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Anton Forsberg Nearing Return

February 3, 2024 at 12:00 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 3 Comments

The Senators could get some help between the pipes when they play their first game after their bye week next Saturday.  Postmedia’s Bruce Garrioch reports that Anton Forsberg is on track in his recovery from a groin injury and might be ready to be activated off LTIR for that game against Toronto.

The 31-year-old is in the second season of a three-year, $8.25MM contract that he signed back in 2022 while in the middle of his best year at the NHL level.  However, since then, Forsberg hasn’t played anywhere near as well and has struggled to the tune of a 3.35 GAA and a .889 SV% in 16 appearances so far this season.  That said, those numbers are better than what Mads Sogaard was able to do in his stint as Forsberg’s replacement so his return will still be an upgrade.

However, Forsberg returning to the lineup will once again bring Ottawa’s cap crunch to the forefront.  Per CapFriendly, the Sens are currently using $1.55MM of LTIR; that amount will need to come off their books before they can bring the netminder back onto the active roster.  That means that two players will need to be cleared off.

One of them is fairly straightforward as Kevin Mandolese, currently the second option on the depth chart after being recalled following Wednesday’s game, can go back to AHL Belleville.  That will clear $775K of that amount, leaving another $775K to come.

That one will be a little trickier to open up.  Ottawa has just two waiver-exempt players, defenseman Jake Sanderson and center Ridly Greig.  Both play key roles for the Senators so it’s safe to say that they won’t be going down.

Winger Zack MacEwen and defenseman Jacob Bernard-Docker both cleared waivers earlier this season but neither would be a lock to clear again.  MacEwen’s on a three-year deal but at the minimum salary, a team looking for extra grit could easily put in a claim.  Meanwhile, Bernard-Docker has been a regular on the third pairing most nights and as a young right-shot blueliner now with some NHL time under his belt, there’s likely a rebuilding team or two that would claim him now.  Either of them coming off the books would barely squeak them under the cap line, leaving no wiggle room for recalls if needed.

If GM Steve Staios doesn’t want to risk one of those two and doesn’t have a trade on the horizon, one other option might be to waive Dominik Kubalik.  The winger is believed to have been available for a couple of months now with no takers.  With a $2.5MM cap charge, he might pass through unclaimed and while that full amount wouldn’t come off their books, they’d open up $1.15MM in room, creating enough space to activate Forsberg.  It might not be the most desirable option but that could be a short-term fix.

With Ottawa being one of the few teams to play leading up to the All-Star break, Staios still has the better part of a week to determine how to make the money work.  But after being able to delay dealing with this cap crunch which was lingering back in training for more than half the season, it appears the time has come to deal with it.

Ottawa Senators Anton Forsberg

3 comments

Salary Cap Deep Dive: Philadelphia Flyers

February 3, 2024 at 10:51 am CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

Navigating the salary cap is one of the more important tasks for any GM.  Teams that can avoid total cap chaos by walking the tightrope of inking players to deals that match their value (or compensate for future value without breaking the bank) remain successful.  Those that don’t see struggles and front office changes.

PHR will look at every NHL team and give a thorough look at their cap situation for the 2023-24 season.  This will focus more on players who are regulars on the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL.  All cap figures are courtesy of CapFriendly.

Philadelphia Flyers

Current Cap Hit: $83,322,620 (under the $83.5MM Upper Limit)

Entry-Level Contracts

G Samuel Ersson ($859K this season)
F Tyson Foerster (two years, $863K)

Potential Bonuses
Ersson $32.5K

Foerster impressed in limited action last season and has become a full-time regular this year.  That said, he’s more of a secondary player at this point which likely has him heading for a short-term second contract, especially with the limited action as a rookie.  If he finds another gear offensively next season and pushes into the 40-point-pace range, he could surpass the $2MM mark on that agreement.

Ersson has already signed his second contract so we’ll look at that in more detail shortly but it’s worth noting his bonuses are based on games played.  The exact number needed isn’t known but the lower end of a games played bonus is usually around 20.  If that’s the case here, he has already reached it.

Signed Through 2023-24, Non-Entry-Level

G Carter Hart ($3.979MM, RFA)
D Nick Seeler ($775K, UFA)
D Marc Staal ($1.1MM, UFA)
D Sean Walker ($2.65MM, UFA)
D Yegor Zamula ($775K, RFA)

Walker was picked up from the Kings in the summer with his inclusion appearing to primarily be for cap purposes.  However, the 29-year-old has rebuilt his value nicely, spending a lot of time on the second pairing.  Now, instead of a likely pay cut had this season gone like last year, Walker is set up to potentially land a small raise on a multi-year agreement.  In the meantime, he is a speculative trade candidate as is Seeler.  Seeler has become a regular with the Flyers over the last year and a half after being a player on the fringes of the roster.  His playing time is still somewhat limited as he’s a full-time part of the third pairing.  Philadelphia is believed to be interested in an extension, one that should push into the $1.25MM to the $1.5MM range.

Staal signed with the Flyers early in free agency to give them a bridge veteran, allowing them to keep some of their youngsters in AHL Lehigh Valley a little longer.  He has missed time with injuries and has been scratched at times as well.  Accordingly, while it’s possible he lands another deal to fill that type of role, it’s likely to come in closer to the league minimum.  As for Zamula, he hasn’t been in the lineup every night but he has more than held his own and is even seeing time on the second power play unit at times.  Doubling his current AAV on a two-year bridge deal could be achievable for the 23-year-old.

Hart had been performing at a level similar to last season which had him on track to be qualified at just under $4.5MM.  However, his leave of absence pertaining to the sexual assault charge as part of the 2018 investigation into Canada’s World Junior team now has that outcome looking doubtful.  Now, a non-tender looks likely.

Signed Through 2024-25

F Cam Atkinson ($5.85MM, UFA)
F Morgan Frost ($2.1MM, RFA)
F Noah Cates ($2.65MM, RFA)
F Garnet Hathaway ($2.375MM, UFA)
F Travis Konecny ($5.5MM, UFA)
G Cal Petersen ($5MM, UFA)
D Cam York ($1.6MM, RFA)

After missing all of last season due to a herniated disk in his neck, Atkinson has been healthy all season long and is producing at close to a 50-point pace.  That’s on the high side for this price tag but that was likely expected when he signed this deal back with Columbus in 2017.  His next contract should check in closer to the $4MM mark if he can stay at that pace for another year and a half.

Konecny’s future with the Flyers has been speculated about for a while.  First, he looked like a long-term core piece but then when he took a step back in 2020-21 and then followed it up with just 16 goals the following year, some questioned if he was going to be part of those plans much longer.  Since then, he has authored a year and a half of top-line production and now, the idea of an extension is very much on the table.  If it happens, Philadelphia will be paying him off two career platform years which certainly will carry some risk while likely upping the price tag close to the $8MM mark.  But after leading the team in scoring last season and for most of this year, there’s a strong case to make to keep him around.

Cates has had a year to forget.  A broken foot kept him out for the better part of two months and in between, he has struggled mightily, sitting on just one goal in 28 games.  This AAV will be his qualifying offer in 2025 and he’ll have arbitration rights again at that time.  There’s plenty of time to turn his fortunes around but at this point, a non-tender could be on the table if his struggles continue.

Hathaway signed a surprisingly high contract for someone who is best deployed on the fourth line but the Flyers put extra value in trying to fill his particular role.  It would be surprising to see another raise coming but in a more favorable cap environment, it’s not out of the realm of possibility either.  Frost had a breakout year last season, earning a nice bridge deal for his troubles but he has struggled somewhat this season while John Tortorella has scratched him frequently, leading to trade speculation.  At this point, a one-year deal after this one that basically works as a second bridge might be the most likely outcome; that contract would check in a bit higher than his $2.4MM qualifying offer if his production stays in its current range.

York is also on his bridge contract and while the offensive potential he showed in the US National Team Development Program and in college hasn’t quite translated to big point totals yet, he’s logging heavy minutes.  That alone could help him double this price tag in 2025 and if the production comes, the cost of a long-term agreement will go up quite quickly.

Petersen was acquired as salary ballast in the Ivan Provorov three-way trade last summer and has spent most of the last year and a half in the minors.  With Hart’s absence, that should change but his struggles in his limited NHL action make this a steep overpayment.  If this continues, he’ll be closer to the $1MM territory as a free agent.

Signed Through 2025-26

F Nicolas Deslauriers ($1.75MM, UFA)
G Samuel Ersson ($1.4MM in 2024-25 and 2025-26, RFA)
D Jamie Drysdale ($2.3MM, RFA)
F Scott Laughton ($3MM, UFA)
F Ryan Poehling ($1.4MM this season, $1.9MM in 2024-25 and 2025-26, UFA)

Laughton has shown he can play in the top six but is likely best utilized as a third-line middleman.  This price tag is certainly quite fair for that role which is why teams are starting to call about his potential availability.  With a 43-point season under his belt, there’s room for his price tag to grow if he’s able to produce near that level with any type of consistency; doing so could push him into the $4MM range.

Deslauriers is another player they willingly gave more than market value to in order to have their desired grit on the fourth line.  While he has had some success offensively in the past, he is starting to slow down on that front.  Another contract is definitely achievable (even at 35 which he’ll be when this deal ends) but it should come in closer to the minimum next time.  Poehling has held his own in a bottom-six role and inked his new deal recently, a nice outcome for someone who was non-tendered last summer.  He’ll need to become more productive to have a chance at getting third center money.

Drysdale was acquired less than a month ago and has fit in nicely so far.  Injuries have limited him significantly the last two seasons which hasn’t helped to firm up where his expected long-term deal after this one will land.  If he lives up to his upside and stays healthy, he should become Philadelphia’s top-paid blueliner.  But if the injury trouble continues, that will certainly scale that price tag down.

Ersson impressed down the stretch last year, landing this extension before the 2023-24 campaign started.  It’s a move that looks better now as he had pushed his way into more playing time early on and is now their likely starter the rest of the way.  He’ll have that time to show if he’s a legitimate number one or more of a backup with the range of outcomes money-wise stretching past a few million per season depending on how he plays.

Read more

Signed Through 2026-27 Or Longer

F Sean Couturier ($7.75MM through 2029-30)
D Ryan Ellis ($6.25MM through 2026-27)
F Joel Farabee ($5MM through 2027-28)
D Rasmus Ristolainen ($5.1MM through 2026-27)
D Travis Sanheim ($6.25MM through 2030-31)
F Owen Tippett ($1.5MM in 2023-24, $6.2MM from 2024-25 through 2031-32)

On the surface, a $7.75MM price tag for a number one center is perfectly reasonable.  In a lot of cases, it’d be a bargain.  The problem for the Flyers is that Couturier probably isn’t an ideal top middleman at this stage of his career.  He has done well considering he missed 22 months after undergoing back surgery twice and he has produced at a second-line level.  However, while he remains a key defensive player, will he be able to get back to top form offensively?  If so, Philadelphia will have a bargain in those seasons.  But considering Couturier is signed until he turns 38, it was already likely that some of those years would be tough on the books.  If he can’t get back to top form, this contract could become a problem in a few years.

Tippett also signed just recently as he has lived up to the offensive expectations placed on him when he was the tenth-overall pick back in 2017.  He’s scoring at a better-than-30-goal rate this season and as long as he stays there, they’ll do well with this contract given the premium often placed on big scoring wingers.  As for Farabee, his per-game output dipped the last two seasons but he has rebounded nicely this year.  At this price point – one lowered by bypassing a bridge deal – he only needs to produce around the 50-point mark to provide value on the contract.  Farabee should be able to do just that.

After signing the early extension last season, Sanheim struggled last year, leading to some speculative trade inquiries to see if the Flyers wanted to sell low.  They didn’t and were wise for holding onto him as he has emerged as a capable top-pairing player this season.  If he plays at a similar level throughout the deal, this will become a team-friendly one fast.  The same can’t be said for Ristolainen.  His playing time has dipped in each of the last five seasons and barring a big uptick in playing time after the All-Star break, that will become six.  While he is a good fit for his current role on the third pairing, the price tag is about double what it should be for someone with his experience in that spot.

Ellis, meanwhile, has played just four games for the Flyers who acquired him back in 2021 due to a torn psoas muscle.  At this point, he’s not expected to be able to play in the coming years.  While he’s not on LTIR now (as a below-cap team, Philadelphia doesn’t need to place him on there), he’s eligible to go on there when needed.

Buyouts

G Ilya Bryzgalov ($1.643MM through 2026-27, cap-exempt)
D Tony DeAngelo ($1.667MM through 2024-25)
F Oskar Lindblom ($667K in 2023-24)

Retained Salary Transactions

F Kevin Hayes ($3.571MM through 2025-26)

Best Value: Tippett (on this season’s contract)
Worst Value: Petersen

Looking Ahead

While cap space is at a premium right now, that’s only on paper since Ellis can be moved to LTIR at any time.  Doing so runs the risk of bonus carryover but with Ersson’s games played one being the only one to contend with, that’s not much of a concern.  If they want to buy at the deadline or take on a contract to add future assets, they can go that route without an issue.

At this point, it doesn’t seem likely that next year’s roster will look much different than this one.  They have around $78MM in commitments on the books already with a few spots to fill.  Over $28MM comes off the books for 2025-26, however, so that might be the time when GM Daniel Briere really gets to make his mark on this roster.

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Philadelphia Flyers| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals| Salary Cap Deep Dive 2023

2 comments

Morning Notes: Skills Results, Lacher, Coyotes

February 3, 2024 at 9:29 am CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

The NHL’s All-Star Skills Competition was held on Friday night in a revamped format that saw a dozen players compete in a head-to-head format while taking part in at least four of the events.  Oilers center Connor McDavid took home the title and $1MM while the rest of the results were as follows.

Fastest Skater: McDavid (Oilers, 13.408 seconds)
One-Timers: Nathan MacKinnon (Avalanche, 23 points)
Passing Challenge: Elias Pettersson (Canucks, 25 points)
Hardest Shot: Cale Makar (Avalanche, 102.56 mph)
Stick Handling: McDavid (Oilers, 25.755 seconds)
Accuracy Shooting: McDavid (Oilers, 9.158 seconds)
One-On-One: William Nylander (Maple Leafs, 9 points), Alexandar Georgiev (Avalanche, 9 saves)
Obstacle Course: McDavid (Oilers, 40.666 seconds)

Other early news from around the hockey world:

  • Former Bruins goaltender Blaine Lacher passed away on Friday at the age of 53, the team announced (Twitter link). Lacher made an immediate impact in the NHL, coming up as Boston’s starter in the lockout-shortened 1994-95 campaign, putting up a 2.41 GAA in 35 games to earn him a top-five finish in Calder Trophy voting.  However, Lacher only made seven appearances at the top level after that.  No cause of death was revealed.
  • On Friday, the NHLPA expressed its frustration with Arizona’s search for a new arena site, stating that they’ve missed two deadlines already while not engaging with the PA on numerous fronts. However, it appears the team remains on track to purchase a parcel of land as the team confirmed (Twitter link) a report from ABC15’s Taylor Rocha that they are moving forward with a plan to buy in North Phoenix.  At this point, multiple arena sites are still being considered which means we’re still likely a little while away from having more clarity on that front.

Boston Bruins| Colorado Avalanche| Edmonton Oilers| Toronto Maple Leafs| Utah Mammoth| Vancouver Canucks Cale Makar| Connor McDavid| Elias Pettersson| Nathan MacKinnon| William Nylander

1 comment

Evening Notes: Hughes, Savard, Sandin-Pellikka

February 2, 2024 at 8:55 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 7 Comments

Star New Jersey Devils forward Jack Hughes told All-Star Game reporters, “I think I’m really close, hopefully I can come out of the break here and feel good, finish the year really strong.” Hughes has missed New Jersey’s last 10 games with an upper-body injury. The absences earned Hughes a spot on injured reserve ahead of the All-Star break, though that move was seemingly a paper transaction so the team could claim defenseman Nick DeSimone from the Calgary Flames.

This injury marks Hughes’ second long-term absence this season, with the star also missing five games earlier in the season with a shoulder injury. He’s been a force to be reckoned with when he is healthy, boasting 45 points through just 32 games. That ranks him second on the team in scoring, despite his absences, and fifth in the league in points per game. Hughes, 22, has done a lot to establish himself as the Devils’ franchise centerman of the future. Now, he just needs to prove he can stay healthy.

Other notes from around the league:

  • The Montreal Canadiens aren’t planning on parting ways with defenseman David Savard, per team general manager Kent Hughes. Savard is in his third season with the Canadiens, joining the team via unrestricted free agency with a four-year, $14MM contract signed during the 2021 summer. It was the first time in Savard’s then 11-year career that he reached free agency and he made sure to return to his hometown team. Hughes isn’t looking to change that decision this Spring.
  • Top defense prospect Axel Sandin-Pellikka has returned to the Skelleftea organization after sitting out with an undisclosed injury suffered during the 2024 World Junior Championships. Sandin-Pellikka has been a standout name for Skelleftea, ranking third among the team’s defenders in scoring despite missing 13 games this season. He’s boasting 13 points through 26 games, the most among any U20 defensemen in the SHL. The Red Wings selected Sandin-Pellikka with the 17th overall pick in the 2023 NHL Draft.

Detroit Red Wings| Montreal Canadiens| New Jersey Devils Axel Sandin-Pellikka| David Savard| Jack Hughes

7 comments

Trade Deadline Primer: Carolina Hurricanes

February 2, 2024 at 7:07 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 4 Comments

With the All-Star break approaching, the trade deadline looms large and is about a month and a half away. Where does each team stand, and what moves should they be looking to make? We continue our look around the league with the Carolina Hurricanes.

The Carolina Hurricanes have made their top status in the NHL undeniable this season. They’ve yet to have a losing record, despite facing injuries to top scorer Andrei Svechnikov and multiple goaltenders, including starter Frederik Andersen who is out indefinitely with a blood clotting issue. The Hurricanes have already iced five different goalies through the first half of the season, including waiver claim Spencer Martin and rookie Yaniv Perets. They even had veteran Jaroslav Halak on a professional try-out contract earlier in the season, though the 38-year-old wasn’t able to earn an NHL deal. But Carolina has persevered, fighting their way to ninth in the NHL and ranking in the league’s top 10 in goals for and against. They’ll be gearing up for another long playoff push when the Trade Deadline rolls around.

Record

28-15-5, 2nd in the Metropolitan

Deadline Status

Buyer

Deadline Cap Space

$8.73MM on deadline day, 0/3 retention slots used, 41/50 contracts used, per CapFriendly.

Upcoming Draft Picks

2024: CAR 1st, CAR 2nd, PHI 2nd, CAR 3rd, CAR 4th, CAR 5th, CAR 6th, CAR 7th
2025: CAR 1st, CAR 2nd, CAR 3rd, CAR 4th, CAR 6th, CAR 7th

Trade Chips

The Carolina Hurricanes have kept their roster fairly tight over the last few seasons and thus, don’t have much in the way of bargaining chips entering trade season. They are once again rumored to be shopping around Tony DeAngelo, who is in his second stint with the team after they traded him to the Philadelphia Flyers for a second, third, and fourth round pick in the 2022 summer. DeAngelo likely hasn’t done much to raise his value since that deal, seeing a decline in his production with 42 points in 70 games last season and just nine in 21 games this year. It’s been coupled with a decreased role, with the 28-year-old averaging just 14 minutes of ice time this season, significantly down from the 22 minutes he averaged with Philadelphia last season. Still, the hope of a revamped role leading to revamped scoring could be enough to convince a deadline seller.

The Hurricanes will otherwise likely be moving on from future assets. They’ve managed to hang on to almost all of their draft picks over the next three drafts and could be poised to cash them in with the wind behind them this season. They’ve also drafted well enough to manage parting with a few top prospects, like winger Noel Gunler who appeared in 42 AHL games and scored 23 points between 2021 and 2023, but is now on loan to the Liiga’s Karpat. Or they could move on from one of their two leading NCAA scorers in Bradly Nadeau – who ranks second on the University of Maine in scoring with 31 points in 22 games – or Cruz Lucius – who leads the University of Wisconsin with 22 points in 24 games.

With Carolina having reportedly taken Brett Pesce off the trade deadline, it’s hard to imagine many other names they’d be excited to move. They’ll be limited to a strict buyer status on deadline day, doomed to part with future capital if they want to build on this season. But they may have a silver lining financially, with CapFriendly estimating the Hurricanes will have roughly $8.7MM in deadline cap space. That could be enough to make bringing on cap feasible, likely cheapening any deal, or helping them contend for the more expensive players on the market.

Team Needs

1) Consistency In Net: The Carolina Hurricanes don’t necessarily need a goaltender. Pyotr Kochetkov has manned the team’s net serviceably, when healthy, tallying 11 wins and a .900 save percentage through 23 games. The 24-year-old is currently in the AHL, looking to make his return from a concussion suffered on January 11th that earned him a stint on injured reserve. Kochetkov’s de facto backup, Antti Raanta, has also managed 12 games this season, though he’s tallied a much lower .870 save percentage. But neither goalie has been able to evade the minors, with Kochetkov not making the Hurricanes out of camp and playing in three AHL games this season, and Raanta getting placed on waivers earlier in the year and appearing  in two AHL games.

Consistency in net has been Carolina’s missing piece this year. And while they could continue wishing for better health, this could be the best year to bring in a new name. There’s a long list of quality goaltenders on the trade block, including  backups Jake Allen and Marc-Andre Fleury. Both options could come at a cheaper price than top names like Jacob Markstrom or Kaapo Kahkonen, while still providing Carolina with an upgrade over Raanta. With Kochetkov hoping to return from injury soon, the Hurricanes don’t need to sell the lot for a new name. But anyone capable of staying active would provide massive value, especially as the team aims its sights on a deep playoff run.

2) A Big Splash: Carolina hasn’t had much to complain about this season. They’re getting plenty of scoring, with 11 players boasting 20 or more points, including three defensemen. They’re even poised to add a major scoring talent back into the lineup when Andrei Svechnikov returns from an upper-body injury that’s held him out of Carolina’s last three games. But there are plenty of big names on the open market that could put an already-strong Hurricanes team over the top. They could pull off a blockbuster deal to bring in Ottawa’s Jakob Chychrun or Vladimir Tarasenko, Philadelphia’s Sean Walker, or Pittsburgh’s Jake Guentzel. All four players would provide formidable depth to Carolina, without locking the team into lengthy contracts. It’d be a surefire boost to a Hurricanes lineup that’s pitted up against a strong divisional opponent in the New York Rangers. Carolina doesn’t typically jump for big-name Spring trades, but a rich market could sway them to upgrade while they still can.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Carolina Hurricanes| Deadline Primer 2024| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

4 comments

Snapshots: NHL Expansion, Thomson, Newhook

February 2, 2024 at 3:49 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 26 Comments

The NHL is eyeing expansion, with commissioner Gary Bettman naming Salt Lake City, Houston, Atlanta, Cincinnati, and Omaha all as cities that have expressed interest in housing an NHL club. Houston and Omaha are the only cities on the list not currently housing an ECHL club, though Omaha makes up for it with the University of Nebraska-Omaha’s Division 1 NCAA team and the USHL’s Omaha Lancers juniors club. Houston did host a minor league club from 1994 to 2013, though they relocated to Des Moines Iowa ahead of the 2013-14 season. The city has been without professional hockey ever since, though this season does mark the first time since World War II that the University of Houston has hosted a club hockey team.

How the NHL will go about reconfiguring divisions if one, or all, of these five cities receive a team is unclear. The list seemingly places three clubs undeniably in the Western Conference – Salt Lake City, Houston, and Omaha – while Atlanta would settle back into their place in the Eastern Conference. Cincinnati would be the toss-up, with the city situated perfectly on the line of conference ambiguity. It’s west of Detroit and Columbus – two teams that have spent time in both conferences – but still east of Nashville, a city that could reasonably mark where the Western Conference ends and the Eastern Conference begins. It seems most likely that Cincinnati will be the balancing piece in any new NHL expansions, if and when they happen.

Other notes from around the league:

  • The Ottawa Senators are open to shopping around defenseman Lassi Thomson, per team reporter Bruce Garrioch of the Ottawa Sun. A recent report on Sweden’s Expressen shared that the defenseman could return to Scandinavian hockey, joining the SHL’s Malmo Redhawks. This rumored move could be a driving factor in any trade talks, as Ottawa will surely want a return on their investment and any recipient will want to ensure they’re getting a long-term piece. Thomson, 23, has spent all season in the AHL, totaling 11 points through 40 games. He’s also added 40 penalty minutes and a -11. All of these stats are a step down from Thomson’s 2022-23 season, when he managed 33 points, 28 penalty minutes, and a -9 through 56 AHL games. The former 2019 first-round pick played two seasons in the Liiga, Finland’s top league, after being drafted and before his career in North American pros began at the end of the 2020-21 season.
  • Montreal Canadiens forward Alex Newhook is aiming for a return soon, says team general manager Kent Hughes. Newhook was announced as out for 10-to-12 weeks in early-December after suffering a high ankle sprain. That projection places his return in mid-February, at the earliest – though his return to the ice in late January suggests he’s progressing nicely. Newhook has appeared in 23 games with Montreal this season, scoring seven goals and 13 points. It’s his first time playing in Canada since his two-year stretch in the BCHL prior to being drafted. The Canadiens traded a 2023 first and second round draft pick, as well as Gianni Fairbrother, to the Colorado Avalanche this summer in exchange for Newhook.

Atlanta| Montreal Canadiens| Ottawa Senators| Salt Lake City Alex Newhook| Lassi Thomson

26 comments

NHLPA: Coyotes Have Missed Two Deadlines In New Arena Search

February 2, 2024 at 2:33 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 23 Comments

The Coyotes organization has missed two deadlines in their search for a new arena in the Phoenix area, NHLPA Executive Director Marty Walsh told reporters on Friday from All-Star weekend in Toronto (via Chris Johnston of The Athletic and TSN). In his press availability, Walsh said he’s “extremely concerned” and “disappointed” with the team’s ownership and claimed owner Alex Meruelo has “refused to engage with the [NHLPA] on numerous fronts,” per Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli.

Those statements from Walsh run in contrast to what NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman said earlier in the day, claiming he was “reasonably confident” that Meruelo would present a plan for an NHL-quality arena in the Phoenix metro area within a reasonable time frame (via Johnston). Previous anticipated dates for a concrete announcement regarding an arena plan included New Year’s Day and this weekend’s All-Star game, neither of which carried any significant updates.

Coyotes President and CEO Xavier A. Gutierrez told Craig Morgan of PHNX Sports in December that the team anticipated an announcement of their chosen area site by the end of the 2023 calendar year “or shortly thereafter.” At the time, TSN’s Darren Dreger reported that the deal, expected to be for a parcel of land within Phoenix city limits close to the suburb of Scottsdale, was close to being finalized.

Arizona is in its second season using Mullett Arena as its full-time home, where it’s the secondary tenant to Arizona State University’s men’s hockey program. It has a capacity of just 4,600 seats for NHL games.

The current collective bargaining agreement does not award players any avenues for action against the Coyotes, Walsh said (via Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman). Arizona’s first plan for a new arena and entertainment district, a parcel of land in Tempe near Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport, was struck down by voters in a May 2023 referendum.

Time is quickly running out for Meruelo to present a long-term plan for a Phoenix-area home. Salt Lake City-based Smith Entertainment Group, owners of the NBA’s Utah Jazz, expressed written intent for an expansion franchise last month. That market is a geographically logical place for relocation and could house the Coyotes franchise as soon as next season.

NHLPA| Utah Mammoth

23 comments

International Notes: Russia, Insurance, Rink Size, 4 Nations Face-Off, World Cup

February 2, 2024 at 1:03 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 13 Comments

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman confirmed today that NHL players will participate in the 2026 and 2030 Winter Olympics. Along with NHLPA Executive Director Marty Walsh and IIHF President Luc Tardif, Bettman oversaw a press conference during All-Star weekend in Toronto and offered some clarifying notes about Olympic participation in 2026 in Milan, Italy.

Tardif confirmed to reporters that Russia’s standing in the tournament has not yet been decided. The IIHF council will meet next week to determine whether the country will be eligible to return for the 2025 Men’s World Championship, at which point they will issue additional updates. Russia has been barred from IIHF competition since its early 2022 invasion of Ukraine for geopolitical reasons. If deemed eligible for Olympic play in 2026, Russia will qualify automatically based on their current world ranking.

The security of players will be the driving force behind the IIHF’s decision to reinstate a Russian contingent, said Tardif. Both the 2025 World Championship and 2026 Winter Olympics will be held in Western European countries.

Other updates regarding the Olympics and future international tournaments:

  • One of the driving forces behind the NHL’s barring of players from attending the 2018 and 2022 Winter Olympics dealt with uncertainty over insurance and travel costs for players. That’s been settled as part of today’s announcement, Bettman said. Those costs, plus other travel-associated costs, will not be fronted by the league – instead, individual Olympic committees and the IIHF will provide funding for players to travel and stay at the overseas events.
  • Tardif also added that for the first time, the Olympic tournament will be played on smaller NHL-sized ice in 2026. This downsizing from the standard international-sized rink was not contingent on the NHL’s participation in the event, per Tardif, and it did not play a factor in today’s announcement. Previous IIHF specifications dictated that rinks must be 197 by 98 feet, while NHL rinks are narrower at 200 by 85 feet.
  • The league also confirmed today’s reported news that a 2025 best-on-best tournament between Canada, Sweden, Finland, and the United States will occur next February in two unnamed North American cities, one in Canada and one in the United States. The tournament, called the 4 Nations Face-Off, will be comprised of 23 NHL-rostered players from each country selected by each nation’s governing association. Interestingly, despite the NHL hosting the tournament, the round-robin portion will adopt the more internationally-recognized 3-2-1-0 points system. There will be no multi-round playoff; instead, the best two teams in the round-robin schedule will play a one-game final match.
  • Bettman said the league’s plan is to return to a regular World Cup of Hockey schedule after Olympic participation resumes. Time constraints limited the size of the 2025 best-on-best tournament, but World Cups are expected to run in 2028 and 2032 and will feature expanded participation from countries not included in the 2025 tournament.

4 Nations Face-Off| IIHF| NHL| NHLPA| Olympics

13 comments

NHL To Allow Players To Attend 2026, 2030 Winter Olympics

February 2, 2024 at 12:35 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 9 Comments

12:35 p.m.: Commissioner Gary Bettman confirmed an agreement has been reached with the IIHF to send players to the 2026 and 2030 Winter Olympics to media today. Bettman added the league has been given “assurances” that the venue under construction for ice hockey in Milan will be completed on schedule.

9:56 a.m.: The NHL and IIHF have reached a deal to allow players to participate in both the 2026 and 2030 Winter Olympics, ESPN’s Kevin Weekes said Friday. An official announcement is expected from the league later today after the IIHF quickly posted and deleted a post confirming the news on X, formerly known as Twitter, this morning.

Also expected Friday afternoon is an announcement confirming the NHL’s plans to hold a best-on-best international tournament in 2025 between Canada, Finland, Sweden, and the United States, per Frank Seravalli of Daily Faceoff. The tournament will be hosted in Boston and Montreal and will result in no All-Star Game being held next year.

2026 will mark the first time NHL players participate in the Olympics since the 2014 edition held in Sochi, Russia. Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, have already been tabbed as the 2026 hosts, although concerns about the construction timeline for the Olympic rink in Milan may force the ice hockey competitions to be moved to Turin, which hosted the Winter Olympics in 2004.

The host for the 2023 Games has not been named, although Salt Lake City, Stockholm, Switzerland, and the French Alps region have submitted bids. The French Alps bid entered the “targeted dialogue phase” late last year and is the most likely host for the 2030 edition, while Salt Lake City will likely receive the 2034 Games.

Milan will mark the first Olympic appearance for all of the NHL’s next generation of stars, including Connor McDavid, Nathan MacKinnon, Auston Matthews, Leon Draisaitl, David Pastrňák, Cale Makar, and many others. It’s unclear whether Russia will field a team at the event – they are currently barred from IIHF competition due to the country’s invasion of Ukraine.

Meanwhile, the 2025 four-nations-style tournament will be the first true exhibition of best-on-best international play involving the world’s highest-ranking men’s hockey countries since the 2016 World Cup of Hockey.

IIHF| NHL| NHLPA| Newsstand| Olympics

9 comments

Kings Fire Todd McLellan, Name Jim Hiller Interim Head Coach

February 2, 2024 at 10:34 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 48 Comments

The Kings have fired head coach Todd McLellan, according to a team statement Friday. Assistant Jim Hiller will serve as Los Angeles’ interim head coach for the remainder of the 2023-24 season.

McLellan, 56, was in the final season of a five-year contract earning him roughly $5MM per season, according to CapFriendly. He’d signed a one-year extension prior to this season, which the Kings will still owe him.

The veteran NHL head coach oversaw the Kings’ return to relevancy after their late-2010s retool, posting a 164-130-44 record in 338 appearances and guiding them to playoff berths in back-to-back seasons for the first time since a five-year run between 2010 and 2014. A team with Stanley Cup aspirations this year has now fallen out of the divisional playoff picture, though, going 3-8-6 in their last 17 games and narrowly occupying a Wild Card spot.

Most pointed to the Kings’ lack of stable goaltending entering the season as a reason why their record might crumble. Interestingly enough, that hasn’t been the case. While he’s going through a recent rut, veteran Cam Talbot has given Los Angeles above-average play with a .911 SV% and 2.5 goals saved above expected (per MoneyPuck) in 32 appearances. Since a mid-season recall from AHL Ontario, backup David Rittich has been excellent, with a .925 SV% and a 5-1-3 record in 11 games.

They’ve also dominated possession. Their expected goals share and Corsi share at 5-on-5 play both rank third in the league, but despite that, their offense has struggled to produce with subpar shooting talent. Their 152 goals scored rank 16th in the league at the All-Star break – exactly in the middle of the pack.

That would still assign blame to a roster construction issue and not a coaching one, given the team’s systems under McLellan, have been conducive to dominating play. The team’s biggest offseason swing, a trade and subsequent eight-year, $68MM extension for Pierre-Luc Dubois, has crashed and burned. The 25-year-old has 10 goals and 20 points in 48 games, far below expectations. He’s averaging under 16 minutes per game and has a team-worst -16 rating.

Nonetheless, Los Angeles will turn to a different voice to ensure they maintain their playoff spot and don’t slide further down the Western Conference standings. Hiller has been on the Kings’ staff since the beginning of last season after being let go as an assistant by the Islanders in the 2022 offseason. Prior to a three-year tenure on Long Island, Hiller served as an assistant in Toronto from 2015 to 2019 and spent the 2014-15 season as an assistant on the Red Wings’ bench. Before ascending to the NHL coaching ranks, he spent nearly a decade as a head coach in the WHL with the Chilliwack Bruins and Tri-City Americans.

Hiller’s NHL career was short-lived, but 40 of his 63 games came wearing a Kings jersey in the 1992-93 season when the Wayne Gretzky-led team advanced to the Stanley Cup Final. Hiller was involved in a major mid-season trade with the Red Wings that year, heading to Detroit along with future Hall-of-Famer Paul Coffey in a deal for winger Jimmy Carson.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Coaches| Jim Hiller| Los Angeles Kings| Newsstand| Todd McLellan

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