Buffalo Sabres Recall Jeremy Davies

The Buffalo Sabres have announced the recall of defenseman Jeremy Davies from the team’s AHL affiliate, the Rochester Americans.

The move comes after Owen Power was a last-minute health-related scratch for the team’s game against the Colorado Avalanche. Defenseman Jacob Bryson is also dealing with his own lower-body injury.

Davies, has been recalled by the Sabres before but has yet to make his debut for the club. He’s spent most of the year with their AHL affiliate in Rochester, where he has five points in 19 games. Davies has played in a top-four role in Rochester and is used in a supporting role on both special teams units.

Originally a New Jersey Devils late-round pick, Davies turned pro with the Nashville Predators after a three-year collegiate career at Northeastern University. Over the course of three seasons in the Predators organization, Davies got into 22 NHL games, scoring three assists.

Last year Davies spent the bulk of his time with the Predators’ AHL affiliate, the Milwaukee Admirals, scoring 31 points in 54 games. That was a performance that earned him a $750k one-year, two-way deal with the Sabres this summer. Davies will be an arbitration-eligible restricted free agent at the end of the season.

New York Islanders Activate Kyle Palmieri

Yesterday, as part of our coverage of Adam Pelech‘s placement on injured reserve, we covered how the New York Islanders were nearing a return date for Kyle Palmieri, who was out with an upper-body injury.

Today, that return date has been finalized, with Palmieri being activated from injured reserve this afternoon. Palmieri, 31, has played in 20 games so far this season, scoring six goals and nine points. He scored 15 goals and 33 points last year, playing on a $5MM cap hit that runs until the summer of 2025.

Palmieri is a veteran of over 700 career NHL games, and his return to full health is a positive development for the Islanders as they look to make their return to the playoffs. Not only does Palmieri chip in an important amount of secondary scoring, but his gritty, hard-working style is also very highly regarded on Long Island by both fans and coach Lane Lambert.

While he may be a few too many years removed from his 30-goal, 50-point days to be relied on for that kind of production anymore, he’s still an experienced forward with an exceptional resume and a wealth of experience.

Detroit Red Wings Re-Assign Steven Kampfer

The Detroit Red Wings recalled veteran blueliner Steven Kampfer from their AHL affiliate, the Grand Rapids Griffins, three days ago. Today, after a stay on the roster that did not include an NHL game played, the Red Wings have re-assigned Kampfer back to the AHL.

This move did not come with any other announcements, although seeing as the Red Wings have a whopping seven players on injured reserve, the natural first place to look to is there. Since this re-assignment leaves the Red Wings with just six healthy defensemen on their active roster, it could be an indication that veteran Olli Maatta is nearing a return to full health.

In sending down Kampfer the Red Wings have sent down an offseason acquisition that has fit in well with their AHL affiliate. Through 19 games so far this season Kampfer has 10 points. The 34-year-old defenseman signed in Detroit after a strong 2021-22 in the KHL. In 46 games for KHL side Ak-Bars Kazan, Kampfer had 30 points.

Kampfer is a veteran of over 230 NHL games and could be in line to play in his first NHL game since 2020-21 if he is called up once again. In the meantime, though, he’ll head back to Grand Rapids and resume his role as one of the team’s top all-around defensemen.

Mason Marchment Fined For Embellishment

The NHL has fined Dallas Stars forward Mason Marchment $2,000 for diving/embellishment following an incident on December 8 against the Ottawa Senators, when Derick Brassard was issued a hooking penalty. The first such incident only results in a warning, meaning this was the second time Marchment had been caught this season.

The original incident was a game against the Colorado Avalanche on November 26.

While a $2,000 fine certainly won’t affect Marchment’s financial standing very much, it should be noted that these punishments escalate and can result in fines for the head coach. If a team is involved in four incidents in a single season, the coach will start having to pay his own penalties. The escalation looks like this:

Citation # Player Fine(s) Head Coach Fine(s)*
1 Warning N/A
2 $2,000 N/A
3 $3,000 N/A
4 $4,000 N/A
5 $5,000 $2,000
6 $5,000 $3,000
7 $5,000 $4,000
8 $5,000 $5,000

*For head coaches, each fine issued to a player on his club counts toward the total.

Costing your coach money certainly isn’t a place most players want to be in, even if you have the security of a multi-year deal.

Axel Rindell Clears Unconditional Waivers

Dec 16: Rindell has cleared and will have his contract terminated. He is expected to join Timra IK for the rest of the season.

Dec 15: The Toronto Maple Leafs have placed Axel Rindell on unconditional waivers for the purpose of a contract termination, according to Chris Johnston of NorthStar Bets. The move would allow Rindell to pursue other opportunities as a free agent, and clear a contract slot for the Maple Leafs, who are currently at the limit of 50.

Rindell, 22, was a sixth-round pick of the Maple Leafs in 2020 that signed his entry-level contract last spring. After three rather successful seasons in Finnish professional hockey, it looked like the team might have had another depth option on their hands.

None of the success that Rindell had overseas has materialized in North America, however, and he was seeing time with the Newfoundland Growlers of the ECHL. In six AHL games, the right-shot defenseman had no points, and will now likely go back to continue his development in Europe.

That doesn’t mean his career is over on this side of the pond, but the contract slot is much more valuable to the Maple Leafs than the potential he was showing.

Toronto has been unable to do things like claim a player off waivers and would have been forced to even up contracts in any trade. Critically, it also would have potentially stopped them from signing a prospect like Matthew Knies at the end of the college season. With that in mind, it is likely that you will see the Maple Leafs clear a few more at some point, whether through deadline deals or additional terminations.

Alex Vlasic Out With Broken Fibula

The Chicago Blackhawks filled up their NHL roster with veteran names this summer so that they could keep top prospects developing in the minor leagues, competing for a Calder Cup championship. Unfortunately, that development only happens if they can stay healthy, and today the Rockford IceHogs announced some bad news. Alex Vlasic will miss six weeks with a right fibula fracture.

Vlasic, 21, is one of the Blackhawks’ top prospects, drafted 43rd overall in 2019. The 6’6″ defenseman spent three seasons at Boston University eliminating the competition’s best players on a nightly basis and didn’t look out of place during a 15-game stint with Chicago at the end of last year This season, the hulking defender had six points in 21 games with the IceHogs and sat second in +/- with a +13 rating. A standout even among a talented young group in Rockford, there are many more NHL games in Vlasic’s future.

He’ll now miss a big chunk of his first full professional season as six weeks will take him out until nearly February. Rockford, 7-1-2 in their last ten, will have to keep up the pace without him, as even with that strong stretch they remain in third place in the Central Division.

Jakub Vrana Enters Follow-Up Phase Of Player Assistance Program

Detroit Red Wings forward Jakub Vrana is now eligible to return to action after moving into the follow-up phase of the NHL/NHLPA player assistance program. According to a press release from the league, his care “continues to be administered” but the dynamic forward’s status has been changed to available.

Vrana entered the program in October and has played just two games this season. He scored 13 goals and 19 points in 26 games in 2021-22, and is on the second season of a three-year, $15.75MM contract with Detroit.

The team has not yet made any statement on when Vrana will be back in the lineup, but given the two months that it has been since he last suited up, it may take some time before he can contribute. The Red Wings are set to play the Ottawa Senators tomorrow afternoon. The team has enough cap space and roster room to activate Vrana if they choose to do so.

Nate Schmidt Placed On Injured Reserve

The Winnipeg Jets have quickly moved Nate Schmidt to injured reserve after he suffered an upper-body injury last night. After the game, head coach Rick Bowness confirmed to Murat Ates of The Athletic that Schmidt had been placed in the concussion protocol. In his place, the team has recalled Ville Heinola under emergency conditions.

Schmidt took a huge hit from Tanner Jeannot and stayed down, while the Nashville Predators forward did not receive a penalty on the play. With him exiting after just 5:30, the Jets leaned heavily on the trio of Josh Morrissey, Neal Pionk, and Brenden Dillon, with the latter even getting some unexpected powerplay time. Morrissey played more than 27 minutes in the overtime win.

It’s a good opportunity for Heinola, even if it does through an injury. The 21-year-old defenseman has been something of a squeaky wheel this season, with his agent publicly acknowledging frustration about how the Jets have used him. The 20th overall pick from 2019 can’t seem to secure any consistent NHL playing time, and has just 27 appearances over parts of four seasons.

Schmidt, meanwhile, had played in 29 games this season, averaging just over 20 minutes a night before exiting last night early.

Edmonton Oilers Looking For Defense

The Edmonton Oilers can score, everyone knew that. Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl rank first and second respectively in league scoring, each well ahead of third-place Tage Thompson. Even Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Zach Hyman are among the league’s best, sitting tied for 13th and 20th in points. The thing they can’t do is keep the puck out of their net.

Last night was a great example. After getting out to a 3-1 lead over the St. Louis Blues halfway through the third period, the ice tilted and the Oilers defense couldn’t handle it. First Robert Thomas, then Vladimir Tarasenko – shorthanded – scored to bring the Blues back and force overtime. A shootout loss and another blown point for Edmonton, who sit fourth in the Pacific Division after 31 games with a 17-13-1 record.

It shouldn’t come as much of a surprise, then, when Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic reports that the Oilers have already been doing some due diligence on defensemen that might be available this season. LeBrun lists John Klingberg and Joel Edmundson among the names that the team has already looked into, though those two in particular offer very different skill sets.

The interesting part of any Oilers trade speculation though, is how their cap situation will be affected. The team currently has some wiggle room but that is provided by Evander Kane‘s placement on long-term injured reserve. When he is ready to return, it would seriously complicate things. Adding a difference-making defenseman would be difficult in that scenario, even with salary retention from a rebuilding club.

That reality will only fuel the Jesse Puljujarvi speculation that continues to suggest this will be his last season with Edmonton. If the team is going to cut bait in the summer, they might as well do it a bit early to clear some cap room.

Either way, the Oilers can’t keep letting games slip through their fingers if they want to be a serious contender in the Western Conference. With Philip Broberg not yet ready to elevate the defense corps, they’ll have to look elsewhere for an answer on the back end.

Snapshots: O’Reilly, Edmundson, Schmidt

While the Toronto Maple Leafs have been among the NHL’s most successful regular-season teams for the past half-decade, playoff success has eluded them. One player who had similarly spent an extended period without any playoff success is Ryan O’Reilly, who spent nearly his first decade in the NHL without making it to the second round. In 2019, though, O’Reilly bucked that career trend, leading the St. Louis Blues to a Stanley Cup victory and winning the Conn Smythe Trophy along the way.

The Maple Leafs want to do the same this spring, and it seems that they view O’Reilly as someone who can help them get there. Per Pierre LeBrun in The Athletic’s first 2022-23 trade board, Toronto has “talked about O’Reilly internally,” debating the prospect of acquiring him from the Blues. (subscription link) While O’Reilly’s scoring numbers have slowed down, Toronto could add him to a center corps that already boasts Auston Matthews and John Tavares, forming what would be likely the best trio of centers in the NHL. He remains a player with a sterling reputation as a playoff performer, and as a pending unrestricted free agent acquiring him would pose no long-term financial complications.

For some other notes from across the NHL:

  • The Montreal Canadiens have been better than expected this season, as they were the NHL’s worst team last year but have hovered around the .500 mark so far in 2022-23. Despite that, the team is still anticipated to engage other teams as a seller in next year’s trade market, and one of the players reportedly garnering interest from other teams is defenseman Joel Edmundson. On TSN’s Insider Trading segment, LeBrun reported that the Edmonton Oilers had interest in adding Edmundson, a 2019 Stanley Cup champion who has taken an important leadership role on a young Canadiens team.
  • The Winnipeg Jets announced tonight that defenseman Nate Schmidt has suffered an upper-body injury, and will not return to their game against the Nashville Predators. Schmidt appeared to suffer the injury after a high hit from Predators forward Tanner Jeannot. The loss of Schmidt costs the Jets one of their top-four defensemen, as he has skated in over 20 minutes per night, including time on the second units of both special teams phases.