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Snapshots: Predators, Haula, Hurricanes, McCabe

January 5, 2025 at 7:59 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

The Predators have recalled defenseman Kevin Gravel from AHL Milwaukee, per the AHL’s transactions log.  He’ll take the place of Jeremy Lauzon on the active roster who has been moved back to injured reserve.  Gravel has an assist in three games with Nashville so far this season but is likely to be in the seventh defender role for the time being.  He also has five points in 25 games with the Admirals.  Lauzon, meanwhile, just returned from injured reserve midway through last month, getting into six games before being sidelined with a lower-body injury once again.  He has one assist and 127 hits in 28 games thus far in just under 18 minutes a night of playing time.

Elsewhere from around the NHL:

  • The Devils announced (Twitter link) that center Erik Haula is listed as day-to-day with an ankle injury and is set to undergo further testing. Head coach Sheldon Keefe told reporters including James Nichols of NJ Hockey Now that the veteran is going to miss some time.  It has been a rough year for Haula thus far as he has just five goals and six assists in 42 games.  Even extrapolated for a full season, his projected output would be well below the 44, 41, and 35 points Haula had in the last three years.
  • Hurricanes winger William Carrier was a late scratch from their game against Pittsburgh. The team announced (Twitter link) that he’s dealing with a lower-body injury.  The 30-year-old is in his first season in Carolina after signing a six-year deal with them over the summer and has nine points along with a team-high 136 hits in 39 games.  In a corresponding move, winger Juha Jaaska was brought back up from AHL Chicago, per the AHL’s transactions log, after being sent down on Thursday.  He made his NHL debut on Wednesday, playing 8:21 against Florida.
  • The Maple Leafs announced (Twitter link) that defenseman Jake McCabe suffered an upper-body injury in tonight’s game against Philadelphia and won’t return. The injury occurred in a fight late in the opening period.  McCabe has been an important part of Toronto’s back end, logging over 21 minutes a night while chipping in with 11 points, 68 blocks, and 75 hits in his first 35 games this season.

AHL| Carolina Hurricanes| Nashville Predators| New Jersey Devils| Snapshots| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions Erik Haula| Jake McCabe| Jeremy Lauzon| Juha Jaaska| Kevin Gravel| William Carrier

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PHR Mailbag: Lightning, Panthers, Chychrun, Hughes, Kings, Jets, Spengler Cup

January 5, 2025 at 6:59 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

Topics in this edition of the PHR Mailbag include the cap crunch the Panthers will be facing as they look to re-sign two key unrestricted free agents this summer, options for the Jets to solve their roster needs, and much more.  With so many questions this time around, we’ll break them into three separate pieces instead of the usual two.

FeeltheThunder: As a Tampa fan, I’m wondering the type of combo Tampa will go for in the trade deadline. Tampa is a much-improved team from last year (night and day, really). I feel Tampa may go for one or two forwards to add more additional depth to their middle/bottom six group like they did a few years ago with Brandon Hagel and Nick Paul (that’s worked out quite well). They have a pretty good defensive group overall and have some depth so I don’t know if adding a defensive piece is necessary. What do you think of the combo they’ll go with and who may the targets be?

I feel one name for starters (if available) Jake Evans from Montreal has a number of qualities Tampa tends to aim for in a player and Tampa/Montreal have traded in the past.

In follow-up comments, you also mentioned Luke Kunin (who I’ve tossed out before as a possible fit for them) and Will Cuylle (who might be one of the more untouchable Rangers at the moment).  I still like Kunin as a fit for them.  If memory serves, I had Mikael Granlund on that list previously, assuming they can make the money work with the Sharks out of retention slots.  I think he’s still a good fit for them too.

Evans is a good one as well although the asking price on him is going to be fairly high with the start he’s off to this season.  At a $1.7MM cap charge, he’ll be affordable for a lot of contenders which will drive up the acquisition cost.  If Buffalo sells, Jordan Greenway could be viewed as trying to refill the Tanner Jeannot slot, probably at a much lesser price point than what was paid to Nashville to get Jeannot.  Another center that could interest them is Sean Kuraly, someone who can kill penalties and play with an edge.  If Utah sells, Nick Bjugstad could also fit the bill.

If they go for two forwards, it’ll be a center/winger combo (and if they wound up with someone like Kunin who plays all three positions), even better for them.  Aside from Granlund, all are cheap enough that Tampa Bay could afford them outright without necessarily needing retention at the trade deadline if they’re able to stay healthy between now and then.

Having said that, it wouldn’t shock me if one of their additions is on the back end, looking for a third-pairing upgrade.  Someone who can kill penalties, play with an edge, and give them a bit more depth in case injuries arise.  In essence, something like the David Savard move a few years ago (just not at the cost of a first-round pick).  Depending on what happens with Savard in Montreal and what they look to do up front, he could be a potentially plausible fit again.

Sunshine swede: Do you think Panthers can extend both Ekblad and Bennett? Guess Bennett will earn a raise, while Ekblad might have a cut. What do you think about their next deals?

Keeping one is definitely doable but both could be a challenge.  Per PuckPedia, they have $72.5MM in commitments on the books for next season already to 15 players.  If the salary cap lands around the $92MM range (some could see it going higher but for now, that’s the 5% allowable increase), that gives them a little less than $20MM to work with, a bit less than that if they want to leave themselves some in-season wiggle room.

Coming into the season, Sam Bennett was probably looking at a long-term deal in the $6.5MM range.  Given the dearth of impact centers set to become an unrestricted free agent and the fact he’s on pace for career highs offensively across the board, it stands to reason that he could push past $7MM on his next deal.  Frankly, something along the lines of Aaron Ekblad’s current price tag ($7.5MM) wouldn’t shock me given his playoff success.

As for Ekblad, he’s also set to benefit from a fairly weak UFA market; it’s basically between him and Neal Pionk for the top veteran right-shot option available.  While he’s not the big point producer he was earlier in his career, he still plays a big defensive role, logs heavy minutes, and is on pace for around 40 points again.  I could see a small cut in his pay but I could also see a long-term deal at that price tag again depending on how many teams are serious about bidding for him.

If the two of them cost, say, $14MM combined, now you’re down to only around $5MM to re-sign Mackie Samoskevich and sign a couple of depth forwards and depth defenders.  That’d make it tough to do anything to materially improve the roster.  Of course, losing one of those two would certainly hurt things as well.  I think the likeliest outcome is that they only keep one but if they really want to make their roster more top-heavy, there’s a way to keep both of them around and then restructure a bit once their $14.5MM goalie tandem sees their contract expire in 2026.

2012orioles: Is a Jakob Chychrun extension with the Capitals going to happen?

Last month, Chychrun indicated to Sportsnet’s Luke Fox that he could see himself re-signing with Washington.  And frankly, it’s easy to see why.  The Caps have been one of the biggest pleasant surprises of the season with their roster makeover during the summer paying dividends with Chychrun playing a big role in that.  He’s on pace for a career year offensively with 11 goals and 14 assists in just 33 games.  His shooting percentage (15.1%) is a lot higher than his career average so there might be a bit of regression coming on the goal front but even so, he should blow past his personal benchmark of 41 points as long as he stays healthy.  In a contract year, that’s great news for him.

That next contract is going to be quite pricey, however.  He was probably in the $7MM range heading into the season and with the year he’s having offensively and the talk of a salary cap increase of more than 5%, it wouldn’t be shocking to see his next AAV start with an eight.  That might seem high but he’ll be 27 when he hits the open market; whoever signs him will be getting several of his prime years.

Can the Capitals be the team that gives him that contract?  I think they can be.  Per PuckPedia, they have $63.7MM on the books for 2025-26 with 14 players signed.  Granted, they need to sign a goalie tandem that will cost a lot more than the sub-$2MM they’re paying this year but there’s room for another big-ticket deal on the books.  Having said that, a Chychrun extension would push them past $30MM (probably closer to $32MM) on their back end so they may want to trim a bit.  But they can afford it and he’s a very good fit.  I think they can get it done.

DevilShark: What do you see as Hughes III ceiling in Norris voting this year? Could he crack the top 10?

Let’s recap his first half of the season.  Luke Hughes has three goals and 15 assists in 33 games so far.  Decent offensive numbers, sure, but hardly worthy of award consideration.  It’s even a step back from his per-game production from last season.  On top of that, his playing time is down by nearly two minutes a night from last year.  He sits fifth among New Jersey defenders in ATOI as a result.

Is this realistically the profile of a player who should be in consideration for the Norris Trophy as the NHL’s best defenseman?  Logically, doesn’t Hughes need to be New Jersey’s top blueliner to be even considered for the award?  While it’s worth noting that the Devils run three very balanced pairings, I don’t see a case to be made for him to land on a ballot let alone finish in the top ten in voting.

It wouldn’t shock me for Hughes to one day land in there.  Once he takes on a bigger role and if he can become the type of highly productive blueliner many project him to be, he’ll get into that range.  But that’s not going to happen this season.

rpoabr: What’s the trade that puts the LA Kings into true Cup contention? Doughty coming back soon (hopefully) should already be a boost.

Drew Doughty’s eventual return will be the biggest boost they get.  Adding a legitimate number one blueliner to the roster puts the rest of the back end in a more optimal spot on the depth chart and gives them a bit more depth in general.  If they stay healthy the rest of the way, they probably don’t need to make a move to add defensive depth so we can scratch that off the list of trade options.

But here’s the problem.  When Doughty returns (probably later this month), that’s the end of their cap space.  The Kings are operating in LTIR which means they haven’t been banking cap space.  Right now, they have lots to spend with an LTIR pool of more than $10MM.  When he comes back, they have to start trimming players to get back into cap compliance.  That puts them in a spot where they’re going to have to match money or get double retention on a player.  That means there isn’t a trade available to them this season that’s going to vault them into true Cup contention.

What could help put them into at least semi-contender status would be adding a top-six winger to help get them out of the middle of the pack offensively.  Making the money work would require double retention but players like Jason Zucker and Kyle Palmieri come to mind, players that will boost their middle six and should be acquirable for a package starting with a second-round pick.  But even with that, when you’re in a division with Vegas and Edmonton, they’re going to be hard-pressed to get to true Stanley Cup contention no matter what move(s) they make.

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Cla23: What realistic trade can the Winnipeg Jets make to acquire a top-four defenseman or second-line center? I mean players with NMC, NTC, will probably not waive to come to the first-place overall Jets.

Winnipeg not being a ‘destination’ team certainly complicates things a bit for GM Kevin Cheveldayoff who will have to get creative to try to fill those holes.  At first glance, the easiest short-term solution for a second center is to flip a draft pick or two to San Jose for Mikael Granlund.  Granlund is producing well but with the Sharks unable to retain, I wonder if a 2026 second-round pick and a 2025 third-rounder is enough.  He doesn’t have any trade protection either and if there’s a good fit, I could see him being amenable to a deal to stick around.

On a longer-term basis, I wonder if they might be a team that could pry Dylan Cozens out of Buffalo.  The Sabres would want a similar young talent in return so the offer would need Cole Perfetti as one of the pieces.  I also think they’d need to add their first-round pick this year.  There might be another third element but more of the inconsequential variety.  That’s a high price but Cozens has five more years of team control at a price tag ($7.1MM) that Winnipeg can afford and would give them a capable second option behind Mark Scheifele.  If they want a young option to grow with their core (and doesn’t have trade protection), it’s going to be expensive.  And Buffalo gets someone who fits their core group age-wise, some cap relief if they intend to make a big splash in free agency, and another quality draft pick to use or trade for more of a win-now option.

Adding defensive help is going to be tough, especially a longer-term upgrade.  Teams moving a more cost-controlled option would want a younger piece with some upside in return and I don’t think players like Ville Heinola and Dylan Samberg (who was off to a nice start before getting injured) are the caliber of young blueliners they’d be seeking.  So, the rental market it is then.  I’d put Marcus Pettersson as a viable target for them with the return I suggested for Granlund potentially being enough (though I see Pittsburgh trying to hold out for a first-rounder).  And again, if the fit is good, maybe he stays and fills that need longer term.

Gmm8811: Need MORE Spengler Cup coverage!!! What have been the most significant signings of Spengler participants that weren’t on anyone’s radar? Who has benefitted the most from a good tournament showing?

Truthfully, I can’t think of any off the top of my head that would be considered significant signings from Spengler Cup participants over the years.  Anaheim gave Kodie Curran a two-year, $2MM one-way contract in 2020 a year after he played in the tournament.  A seven-figure salary for someone from there with minimal pro experience in North America would qualify as significant in comparison to some of the two-way deals given out.   Looking through the top scorers in recent years, none of them landed an NHL deal.

The who has benefitted question is a tough one to answer since I’m not sure what the perspective is.  If it’s benefitting from the tournament in the hopes of landing an NHL deal, there probably aren’t any.  Jonathan Hazen stood out to me in a positive way for the second straight year but he has another season and an option on his contract in Switzerland and is already 34 so he’s not landing an NHL chance.  If you’re asking from the standpoint of a good showing helping secure a contract overseas for next season, several I’m sure helped their chances but when you’re looking in the grand scheme of things, it’s a three-game or four-game event.  That’s probably too small a sample size to make any sort of conclusions from.

Photo courtesy of Imagn Images.

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals PHR Mailbag

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Utah Hockey Club Reassign Kevin Connauton

January 5, 2025 at 5:57 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

After claiming defenseman Nick DeSimone off waivers from the New Jersey Devils earlier today, the Utah Hockey Club had one too many players on their active roster. According to Belle Fraser of The Salt Lake Tribune, the team has reassigned defenseman Kevin Connauton to their AHL affiliate, the Tucson Roadrunners.

Despite being recalled by Utah on two separate occasions during the 2024-25 NHL season, Connauton has yet to debut with the team in the NHL. In his second stint with AHL Tucson for the first time since the 2016-17 season, Connauton has recorded five goals and nine points in 24 contests.

Connauton joined the new Utah organization this past summer for their inaugural season, signing a two-year, $1.55 million contract. Although the team clamored to add more defensive depth to the entire organization in the offseason, Connauton had a legitimate chance to play in his first NHL game since the 2021-22 season after injuries to Sean Durzi, John Marino, Maveric Lamoureux, and Robert Bortuzzo earlier in the year.

Instead, Connauton has been passed by other candidates and pushed further down the depth chart with the acquisition of DeSimone. The former 83rd overall pick of the 2009 NHL Draft is in the twilight years of his career and has likely seen any future opportunity in the NHL pass him by.

Still, the veteran journeyman has put together a relatively lengthy NHL career with six different organizations. Connauton has scored 28 goals and 80 points in 360 NHL contests split between the Arizona Coyotes, Colorado Avalanche, Columbus Blue Jackets, Dallas Stars, Florida Panthers, and Philadelphia Flyers beginning in the 2013-14 season.

AHL| Transactions| Utah Mammoth Kevin Connauton

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Colorado Avalanche Recall Tye Felhaber

January 5, 2025 at 5:50 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

The Colorado Avalanche are recalling a newly-signed depth forward for the second time this year. The organization announced they’ve recalled forward Tye Felhaber from their AHL affiliate, the Colorado Eagles, before their upcoming game against the Florida Panthers tomorrow night.

It’ll be the second time Felhaber’s been on an NHL roster this season after clearing waivers on December 19th. Felhaber debuted in the NHL one day after signing with the Avalanche on December 16th but failed to find the scoresheet after skating in 4:34 of the game against the Vancouver Canucks.

Colorado isn’t likely to insert Felhaber into the lineup tomorrow night unless another option becomes unavailable. Still, they may keep him on the active roster as insurance for the rest of the week considering their upcoming Central Division road trip against the Chicago Blackhawks, Minnesota Wild, and Winnipeg Jets.

After transitioning to professional hockey during the 2019-20 season, Felhaber is now a veteran of seven seasons in the AHL and three in the ECHL. He’s suited up for four teams in the AHL including stops with the Texas Stars, Syracuse Crunch, Milwaukee Admirals, and now Eagles. Felhaber’s been a relatively mild depth scorer with 35 goals and 72 points in 193 contests.

Still, considering he cleared waivers not long ago, Felhaber provides optimal flexibility to a team struggling to stay below the cap. The Avalanche have just over $2.97MM in cap space thanks to several long-term injured reserve placements but will have to get creative once Miles Wood and his $2.5MM salary come back on the books.

Colorado Avalanche| Transactions Tye Felhaber

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Penguins Activate Kris Letang, Place Philip Tomasino On IR

January 5, 2025 at 4:30 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

The Pittsburgh Penguins are making a few roster moves before their game against the Carolina Hurricanes tonight. Pittsburgh announced they’ve placed forward Philip Tomasino on injured reserve while later adding they’ve activated defenseman Kris Letang in a corresponding move.

Considering the Penguins had a full 23-man roster before tonight’s game, this transaction was expected. Wes Crosby of NHL.com reported earlier that the Penguins expect Tomasino to miss the next week or two with a lower-body injury while Letang became a game-time decision.

Tomasino’s injury dampens the young forward’s hopes for the 2024-25 season. The former 24th overall pick of the 2019 NHL Draft was traded from the Nashville Predators to the Penguins for a 2027 fourth-round pick earlier in the season appearing to turn a corner with the second organization of his career.

He scored three goals and four points in his first five games as a Penguin averaging 15 minutes of ice time per game, nearly two minutes more than his season-high with the Predators. Unfortunately, Tomasino’s production has cooled off dramatically with one goal and three points in the next 11 contests. Thanks to Pittsburgh’s 10-5-2 record in their last 17 games, Tomasino should rejoin a team on the hunt for a spot in the 2025 Stanley Cup playoffs which is more than what could be said of his former teammates in Nashville.

At the cost of some forward depth up front, the Penguins will get an addition to their defensive core in the form of Letang. Unfortunately, it won’t be quite the addition as it would have been in years past.

Letang is squarely in the middle of the worst statistical output of his lengthy NHL career. Assuming he plays in Pittsburgh’s remaining 42 games and continues his current offensive production, he’ll finish with 35 points in 76 games this season which would be the lowest since his tertiary campaign in the 2008-09 season.

Things don’t get any better on the defensive side of the puck. Letang is averaging a career-low 47.8% CorsiFor% and 87.5% on-ice save percentage while at even strength. Additionally, Letang is averaging an expected +/- in the negatives for the first time since the 2020-21 season.

Still, the Penguins are contractually committed to Letang for three years beyond this one and he still represents one of their better defensive options. He’s expected to play alongside rookie defenseman Owen Pickering on the team’s top-pairing tonight.

Injury| Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Kris Letang| Philip Tomasino

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Vegas Golden Knights Reassign Tanner Laczynski

January 5, 2025 at 3:30 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

Depth forward Tanner Laczynski is back in the American Hockey League shortly following his first goal as a member of the Vegas Golden Knights. The organization announced they’ve reassigned Laczynski to their AHL affiliate, the Henderson Silver Knights.

Laczynski was chosen by the Philadelphia Flyers with the 169th pick in the 2016 NHL Draft following a successful NCAA career at Ohio State University. He finished his NCAA career with 48 goals and 143 points in 138 games before transitioning to professional hockey in 2020-21.

Despite missing many games due to injury through the first few seasons of his career, Laczynski was still a relatively productive forward, particularly with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms. Laczynski recorded 31 goals and 74 points in 93 games for the Phantoms from 2021-2024 with another four goals and six postseason contests.

His time on an NHL roster wasn’t nearly as fruitful. Laczynski was rarely used in the first two years of his career, suiting up in six total games for the Flyers in the 2020-21 and 2021-22 seasons averaging 9:53 of ice time per game. He garnered a larger opportunity in the 2022-23 season with 32 games but only scored two goals and two assists with even less average ice time.

Laczynski eventually left the Flyers organization after spending all last year in Lehigh Valley. The Golden Knights moved relatively quickly signing a player of Laczynski’s history this past summer on the back of a two-year, $1.55MM agreement.

Outside of scoring in last night’s contest against the Buffalo Sabres, Laczynski has spent much of the year with Henderson. He leads the team in scoring with six goals and 20 points in 18 contests but the Silver Knights still reside in the Pacific Division basement by a margin of five points despite Laczynski’s efforts.

AHL| Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights Tanner Laczynski

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Ducks Sign Frank Vatrano To Three-Year Extension

January 5, 2025 at 2:03 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 19 Comments

In an announcement from himself and his young daughter, Frank Vatrano is committing to Orange County for another three seasons. In a quick follow-up from TSN’s Pierre LeBrun, Vatrano’s three-year pact will pay him $18MM in total but carries an uncommon method of deferred salary.

LeBrun shares that Vatrano will earn a base salary of $3MM each year of the deal with $9MM deferred. From 2035, Vatrano will earn $900K annually from the Ducks until 2044. LeBrun asserts that Vatrano plans to live outside of California in retirement giving him the flexibility to earn his annual disbursement in a tax-free state. Additionally, the creativity of the deferred salary brings Vatrano’s cap hit down to $4.67MM (instead of $6MM) which provides cost-savings to Anaheim.

Being primarily used in Major League Baseball, this is the most creative use of deferred salary in recent memory in the National Hockey League and may be a sign of things to come. There are increasing concerns that teams within states without an income tax have a competitive advantage over other teams, particularly in comparison to the Canadian market in recent years. The use of deferred salary by Anaheim may be a way to show players, particularly unrestricted free agents, that there are creative ways to dodge financial impediments.

For Vatrano’s part, it’s a healthy raise on his modest $3.65MM salary for the last three years. After a disappointing year with the New York Rangers, the Ducks signed Vatrano to a three-year, $10.95MM contract as an unrestricted free agent in the summer of 2022.

Subsequently, he’s enjoyed the two most productive seasons of his career. Vatrano scored 22 goals and 41 points in 81 games for Anaheim during the 2022-23 season finishing tied for third on the team in goal-scoring. Vatrano followed up that performance with the best season of his career scoring 37 goals and 60 points in 82 games last year shattering his previous record of 24 goals in 2018-19 with the Florida Panthers.

Vatrano’s goal-scoring output has dissipated slightly this year with nine goals and 20 points in 37 games but he’s still proving to be a physical, offensive threat in the Ducks’ top-six. Unsurprisingly, the defensive side of Vatrano’s game is improving under head coach Greg Cronin’s hard-nosed system, with the veteran sniper managing the best 5-on-5 on-ice save percentage since his time with the Panthers.

The extension reflects Vatrano’s earnest commitment to a rebuilding organization. It also removes an important trade candidate from consideration as the deadline approaches. Vatrano’s style of play would be an asset to almost any contending team’s middle-six, but they will now have to seek such an advantage elsewhere.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Anaheim Ducks| Newsstand| Transactions Frank Vatrano

19 comments

Utah Hockey Club Claims Nick DeSimone On Waivers

January 5, 2025 at 1:45 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

1/5: The Utah Hockey Club has claimed DeSimone off of waivers from the Devils, per Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman. DeSimone will replace Dakota Mermis’ role as Utah’s seventh defenseman, after the Leafs reclaimed Mermis off of waivers from Utah. New Jersey also acquired DeSimone off of waivers, claiming him away from Calgary last season.

1/4: The Devils are making a move to open up a roster spot.  Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports (Twitter link) that the Devils have placed defenseman Nick DeSimone on waivers.

It’s the second time this season that the 30-year-old finds himself on the wire.  DeSimone was put on waivers late in training camp and passed through unclaimed.  That wasn’t the case last year when he was waived, however, as he wound up with New Jersey via a midseason claim from Calgary, getting into 11 games after that where he had a pair of points along with 21 blocked shots in 16:29 of playing time per contest.  However, with the team much healthier and deeper on the back end going into the season, DeSimone lost his roster spot at the time.

DeSimone has been up with the Devils a few times this season.  Those combined stints totalled more than 30 days which is why he needs to go back on waivers to return to AHL Utica even though he didn’t suit up once with the Devils while on recall.  DeSimone has played in 12 games with the Comets when he hasn’t been in New Jersey, picking up three assists.

DeSimone is playing on a one-year, one-way contract worth the league minimum salary of $775K this season and is slated to become an unrestricted free agent this summer.  Considering that some teams are dealing with some short-term injuries on the back end, it’s possible that DeSimone could find himself on the move when his waiver period expires at 1 PM CT on Sunday.

New Jersey Devils| Transactions| Utah Mammoth| Waivers Nick DeSimone

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Senators’ Linus Ullmark, Travis Hamonic Out Week-To-Week

January 5, 2025 at 1:24 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 1 Comment

Ottawa Senators head coach Travis Green issued a laundry list of injury updates on Sunday, captured by TSN’s Bruce Garrioch. Most notably, starting goaltender Linus Ullmark was designated as week-to-week with a back injury. Ullmark hasn’t skated since leaving the team’s December 22nd match against Edmonton early after his back tightened up. He’s missed five games since, and will now continue to sit out through the bulk of January.

Losing their star netminder has been a tough blow for Ottawa to bear. They’ve turned to a mix of Anton Forsberg and Leevi Merilainen in his absence, but totaled a bleak 1-4-0 record and 3.20 goals-against per-game. Ullmark has been far more successful in net, ranking 16th in the league wins (12) and seventh in save percentage (.915). He’s everything Ottawa was hoping for when they traded two players and a first-round pick for him this summer. But with him on the shelf for the foreseeable future, the Senators are once again faced with a lack of goaltending depth.

Forsberg should continue his role of de facto starter, giving him a chance to improve on his .885 Sv% in 12 games this year. But Merilainen will receive the biggest opportunity with this news. He’s spent the season moving back-and-forth between the major and minor rosters, in the mix posting a team-best .901 Sv% in 13 games for the Belleville Senators. The 22-year-old has also set a 2-2-0 record and .884 in his NHL appearances this season, and could earn a big role if he proves to be the piece the pulls Ottawa out of their lump.

Green also shared that defenseman Travis Hamonic will miss two-to-four weeks with a lower-body injury. Hamonic played down to the final minute of Ottawa’s Friday loss to St. Louis, and didn’t seem noticeably limited in his final shift. But he’ll now be out for the long-term, likely opening the door for Jacob Bernard-Docker to step back into the lineup. Bernard-Docker has four points in 25 games this season, continuing his scoring slump after he scored just 14 points in 72 games last season. If he proves a shaky addition, the Senators could also turn towards Nikolas Matinpalo, who has only played one NHL game this season but has scored seven points in 24 AHL games.

In brighter news, forwards David Perron and Michael Amadio have both returned to skating. Both are recovering from upper-body injuries. Perron has been injured for much of the season, only appearing in nine games and not yet scoring for his new club. Amadio has been a bit more impactful, scoring 10 points in 33 games in the mix of Ottawa’s bottom-six. Placing Hamonic and Ullmark on injured reserve would clear the space for Ottawa to activate both forwards.

AHL| Injury| NHL| Newsstand| Ottawa Senators| Players David Perron| Linus Ullmark| Michael Amadio| Travis Hamonic

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Wild Assign Carson Lambos, Brendan Gaunce To AHL

January 5, 2025 at 11:24 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Minnesota Wild have assigned forward Brendan Gaunce and defenseman Carson Lambos to the AHL’s Iowa Wild, per Michael Russo of The Athletic. Russo points out that these moves could indicate that Minnesota could get multiple injured players back before they host St. Louis on Tuesday. Minnesota is facing an extensive list of absentees, including injuries to superstar Kirill Kaprizov, team captain Jared Spurgeon, and top-four defender Jacob Middleton. Both Kaprizov and Middleton could reasonably make it back for Tuesday’s game, should they hit an upswing in their recovery. Russo also shared that forward Devin Shore should be clear to practice, after being a last-minute scratch for Minnesota’s Saturday win over Carolina.

The focal piece of this move is former first-round pick Lambos, who will now have the first NHL call-up of his career cut short without an NHL debut. Lambos was the 26th overall pick in the 2021 NHL Draft, selected with the pick Minnesota acquired after sending Jason Zucker to the Pittsburgh Penguins. Lambos was a smooth and diligent two-way defender in his draft year and managed double-digit goals and point-per-game scoring in both the 2021-22 and 2022-23 WHL seasons, even captaining the Winnipeg Ice in the latter season. But unfortunately, that production has yet to appear at the pro flight. He scored 14 points in 69 games as an AHL rookie last season, but may not even reach that point this season – with five points in 27 games putting him on track for just 12 points in a full year. He’ll now return to the minors and continue fighting to improve his game-to-game impacts.

Lambos will be joined by Gaunce, who’s found far more success in the AHL this year. His 11 goals and 17 points through 22 games currently leads the Iowa Wild in goals and ranks second in points. Gaunce has stepped into the mix of depth forwards used to fill in for Wild injuries, playing in five NHL games but yet to score a point this season. His only notable stat changes stand as four penalty minutes and a -3.

AHL| Minnesota Wild| NHL| Players| Transactions Brendan Gaunce| Carson Lambos

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