Minor Transactions: 03/22/22

After the rush and excitement of trade deadline day blows over, it’s always good to be reminded that hockey transactions do go on. Sure, there will be nothing close to matching the excitement of the deadline until later this summer with the NHL Draft and opening of free agency, but in the meantime there will still be signings involving undrafted college and junior players, prospects receiving entry-level deals, and perhaps some early European additions, not to mention the potential for some minor trades among non-playoff teams getting their offseason started early. There also continue to be roster operations ongoing outside the NHL, with the AHL and European leagues dealing with different rules and timelines. For those “minor” moves, make sure you don’t miss out on any of the action:

  • It’s hard to keep all of the NHL trades straight on deadline day, nevertheless noticing an AHL swap. It seems that future considerations had a busy day across both leagues, as that was the return for the Belleville Senators in a deal that saw veteran forward Tyrell Goulbourne head to the Stockton Heat. The team announced that they had acquired the 28-year-old forward, as they look to bolster their lineup for the Calder Cup playoffs. Goulbourne, a former member of the Philadelphia Flyers, has never possessed much offensive ability and is scoreless through nine AHL games this season, but continues to provide value with his defensive ability. Though not confirmed by any of the teams involved at either level, Goulbourne is believed to be future considerations himself, as the return of the NHL deal that saw goaltender Michael McNiven head to Ottawa.
  • Arizona State standout Colin Theisen isn’t going very far for his first pro experience. The AHL’s Tuscon Roadrunners have signed the Sun Devils captain, his now-alma mater announced. A fifth year transfer from Notre Dame, Theisen enjoyed a breakout season to end his collegiate career, recording 19 goals and 42 points in 35 games with ASU. This was far superior than anything he did with the Fighting Irish; in fact, his goals and points totals were better than his two best marks at Notre Dame combined. Though hardly a young prospect at 24, Theisen did enough this year to earn a look in the pros and the nearby Roadrunners were happy to give him a shot. Perhaps the Coyotes will be next if he can prove his game translates to the next level.
  • Though far less common in Europe, the end of the playing season marks the beginning of buyout season and one Swiss club is making big cuts. The National League’s SC Bern has bought out a pair of former NHL forwards in Cory Conacher and Kaspars Daugavins as they begin a “remodel”. Conacher and Daugavins were both under contract through 2022-23 and seemingly seemed safe to stick around. Both were among the top six scorers for Bern, as was Vincent Praplana player who had already been bought out (with three year remaining on his deal). Though each is on the wrong side of 30, Bern is undoubtedly a worse team without Conacher and Daugavins who will attract interest from a multitude of other European clubs.

Trade Deadline Notes: Dadonov, DeBrusk, Motte

There is still no official decision on the trade between the Anaheim Duck and Vegas Golden Knights, though some sources have indicated to Jesse Granger of The Athletic that they believe it will be voided. Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet tweeted a bit of an explanation, noting that not only did the Golden Knights not receive Evgenii Dadonov‘s no-trade list, but they and the NHL were also “led to believe” that the list had not been filed properly and thus expired.

That is not the case, however, as evidence has emerged to show that Dadonov properly filed his no-trade list, which includes the Ducks, on June 30, the day before the clause would have expired had it not been given to the Senators. Important to note in this situation, and something that is often misunderstood is that though Dadonov could still technically be traded after the “deadline” should this deal be voided, he no longer would be eligible to play at all in 2021-22, regular season or playoffs.

  • When Jake DeBrusk inked a two-year extension yesterday, some believed it would lead to a fresh start somewhere else later in the day, given that his agent immediately told members of the media that a trade request was still valid. In fact, agent Rick Valette told Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic that he was “hoping Jake would have a change of scenery” at the deadline. He also wanted to be clear that DeBrusk still loves the city of Boston and will be completely focused on the Bruins’ Stanley Cup run for the rest of this season.
  • When Tyler Motte was moved at the deadline for a 2023 fourth-round pick, some wondered why the Vancouver Canucks would bother, given how well he has fit into the team’s bottom-six. Motte is a pending free agent and according to Rick Dhaliwal of CHEK TV, he didn’t want to leave the organization at all but was asking for a contract with an average salary over $2MM. The 27-year-old has seven goals and 15 points in 49 games this season.

Ryan Murray Out Indefinitely

The Colorado Avalanche added Josh Manson ahead of the deadline, but weren’t able to secure any more defensive additions yesterday. Unfortunately, just a few hours later, one of their regulars went down and is now out indefinitely. Ryan Murray, who blocked a shot just 31 seconds into his first shift, is out “weeks not days” according to head coach Jared Bednar, who confirmed it was a fracture but did not specify if it was a hand or an arm injury, according to Peter Baugh of The Athletic.

The Avalanche were playing with seven defensemen last night, though one of those was Kurtis MacDermid, who is a hybrid for them usually lining up at forward when the entire group is healthy. In Murray’s absence, and with Manson still just getting started with the team, Cale Makar went over 30 minutes and Devon Toews racked up 27:38–the only two defensemen to even crack the 20-minute mark.

While the Avalanche do have quite a bit of defensive depth, Samuel Girard is also out with an injury and Bowen Byram is still a question mark because of his ongoing concussion issues. The young Byram is back on the ice with the team–in a regular jersey even–but it’s not clear when he will actually re-enter the Avalanche lineup.

Of note, Justin Barron, who has played two games for the team this season, was traded to the Montreal Canadiens as part of the Artturi Lehkonen deal.

Murray, 28, has dealt with injuries his entire career, only once completing a full season unscathed. Through 37 appearances this year, he had just four points, but was still a useful depth piece for a team looking to go on a long playoff run. Now sidelined for the next while, it will be interesting to see if Murray ends up losing his spot in the lineup, should Colorado get comfortable with a new deployment of defensemen.

Toronto Maple Leafs Sign Curtis Douglas

One of the things Toronto Maple Leafs general manager Kyle Dubas was asked about yesterday was whether he considered signing some of his standout AHL players to NHL contracts before the deadline, which would have made them eligible for the playoffs. While he explained that they needed to leave slots open for some college signings, the team has now worked out a future deal with one of those minor league players.

Curtis Douglas has signed a two-year, entry-level contract with the Maple Leafs that will begin in the 2022-23 season. Douglas is currently playing for the Toronto Marlies on an AHL contract.

Standing 6’8″, the 22-year-old Douglas is an intriguing forward prospect. Originally selected by the Dallas Stars in the fourth round of the 2018 NHL Draft, he ended up an unrestricted free agent when the two sides failed to work out a contract. After spending part of last season playing for the Linz Steel Wings in Austria, he joined the Belleville Senators and played 11 games in the AHL.

This season, with the Marlies, he has eight goals and 27 points in 49 games, good enough to earn himself an entry-level deal. Douglas only turned 22 a few months ago and is still very raw, but at least is showing signs that he is starting to harness his size effectively.

Because it is a future deal, it does not take up one of the Maple Leafs’ remaining contract slots, which could potentially go to college standouts–and U.S. Olympians–Matthew Knies and Nick Abruzzese in the coming weeks.

AHL Shuffle: 03/22/22

Now that the trade deadline is over, and teams are relatively fixed for the rest of the season–save for some college additions as NCAA seasons wrap up–the only way to really change the makeup of your roster is minor league moves. As always, we’ll continue to track that minor shuffling right here.

Atlantic Division

  • Taro Hirose has been recalled by the Detroit Red Wings, after going down yesterday to make sure he was eligible for the AHL playoffs. The 25-year-old has been outstanding for the Grand Rapids Griffins and does have three points in four games for the Red Wings.

Metropolitan Division

  • After sending him down yesterday, Radim Zohorna is back with the Pittsburgh Penguins today. Unfortunately, someone took his jersey number in the meantime. Rickard Rakell will now wear No. 67 for the Penguins, with Zohorna switching to No. 63.

Central Division

  • The St. Louis Blues have recalled Nathan Walker under emergency conditions, meaning, for now, he’ll continue his excellent season in the NHL. Walker has 44 points in 47 minor league games, but has also scored four goals and five points in nine appearances with the Blues. Quite the campaign for the 28-year-old forward.
  • Ville Heinola is back with the Winnipeg Jets, recalled under emergency conditions once again. The young defenseman has been bounced up and down all season, though he is still expected to only serve as insurance in case one of the team’s defenders isn’t able to go tonight.
  • The Arizona Coyotes have recalled Cam Dineen, who popped down to the AHL just to become eligible for the Calder Cup playoffs. Dineen played two games for the Coyotes over the weekend, taking his career total to 16 in this his rookie season.

Pacific Division

This page will be updated throughout the day

2022 Trade Deadline Day Broken Down By Team

The 2022 trade deadline was extremely busy, with more than 30 transactions taking place before the bell rung. It’s hard to keep track of everything as it is happening, so we’ll break it down by team. Note that these are only the deals that happened on deadline day itself, meaning acquisitions like Claude Giroux and Ben Chiarot will not be listed.

Anaheim Ducks

Added:

Zach Aston-Reese (PIT)
Dominik Simon (PIT)
Calle Clang (PIT)
2022 2nd-round pick (PIT)
Evgenii Dadonov (VGK)*
Conditional 2023 2nd-round pick (VGK)*

Removed:

Rickard Rakell (PIT)
John Moore (VGK)*
Ryan Kesler (VGK)*

*This trade is still pending approval from the NHL Central Registry

Arizona Coyotes

Added:

Jack McBain (MIN)
Bryan Little (WPG)
Nathan Smith (WPG)
2023 3rd-round pick (WSH)
Future considerations (TBL)

Removed:

Johan Larsson (WSH)
Riley Nash (TBL)
2022 2nd-round pick (MIN)
2022 4th-round pick (WPG)

Boston Bruins

Added:

Josh Brown (OTT)
2022 conditional 7th-round pick (OTT)

Removed:

Zachary Senyshyn (OTT)
2022 5th-round pick (OTT)

Buffalo Sabres

None

Calgary Flames

Added:

Ryan Carpenter (CHI)
Future considerations (OTT)

Removed:

Michael McNiven (OTT)
2024 5th-round pick (CHI)

Carolina Hurricanes

Added:

Max Domi (CBJ)
Tyler Inamoto (FLA)

Removed:

Aidan Hreschuk (CBJ)

Chicago Blackhawks

Added:

Conditional 2022 2nd-round pick (MIN)
2024 5th-round pick (CGY)

Removed:

Marc-Andre Fleury (MIN)
Ryan Carpenter (CGY)

Colorado Avalanche

Added:

Artturi Lehkonen (MTL)
Andrew Cogliano (SJS)

Removed:

Justin Barron (MTL)
2024 2nd-round pick (MTL)
2024 5th-round pick (SJS)

Columbus Blue Jackets

Added:

Aidan Hreschuk (CAR)

Removed:

Max Domi (CAR)
2022 6th-round pick (FLA)

Dallas Stars

Added:

Vladislav Namestnikov (DET)

Removed:

2024 4th-round pick (DET)

Detroit Red Wings

Added:

Jake Walman (STL
Oskar Sundqvist (STL)
2023 2nd-round pick (STL)
2024 4th-round pick (DAL)

Removed:

Nick Leddy (STL)
Luke Witkowski (STL)
Vladislav Namestnikov (DAL)

Edmonton Oilers

Added:

Brett Kulak (MTL)
Derick Brassard (PHI)

Removed:

William Lagesson (MTL)
Conditional 2022 2nd-round pick (MTL)
2023 4th-round pick (PHI)
2024 7th-round pick (MTL)

Florida Panthers

Added:

Egor Korshkov (CAR)
2022 6th-round pick (CBJ)

Removed:

Tyler Inamoto (CAR)

Los Angeles Kings

Added:

Frederic Allard (NSH)
Nelson Nogier (WPG)

Removed:

Brayden Burke (NSH)
Markus Phillips (WPG)

Minnesota Wild

Added:

Marc-Andre Fleury (CHI)
Jacob Middleton (SJS)
2022 2nd-round pick (ARI)
Future considerations (SEA)

Removed:

Kaapo Kahkonen (SJS)
Jack McBain (ARI)
Victor Rask (SEA)
Conditional 2022 2nd-round pick (CHI)
2022 5th-round pick (SJS)

Montreal Canadiens

Added:

Justin Barron (COL)
William Lagesson (EDM)
Nate Schnarr (NJD)
Conditional 2022 2nd-round pick (EDM)
2024 2nd-round pick (COL)
2024 7th-round pick (EDM)

Removed:

Artturi Lehkonen (COL)
Brett Kulak (EDM)
Andrew Hammond (NJD)

Nashville Predators

Added:

Brayden Burke (LAK)
Alex Biega (TOR)

Removed:

Frederic Allard (LAK)
Future considerations (TOR)

New Jersey Devils

Added:

Andrew Hammond (MTL)

Removed:

Nate Schnarr (MTL)

New York Islanders

None

New York Rangers

Added:

Nicholas Merkley (SJS)
Justin Braun (PHI)
Tyler Motte (VAN)
Andrew Copp (WPG)
2023 6th-round pick (WPG)

Removed:

Anthony Bitetto (SJS)
Morgan Barron (WPG)
Conditional 2022 2nd-round pick (WPG)
Conditional 2022 2nd-round pick (WPG)
2023 3rd-round pick (PHI)
2023 4th-round pick (VAN)
2023 5th-round pick (WPG)

Ottawa Senators

Added:

Zachary Senyshyn (BOS)
Michael McNiven (CGY)
2022 5th-round pick (BOS)
2022 5th-round pick (WPG)

Removed:

Josh Brown (BOS)
Zach Sanford (WPG)
2022 conditional 7th-round pick (BOS)
Future considerations (CGY)

Philadelphia Flyers

Added:

2023 3rd-round pick (NYR)
2023 4th-round pick (EDM)

Removed:

Justin Braun (NYR)
Derick Brassard (EDM)

Pittsburgh Penguins

Added:

Rickard Rakell (ANA)
Nathan Beaulieu (WPG)

Removed:

Zach Aston-Reese (ANA)
Dominik Simon (ANA)
Calle Clang (ANA)
2022 2nd-round pick (ANA)
Conditional 2022 7th-round pick (WPG)

San Jose Sharks

Added:

Kaapo Kahkonen (MIN)
Anthony Bitetto (NYR)
Antoine Morand (TBL)
2022 5th-round pick (MIN)
2024 5th-round pick (COL)

Removed:

Jacob Middleton (MIN)
Nicholas Merkley (SJS)
Andrew Cogliano (COL)
Alexei Melnichuk (TBL)

Seattle Kraken

Added:

Victor Rask (MIN)
Daniel Sprong (WSH)
2022 4th-round pick (WSH)
2023 6th-round pick (WSH)

Removed:

Marcus Johansson (WSH)
Future considerations (MIN)

St. Louis Blues

Added:

Nick Leddy (DET)
Luke Witkowski (DET)

Removed:

Jake Walman (DET)
Oskar Sundqvist (DET)
2023 2nd-round pick (DET)

Tampa Bay Lightning

Added:

Riley Nash (ARI)
Alexei Melnichuk (SJS)

Removed:

Antoine Morand (SJS)
Future considerations (ARI)

Toronto Maple Leafs

Added:

Future considerations (NSH)

Removed:

Alex Biega (NSH)

Vancouver Canucks

Added:

2023 4th-round pick (NYR)

Removed:

Tyler Motte (NYR)

Vegas Golden Knights

Added:

John Moore (ANA)*
Ryan Kesler (ANA)*

Removed:

Evgenii Dadonov (ANA)*
Conditional 2023 2nd-round pick (ANA)*

*This trade is still pending approval from the NHL Central Registry

Washington Capitals

Added:

Johan Larsson (ARI)
Marcus Johansson (SEA)

Removed:

Daniel Sprong (SEA)
2022 4th-round pick (SEA)
2023 3rd-round pick (ARI)
2023 6th-round pick (SEA)

Winnipeg Jets

Added:

Markus Phillips (LAK)
Zach Sanford (OTT)
Morgan Barron (NYR)
Conditional 2022 2nd-round pick (NYR)
Conditional 2022 2nd-round pick (NYR)
Conditional 2022 7th-round pick (PIT)
2022 4th-round pick (ARI)
2023 5th-round pick (NYR)

Removed:

Nelson Nogier (LAK)
Bryan Little (ARI)
Nathan Smith (ARI)
Nathan Beaulieu (PIT)
Andrew Copp (NYR)
2022 5th-round pick (OTT)
2023 6th-round pick (NYR)

Note that the teams in parenthesis are the ones involved in the trade, not necessarily the original owners of the associated draft picks.

Hayden Hodgson Signs NHL Contract

Lost in the shuffle yesterday was an NHL contract, according to CapFriendly, for Hayden Hodgson with the Philadelphia Flyers, rewarding him for his strong play in the AHL this season and making him eligible for the stretch run. The deal is for the rest of this season and will carry a cap hit of $750K.

Hodgson, 26, has 18 goals and 29 points in 44 games for the Lehigh Valley Phantoms this season, playing on an AHL contract after spending parts of the last five years in the ECHL. The 6’2″ undrafted forward had some other NHL teams “sniffing around” on him according to Frank Seravalli of Daily Faceoff, but he ended up signing with the organization he was already a part of. He will stay with Lehigh Valley for now.

An NHL contract means that Hodgson could get a chance to play with the Flyers down the stretch, but it also means that he will be a restricted free agent at the end of the season. He will be eligible for arbitration, though it seems more likely that the two sides would agree on another two-way contract ahead of time, if the team wants to keep him for next season.

Evgenii Dadonov Trade Under Review

March 22: After news broke last night that there was an issue with this trade, Darren Dreger of TSN tweets that it is still being reviewed by the NHL Central Registry and the NHLPA. The issue stems from a no-trade clause that was not disclosed by the Ottawa Senators when Dadonov was originally traded to Vegas, despite it being public knowledge at the time.

March 21:  After much speculation throughout the day, the Evgenii Dadonov trade has finally gone through this evening reports TSN’s Chris Johnston. In addition to Dadonov, also heading to the Anaheim Ducks is a conditional second-round draft choice, which will be determined by the conditions of a draft pick previously traded to the Buffalo Sabres. In exchange, the Vegas Gold Knights acquire defenseman John Moore and the contract of forward Ryan Kesler.

This deal had been reported and all but confirmed earlier today before the NHL’s 3:00 pm EST trading deadline, however it had not been processed through NHL Central Registry and was not official until this evening. As Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman explains, the trade would have been accepted had it been submitted to Central Registry before the deadline, however that would have made Dadonov and Moore ineligible to play for the rest of the season. However, it appears the trade was submitted in time.

This trade was, for the most part, a salary cap deal. By sending Dadonov to Anaheim, Vegas clears his $5MM salary cap hit for this year and next year. However, by acquiring Moore, they absorb his $2.75MM cap hit, but that will lower to $1.625MM if they bury Moore in the AHL. In acquiring Kesler’s contract, Vegas can put him straight onto LTIR and have no net impact on their salary cap. All told, Vegas, will save $3.375MM in cap space, in exchange for a second-round draft pick and any production they will miss from Dadonov.

For Anaheim, the team has allowed Vegas to navigate a tricky cap situation, and was compensated for doing so with a second-round draft choice. The condition on the draft pick, as mentioned, concerns the Jack Eichel trade with Buffalo. If Vegas’ first-round draft choice in 2022 is in the top ten, then Vegas will send their 2024 second-round pick to Buffalo instead of the 2023 second-round draft pick originally reported in the Eichel deal. In other words, if Vegas’ first-round pick in 2022 is in the top 10, Anaheim receives their 2023 second-round draft choice; otherwise, they will receive Vegas’ 2024 second-round draft choice. Regardless, this move represents further precedent of the cost of shedding salary cap for a team that desperately needs to do so.

Not to be forgotten, the Ducks also acquire Dadonov, who has played in 62 games for Vegas this year, amassing 15 goals and 12 assists in the process, which replaces a good deal of the production Anaheim lost by trading Rickard Rakell away to the Pittsburgh Penguins earlier today. Dadonov also has an additional year under contract at $5MM for next year.

Arizona Coyotes Acquire Jack McBain, Sign Him To Entry Level Contract

Monday, 7:53 pm: As expected, after acquiring him, the Arizona Coyotes have signed forward Jack McBain to an entry-level contract. The contract is for two years and carries a cap hit of $884K. What is most notable about this contract is that it begins this year, perhaps giving the Coyotes a chance to give McBain an NHL look this year. The 22-year-old just finished his fourth season at Boston College and was set to be granted free agency this summer if he did not sign. One wrinkle to this story, however, is that McBain is currently injured and is in a walking boot, reports Craig Morgan of PHNX Sports. Once healed, McBain can begin to work his way back and into an NHL lineup for the first time in his career.

Monday, 10:45 am: The deal has now been made official.  Coyotes GM Bill Armstrong had the following statement about his new center:

We are very pleased to acquire Jack McBain. He is a big, strong, highly-skilled center who had a tremendous season with Boston College. We are thrilled to have him join our organization.

Sunday: The Arizona Coyotes have acquired the rights to prospect center Jack McBain from the Minnesota Wild. They are acquiring the Vancouver Canucks’ 2022 second-round pick from the Coyotes in return, and McBain is expected to sign an entry-level contract with Arizona shortly. The trade was first reported by Frank Seravalli of Daily Faceoff. McBain’s name was first entered into the trade deadline conversation by Sportsnet’s Jeff Marek and has been floating in deadline rumors ever since. McBain had made it clear that he would not be signing in Minnesota, and Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported that the Wild and GM Bill Guerin were asking for a second-round pick from any interested party in return for McBain’s rights. They have gotten their asking price with this trade, as Arizona cashes in one pick from its impressive stockpile to acquire a player who many believe is ready to step into the NHL as soon as he signs his contract.

For the Wild, this trade represents Guerin being able to take advantage of McBain’s development as a college prospect to recoup some value from his rights. As mentioned above, McBain had communicated to the Wild that he would be signing his entry-level contract elsewhere, and from that point, it became imperative for Guerin to gain something from holding McBain’s rights. In previous trades, such as Zach Hyman to Toronto in 2015, a low-value pick is all the rights-holding team can get in return, given that their leverage is low due to their player’s pending free agency. But more recently, as we saw with Adam Fox‘s trade to the New York Rangers in 2019, teams have become more willing to part with valuable assets to acquire the rights to sign an NCAA prospect. So while Guerin and Wild fans may be disappointed that McBain chose not to sign in Minnesota, being able to get a second-round pick in exchange for a prospect’s soon-to-be expired rights is a good bit of business.

This trade is also good business for Arizona and GM Bill Armstrong. The Coyotes have built their team around a bold, scorched-earth plan to stockpile as much long-term value as possible. They have traded significant, in-their-prime, team-controlled players such as Conor Garland and Christian Dvorak, and have also weaponized their enviable amount of cap space to take on other teams’ unwanted contracts for draft pick compensation. The result of their efforts has been a stable of upcoming draft picks larger than any other franchise in the NHL. For the 2022 draft, before this trade, the Coyotes were set to have three first-round picks and five second-round picks. Now, they still have three first-rounders and four second-rounders. Second-round picks are assets that the team currently has an abundance of, but what they are lacking is quality talent at the center position. By trading for him, it is clear that Arizona believes McBain is exactly that, and through this trade, the Coyotes are subtracting from a position of strength to add to a position of pretty severe weakness. The Coyotes’ top four players down the middle are currently Travis Boyd, Riley Nash, Christian Fischer, and Barrett Hayton. Only Boyd is under contract for next season. By acquiring McBain, who had 33 points in 24 games this past season for Boston College, the Coyotes add a high-upside prospect who is ready to step in and bolster their lineup immediately. He might not have the tools to become a do-it-all star first-line center, but regardless of what role he ends up settling into his acquisition by the Coyotes is a shrewd move from Armstrong to help diversify the team’s immediate and long-term outlook down the middle.

It’s not often that a trade can truly please the fanbases of both teams involved, and given McBain’s reluctance to sign in Minnesota there still could be bitterness from that side. But that being said, this looks like a trade where both sides, given their respective situations, seem to come away on top.