Training Camp Notes: Stone, Biakabutuka, Mangiapane

Injury troubles plagued the Vegas Golden Knights last season, something they can ill-afford a repeat of in 2022-23. There’s some good news on that front regarding one of their star players, though, as right wing Mark Stone skated in a contact jersey today for the first time during training camp.

The Golden Knights will count on Stone to have a rebound year as their captain, especially with their offensive depth thinning. The 2021 Selke Trophy finalist and 2019 runner-up played in just 37 games due to injury last season, registering nine goals, 21 assists, and 30 points. Hopefully, the serious back injuries that plagued him last season don’t become a long-term issue for the 30-year-old.

  • Somewhat of a rarity these days, a player attending camp on an amateur tryout might do well enough to earn a contract within the organization. Detroit Hockey Now’s Kevin Allen notes that the Red Wings have been impressed with defenseman Jérémie Biakabutuka, with head coach Derek Lalonde complimenting his skating and compete level. The 20-year-old is set to return to the QMJHL’s Charlottetown Islanders next season but could receive an NHL entry-level contract from Detroit or receive an AHL offer from the Grand Rapids Griffins when his season is over.
  • Calgary Flames winger Andrew Mangiapane was a full participant in camp today after missing the first four days of group skates with what the team called a “minor lower-body injury.” He made his return to scrimmages skating on a line with newcomer Nazem Kadri, a role he’s likely to reprise in the regular season as well. Mangiapane is coming off a career-high 35 goals and 55 points.

Philadelphia Flyers Add Cal O’Reilly On PTO

In conjunction with announcing today’s training camp cuts, Philadelphia Flyers general manager Chuck Fletcher also announced that the team has added veteran forward Cal O’Reilly to camp on a professional tryout (PTO).

O’Reilly, 35, hasn’t played in the NHL since a one-game call-up to the Minnesota Wild in 2017-18. Before that, however, he spent quite a bit of time bouncing up and down between the NHL and AHL. After the Nashville Predators selected him 150th overall in the 2005 NHL Draft, he stayed in the organization through the beginning of the 2011-12 season. In Nashville, O’Reilly never managed to crack the lineup full-time but did finish his Predators career with 11 goals, 24 assists and 35 points in 85 games. Just a few weeks into the season, though, Nashville dealt O’Reilly to the then-Phoenix Coyotes for a fourth-round pick, essentially moving up one round in total value while also getting a solid, yet brief NHL stint out of O’Reilly. After just five points in 22 games, though, the Coyotes attempted to waive O’Reilly, whom the Pittsburgh Penguins claimed for the remainder of the season, where he had one assist in six games.

After playing 33 games in that busy 2011-12 season, O’Reilly would only see NHL ice again in three more seasons: 20 games with the Buffalo Sabres in 2015-16, another 11 games with the Sabres in 2016-17, and that one-game call-up in Minnesota in 2017-18. O’Reilly did remain in the Wild organization for another season after that, though, serving as the captain of the AHL’s Iowa Wild from 2017 to 2019.

O’Reilly’s technically been in the Flyers organization ever since, spending the last three seasons as a leader for the AHL’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms. Already signed to an AHL contract for 2022-23, O’Reilly will enter his third straight season as the Phantoms’ captain. His 53 points last season were his most since he scored 67 points in 67 games during his last season in Iowa.

With Philadelphia’s depth continuing to get hit by injuries, the Flyers will have O’Reilly in camp to evaluate if he’s still NHL call-up material at age 35. He essentially comes in (maybe just temporarily) to replace one of the team’s other PTO additions, Artem Anisimov, who currently is day-to-day with a lower-body injury.

Snapshots: Extension Talks, Sutter, Border Mandates

There are several players around the league that have been involved in extension talks over the summer, including the likes of MacKenzie Weegar and Bo Horvat. Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet touches on several of these situations in the latest 32 Thoughts podcast, giving his thoughts on whether in-season negotiation will be an option.

In Weegar’s case, Friedman notes that there is a feeling that once the season begins, extension talks will be shelved to the end of the year. The 28-year-old defenseman is an unrestricted free agent at the end of the season and is coming off a career-best 44 points last season. While Horvat’s situation is a bit murkier, Friedman believes that David Pastrnak of the Boston Bruins is open to talking throughout the year.

  • Another important member of the Calgary Flames is in the final year of his contract but he isn’t a player. Friedman believes that Darryl Sutter will likely be extended at some point, as his three-year deal approaches expiry. Sutter was hired in 2021, making the first year of his deal the end of the 2020-21 season, and has had a strong effect since returning to Calgary. Under his leadership, the team went from missing the playoffs with a sub .500 record in 2020-21 to winning the Pacific Division and reaching the second round.
  • The Canadian government is dropping all vaccine requirements for non-citizens entering the country as of October 1, meaning that unvaccinated players in leagues like the NHL, NBA, and MLB should now be able to travel with their teams for games in Canada. Last season, for instance, the Detroit Red Wings were forced to leave Tyler Bertuzzi behind when they went on road trips north of the border, something that may well have cost him the team lead in scoring, given the pace he produced at through 68 games. Hopefully, the league will not need to deal with these limitations in the future, as health officials continue to reduce restrictions.

Brock Boeser Undergoes Hand Surgery

After signing a new three-year, $19.95MM contract this summer, there was plenty of excitement around a potential bounce-back season for Brock Boeser and the Vancouver Canucks. Unfortunately, his debut will have to wait, as Boeser suffered a hand injury at practice on Saturday and underwent surgery today. He is out for three to four weeks.

The 2021-22 season was something of a disappointment for Boeser, who dealt with injury and the death of his father. He still scored 23 goals in 71 games, but his 46 points were the worst per-game pace of his career. With contract security in tow, it seemed likely that he could make it back to the dynamic offensive piece he was in years past.

Now, with another training camp disrupted by injury, it’s not clear what the Canucks will receive from Boeser for the first part of the year at least. A hand injury is certainly not what you want to hear for a player that relies so much on his shot, but hopefully, the three-week timeline has him back on the ice after missing just a few games.

With Boeser out – and Ilya Mikheyev, who is still being evaluated – there will be some minutes up for grabs in the top six. General manager Jim Rutherford did tell Rick Dhaliwal of CHEK TV today that Nils Hoglander has impressed him, and that Andrei Kuzmenko still has some adjustments to make with the North American game.

Conor Geekie Returned To WHL

As we now get closer and closer to the start of the regular season, some of the top selections of the 2021 and 2022 drafts will be sent back to their junior teams to continue developing. Making the NHL is a difficult task, and with CHL players under the age of 20, the AHL is not an option due to age restrictions. Today, the Arizona Coyotes have sent Conor Geekie back to the WHL’s Winnipeg ICE, where he will remain for the rest of the season. The team has also sent undrafted netminder Anson Thornton to the Barrie Colts.

Geekie, 18, was the 11th overall pick in this year’s draft, after his outstanding 2021-22 season that saw him score 70 points in 63 games with Winnipeg. He and Matthew Savoie, the ninth overall pick (Buffalo), drive one of the most exciting offensive teams in junior hockey, and should make the ICE a contender once again this year.

Standing 6’3″ but with a game focused more on skill than size, Geekie projects to be a long-time asset down the middle for the Coyotes. At this point in the rebuild, there is no benefit from rushing a player like him, meaning a trip back to junior was always in the cards. Still, it will be interesting to see what kind of forward momentum he can build this year after already dominating most nights as a 17-year-old.

Notably, since he only turned 18 in May, Geekie will not be eligible for the AHL in 2023-24 either, as he will still be under the 20-year-old cutoff. That means the ICE could potentially get him for two more years, should he fail to make the Coyotes again next fall. For now, he’ll likely be a candidate for the Canadian Word Junior team in December, and a top performer all year in the WHL.

Latest On Nic Hague

There are just a handful of restricted free agent negotiations still going on and at least one of them doesn’t appear to be headed to the finish line. According to Jeff Marek of Sportsnet, Nicolas Hague has left Vegas and will start training with the OHL’s Kitchener Rangers tomorrow, the junior team located in his hometown.

Hague, 23, has played 142 games in his NHL career to this point, but hasn’t yet cracked the 19-minute mark for average time on ice. That’s because of the huge minutes that players like Alex Pietrangelo and Shea Theodore log, keeping Hague buried deeper in the lineup than perhaps he could be somewhere else. With the Golden Knights also not in a place to spend much on a multi-year deal because of their cap situation, it’s a difficult needle to thread.

Still, skating with a junior team is certainly not NHL training camp, meaning whenever he does sign, Hague is going to be behind the rest of his competition. As we’ve seen in the past, players who miss training camp are usually slow starters. In the case of a player like William Nylander, who sat out the first part of the season, it was basically a lost year.

Generally, these negotiations are completed by the time the season starts, and with Vegas’ long-term injured reserve issues, they will have more flexibility just before training camp ends. But at this point, it doesn’t seem as though you’ll see the young defenseman on the ice with his teammates for a little while.

Training Camp Cuts: 09/26/22

October is right around the corner and teams are going to start paring down their training camp rosters in preparation for the regular season. The preseason is starting to see more NHL-like lineups, and prospects will be returning to their respective clubs for another development year.

Detroit Red Wings (via team release)

F Pasquale Zito (to Windsor, OHL)
F Amadeus Lombardi (to Flint, OHL)
D Oscar Plandowski (to Drummondville, QMJHL)
G Jan Bednar (to Acadie-Bathurst, QMJHL)
F Marcus Limpar-Lantz (released from ATO)
F Julien Anctil (released from ATO)
F Mitchell Martin (released from ATO)
G Andrew Oke (released from ATO)

Edmonton Oilers (via Daniel Nugent-Bowman, The Athletic)

F Jake Chiasson (to Brandon, WHL)

Los Angeles Kings (via team release)

D Angus Booth (to Shawinigan, QMJHL)

Minnesota Wild (via team release)

F Caedan Bankier (to Kamloops, WHL)
F Hunter Haight (to Barrie, OHL)
F Servac Petrovsky (to Owen Sound, OHL)
F Josh Pillar (to Saskatoon, WHL)
D Kyle Masters (to Kamloops, WHL)
D David Spacek (to Sherbrooke, QMJHL)
G Thomas Milic (released from ATO)

Montreal Canadiens (via team release)

F Jared Davidson (to Seattle, WHL)
F Cedrick Guindon (to Owen Sound, OHL)
D Daniil Sobolev (to Windsor, OHL)
G Antoine Coulombe (to Shawinigan, QMJHL)

New York Islanders (via Andrew Gross, Newsday)

F Richard Panik (to TBD)

Philadelphia Flyers (via team release)

Mikael Huchette (released from ATO to Québec, QMJHL)
Tyler Savard (released from ATO to Soo, OHL)
Alexis Gendron (to Blainville-Boisbriand, QMJHL)
Ethan Samson (to Prince George, WHL)
Brian Zanetti (to Peterborough, OHL)

Pittsburgh Penguins (via team release)

D Isaac Belliveau (to Gatineau, QMJHL)
D Ryan McCleary (to Portland, WHL)

San Jose Sharks (via team release)

Jake Furlong (to Halifax, QMJHL)
Liam Gilmartin (to London, OHL)
Max McCue (to London, OHL)
Ethan Cardwell (to San Jose, AHL)
Brandon Coe (to San Jose, AHL)
Dillon Hamaliuk (to San Jose, AHL)
Patrick Holway (to San Jose, AHL)
Mark Liwiski (to San Jose, AHL)
Mitchell Russell (to San Jose, AHL)
Ozzy Wiesblatt (to San Jose, AHL)
Braeden Bowman (released from ATO to Guelph, OHL)
Samuel Mayer (released from ATO to Peterborough, OHL)
Josh Lawrence (released from ATO to Blainville-Boisbriand, QMJHL)
Mitchell Smith (released from ATO to Saginaw, OHL)

Vancouver Canucks (via team release)

Yushiroh Hirano (released from PTO to Abbotsford, AHL)
Chad Nychuk (released from ATO to Abbotsford, AHL)
Matt Anderson (released from PTO to South Carolina, ECHL)
Dylan MacPherson (released from PTO)
Cole Shepard (released from ATO to Lethbridge, WHL)
Connor Lockhart (to Peterborough, OHL)
Ty Young (to Prince George, WHL)
Kirill Kudryavtsev (to Soo, OHL)

Washington Capitals (via team release)

D Dru Krebs (to Medicine Hat, WHL)
F Jake Karabela (to Guelph, OHL)
D Simon Motew (to Kitchener, OHL)
F Ryan Hofer (to Everett, WHL)
F Alex Suzdalev (to Regina, WHL)
F Haakon Hanelt (to Gatineau, QMJHL)

This page will be updated throughout the day

Keean Washkurak Undergoes Surgery

The St. Louis Blues won’t have Keean Washkurak for the rest of training camp, as the young forward will undergo surgery on his left wrist today. He will be re-evaluated in four to six weeks.

Washkurak, 21, was a fifth-round pick of the Blues in 2019 who scored 13 goals and 23 points as a rookie last season for the Springfield Thunderbirds. The physical, in-your-face forward racked up 50 penalty minutes to go with it, continuing to play the style that made him a standout for the Mississauga Steelheads of the OHL.

While making the Blues roster was likely out of the question at this point, Washkurak was ticketed for an important role in the minor leagues. Starting things out with a wrist injury certainly isn’t an ideal situation in an important development year. He’ll miss a good chunk to start the year, and will have to try and jump onto a moving train when he is finally cleared to return.

Washkurak will start the year on season-opening injured reserve.

Snapshots: Dumba, Barabanov, Harpur

Generally, when thinking of the Minnesota Wild, the first name that comes to mind is Kirill Kaprizov. That’s fair, considering his superstar status, however the team’s defense core, which has been together for several years, is the foundational piece of the team’s current build. Those players include captain Jared Spurgeon, Jonas Brodin, and impending UFA Mathew Dumba. The seventh-overall pick in 2012, Dumba has spent parts of nine seasons in the NHL, all wearing a Wild uniform. But, for much of it, it’s been his name circulating in the rumor mills and that may continue to ring true this year.

The Athletic’s Michael Russo had a chance to talk with Dumba recently, who opened up about the possibility for being traded and his impending free agency, especially as it relates to Minnesota’s difficult salary cap situation. The defenseman made clear he wants to stay and is focused on being the best player and leader he can be, allowing it to work out as it does. Wild GM Bill Guerin, however, didn’t seem as optimistic, reiterating the organization’s difficult cap position, which “makes it hard to do certain things.” Guerin also mentioned that the Wild had not begun to engage Dumba on extension talks yet. Notably, the Wild are set to carry a $12.7MM cap charge against them this season, which increases to $14.7MM over the next two, thanks to their buyouts of Zach Parise and Ryan Suter. Though they technically might be able to afford Dumba, they will have to be smart with the use of their cap, and with the defenseman coming off of a $6MM AAV deal and a pipeline loaded with defensive talent, extending him may not necessarily make the most sense.

  • San Jose Sharks forward Alexander Barabanov is considered day-to-day with a lower-body injury, Sharks coach David Quinn  told the media, including Curtis Pashelka of the Bay Area News Group. Though the injury is not specified, day-to-day status should mean the injury won’t have a lasting impact that would keep the 28-year-old from being ready for opening night. The forward, who had 39 points in 70 games last season, projects to be among a few key sources of offense this year for the Sharks. Not surprisingly given this news, Barabanov is not in the lineup for tonight’s preseason game against the Los Angeles Kings.
  • A scary scene earlier today as defenseman Ben Harpur, who is in camp with the Columbus Blue Jackets on a PTO, was injured in a scrap with Pittsburgh Penguins forward Jamie Devane. After the fight, Harpur appeared injured, but the nature and severity of the injury was unclear. One potentially positive update from Aaron Portzline of The Athletic is that Harpur was able to fly back to Columbus with the team after the game. Given the immediate aftermath, where Harpur laid still on the ice for several moments, seeing he was able to travel with the team is, for now, good news.

2008 NHL Draft Take Two: Fifteenth Overall Pick

Hindsight is an amazing thing, and allows us to look back and wonder “what could have been.”  Though perfection is attempted, scouting and draft selection is far from an exact science, and sometimes, it doesn’t work out the way teams – or players – intended. For every Patrick Kane, there is a Patrik Stefan.

We’re looking back at the 2008 NHL Entry Draft and asking how it would shake out knowing what we do now.  Will the first round remain the same, or will some late-round picks jump up to the top of the board?

The results of our redraft so far are as follows with their original draft position in parentheses:

1st OverallSteven Stamkos, Tampa Bay Lightning (1)
2nd OverallDrew Doughty, Los Angeles Kings (2)
3rd OverallRoman Josi, Atlanta Thrashers (38)
4th OverallAlex Pietrangelo, St. Louis Blues (4)
5th OverallErik Karlsson, Toronto Maple Leafs (15)
6th OverallJohn Carlson, Columbus Blue Jackets (27)
7th OverallJacob Markstrom, Nashville Predators (31)
8th OverallBraden Holtby, Phoenix Coyotes (93)
9th OverallJordan Eberle, New York Islanders (22)
10th OverallJared Spurgeon, Vancouver Canucks (156)
11th OverallCam Atkinson, Chicago Blackhawks (157)
12th Overall: T.J. Brodie, Buffalo Sabres (114)
13th Overall: Josh Bailey, Los Angeles Kings (9)
14th Overall: Adam Henrique, Carolina Hurricanes (82)

With the 14th overall selection of the 2008 redraft, readers voted to re-write history and have the Hurricanes choose Henrique instead of Zach Boychuk, who Carolina actually picked in this spot 14 years ago. Although Boychuk has been a solid pro at several levels still to this day, taking the fan-favorite Henrique at this spot would have represented far better value. Henrique doesn’t have the illustrious resume that some of his fellow 2008 selections do, but he’s put together a solid career worthy of a mid-first-round pick.

Originally drafted in the third-round, 82nd overall by the New Jersey Devils, Henrique took some time to develop, but burst onto the scene in 2011-12 with 51 points in 74 games. He’d add another 13 in 24 playoff games, including the goal he may be best remembered for: an iconic overtime winner that sent the Devils to the Stanley Cup Finals. Throughout his career, he’s hit the 50-point mark three separate times and the 20-goal mark six times, including a 30-goal performance in 2015-16.

Having established himself as a fan favorite in New Jersey, the forward was dealt early on in the 2017-18 season in a hockey trade that sent defenseman Sami Vatanen to New Jersey from the Anaheim Ducks. Out west, Henrique continued his solid play, albeit with a small step back in production. This season however, the 32-year-old appeared to find his scoring touch once again, registering 19 goals and 23 assists in just 58 games, nearly a 60-point pace. In the end, the Devils found great value by selecting Henrique in the third-round, but going even as high as 14th to the Hurricanes in a redraft appears to still lend great value.

Having addressed Henrique, we turn to the 15th overall pick. Now, first and foremost, there are some terrific hockey players with great resumes left to pick from, but none compare to the generational talent that is Erik Karlsson, who went 15th back in 2008. In the redraft, Karlsson bumped well up the draft board, going fifth overall. The defenseman’s case is an interesting one given the sensational seasons he had as a member of the Ottawa Senators, but also his recent injury history. Had we run this series five years ago, there’s a very good chance he would have been the first selection.

When Ottawa selected the slick, puck-moving defenseman out of the Frolunda organization, he had just come off a 37-point season in 38 games in the Swedish junior league which also included a seven-game stint with Frolunda in the then-Swedish Elite League. The Senators opted to have the defenseman spend another year in Europe, where he played a majority of the season with Frolunda, recording 10 points in 45 games. The following season, 2009-10, Karlsson came over and stepped right into the Ottawa lineup.

After establishing himself as an NHL regular, Karlsson broke out as a superstar during the 2011-12 campaign, where he scored 19 goals to go along with 59 assists. This breakout would start a run of seven years with Karlsson being among the best, if not the best defenseman in the NHL, regularly tallying at least 15 goals and 65 points per season, but hitting career-highs with 21 goals in 2014-15 and 82 points in 2015-16.

Entering the 2018-19 season, with the Senators in a full-scale rebuild and Karlsson’s contract set to expire after the season, the team was looking for suitors and found one in that of the San Jose Sharks. Though the deal, and the entire Senators rebuild for that matter, was met with criticism, the ultimate return would be arguably as franchise-altering as selecting Karlsson was in the first place. For Karlsson and forward Francis Perron, the Senators received forwards Joshua Norris, Chris Tierney and Rudolfs Balcers, defenseman Dylan DeMelo, as well as a conditional first-round draft pick and two conditional second-round draft picks. While one of the second round picks was dealt, the other picks would turn into Zack Ostapchuk and budding superstar Tim Stutzle, who they selected third overall in 2020.

San Jose was able to work out an extension with Karlsson just ahead of free agency, an eight-year, $92MM deal, one which was appropriate at the time, but has now seemingly gone sideways. Since the trade to San Jose, Karlsson has dealt with a bevy of injury issues that have cost him games played and appeared to hamper his game to a degree as he’s played through them. His production has dropped off to a degree, but has managed to maintain close to a 60-point pace per 82-games played, but whether or not that is worth an $11.5MM hit against the salary cap remains in question, and is arguably a driving force behind the Sharks current state as a presumed rebuilder.

Given recency bias, it would make sense that a defenseman once considered among the very best players in the league for several seasons in that of Karlsson would slide down to fifth overall in a 2008 redraft. However, there’s no doubt that his original selection – 15th overall – was a fantastic pick by Ottawa. But, running through the first round again, taking Karlsson here is no longer an option. Though not a possible Hall of Famer, Ottawa will still get a quality player this time around, but who will it be?

2008 Redraft: Fifteenth Overall

  • Tyler Myers 23% (181)
  • Gustav Nyquist 17% (129)
  • Derek Stepan 15% (116)
  • Jake Allen 9% (69)
  • Justin Schultz 6% (45)
  • Zach Bogosian 5% (41)
  • Travis Hamonic 5% (39)
  • Jake Gardiner 4% (33)
  • Marco Scandella 3% (24)
  • Tyler Ennis 2% (19)
  • Michael Del Zotto 2% (14)
  • Luke Schenn 2% (13)
  • Zach Boychuk 1% (11)
  • Jason Demers 1% (11)
  • Matt Martin 1% (10)
  • Colin Wilson 1% (8)
  • Mikkel Boedker 1% (7)
  • Matt Calvert 1% (6)
  • Zack Smith 0% (3)

Total votes: 779

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