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Avalanche Recall John Ludvig From Conditioning Loan

January 11, 2025 at 8:48 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

After two weeks spent in the American Hockey League with the Colorado Eagles, defenseman John Ludvig will return to the NHL. The Colorado Avalanche announced they’ve recalled Ludvig from his conditioning loan to the NHL roster.

According to the current Collective Bargaining Agreement, the rules stipulate that a team can send a player down via a standard conditioning loan for 14 consecutive days, meaning the Avalanche kept Ludvig in the AHL for the maximum allotted time. Furthermore, during his entire stint with the AHL Eagles, Ludvig counted against the 23-man roster for the Avalanche and was paid his full NHL salary for the duration of the loan.

During his 14-day span in Loveland, CO, Ludvig tallied one assist in five games for the Eagles with a -3 rating. It’s not dissimilar from his production in the NHL this year with the Avalanche as he’s tallied two assists in eight games with a -4 rating.

Although Colorado has struggled with injuries this season, they have operated quite well in Ludvig’s absence. Should the organization want to continue with only seven available defensemen on the active roster, it wouldn’t be surprising to see Ludvig end up on waivers within the next week.

He could get some consideration from the team’s wanting another minimum-salary defenseman on the NHL roster but he’ll likely clear given his production over the last two years. This would ultimately prove a benefit to Ludvig as the Avalanche may be more comfortable taxiing him from the AHL should he be exempt from waivers for a few weeks.

Colorado Avalanche| Loan| Transactions John Ludvig

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San Jose Sharks Make Several Roster Moves

January 11, 2025 at 7:45 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

As expected, the San Jose Sharks made multiple roster moves before tonight’s contest against the Minnesota Wild. The Sharks organization announced they’ve activated forward Carl Grundström and defenseman Jake Walman from the injured reserve while placing forwards Klim Kostin and Nikolai Kovalenko on it in a corresponding roster move.

Despite moving a pair of forwards to the injured reserve, the transaction is a major addition to San Jose’s lineup. Walman has objectively been the Sharks’ top defenseman this near averaging nearly a point-per-game for the first time in his career with five goals and 25 points in 31 games while averaging 22:50 of ice time per night. His defensive metrics have depressed slightly since his time with the Detroit Red Wings and St. Louis Blues but Walman is still one of the only Sharks’ defensemen with a positive expected +/- and CorsiFor% over 50.0%.

Grundstrom is expected to reprise his familiar role in San Jose’s bottom-six. He’s scored one goal and five points in 30 games for the Sharks this season which is seven points lower than his 20-point, 82-game average with the Los Angeles Kings last year. Still, Grundstrom is second amongst San Jose’s forwards in hitting with 85 showing he can still provide quality physicality if he isn’t finding his way on the scoresheet.

The oft-healthy scratched Klostin is one of the forwards moved to the injured reserve to make room for Walman and Grundstrom’s activation. After scoring five goals and 10 points in 19 games for the Sharks after being acquired from the Red Wings at last year’s deadline his offensive output has fallen off a cliff this season with one goal and four points in 26 contests. He’ll likely miss three games on the injured reserve after suffering a lower-body injury yesterday and may not find himself in the lineup once he returns.

Kovalenko hasn’t suited up for San Jose since the team’s game against the Vegas Golden Knights on January 7th due to an upper-body injury. He’ll be quicker to return than Klostin given he was considered day-to-day and will have already missed two of three games needed to be eligible for activation. He got off to a quick start with the Sharks after being acquired from the Colorado Avalanche tallying five assists in his first five games but only has one goal in the following seven contests.

Injury| San Jose Sharks| Transactions Carl Grundstrom| Jake Walman| Klim Kostin| Nikolai Kovalenko

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Rasmus Andersson Hopes To Remain With Calgary Flames

January 11, 2025 at 6:46 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 6 Comments

Rasmus Andersson wants to remain a member of the Calgary Flames beyond this season in no uncertain terms. Andersson reiterated his desire to stay with the Flames organization in a recent interview with Sportsnet’s Eric Francis and his displeasure for some specific teams in the Pacific Division.

Francis quoted Andersson saying, “I love playing here and I’ve always loved playing here and that’s never going to change. Of course I would love to stay here, but I’ve heard from everyone else who has been in my situation that it’s a business.” Furthermore, his passion and loyalty toward the Flames organization has turned into distaste for other organizations with Andersson saying, “I hate the Oilers, I hate the Canucks and that’s just the way I am.”

Given his age, contract term, and recent production, Andersson entered the season as arguably the best trade chip at Calgary’s disposal. Many preseason expectations had the Flames finishing at or near the Western Conference basement after moving on from Noah Hanifin, Elias Lindholm, Andrew Mangiapane, Jacob Markström, Chris Tanev, and Nikita Zadorov during the 2023-24 season and this past offseason.

Calgary didn’t get the memo as they hold a 19-14-7 record through the first half of 2024-25 and sit one point back of the final wild-card spot in the Western Conference. The Flames don’t have the league’s best offense, defense, or goaltending but are controlling scoring chances more times than not leading to their surprising record.

It would be surprising if there wasn’t mutual interest in retaining Andersson. He’s been one of the more underrated two-way defensemen in the league from 2022-2025 scoring 30 goals and 156 points in 279 games for the Flames while holding a career 51.7 CorsiFor% at even strength and +43.5 expected +/-.

Defensemen like Andersson don’t grow on trees, especially as a right-handed shot. He’ll earn a more than affordable $4.55MM salary for the next two years before being eligible for a new contract on July 1st, 2026.

It’s a precarious situation for the Flames. On one hand, they won’t have a trade candidate with as much value as Andersson for quite some time. On the other hand, the loyalty he holds toward the organization plus his on-ice production is something Calgary should want in the roster for the foreseeable future. A resolution of some sort will be decided on soon in the form of an Andersson extension on July 1st or his wearing of another team’s jersey by the end of this season.

Calgary Flames Rasmus Andersson

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Blackhawks Activate Alec Martinez, Place Connor Murphy On Injured Reserve

January 11, 2025 at 5:46 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

The Chicago Blackhawks are swapping a pair of veteran defensemen on the team’s injured reserve. Before their contest tonight against the Edmonton Oilers, the Blackhawks organization announced they’ve activated Alec Martinez from the injured reserve and have placed Connor Murphy on the injured reserve, retroactive to December 31st, in a corresponding roster move.

Martinez will resume what can only be described as one of the more disappointing seasons of his professional career. He’s had a fair bit of injury concern since coming into the league at age 22 during the 2009-10 season and will now fail to reach 60 games played for the second consecutive year.

The three-time Stanley Cup champion was brought in as a veteran presence with championship pedigree for a young Blackhawks’ defensive core. As much of a mentor as he’s been to many of his younger peers in Chicago, Martinez has only managed to suit up in 15 games this year.

Despite starting the season on time, Martinez was placed on the team’s injured reserve after only four games at the beginning of the season due to a lingering injury from the preseason. He was reinstated nearly a month later in mid-November but returned to the IR due to a face injury against the Winnipeg Jets on December 7th.

Dissimilarly, Murphy is one defensive veteran having a positive year for the Blackhawks. Murphy also has recent injury concerns, having only played 46 games during the 2023-24 season. However, he has already scored one goal and recorded 13 points in 38 games.

He’s already eligible for activation and will as soon as he’s fully recovered from his groin injury. Murphy will look to achieve his career-high in scoring (19 points in 2019-20) once he returns to Chicago’s active roster.

Chicago Blackhawks| Injury| Transactions Alec Martinez| Connor Murphy

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Vladislav Gavrikov Interested In Extension With Kings

January 11, 2025 at 4:44 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 5 Comments

History could repeat itself next summer with the Los Angeles Kings organization. The team saw defenseman Matt Roy head for greener pastures in the form of a six-year, $34.5MM deal with the Washington Capitals and that’s not a scenario they’ll want to see play out again with another shutdown defenseman of theirs.

If Vladislav Gavrikov has his way, he’ll be with the Kings organization for the foreseeable future. In a recent interview with Daria Tuboltseva of RG.org, Gavrikov said, “We shared our position, but it’s too early to discuss a new contract. I have a full no-trade clause, so the trade deadline isn’t an issue for me – we have plenty of time. I haven’t decided on the term yet, but my priority is a long-term contract. As for the financial side, we haven’t gotten to that yet.”

This summer will be Gavrikov’s second opportunity to sign a new long-term contract in Los Angeles. He originally signed a two-year, $11.75MM extension with the Kings in 2023, a few months after the team acquired him in a trade with the Columbus Blue Jackets. As much as Gavrikov would have liked to sign a long-term deal in Columbus then, he chose a shorter-term deal with the Kings for a few reasons.

At the time, Gavrikov’s idea of a shorter-term deal with Los Angeles was largely a gamble on himself. The salary cap’s upper limit was mostly stagnant from 2019 to 2024, and Gavrikov wanted to set himself up for a larger payday once it started to rise again. Given that the upper limit will be nearly $10MM more in the 2025-26 campaign than when he signed his current contract, it appears Gavrikov’s gamble has paid off.

Another reason Gavrikov chose a shorter-term deal is that he hadn’t quite familiarized himself with the city of Los Angeles. Further along in the interview with Tuboltseva, Gavrikov was quoted saying, “When I got to L.A., I needed time to decide if my family and I wanted to stay. That’s why we agreed on a short-term contract with the Kings. Now we know what we want, and we can sign a long-term deal here.”

His defensive attributes alone have made him a valuable blue-liner for the Kings. Gavrikov has had to take on a larger role this year in Los Angeles due to the untimely injury of Drew Doughty at the beginning of the season. The native of Yaroslavl, Russia leads all Kings’ defensemen in average time on ice of 23:52, 81 blocked shots, and a +16 rating.

There aren’t a ton of recent comparables to Gavrikov’s situation but the defenseman who immediately comes to mind as playing a similar style and signing a long-term deal is Chris Tanev of the Toronto Maple Leafs. Toronto signed Tanev to a six-year, $27MM contract this past summer, but being that Gavrikov is six years younger than Tanev, it’s more than likely his AAV will land closer to $6MM-$6.75MM instead of Tanev’s $4.5MM.

Los Angeles Kings Vladislav Gavrikov

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Atlantic Notes: Ullmark, McCabe, Stolarz, Rifai, Savard

January 11, 2025 at 4:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The Senators got some good news on the injury front on Friday as Postmedia’s Bruce Garrioch notes that goaltender Linus Ullmark was back on the ice on Friday for the first time since suffering a back injury before the holiday break.  Head coach Travis Green indicated that he’s hopeful that the veteran will be able to return to practice soon which is the next hurdle to clear before he can return.  After a slow start to his season, Ullmark has a 1.48 GAA with a .957 SV% in his last ten outings which helped briefly propel them into one of the Wild Card spots in the East.  But since he went down, the Sens have won just one of their last seven games, making his eventual return a top priority.

Elsewhere in the Atlantic:

  • Maple Leafs defenseman Jake McCabe skated today as he works his way back from an upper-body injury sustained in a fight last weekend, shares Nick Barden of The Hockey News (Twitter link). However, head coach Craig Berube noted that there’s no timeline for a return but that the veteran is doing well.  McCabe has 11 points, 68 blocks, and 72 hits in 36 games this season while his 20:52 ATOI – a career-high – sits third among Toronto defenders.
  • In a separate note from Barden (Twitter link), he relays that Maple Leafs goaltender Anthony Stolarz could resume skating as soon as this week as he gets closer to returning from a knee injury. Stolarz underwent surgery last month and was given a timeline of four to six weeks to return.  Next week will mark the four-week mark so it appears he’s on track in his recovery.  The 30-year-old was off to quite a strong start before getting hurt as his .927 SV% through his first 17 starts still leads the league.
  • After papering him back to the Marlies on Thursday, the Maple Leafs have once again recalled defenseman Marshall Rifai, per the AHL’s transactions log. While banking cap space isn’t the goal here with Toronto, shuffling him down on non-game days delays his waiver clock.  Rifai played two games with the Maple Leafs last season, his only NHL action thus far.
  • The Canadiens announced (Twitter link) that defenseman David Savard will return to the lineup tonight against Dallas. The veteran had missed the last four games with an upper-body injury.  A pending unrestricted free agent, Savard has 10 points, 90 blocks, and 31 hits in 35 games this season while logging 18:37 per night of playing time.

AHL| Montreal Canadiens| Ottawa Senators| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions Anthony Stolarz| David Savard| Jake McCabe| Linus Ullmark| Marshall Rifai

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PHR Mailbag: Offer Sheets, Flyers, Werenski, Rossi, Soderblom, Islanders, Standings

January 11, 2025 at 2:59 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

Topics in this edition of the PHR Mailbag include Zach Werenski’s Norris candidacy, forecasting the next contract for Marco Rossi, and much more.  If your question doesn’t appear here, check back in last weekend’s mailbag while we’ll run one more next weekend as well.

Gmm8811: It’s looking like the Broberg/Holloway offer sheets have worked out really well for the Blues. Do you foresee more GM’s taking a harder look at that option in the future? Thoughts on next year’s steals?

At this point, the Blues certainly have to be happy with how things turned out.  Philip Broberg is a legitimate top-four defender for them and Dylan Holloway has blown past his career bests offensively and turned into a capable top-six winger.  For what it’s worth, Edmonton pivoted relatively well with their low-cost replacements of Ty Emberson and Vasily Podkolzin, given the circumstances.  Those two aren’t playing at the level Broberg and Holloway are now but they are playing to the level those two likely would have performed at had they stayed with the Oilers.

That type of success story should make general managers a bit more willing to look into offer sheets as an option although I do think more of them get floated around than we ever see.  We only find out when one is signed, not when one is discussed between teams and agents.  With another fair-sized jump expected in the salary cap, there’s definitely going to be a chance for a strategic offer sheet or two this summer.

The challenge is finding a team that will be cap-strapped early in free agency.  There will be plenty, sure, but identifying them now isn’t as easy as there are many signings and trades to be made over the next six months.  It’s also finding a younger player who wants a shorter-term deal as with the divisor for offer sheet compensation only being a maximum of five (even on a contract longer than that) cranks up the draft pick cost too high to be worthwhile.

If Florida finds a way to re-sign or replace both Aaron Ekblad and Sam Bennett, they’re going to have to look at low-cost deals to round out their roster.  That could make someone like Mackie Samoskevich a bit vulnerable as the Panthers would probably prefer a cheap one-year contract while he could command a two-year or three-year deal from a team that sees him playing a bigger role and is willing to pay him accordingly.  If Seattle re-signs or replaces Yanni Gourde and Brandon Tanev, that might push them into a lower-cost deal with Ryker Evans so I think teams would sniff around that but he seems less likely.  If the Stars are active between retaining or replacing their veterans, they could be vulnerable if they force themselves to pursue shorter-term agreements with their RFAs.  Wyatt Johnston probably isn’t attainable but if there’s a team that really believes in Mavrik Bourque, I could see him garnering offer sheet interest as well.

Emoney123: Is there a trade or potential 2025 free agent the Flyers can pair with Michkov?

From a UFA perspective, it depends on whether Philadelphia views Mikko Rantanen as a center, a position he has played off and on with Colorado.  If Rantanen wants to go for top dollar (which likely takes him off the table to re-sign), the Flyers are one of the teams that would have enough cap space that they could plausibly afford him without needing to do much subtraction from their roster.  I suppose Mitch Marner fits as well if Matvei Michkov switches to the left wing as a left-hand shot but is that too much raw playmaking on one line?  That said, if the Flyers had a shot at adding a top talent like that, do it and figure the rest out later might be the best approach there.

On the trade front, Vancouver seems like the team to try to make a move with if they ultimately decide to move one of Elias Pettersson or J.T. Miller (who has full no-trade protection).  Legitimate top centers don’t come available too often and while both players have recent question marks, they also have a proven track record of recent production.  The cost for either would be significant, both in terms of current and future assets and with the Flyers still being in the build-up stage, a swap like that might not be at the most optimal time.  But again, with the scarcity of those types of players being traded, that shouldn’t dissuade GM Daniel Briere from inquiring at least about what it would cost to get one of them.

bottlesup: It might be a bit early, but is it safe to throw Werenski’s name into the Norris conversation?

I’d say it’s very safe to have Werenski in that mix.  He’s among the league leaders among blueliners for points, plays in all situations (all-around ability is right in the criteria for the award), and leads the NHL in average ice time.  When you’re in the mix offensively with the likes of Cale Makar and Quinn Hughes, you’re definitely doing something right.  He has undoubtedly played a significant role in the Blue Jackets surprisingly finding themselves in the battle for a playoff spot at the midway mark of the season, an outcome few would have seen coming.

I expect that their playoff situation will ultimately dictate whether he wins the award.  That, and staying healthy, of course.  It’s not unprecedented that a non-playoff blueliner wins it as Erik Karlsson did just two years ago.  However, his numbers were so far and beyond the rest (he had 25 points more than any other defender) that they were enough of a difference-maker.  Werenski isn’t going to have that luxury.  If the Blue Jackets come up short of a playoff spot, he’ll probably land plenty of second and third-place votes but that won’t be enough to win.  But if they get in, he’ll be the driving reason why which should sway lots of first-place votes his way and make the difference.

Zakis: What does a Marco Rossi extension look like?

Why are the Iowa Wild perpetually bad and has that had influence on prospects seemingly not reaching another level (thinking Hunt, Lambos, Jiricek)?

Back in the summer, I basically pegged Rossi’s range as a bridge deal starting with a three or a long-term deal starting with a five if he had a season similar to 2023-24 this year.  That clearly isn’t happening since he’s already nearly matched his point total from a year ago in half the games.  That’s certainly going to change the numbers.  The bridge deal now will probably start with a four and a longer-term agreement that buys out UFA years coming closer to the $7MM range depending on how many years it buys out.  (And if he produces at an even higher rate in the second half, those numbers will go up even more).

Despite the strong showing this season, I tend to lean toward the bridge deal for Rossi.  There has been a lot of smoke about the Wild not being fully sold on Rossi (who’s undersized for a center) and while the team has tried to quash that, I don’t think they’re going from being uncertain about him to handing him a long-term deal.  I also expect Minnesota to take advantage of their cap space and try to make a splash or two in free agency (or on the trade front) that might push them to have to go that route anyway.

As for the farm team, I didn’t realize the history was that bad.  For those who don’t follow Iowa, in their first 11 years of existence, they made the playoffs once and lost in the play-in round once.  There has been considerable turnover in terms of their coaching along the way as well.  Without watching them closely, I can’t begin to assess what’s happening beyond simple guesswork which doesn’t do any good.

I don’t think it’s fair to put David Jiricek in that group considering he’s barely been with them for a month but I would suggest that yes, a continuous losing environment doesn’t help from a development perspective.  Sometimes it’s good to have more prospects meaning the youngsters are getting playing time but I believe there’s value in being in a good spot, playing meaningful hockey, and seeing some playoff action.  It’s hard to objectively state that yes, that held some players back from getting to another level – it’s not that simple, obviously – but I’d say it hasn’t helped.

Unclemike1526: Not being able to watch the games this year, I’m just curious is Soderblom that much better or is it just a mirage? After being able to watch the last three games I’m not exactly missing watching them anyway. It would be nice to get an opinion. I’d dare say right now Soderblom is the best G on the Hawks since Laurent Brossoit can’t play. As bad as Soderblom was last year it’s hard to believe he is that much better.

It’s a combination of a couple of things.  Arvid Soderblom is still young (he’s 25) and it was reasonable to think he’d bounce back, at least to a point after a tough 2023-24 season.  Also, year-to-year volatility for goalies is pretty common, especially younger ones; if veterans can have big swings in performance, so can the unproven ones.  I wouldn’t necessarily say it’s a mirage, it’s just a young goalie who hopefully improved after a tough year and with less than 20 appearances, it’s still too early to say much conclusively.

With Brossoit out and Petr Mrazek a veteran placeholder, you’re absolutely right in that Soderblom is their best option right now.  And with the Blackhawks going nowhere in the standings this year, they should be going to Soderblom more often right now so that they can better assess him.  There’s a reason why he was their goalie of the short-term future not long ago and a reason why they had to go add Brossoit in the summer since he played so poorly last year.  Right now, they need to get a better sense of what they have and see if he’s still part of the future plans.

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FeeltheThunder: I read somewhere that the Islanders are in murky water (obviously) but if they don’t make the playoffs this season, they could start to consider a complete rebuild and surprisingly, sell off top talents like Mathew Barzal, Noah Dobson, Ilya Sorokin, and such during the summer. Granted, Brock Nelson and Kyle Palmieri are being considered potential trade deadline candidates this season but is this an actual possibility that top talents like Barzal, Dobson, Sorokin, and such could be up for grabs during the summer as these players would be some hot commodities among teams?

The Islanders enter the weekend in a tight battle to not be in last in the Eastern Conference and GM Lou Lamoriello indicated that he’s not even considering selling at this time.  I note this solely so I can say even if they do start selling later on, it’ll be the rentals, not the top players.

Now, you asked about the summer and I think the question that needs to be answered first is who the GM is for them this summer.  If it’s Lamoriello, then no, I don’t think he’ll even entertain the possibility of selling any of those players.  He truly believes in the core group of this team and he’s not going to be the one to dismantle it an embark on a longer-scale rebuild.

Now, if it isn’t Lamoriello in charge and a new GM gets a mandate to undergo bigger changes, that could be a different story.  If that happens, then some more prominent talent might become available.  I’m not sure how many of those three would plausibly move, however.  Sorokin isn’t having a great season and is signed through 2031-32 at $8.25MM per year.  I suspect teams will want to see him bounce back before making that type of commitment.  If he can get back to form, though, then yes, he could be made available if they’re getting a strong goalie prospect in return.

At 25, Dobson is young enough to be part of a longer-term core, even of a rebuilding team.  While I’m sure they’d get strong interest in him, I could see them electing to make him one of the veteran building blocks of a rebuilding team as well.  As for Barzal, he’s probably the most realistic although at a $9.15MM price tag through 2030-31, they wouldn’t be selling at the peak of his value.  Bo Horvat is someone else who could be in play in this scenario.  But until the GM question is answered, this is a path I don’t see them taking in the near future.

PyramidHeadcrab: New year, new speculation. Looking into 2025, who are your top picks to regress completely out of the playoff picture, and who puts on the thrusters to sneak into a surprise playoff spot?

And indulge me – who finishes at league bottom?

In the East, Boston is currently holding onto a Wild Card spot but boy, do they look vulnerable right now.  They’re not scoring much and Jeremy Swayman isn’t having a particularly strong year either.  They can still turn it around but I’m not overly optimistic.  Columbus is the other Wild Card team at the moment and while they’re a great story, I’d be surprised if they’re still there in April.  While it doesn’t make a ton of sense, I think Pittsburgh just sneaks in this time instead of just missing.  If Linus Ullmark can get back soon, I expect Ottawa would make a push and could get in.  If that doesn’t happen (who knows how long he’s out for), then I’m going to pick the Rangers to turn it around.  They’ve been a bit better as of late and with both Wild Card spots up for grabs, they’re good enough to get back into one of those.

Out West, the only top-three seed that could be up for grabs is the Central where Colorado is trying to grab one from the top Wild Card seed.  Between those four spots and the three in the Pacific, I feel those are all pretty safe barring a significant injury or two.  Vancouver holds the other Wild Card spot and with how things are going for them on and off the ice, I’d be surprised if they can hold onto it.  Utah would be a cool story for sure but with Jim Montgomery helping to stabilize St. Louis, the Blues are my pick to sneak into that last spot.

As for who finishes last, it’s a two-horse race between San Jose and Chicago.  The in-season coaching change hasn’t helped the Blackhawks turn things around and they’re likelier to sell more than the Sharks because they still have their retention slots available to them.  I’d lightly lean toward Chicago finishing 32nd in the standings as things stand.

Photo courtesy of Imagn Images.

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals PHR Mailbag

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Capitals Place Charlie Lindgren On IR, Recall Hunter Shepard

January 11, 2025 at 12:55 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The Capitals will be without Charlie Lindgren for at least the next week.  The team announced that they have placed the goaltender on injured reserve, meaning he will miss at least the next seven days.  Taking his place on the roster is netminder Hunter Shepard who was recalled from AHL Hershey.

Lindgren suffered an upper-body injury in the second period of Friday’s game against Montreal.  Brandon Duhaime pushed Nick Suzuki into the goalie, causing Suzuki to hit Lindgren’s head.  He stayed in the game momentarily but was eventually pulled with Logan Thompson taking over.

Lindgren signed with Washington as a backup goalie in 2022 but had a breakout showing last season, posting a 2.67 GAA, a .911 SV%, and a league-best six shutouts in 50 games.  With Thompson in the fold, Lindgren isn’t playing as much this season but has a 2.65 GAA and a .900 SV% in his first 21 starts, a decent start to his contract year as a pending unrestricted free agent.

As for Shepard, the 29-year-old made four starts for Washington last season in his first taste of NHL action.  He had a stellar showing in the minors last season, putting up a 1.76 GAA along with a .929 SV% in 34 games, winning the Aldege “Baz” Bastien Memorial Award as the AHL’s most outstanding goaltender.  However, things haven’t gone as well in the first half of this year as Shepard has posted a 2.68 GAA and a .898 SV% in 23 contests with the Bears.  He’ll serve as Thompson’s backup while Lindgren is out.

AHL| Transactions| Washington Capitals Charlie Lindgren| Hunter Shepard

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Viktor Lodin Could Return To The NHL Next Season

January 11, 2025 at 11:55 am CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

Viktor Lodin’s first stint in North America came and went with little fanfare.  However, now that he’s having a strong season back home in Sweden, a return could be back on the radar.  Aftonbladet’s Tomas Ros and Hans Abrahamsson report (subscription link) that there are multiple NHL teams (including the Blues and Red Wings) believed to be scouting the forward and that Lodin could look to take another crack at the NHL next season.

The 25-year-old was a fourth-round pick by Ottawa back in 2019, going 94th overall.  After spending the first season of his entry-level deal with SHL Timra, Lodin came to North America late in the year, getting into one appearance with the big club and ten more with AHL Belleville where he impressed with eight points.  That seemed to position himself to push for an NHL roster spot for 2022-23.

That didn’t happen, however.  Lodin was limited to just 28 games with Belleville that year and while he held his own with 15 points in those outings, the Senators elected to walk away at the end of the season, non-tendering him instead of issuing a qualifying offer.

Lodin returned to Sweden last season, spending the year with IK Oskarshamn where he fared well with 11 goals and 20 assists in 40 games.  However, that team was relegated for this season so Lodin moved on to Farjestad for this year and his production has improved.  Through 31 outings in 2024-25, he has 12 goals and 21 assists, good for a tie for second in SHL scoring.

Because Lodin already had his entry-level contract, there are no more restrictions on what type of deal he can sign.  With the year he’s having, it’s possible that he could command a strong two-way deal or even a one-way pact which makes him someone to keep an eye on when the international transfer window opens up in the spring.  If Lodin doesn’t get an offer to his liking, he can fall back on the security of his current deal with Farjestad, one that runs through the 2028-29 season.

Detroit Red Wings| SHL| St. Louis Blues Viktor Lodin

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Predators Recall Kieffer Bellows

January 11, 2025 at 10:53 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The Predators have added some extra depth up front heading into their game against Washington.  The team announced that they have recalled winger Kieffer Bellows from AHL Milwaukee.  Nashville had two open roster spots so no corresponding moves needed to be made.

The 26-year-old spent last season on a minor-league deal with Toronto.  He was quite productive with the Marlies, tallying 27 goals and 22 assists in 52 games in his first extended AHL stint since the 2018-19 campaign.  That helped him earn some NHL interest last summer as he signed a one-year, two-way deal with the Preds on the third day of free agency, a deal that pays $775K in the NHL and $225K in the minors.

Bellows cleared waivers at the start of training camp and has been with the Admirals all season.  He hasn’t been quite as productive as last season but still has 12 goals and 10 assists in 31 outings, good for second on the team in scoring; their top scorer, Vinnie Hinostroza, was brought up in late December.

Bellows has 95 career NHL appearances under his belt.  Most of those came with the Islanders but his most recent stint at the top level came with Philadelphia who claimed him off waivers in 2022-23 (before non-tendering him that summer).  Between the two teams, Bellows has 14 goals and 14 assists along with 199 hits while averaging 11 minutes a night of playing time.

AHL| Nashville Predators| Transactions Kieffer Bellows

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