers was certainly productive this season, collecting 38 points in 45 games despite averaging a career-low 15:39 per contest.
- The Avalanche have recalled center Ben Meyers from AHL Colorado, per the AHL’s transactions log. The 24-year-old played in Tuesday’s series opener against Seattle but didn’t suit up two nights later, resulting in his assignment to the Eagles, one that turned out to be a very quick one. Meyers played in 39 games with the Avs this season, picking up four goals but was much more productive in the minors with 24 points in 30 games.
Connor Bedard Will Not Play In World Championships
Jeff Marek of Sportsnet reports that the presumptive first-overall pick in this year’s upcoming draft, Connor Bedard, will not suit up for Team Canada in the upcoming World Hockey Championships. This indicates that we have seen the last of Bedard for this season, and his next bit of competitive hockey action will be in the NHL next year.
In one of the most incredible junior seasons throughout WHL history, Bedard cemented himself as one of the most important prospects in the game. In 57 games played for the Regina Pats, the captain of the team scored 71 goals and 72 assists, leading Regina to an 11th-place finish in the league. Outside of the WHL, Bedard also led Team Canada in this year’s World Junior Championship, scoring nine goals and 14 assists in only seven games, leading Team Canada to the gold medal.
In an unfortunate end to his likely last season in junior hockey, the Regina Pats were eliminated by the Saskatoon Blades in seven games, eliminating Regina from the WHL playoffs, and ultimately the Memorial Cup playoffs as well. Although losing, it was no fault of Bedard, as the young prospect scored 10 goals and 10 assists in their opening-round matchup.
In just over two weeks, the NHL and its fans will learn who will likely take Bedard first overall in this year’s draft, as the NHL draft lottery is scheduled for May 8th. In recent years, there have been some surprise teams leap into the first-overall slot, but it will most likely fall to either the Anaheim Ducks, Columbus Blue Jackets, or Chicago Blackhawks, as all three teams have over a 10% chance of winning the draft lottery in May.
David Krejci Out For Game Three
Already without captain Patrice Bergeron in their lineup, the Boston Bruins have announced that another veteran center, this time David Krejci, will miss game three with an upper-body injury. At the end of the regular season, Krejci was shut down for the final two games, that time being a lower-body injury.
Delivering on a “Last Dance” style season, the Bruins handily took the NHL’s President’s Trophy, breaking the all-time win record by a team for a single season. Heading into this year’s playoffs, the Bruins were the heavy favorite to eventually win Lord Stanley’s Cup. Unfortunately for the team, they will be without not only two of their best players but two of their best leaders as they play a pivotal game three against the Florida Panthers.
Luckily for the Bruins, after acquiring such players as Dmitry Orlov, Tyler Bertuzzi, and Garnet Hathaway at the trade deadline, they should still reasonably be expected to win this series, but their pathway is becoming a lot more difficult. The Panthers delivered a decisive blow to take game two and will have the benefit of being on home ice for the next two games.
Alexander Romanov, Jesse Puljujarvi Back For Game Three
As the series shifts to New York for game three, both the New York Islanders and Carolina Hurricanes will be receiving reinforcements. Returning for the Islanders will be defenseman Alexander Romanov, and Jesse Puljujarvi returns for the Hurricanes (link). Romanov has been out of New York’s lineup since their April 1st game against the Tampa Bay Lightning, and Puljujarvi has been out of the lineup since their last game of the regular season.
Although the Islanders have played a relatively sound defensive series up to this point, getting Romanov back will allow New York to make things much more difficult on their opposition. Romanov doesn’t score at a rapid pace, but his ability to block shots and deliver serious hits has made him a staple of the Islanders’ back end. In his first season since being acquired from the Montreal Canadiens at last season’s draft, Romanov has played 76 regular season games for the Islanders this season, blocking 129 shots, and making 198 hits.
On the other side of the puck, it is much harder to predict what kind of impact Puljujarvi will make for the Hurricanes. Before joining his new team in Carolina, Puljujarvi skated in 58 games for the Edmonton Oilers, scoring five goals and nine assists. Thinking that a change of scenery might help him reclaim some of his potential of being a fourth overall pick, Puljujarvi only managed to score two points in 17 games in Carolina, neither of which were goals.
To this point in the series, Carolina has a 2-0 lead, winning both games by one goal, including an overtime win in game two. This season, the Hurricanes were a middle-of-the-pack team in terms of goal scoring, and with the Islanders’ style of play being one of the more frustrating to matchup against, this Metropolitan battle could tighten up in the next couple of days.
Tom Gulitti of the NHL was the first to report that Romanov and Puljujarvi would be back for game three.
Snapshots: Wolf, Devils, Canucks Cap Overages
One of the major factors that sunk the Calgary Flames’ 2022-23 season (besides the stunning production decline from team offensive centerpiece Jonathan Huberdeau) was the decline in goaltending quality coach Darryl Sutter’s team received. Jacob Markstrom was a Vezina Trophy contender in his first season as a Flame, posting a .922 save percentage in 63 games. Even backup Daniel Vladar was good, putting up a .906 through 23 starts after his offseason trade from the Boston Bruins. This season, though, both regressed significantly and played to save percentages below .900.
That reality facing the Flames in the crease makes today’s announcement that Calgary’s top prospect Dustin Wolf, 22, was named the league’s Les Cunningham Award Winner. (MVP) Wolf is the American League’s youngest MVP since Jason Spezza won it after his 117-point 2004-05 season, and it comes after he posted a near-bulletproof .932 save percentage in 55 games played. As FloHockey’s Chris Peters notes, this is the fourth straight season Wolf has won Goaltender of the Year in the league he’s played in, and his lowest save percentage as a junior or pro player has been a .924. Although there is much uncertainty facing the Flames organization in the aftermath of former GM Brad Treliving’s departure, Wolf is undoubtedly a player to be excited about.
Some other notes from across the NHL:
- According to calculations from PuckPedia, the New Jersey Devils will need to deal with an overage charge to next year’s salary cap. Because the team used long-term injured reserve to finish the season above the salary cap, performance bonuses earned by Dawson Mercer and Kevin Bahl will be applied to next year’s cap. As a result, the Devils will have a charge of $422.5K to work around. While that’s not a major number in the grand scheme of the salary cap, assuming the cap does not rise for another season, it will remain notable as long as teams look to maximize every last dollar of cap space.
- Another team that will have an overage penalty applied to their salary cap next season is the Vancouver Canucks. As PuckPedia notes, while offseason signing Andrei Kuzmenko provided incredible value for his $950k cap hit, that excellent performance actually earned him $850k in bonus dollars, which will result in a Canucks cap charge for next season. While that’s definitely not ideal for the Canucks’ financial picture, Kuzmenko scored 39 goals and 74 points this season and is under contract for another two seasons at a $5.5MM cap hit. It’d be hard to find a single team in the NHL who wouldn’t put up with a small cap overage penalty in order to have that type of production in their lineup.
Minor Transactions: 04/21/23
It’s another busy day in the world of hockey, with four NHL first-round Game Threes set to be played. The New York Islanders host the Carolina Hurricanes with the goal of avoiding falling into a 3-0 hole, the Florida Panthers host the Patrice Bergeron-less Boston Bruins in Sunrise, the Minnesota Wild are taking on the Dallas Stars in Filip Gustavsson‘s return to the crease, and the Los Angeles Kings will be looking to hold off the Edmonton Oilers without Blake Lizotte in their lineup.
In Europe, the top Central European professional league with teams in Austria, Hungary, Slovenia, and Italy wrapped up its season today. A late third-period game-winning goal from Nikolaj Meyer pushed EHC Red Bull Salzburg past HC Bolzano Foxes to win the club’s second title in as many years. In Germany, EHC Red Bull Munich took a 3-1 lead in the DEL finals against ERC Ingolstadt, powered by an impressive shutout performance from number-one netminder Mathias Niederberger. In Sweden, former Philadelphia Flyers prospect David Bernhardt‘s overtime winner stunned a sold-out crowd in Stockholm to give MoDo Hockey Ornskoldsvik a 2-1 series lead against Djurgarden in the HockeyAllsvenskan finals, with a place in the SHL on the line.
While all these important games are still being played, teams whose seasons have ended are getting a head start on offseason work. Multiple players have already signed with new teams, inked extensions, or announced departures. We’ll keep track of those moves here.
- A talented Buffalo Sabres prospect might be leaving the organization after just a year in North America. Klaus Zaugg of Swiss news outlet Watson reports that Lukas Rousek could be headed back to Europe, and has been identified by HC Ambri-Piotta as a potential replacement for former Ottawa Senator Filip Chlapik. Rousek, a 2019 sixth-rounder, had an impressive 2022-23 season for the Rochester Americans, scoring 56 points in 70 games. It was a major improvement from the four points in 19 games he posted last season and is more in line with how he played in his native Czechia for HC Sparta Praha. Despite that performance, only got into two NHL games (scoring two points) so he could now be opting for a return to Europe, and his destination could be in Switzerland.
- Recently-relegated SHL side Brynas IF have signed a former Anaheim Ducks prospect for their upcoming promotion push: Jack Kopacka. The 25-year-old signs a one-year contract coming from Kristianstads IK in HockeyAllsvenskan, the league Brynas will now be competing in. This past year was Kopacka’s first playing pro hockey overseas, having spent the past four years before that point in the AHL and ECHL. The 2016 top-1o0 selection scored 27 points in 40 games this season and will help bolster Brynas’ attack after the departure of Dmytro Timashov.
- Former Chicago Blackhawk and longtime Liiga and KHL scorer Petri Kontiola is retiring, according to Jatkoika’s Pasi Jokinen. The 38-year-old has had an illustrious playing career as an overseas pro, compiling a combined 744 points in 1,068 games in the KHL, Liiga, and AHL. Kontiola, who spent the last two seasons in Tampere with Ilves, has taken home quite a few honors over the course of his career: he’s an Olympic Bronze Medal Winner (2014), three-time IIHF World Championship Silver Medalist, and an All-Star in each of the three non-NHL pro leagues he’s played in.
- Former Winnipeg Jets farmhand Kevin Clark is leaving the DEL’s Berlin Polar Bears a year early, having the second year of his contract terminated by mutual agreement. The 35-year-old won the DEL title in his first year in the German capital, and scored 20 goals and 37 points this season. The 2014-15 DEL Player of the Year could now be looking elsewhere to continue his pro career, and would likely be a player of interest to quite a few clubs.
- Breakout SHLer Okar Stahl-Lyrenas is transferring from Rogle BK to HV71, per a team announcement. The 25-year-old Champions Hockey League winner has enjoyed a fast rise over the past three years and seems to have now established himself as a scoring option in Sweden’s top division. He scored 25 goals and 44 points in 2020-21 with Mora IK in HockeyAllsvenskan, earning a spot next season at Rogle. His first year in the SHL last season was uneven (18 points in 47 games) but showed promise, and this season he had a breakout, potting 15 goals and 33 points in 46 games. Now, he joins HV71, a club where his 33 points would have ranked third in team scoring, meaning he may have more to work with than at Rogle where his 33 points ranked second-highest on the team.
- The SHL’s Orebro has announced the signing of defenseman Robin Norell, a former Chicago Blackhawks prospect, from IK Oskarshamn. Norell is an undersized defensive defenseman who has skated in nearly 400 SHL games but produced single-digit points production in all but one season. His career highlights include helping his hometown club, Djurgarden, earn promotion to the SHL in 2013-14 and a 2021-22 season with Oskarshamn where he featured in a run to the SHL semifinals.
- Big six-foot-three blueliner Henry Haase, a veteran of nearly 500 DEL games, will not be returning to his club of the last five years, the Augsburg Panthers. Per a team release, Haase is eyeing a return closer to home, which for him is Berlin. Haase developed into a professional with the Berlin Polar Bears’ junior teams and eventually broke into their first team around 2012, helping them win a DEL title in 2012-13. Haase ended up playing three seasons as a regular in Berlin before signing with Dusseldorf in 2016, and now he could be headed back there just in time for his 30th birthday.
- In terms of players confirmed to be making a return to Berlin, the Polar Bears announced the signing of Blaine Byron, a former Pittsburgh Penguins draft pick who scored 42 points in 43 games in the 2021-22 DEL season. His 14 points in 11 playoff games contributed significantly to Berlin’s 2021-22 title, and after the success of his first overseas pro campaign, he signed with IK Oskarshamn in the SHL. He only managed 12 points in 26 games, though, so despite signing a two-year deal with the Swedish side he’s now headed back to his old stomping grounds to see if he can help lift the Polar Bears back to the DEL championship.
- Five-year college hockey blueliner and former NAHL Defenseman of the Year Eric Gotz has landed his first professional contract. He signed a one-year deal with Krefeld Pinguine, a club in Germany’s DEL2. Gotz scored 15 points in 36 games for Vermont this season and will look to help Krefeld get back to the top division of German hockey, the level they were relegated from last season.
- Former Toronto Maple Leafs prospect Nicolas Mattinen, a big six-foot-five blueliner, has earned a contract in the DEL after a strong first season in European professional hockey. Mattinen is headed to the DEL’s Augsburg Panthers after a year spent with VSV EC in the ICEHL. He scored 42 points in 46 games and clearly excelled at that level of hockey, paving his way to the new challenge he’ll face next fall in the DEL.
This page will be updated throughout the day
Blake Lizotte Out For Game Three, Latest On Kevin Fiala
The Los Angeles Kings will remain without Kevin Fiala for tonight’s game against the Edmonton Oilers, according to team reporter Zach Dooley. In addition, center Blake Lizotte has suffered a lower-body injury, and will also miss tonight’s game. Kings head coach Todd McLellan said Gabriel Vilardi would shift to the third-line center slot vacated by Lizotte.
This update on Fiala is not wholly unexpected since he has yet to play in his team’s first-round playoff series. It is nonetheless unfortunate news for Kings fans, though, as Fiala is the team’s most important offensive generator, having posted 72 points in 69 regular-season games.
Fiala last played in a March 1st victory over the Seattle Kraken, a game where he posted a goal and an assist. Before his injury, Fiala had compiled a stretch of eight points in six games, and that’s exactly the sort of production the Kings may need to keep up with Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, and the high-flying Oilers offense.
Lizotte’s absence, unlike Fiala’s, is more unexpected. The energetic undrafted forward has played in both of the Kings’ playoff games this year and is an important bottom-sixer for the team. He set a career-high scoring 11 goals and 34 points this season and is a valued second-unit penalty killer.
Since the Kings are facing an Oilers team who boast one of the most lethal power plays in recent NHL history, the loss of Lizotte heightens Los Angeles’ need to remain disciplined this series.
While the fact that they are heading back to Los Angeles with a tied series and a win on the road should inspire confidence for the Kings, this new absence of Lizotte will undoubtedly make taking a series lead on the Oilers a more daunting task.
Minnesota Wild Reassign Sammy Walker
The Minnesota Wild have reassigned forward Sammy Walker back to their AHL affiliate, the Iowa Wild.
The Athletic’s Michael Russo reported earlier today that top Wild center Joel Eriksson Ek left today’s practice with the non-scratches, hinting that he could be nearing a return to the ice. Walker had been on the Wild’s roster as a reserve player to help deal with Eriksson Ek’s absence, so this reassignment combined with Russo’s note from practice points to the increasingly likely possibility that Eriksson Ek is getting ready to play again.
Of course, another possible factor motivating this reassignment is the fact that AHL Iowa is fighting to keep their season alive tonight against the Rockford IceHogs. A Rocco Grimaldi overtime winner for Rockford in the first game of the AHL’s best-of-three playoff qualifying series put Iowa on the brink of elimination, so seeing as Walker has been one of their top scoring forwards this season it makes sense that the organization would want him back in the AHL to keep Iowa’s Calder Cup hopes alive.
That being said, NHL considerations always come first so it’s more likely that this reassignment has to do with Eriksson Ek’s progress than the team sacrificing a reserve insurance player in order to help out their affiliate in a qualifying-round series.
Should Eriksson Ek make his return soon, he would provide the Wild with a major boost in their currently deadlocked first-round series against the Dallas Stars. His 61 points this season were tops among Wild centers and his defensive play has drawn rave reviews from across the league for years now.
As for Walker, he’ll now get the chance to help AHL Iowa save their season. The former Minnesota Gopher has scored 27 goals and 48 points in 56 AHL games, an impressive performance for a rookie professional. He didn’t get into either of the Wild’s two playoff games, and last played in the NHL on April 13th.
