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East Notes: Senators, Lomberg, Capitals

April 25, 2024 at 6:14 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Ottawa Senators have hit a snag in their pursuit of moving to the LeBreton Flats, reports Bruce Garrioch of the Ottawa Sun. The Senators have been working with the National Capital Commission to facilitate the move for the last two years, establishing a memorandum of understanding with the NCC that dedicated a parcel of land for a new arena. But the parcel is just seven acres, compared to the Senators’ current 75-acre plot, leading the team to worry they may not have room for public parking.

Still, Senators’ CEO Tobi Nussbaum shared with Garrioch that the NCC has room for flexibility, and that the team remains confident that LeBreton is the right spot for them. The two sides will face a soft-deadline of September to decide if they are going to move forward with the LeBreton arena, though Nussbaum added, “Should (the rink) not happen, there is a Plan B for those parcels within LeBreton Flats. If the two sides aren’t able to come to an agreement or the Senators make a decision that they’re not going to build there, then we’ll move to our second option”

Other notes from the Eastern Conference:

  • Forward Ryan Lomberg will remain out of the Florida Panthers lineup in Game Three due to illness, head coach Paul Maurice told Florida Hockey Now’s Colby Guy (Twitter link). Guy added that Lomberg traveled with the team, but needs another day of feeling good before returning to their facilities. Kyle Okposo will step into the lineup in his place, set to play in his first postseason game since 2016, when he scored eight points in 11 games with the New York Islanders. Okposo has yet to record his first point as a Panther, despite appearing in six games. Pending a big Game Three performance, he’ll likely step back out of the lineup when Lomberg is back to full health.
  • The Washington Capitals could be without forward Sonny Milano in Game Three due to an upper-body injury, shares Sammi Silber of The Hockey News (Twitter link). Milano appeared in both of Washington’s postseason games so far, recording no scoring and a -2. Silber also shared that defenders Rasmus Sandin and Nick Jensen are each continuing to progress from the injuries that’s so far held them out of the postseason lineup. That means Alexander Alexeyev and Dylan McIlrath will remain in the lineup, after rookie Vincent Iorio was also sidelined with injury.

Florida Panthers| Injury| Ottawa Senators| Washington Capitals Nick Jensen| Rasmus Sandin| Ryan Lomberg| Sonny Milano

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Metropolitan Notes: Chytil, Fast, Martin, Seeley

April 25, 2024 at 5:12 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The New York Rangers will be joined by centerman Filip Chytil when they travel to Washington D.C. for Games Three and Four, per Mollie Walker of the New York Post (Twitter link). It’s another substantial step in Chytil’s storied return from a November 2nd concussion. The 24-year-old hasn’t played a game since and took time away from the team around the holidays to recover in his native Czechia. He returned to New York in late January and received clearance to return to practice just two games before the end of the regular season.

Chytil has since worked his way out of a no-contact jersey, and back to full conditioning, even serving in Alexander Wennberg’s slot as the fourth-line center during the team’s Thursday morning practice while Wennberg took a maintenance day. There has been no indication of Chytil’s game availability, but his traveling is certainly an encouraging step. He’s been out of the lineup for six months and 74 games, ending his season with six assists in 10 games.

Other notes from the Metro Division:

  • Forward Jesper Fast will remain out of the Carolina Hurricanes lineup in Game Three, shares team reporter Walt Ruff (Twitter link). Fast hasn’t skated since exiting the team’s season-finale with an upper-body injury, missing the last two games. He was a steadfast piece of Carolina’s fourth line this season, recording 19 points in 73 games while averaging roughly 12-and-a-half minutes of ice time. His absence has made way for Jack Drury to return to the Stanley Cup Playoffs, after playing in 13 games in last year’s postseason. Drury has recorded two assists in two games but is still searching for the first postseason goal of his career.
  • New York Islanders veteran Matt Martin sustained an undisclosed injury and will be a game-time decision for Game Three, head coach Patrick Roy shared with The Athletic’s Arthur Staple (Twitter link). Martin has averaged just north of 10 minutes of ice time through the first two games of the series, recording 16 penalty minutes, five hits, and two blocked shots. Forwards Ruslan Iskhakov and Oliver Wahlstrom will likely contend for the open spot should Martin sit. Iskhakov was impressive when he received his NHL debut in the team’s season finale, recording an assist and seeming well-adjusted. He’d be an interesting change-of-pace option if the Islanders are looking for a spark, though Wahlstrom’s 32 NHL games this season could earn him the edge. The Islanders are currently down 2-0 in their First Round matchup with the Hurricanes.
  • Carolina has recalled defenseman Ronan Seeley as a black ace, shares Walt Ruff (Twitter link). Seeley has yet to make his NHL debut, though he did record 14 points in 58 AHL games this season. He’s in his second pro season, after being drafted in the seventh-round of the 2020 NHL Draft. Seeley is one of four extra defenders on Carolina’s roster, alongside Scott Morrow, Dylan Coghlan, and the injured Brett Pesce.

AHL| Carolina Hurricanes| Injury| NHL| New York Islanders| New York Rangers Filip Chytil| Jack Drury| Jesper Fast| Matt Martin

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Logan Stankoven Wins AHL Rookie Of The Year

April 25, 2024 at 3:45 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

Dallas Stars winger Logan Stankoven has won the 2024 Red Garrett Memorial Award as the AHL’s Rookie of the Year (Twitter link). This comes after Stankoven posted 24 goals and 57 points in his first 47 minor-league games. His 1.21 points-per-game is the highest scoring pace from an AHL rookie since Jack Quinn posted 61 points in 45 games in the 2021-22 season. Quinn also won the league’s Rookie of the Year award that year. The last AHL rookie to come close to Quinn and Stankoven’s scoring pace was Jake Guentzel all the way back in the 2016-17 season.

While it’s usually hard to find a correlation between most awards and NHL success, the AHL Rookie of the Year typically manages a fine NHL career – something made evident by past winners Quinn, Joshua Norris, and the 2015 tie between Mikko Rantanen and Frank Vatrano. Stankoven seems on a fast track to join his peers, gaining a consistent role in Dallas’ top-six just a few games into his NHL career. He finished the regular season with 14 points in 24 NHL games. He’s also recorded one point in his first two Stanley Cup Playoff appearances, looking plenty adjusted to the fast pace of the NHL postseason.

Dallas is undoubtedly giddy over just how well Stankoven’s first professional season has gone. The former Kamloops Blazers captain was very highly acclaimed during his four-year WHL career, posting 260 points in 179 games and becoming the highest-scoring Blazer since 2013. But played-out concerns about his 5’8″ frame and ability to engage physically dropped Stankoven to the second round of the 2021 NHL Draft, where Dallas quickly took advantage of the rest of the league’s oversight. Two years later, he’s now being awarded for a dazzling start to his pro career and playing meaningful minutes in the postseason. Stankoven was Dallas’ second pick of the 2021 Draft, follwoing the team’s selection of Wyatt Johnston at 23rd-overall.

Stankoven was one regular-season game shy of solidifying this year as his NHL rookie season. That means he’ll remain eligible for the Calder Trophy next season, when he’s sure to have a much more clear-cut role in Dallas’ electric offense. He could also be more formally regrouped with center prospect Mavrik Borque, who led the AHL in scoring this season and formed a dynamic duo with Stankoven earlier in the year.

AHL| Dallas Stars| NHL Logan Stankoven

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Maple Leafs Notes: Nylander, McMann, Grebyonkin

April 25, 2024 at 2:50 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The reason for William Nylander’s playoff absences has been revealed, with Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman sharing that the star winger has been facing severe migraines. Friedman adds that the exact reason for the migraines hasn’t been narrowed down, explaining why the club has stayed quiet about Nylander’s absences. Migraines have been an issue throughout his career, with Nylander even swapping to a tinted visor at the start of the 2022-23 season to try and remedy the issues.

Nylander’s last appearance was in the club’s regular-season finale – a 4-6 loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning. He’s so far missed all three games of Round One, though Friedman shares that there’s hope he could be ready for Game Four. The Maple Leafs will certainly hope that’s the case, as Nylander represents one of their most dangerous postseason assets. He has 17 goals and 40 points across 50 career playoff appearances, and most recently posted 10 points in 11 games in the 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs.

And there’s reason to think Nylander could enter these playoffs with even more bite. The 27-year-old scored a career-high 98 points in 82 games this season while chasing his second-consecutive 40-goal season. He showed just how flexible he could be, too, stepping into a variety of roles and lines. The Maple Leafs are averaging just 2.0 goals per game in Round One, after posting a 3.70 average through the regular season.

Other notes out of Toronto:

  • Winger Bobby McMann is expected to miss the upcoming Game Four, though he hasn’t been ruled out for the series, per TSN’s Darren Dreger (Twitter link). McMann missed Toronto’s has missed the team’s last five games, going back to their second-to-last regular season game, with a lower-body injury. He’ll offer valuable depth whenever he’s able to rejoin the lineup, though he’ll need to get over a scoring drought – having posted just one point in his last eight appearances. McMann, who posted 15 goals and 24 points this season, has yet to play in the first Stanley Cup Playoff game of his career.
  • Toronto could be poised to sign forward prospect Nikita Grebyonkin to his entry-level deal – and may even slot into the Stanley Cup Playoffs – per Alexey Shevchenko of Russian media site Sport Express. Grebyonkin is coming off a Gagarin Cup win with the KHL’s Mettalurg Magnitogorsk. He served a pivotal role in the team’s championship run, ranking second on the team in regular-season scoring with 41 points in 67 games and adding six points in 23 playoff games. Icing Grebyonkin in the playoffs would burn the first year of his assumed three-year entry-level deal, though that may not be too costly for the 21-year-old winger. Toronto originally drafted Grebyonkin in the fifth round of the 2022 NHL Draft.

Injury| KHL| NHL| Toronto Maple Leafs Bobby McMann| Nikita Grebenkin| William Nylander

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Senators Linked To Craig Berube, Dean Evason

April 25, 2024 at 1:33 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

The Senators are hunting for a new head coach this summer after firing D.J. Smith in December after an 11-15-0 start. Former Sens coach Jacques Martin stepped in as interim the rest of the way, and longtime captain Daniel Alfredsson joined his staff as an assistant, but it was clear neither name was expected to be the long-term solution as Ottawa tries yet again to exit their years-long rebuild.

As the Sens enter a long summer, it appears they’d like to get their coaching vacancy sorted out sooner rather than later. Multiple reports suggest they’ve started the interview process, with Bally Sports Midwest’s Andy Strickland reporting the team has “legit interest” in former Blues bench boss Craig Berube for the role. The team has also been granted permission to talk to and subsequently interviewed ex-Wild coach Dean Evason for the role, per The Athletic’s Michael Russo. Berube and Evason were sacked by their respective teams during the 2023-24 campaign.

Ottawa would be Berube’s third try leading an NHL bench. His first stint was brief, coming with the Flyers for nearly two full seasons over the 2013-14 and 2014-15 campaigns. It came after nearly a decade of working in the organization as an assistant and AHL head coach. Let go after failing to make the postseason in 2015, Berube returned to coaching after a season off in the Blues organization, manning their AHL affiliate for a year before being upgraded to associate coach on the NHL bench. The rest was history, taking over for Mike Yeo in the 2018-19 season and guiding St. Louis to its first Stanley Cup on the back of breakout goalie Jordan Binnington.

A below .500 season in 2022-23 and a below .500 start this year cost Berube his job in December, a month after the same fate befell Evason in Minnesota. Plagued by injuries and poor goaltending to start the season, Evason’s Wild sputtered to a 5-10-4 start despite being viewed as a playoff contender in the Central Division for the fifth straight season. Even after the club named John Hynes as his permanent replacement, though, they couldn’t rebound quite enough to squeak into a playoff spot. Minnesota was Evason’s first job as an NHL head coach, compiling a strong 147-77-27 record over parts of five seasons.

Like the Sabres bringing back familiar face Lindy Ruff earlier this week to replace Don Granato behind the bench, Ottawa’s front office is going for a more aggressive, veteran coach to instill accountability across the board. Coaching wasn’t their primary issue by any stretch this season, though. Despite finishing seventh in the Atlantic, the Sens had the possession numbers of a much better team. At 5-on-5, they controlled 51.0% of shot attempts, 50.2% of all scoring chances and 51.4% of high-danger chances. Unfortunately, their 9.6 shooting percentage was a tad below the league average. Big free-agent pickup Joonas Korpisalo crashed and burned between the pipes, conceding nearly 21 goals above average with his .890 SV% in 55 appearances. It was the exact same story as last season when they put up almost identical possession, shooting, and SV% numbers across the board.

Whoever their next hire is will be their third full-time head coach since 2016, a surprisingly low turnover rate for a club that’s fallen short of expectations multiple times in the past few years.

Craig Berube| Dean Evason| Ottawa Senators

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Bob Cole Passes Away

April 25, 2024 at 12:25 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 6 Comments

Iconic Canadian play-by-play voice Bob Cole passed away Wednesday night at age 90, his daughter Megan told CBC News today.

Cole was regarded as one of the most legendary voices in hockey broadcasting history on both sides of the border, even if all his work was done for Canadian networks. He had a remarkable 50-year career calling games for both CBC and Rogers on television and a few seasons on radio in his early years starting in 1969. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1996 and rightly received the Hall’s Foster Hewitt Memorial Award for broadcasting excellence that year, also receiving the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television’s Lifetime Achievement Award at the 10th Canadian Screen Awards in 2022.

The Newfoundland and Labrador native was the voice of multiple Canadian generations, working as the lead play-by-play announcer for CBC’s “Hockey Night in Canada” from 1980 to 2008, as well as their coverage of the Stanley Cup Final, until Jim Hughson was named his successor. He returned to coverage for Sportsnet in 2014, shortly after Rogers acquired the exclusive national rights for the NHL in Canada, where he remained until he called his last game in February 2019, a regular-season match between the Canadiens and Maple Leafs.

Perhaps even more consequential in the fabric of Canadian society were his calls for seminal moments internationally. He was on the air for Canada’s victory over the United States in the gold medal game of the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City (video link), as well as the final game of the 1972 Summit Series between the Soviet Union’s national team and an NHL All-Star contingent that was the most-watched sporting event in Canada for decades.

All of us on the PHR team send our deepest condolences to Cole’s family and friends and to all those who benefited from his decades of service to the sport and the broadcasting field.

Newsstand| RIP Bob Cole

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Predators Recall Juuso Parssinen

April 25, 2024 at 11:28 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Predators have recalled center Juuso Pärssinen from AHL Milwaukee ahead of tomorrow’s Game 3 of their first-round series against the Canucks, per a team announcement.

Pärssinen, 23, began the season on the Nashville roster but was assigned to Milwaukee in late January. He’s remained in the minors since, not appearing in an NHL game since a 3-2 loss to the Coyotes on Jan. 20. Before being sent down, the 2019 seventh-round pick had eight goals and 12 points in 44 games.

The quickly-rising Finn unexpectedly logged top-nine minutes for the Preds much of last season, posting six goals and 25 points in 45 appearances. It was his first full season in North America after two very productive campaigns with TPS in the top-level Finnish Liiga, where he scored the most points by a junior-aged player in 2020-21 and helped TPS advance to the championship series in back-to-back years, although they lost both times.

That showing earned him a deserved opening-night job this year, but his production and overall effectiveness took a step back despite receiving roughly the same amount of ice time (14:20 last year, 14:36 this year). His points per game rate dropped by over half, and he became nearly unusable in the faceoff dot, winning 37.5% of draws after being over 50% in 2022-23. Pärssinen’s possession metrics took a tumble, too, posting a 46.4 CF% at even strength compared to 47.2% last year despite Nashville being a much-improved team at controlling shot attempts.

He responded well to his demotion, though, racking up seven goals and 25 points in 39 games and a +12 rating in Milwaukee to end the season. including five points in his final three games. With Milwaukee finishing first in the Central Division and earning a First Round bye, their Calder Cup Playoff schedule won’t start until next week, so they’re not taking Pärssinen out of important action for their AHL club with today’s recall. He’ll be available for tomorrow’s Game 3 after Nashville tied the series with a Game 2 win Tuesday, but it’s unclear if he’ll draw into the lineup.

Nashville Predators| Transactions Juuso Parssinen

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Blackhawks Sign Alex Vlasic To Six-Year Extension

April 25, 2024 at 11:10 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

11:10 a.m.: Per PuckPedia, Vlasic has a 10-team no-trade list in 2028-29 and 2029-30, the two seasons of the deal he’d otherwise be eligible for unrestricted free agency. The full breakdown of the contract is as follows:

2024-25: $1.5MM base salary + $4.5MM signing bonus
2025-26: $1.8MM base salary + $4MM signing bonus
2026-27: $4.3MM base salary
2027-28: $1.3MM base salary + $3MM signing bonus
2028-29: $1.6MM base salary + $2MM signing bonus
2029-30: $1.6MM base salary + $2MM signing bonus

10:04 a.m.: The Blackhawks have signed promising defenseman Alex Vlasic to a six-year extension with a $4.6MM cap hit, The Athletic’s Scott Powers reports Thursday. The deal, which will pay Vlasic $27.6MM in total, walks him to unrestricted free agency in 2030. The team later confirmed the terms of the deal as initially reported.

Vlasic, 23 in June, was the Blackhawks’ second-round pick in 2019 after they took Kirby Dach third overall. That year, he was the top shutdown defender for the USNTDP’s U-18 squad and was viewed as a consensus late first/early second-round choice. However, he fell a bit to Chicago at 43rd overall. He then embarked on a three-year stint at Boston University, where the 6’6″ blue-liner quietly continued to improve his shutdown game while managing four goals and 20 points in 82 games. His career +1 rating there wasn’t all that impressive, but BU was a rather middling program during his time there and never finished higher than fifth in the Hockey East conference.

The Chicago native turned pro with his hometown club after his junior season, inking a three-year entry-level contract in March 2022 that kicked in immediately. He played 15 games for the Hawks down the stretch, recording his first two NHL points (one goal, one assist) with a -2 rating while averaging 14:19 per game. His possession metrics were decent on a rebuilding club that won just twice in regulation in 20 games after he signed, posting a 44.0 CF% and 54.9 xGF% at even strength, per Hockey Reference. It wasn’t enough to earn him a full-time spot on their 2022-23 roster, playing in only six games last year, but he did post a +12 rating to lead all AHL Rockford defensemen, along with 19 points in 56 games.

He landed an opening night roster spot this season and never looked back. Vlasic operated in a number-one capacity for stretches of the season when Seth Jones was sidelined with injury, finishing second behind Jones in average time on ice (21:29). He put up two goals and 16 points in 76 games in his first full NHL season, adding on a very respectable -4 rating, 44.9 CF%, and 47.7 xGF% while playing shutdown matchups for one of the weakest rosters in the league. When he wasn’t controlling possession himself, he was competent at keeping the puck out of dangerous areas, leading the team with 148 blocks.

Vlasic will never be a point producer, but his linear development and strong showing this season in difficult minutes are exemplary hints that he can be a high-end, top-four complementary shutdown defender for years to come. There haven’t been any major road bumps in his development since his draft day. He navigated the obstacles of the COVID-19 pandemic quite well and hit his likely ceiling earlier than most defenders.

In getting Vlasic signed long-term early on, Blackhawks GM Kyle Davidson continues the recent trend of early long-term commitments to developing defenders. The Sabres’ Owen Power and the Senators’ Jake Sanderson both signed long-term deals after their first full NHL seasons in 2022-23, although they both had one year remaining on their entry-level deals at the time. Vlasic was headed for restricted free agency this summer. It’s an extremely comparable extension to another young Buffalo defender, 24-year-old shutdown man Mattias Samuelsson, who inked a seven-year, $30MM ($4.29MM AAV) agreement in October 2022.

Vlasic joins Jones as the only Blackhawks skaters signed past 2026. Their deals will expire simultaneously after the 2029-30 campaign. Before today’s news, Jones and veteran Connor Murphy were the only Chicago defenders signed to one-way contracts for next season. Vlasic and Jones are expected to reprise their role as Chicago’s top defense pairing in 2024-25.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Chicago Blackhawks| Newsstand| Transactions Alex Vlasic

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Denis Gurianov Linked To KHL’s CSKA Moscow

April 25, 2024 at 9:49 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

2015 first-round pick Denis Gurianov has lacked stability in recent years, suiting up for five NHL and AHL teams over the last two seasons. He headed from Nashville to Philadelphia at this year’s trade deadline in a swap of fringe NHLers, but his stay in the City of Brotherly Love will likely come to an end this summer. Speaking with reporters last week, GM Daniel Brière said he was unlikely to extend the pending UFA (via PHLY Sports’ Charlie O’Connor).

Now, we know where the 26-year-old might end up. According to a report from allhockey.ru (source translated from Russian), he’ll be returning home to Russia and is expected to sign with CSKA Moscow. He’s the second NHL player linked to the military-affiliated club this summer, joining Avalanche netminder Ivan Prosvetov.

It wasn’t all that long ago that Gurianov looked like a budding top-nine sniper with the Stars. At 12th overall, Gurianov was selected over other future stars in the 2015 class, like Islanders forward Mathew Barzal, Hurricanes center Sebastian Aho and Jets sniper Kyle Connor. He came over from Russia and signed his entry-level deal in 2016 but spent three seasons primarily with AHL Texas before breaking into the NHL lineup full-time in 2019-20. Despite averaging just 12:59 per game, he led the offensively challenged club in goals with 20 in 64 contests but ranked eighth in points (29) with only nine assists.

When the NHL reconvened for the bubble playoffs in late summer 2020 after COVID-19 ended the regular season prematurely, Gurianov didn’t miss a beat. He was among the Stars’ best playoff performers, recording nine goals and 17 points in 27 games – including an overtime goal against the Golden Knights that sent the Stars to their first Stanley Cup Final in 20 years.

His limited usage, sky-high 15.2 shooting percentage and middling possession metrics didn’t help his case in contract negotiations the following offseason. Stars GM Jim Nill inked him to a two-year bridge deal worth $5.1MM, which turned out to be a smart decision. Gurianov wasn’t awful over the life of the deal – he had 23 goals and 61 points in 128 games over the life of the deal and was a regular in a top-nine role – but didn’t repeat the goal-scoring value he provided during his rookie season. As expected, his shooting percentage regressed heavily to below 10% each year, and his -10.1 expected rating in 2021-22 was second-worst on the team behind shutdown center Radek Faksa (-12.9).

It was enough to convince the Stars to keep him around as a secondary point-producer, but it was becoming apparent he didn’t have a future as a top-six winger in the NHL. Nill gave him another mid-tier deal, inking him to a one-year, $2.9MM extension a few weeks before he would have reached restricted free agency in 2022. But under new head coach Peter DeBoer, Gurianov flamed out quickly in Dallas, managing only two goals and nine points through 43 games before the team decided to part ways. Nill found a taker on the trade market in the Canadiens, who picked him up in exchange for veteran winger Evgenii Dadonov at 50% salary retention, who had similarly disappointed in Montreal that year.

Nill is widely regarded as one of the best GMs in the league, and that trade is one of many reasons why. Gurianov didn’t turn things around all that much with the Habs, recording five goals and eight points in 23 games down the stretch despite being thrust into top-six minutes to try and reinject confidence into his game. He wasn’t extended a qualifying offer at the end of the season and became a UFA. Dadonov, meanwhile, remains in Dallas and had 10 points in 16 playoff games last season as the Stars advanced to the Western Conference Final.

It didn’t take Gurianov more than a couple of weeks to get another chance in the NHL, though, inking a one-year, one-way deal with the Predators worth $850K in mid-July 2023. A low-risk, low-investment signing for Nashville, it still didn’t pan out. Gurianov played sparingly, managing two points in 14 games, and saw extended time in the minors for the first time in five years. He did quite well with AHL Milwaukee, and his 12 goals and 30 points in 27 games made him one of two point-per-game players on the team alongside veteran Mark Jankowski.

His minor-league showing was strong enough to convince the Flyers to see if he could stick in an NHL role down the stretch, and they picked him up in exchange for depth forward Wade Allison on deadline day. To the masses, it seemed Gurianov’s rather one-dimensional game wouldn’t mesh with head coach John Tortorella’s style. The masses were right. Gurianov spent most of his time in Philly in the press box, only making four appearances for the Flyers and averaging less than 11 minutes per game. He didn’t get on the scoresheet, managed four shots on the goal and registered only one hit.

He’s eligible for unrestricted free agency outright this summer, as his June birthday means he’ll turn 27 before the market opens on July 1. His only previous KHL experience came with Lada Togliatti as a teenager in the 2014-15 and 2015-16 seasons, posting four goals and two assists in 55 games in a limited role. With CSKA, however, he’ll likely receive top-six minutes and would likely be one of their leading scorers next year. Gurianov joins a CSKA offense dotted with a few other former NHLers: reserve list players Vitaly Abramov (Senators) and Vladislav Kamenev (Avalanche) are both under contract for 2024-25, as are former Panthers winger Maxim Mamin and ex-Oilers forward Anton Slepyshev.

If this is it for Gurianov in the NHL, he finishes his career with 52 goals, 61 assists, 113 points and a -2 rating in 298 appearances over seven seasons.

KHL| Philadelphia Flyers Denis Gurianov

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Golden Knights Add Nine Players To Playoff Roster

April 25, 2024 at 8:39 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

Now up 2-0 in their first-round series against the Stars, the Golden Knights have recalled nine players from AHL Henderson to serve as Black Aces for the remainder of their playoff run, per CapFriendly’s transaction log. Forwards Brendan Brisson, Grigori Denisenko, Byron Froese and Mason Morelli; defensemen Kaedan Korczak, Dysin Mayo and Christoffer Sedoff; and goaltenders Isaiah Saville and Jesper Vikman are now all immediately available to Vegas if injuries force them to reach deep into their pool of depth players.

There was no postseason action in store for any of these players in the minors. Henderson failed to qualify for the 2024 Calder Cup Playoffs after going 28-36-3-5 in the regular season, missing out for the second year in a row.

Many of these players, including all of the forwards mentioned and Korczak on the blue line, played in NHL games with the Knights this season. Mayo had 82 NHL games of experience across 2021-22 and 2022-23 with the Coyotes but didn’t suit up for Vegas in 2023-24. Saville, Sedoff and Vikman have yet to make their NHL debuts.

Brisson, 22, is the most likely of these recalls to see game action in the playoffs. The 2020 first-round pick did well in his first NHL season, recording two goals and six assists for eight points in 15 games across a spattering of late-season recalls. Averaging 12:20 per game, he played a handful of different units but spent most of his time on the wing with William Karlsson and Jonathan Marchessault. The trio controlled 65.2% of expected goals in 43 minutes together, per MoneyPuck. The former University of Michigan standout also had 19 goals and 38 points in 52 contests with Henderson, his second full season in the pros.

Denisenko, 23, was picked up in the first round by the Panthers two years before Brisson. After failing to crack Florida’s opening night roster, he was nabbed off the waiver wire by Vegas in October. He was assigned to Henderson after there were no takers for him on waivers a second time – including his former team. The 5’11” winger still doesn’t have an NHL goal to his name in 32 appearances, six of which came in a Golden Knights sweater this season. However, he did have a breakthrough campaign in the minors, recording career-highs across the board with 20 goals, 36 assists and 56 points in 65 games. That led the club in assists and points, and only veteran Sheldon Rempal had more goals (27).

Froese, 33, recorded an assist in 16 appearances for Vegas this year, marking his first time playing in back-to-back NHL seasons since playing in three straight from 2015-16 to 2017-18. The longtime farmhand has suited up 141 times in parts of six seasons for the Canadiens, Flames, Golden Knights, Maple Leafs and Lightning. An alternate captain with Henderson, Froese finished fifth on the club in scoring with 31 points (13 goals, 18 assists) in 53 games.

Morelli, 28, earned his first NHL contract with the Golden Knights last July after spending three years on minor-league deals with the Hershey Bears, the Capitals’ AHL affiliate. Fresh off a Calder Cup win in 2023, Morelli made his NHL debut in February while injuries decimated the Knights’ forward group. He put up a goal and an assist on his first try against the Sharks and finished his callup with four points in nine games. The North Dakota native also had a career-high 13 goals in 56 games with Henderson, adding 16 assists for 29 points on the year.

On the blue line, Korczak will be head coach Bruce Cassidy’s first choice to insert into the lineup if Vegas needs to reach past the two extra defenders they entered the postseason with. The 23-year-old was a second-round pick in 2019 and played a career-high 26 games for the Golden Knights this year, posting nine points and a +12 rating while averaging 16:30 per game. He mirrored those stats in Henderson with a goal and eight assists in 26 games there and still carries significant NHL upside as a smooth-skating, 6’4″ right-shot defender. His entry-level contract is up this summer, but his next deal shouldn’t cost more than $1MM just yet and will be a cheap, reliable call-up option with an outside chance to crack next year’s opening night roster.

Mayo, 27, was picked up by the Knights in a February 2023 trade with Arizona that sent a fifth-round pick and the contract of defenseman Shea Weber, who won’t play again due to various injuries, to the Yotes. An adept shutdown defender with depth NHL upside, Mayo had a career-high 25 points in 67 games with the Silver Knights this season with a -6 rating and 79 PIMs, his most in a single season since his junior hockey days.

Sedoff, 22, was an undrafted free-agent signing by Vegas from the Western Hockey League’s Red Deer Rebels last year. The Finnish blue-liner managed to stick in the AHL the whole season, avoiding a demotion to the ECHL, but didn’t score in 46 appearances. He tallied 10 assists for his first-ever professional points and posted a -1 rating, the second-highest on the team behind Brisson among qualified skaters.

Saville and Vikman split backup duties for Henderson behind the more experienced Jiří Patera, although neither won the job outright. The 23-year-old Saville had slightly better numbers, going 7-12-1 with a .893 SV%, 3.27 GAA and one shutout in 22 appearances. The Alaska native was a Vegas fifth-round pick in 2019. Vikman, 22, was a fifth-round pick a year after Saville. The 6’3″ Swede split the year between Henderson and ECHL Savannah, failing to cross the .900 SV% plateau at either level.

Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights Brendan Brisson| Byron Froese| Christoffer Sedoff| Dysin Mayo| Grigori Denisenko| Isaiah Saville| Jesper Vikman| Kaedan Korczak| Mason Morelli

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