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Offseason Checklist: Los Angeles Kings

June 6, 2023 at 7:59 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 2 Comments

The offseason has arrived for all but the two teams that still have a shot at winning the Stanley Cup.  It’s time to examine what those eliminated squads will need to accomplish over the coming months.  Next up is a look at Los Angeles.

The Kings bolstered their offense with the acquisition of Kevin Fiala last summer and he helped improve their attack from the 20th-best team in 2021-22 to ninth in the league in scoring this season which also helped them surpass the 100-point mark for the first time since 2015-16.  However, they were once again by Edmonton in the first round.  Slow and steady improvement is rarely a bad way to go and their checklist for this summer is based on the idea of them staying on their current trajectory.

Kopitar Extension Talks

Anze Kopitar has been a fixture in the lineup for the Kings since 2006, a year after being the 11th overall pick.  He sits third in franchise history in points and should be able to move into second place about a month or so into the season.  The two-time Selke winner has one year left on his contract and accordingly, he is eligible for a contract extension as of July 1st.  Kopitar’s current deal carries a $10MM AAV, one that seemed a bit steep at the time but he has certainly lived up to it.  However, he’s also 35 and by the time his next contract starts in October 2024, he’ll be 37.

With the center depth that Los Angeles amassed in recent years – including top-five selections in Quinton Byfield and Alex Turcotte – it looked as if their plan was that they would be able to replace Kopitar by the time his deal was up.  That doesn’t seem likely to happen though; Byfield spent time on the wing this season while Turcotte has struggled in the minors at times and isn’t ready for NHL duty.  Phillip Danault was a nice addition in free agency in 2021 but he isn’t a prototypical top center either.

Accordingly, it seems likely that GM Rob Blake will look to sign his captain to an extension.  It’s almost certainly going to be a short-term deal (somewhere between two and four seasons) where the longer the term, the lower the AAV.  Kopitar won’t be eyeing a $10MM price tag again on that next agreement but he’s coming off a 74-point effort, his highest since 2017-18.  As a result, it wouldn’t be surprising to see an extension check in somewhere around the $7.5MM mark, allowing him to remain with the only NHL franchise he has ever known while keeping some stability down the middle while they hope for their prospects to eventually move into a more critical spot in the lineup.

Re-Sign The Columbus Rentals

At the trade deadline, the Kings did their shopping in one move, picking up goaltender Joonas Korpisalo and defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov from the Blue Jackets.  Both players are pending unrestricted free agents and with how they performed with their new team, the Kings would certainly like to keep them around.

Korpisalo signed a one-year deal with Columbus last summer coming off surgery in the hopes that he could show he was healthy and rebuild some value.  Mission accomplished on that front.  He did well with the Blue Jackets and then after the trade, the 29-year-old took over the starting role quickly with a 2.13 GAA and a .921 SV% in 11 starts.  Because of his more volatile track record, Korpisalo won’t be able to command top dollar on the free agent market which works in the Kings’ favor but he is still in line for a significant raise on the $1.4MM he made this season.  It shouldn’t need to get to Calvin Petersen-type money but getting Korpisalo signed should give them some upside at the goaltending position for next season.

As for Gavrikov, the 27-year-old took a step back from his 2021-22 performance with Columbus but found another gear following the trade, notching nine points in 20 games following the swap.  He’s a legitimate top-four defenseman in a UFA market that doesn’t have a lot of them.  While Gavrikov’s AAV over the last three seasons was $2.8MM, his salary this season was $4.2MM, a figure that’s likely to stand as a reasonable starting point for extension talks.  It’s worth noting that a report last month had the two sides making progress on a new deal although clearly, that hasn’t gotten across the finish line yet.

New Deal For Vilardi

Staying healthy was a challenge for forward Gabriel Vilardi early in his career with lingering back troubles being problematic.  Even this season, while his back wasn’t an issue, he had multiple injuries that caused him to miss 19 games in the regular season plus the first game of the Edmonton series.  However, when he was in the lineup, he made an impact.  After notching just 18 goals on his entry-level deal, the 23-year-old bested that total in 2022-23, picking up 23 goals and 18 assists in 63 games, giving them a pretty nice return on a one-year, $825K contract.

That deal is now up this summer and Vilardi will once again be a restricted free agent.  The big difference this time around is now he’ll be arbitration-eligible and obviously has a much better platform year to work from.  Given their desire to re-sign Korpisalo and Gavrikov, it’s reasonable to think another bridge contract will be coming Vilardi’s way if they’re able to ink those two.  A shorter-term agreement should see the AAV fall somewhere in the mid-$2.5MM range but if they work out a pact that buys some extra years of club control, it could creep closer to the $4MM mark.

Trade From Defensive Depth

There are going to be a lot of teams looking for defensive depth this summer.  That’s great news for Los Angeles as they project to have a blueliner available.  Assuming Gavrikov re-signs, that would give them a top-three of him, Drew Doughty, and Michael Anderson that are signed for multiple seasons.  Top prospect Brandt Clarke could be ready for full-time NHL duty as soon as next season.  That’s a nice top-four to work with.

Meanwhile, they have Matt Roy and Sean Durzi who will be entering the final year of their respective contracts next season.  They also have prospect Tobias Bjornfot who was shuffled to and from the AHL frequently this year but is now waiver-eligible.  Additionally, prospect Jordan Spence has lit it up with AHL Ontario the last two seasons and is probably ready for a long look with the big club as well.  Kevin Connauton and Jacob Moverare are pegged to be in the minors but also have NHL experience.  All things considered, their depth is pretty strong.

There’s nothing wrong with having extra depth but there’s a case to be made to move one of them even after trading Sean Walker earlier today.  Durzi’s just 24 with three years of club control remaining and should bring back a nice return and a bit more cap room (he has a $1.7MM AAV) while making room for one of Spence or Clarke.  They could try to move Spence and cash in on his rising value.  There’s still room to move one more defender and with demand for blueliners being high, that should work in Blake’s favor should he opt to make another move.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Los Angeles Kings| Offseason Checklist 2023| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

2 comments

Islanders Notes: Bailey, Coaching Staff, Free Agents, Injury Updates

June 6, 2023 at 6:56 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 4 Comments

Islanders GM Lou Lamoriello met with the media today (video link) and provided updates on several things while also confirming that he is under contract, though he declined to state for how long.  Here are some of the updates from his presser.

  • Speaking about veteran winger Josh Bailey, Lamoriello indicated that “In Josh’s case, it looks like, maybe it’s near the end here.” The 33-year-old had a rough showing this season, notching just eight goals and 17 assists in 64 games, resulting in him being a healthy scratch at times.  Bailey still has one year left on his contract with a $5MM AAV, one that would require New York to provide an incentive for another team to take on.  A buyout, meanwhile, would save around $2.33MM on the cap for next season while adding $1.167MM in dead space for 2024-25.
  • Lamoriello also confirmed that head coach Lane Lambert would be back for his second season behind the bench. The team was eliminated in the first round by Carolina and didn’t take as big of a step forward offensively as expected; the team scored just 12 more goals than they did under the defensive-minded Barry Trotz.  However, Lamoriello wouldn’t confirm that the full coaching staff would be back for next year, stating “that’s not something that I can assert to at this point”.  John MacLean and Doug Houda were the lead assistants this season for the Isles.
  • Lamoriello indicated that he’d like to re-sign pending UFA defenseman Scott Mayfield, goaltender Semyon Varlamov, and forward Pierre Engvall. Mayfield has become a steady top-four blueliner and should more than double the $1.45MM AAV from his expiring deal.  Varlamov played in just 23 games this season, his fewest games played total since getting a brief stint in his rookie year in 2008-09.  He’s coming off a $5MM contract and will be facing a likely cut in pay, especially if he wants to remain in New York.  Engvall, meanwhile, came over at the trade deadline from Toronto and picked up nine points in 18 games following the swap.  He’s coming off a $2.25MM contract and should be in line for more than that on the open market.  With the Islanders having a little over $5MM in cap space per CapFriendly, they have some work to do if they want to bring those three back.
  • As for Zach Parise, another pending UFA, Lamoriello mentioned he’d also like to bring him back but the veteran first needs to decide if he’s going to play again next season. The 38-year-old had a productive year with 21 goals but after 18 NHL seasons, it’s certainly possible that he decides to call it a career.
  • Lamoriello also noted that winger Oliver Wahlstrom has resumed skating as he works his way back from an ACL injury back in late December. He, along with Alexander Romanov (shoulder surgery), are both set to be ready in time for training camp.

Lou Lamoriello| New York Islanders Alexander Romanov| Josh Bailey| Oliver Wahlstrom| Pierre Engvall| Scott Mayfield| Semyon Varlamov| Zach Parise

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Colorado Avalanche Extend Wyatt Aamodt

June 6, 2023 at 3:21 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu Leave a Comment

The Colorado Avalanche have announced that defenseman Wyatt Aamodt has been signed to a one-year contract extension. The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed in the team announcement.

Aamodt was set to become an arbitration-eligible restricted free agent as his one-year entry-level contract was about to expire. Now, with this extension, he’ll avoid any lengthy offseason negotiations and secure his spot in the Avalanche’s plans for next season.

Aamodt will turn 26 early next season and is entering his second full season as a professional hockey player. He’s an undrafted player who spent four seasons with Minnesota State University, playing on some highly successful teams and earning the right to captain the squad in his senior season.

There isn’t a ton of offense in Aamodt’s game, but the five-foot-eleven left-shot blueliner capably handled a regular role on the AHL’s Colorado Eagles’ defense. His strong two-way game kept him in the Eagles’ lineup and earned the trust of head coach Greg Cronin, who recently took the job as the head coach of the Anaheim Ducks.

Late in the season, Aamodt was partnered with rookie NCAA signing Sam Malinski and Aamodt’s steady, reliable play helped Malinski make an instant offensive impact in the AHL, as he scored 10 points in his first 14 games as a professional.

This one-year extension is Aamodt’s reward for a quality campaign in the AHL, and next season he’ll be relied upon once again as a regular in the Eagles lineup, and Aamodt will likely hope to take a step forward in his play and make a push to potentially earn an NHL call-up.

Colorado Avalanche Wyatt Aamodt

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Columbus Blue Jackets Acquire Ivan Provorov As Part Of Three-Team Trade

June 6, 2023 at 2:30 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 69 Comments

With Mike Babcock expected to be named Columbus Blue Jackets head coach later this summer, the Blue Jackets have made a major push to improve their roster for his first season as head coach.

In a trade officially announced by all three involved teams, Columbus is acquiring defenseman Ivan Provorov from the Philadelphia Flyers, but there are a lot of moving parts to the deal. Here are the full details as told by the team announcement:

Philadelphia trades Ivan Provorov and Hayden Hodgson to Los Angeles in exchange for Calvin Petersen, Sean Walker, Helge Grans and the Kings’ 2024 second-round pick. Columbus acquires Kevin Connauton from Philadelphia in exchange for a 2023 first-round pick (22nd overall) and conditional second-round pick in either the 2024 or 2025 NHL Draft. Columbus acquires Provorov from Los Angeles in exchange for Connauton.

The Kings are retaining 30% of Provorov’s deal, meaning he’ll cost $4.725MM against the cap for Columbus for the next two seasons.

Laid out plainly, here is what each team is acquiring as part of this deal:

Columbus gets: Provorov. Philadelphia gets: Petersen, Grans, Walker, 2023 1st (via CBJ via LA), 2024 2nd (via LA), conditional 2nd (via CBJ). Los Angeles gets: Hodgson, Connauton.

Columbus’ acquisition of Provorov should not come as a surprise, as it was reported months ago that the team had an interest in acquiring a defensive upgrade to fill the void left by their trade of Vladislav Gavrikov to Los Angeles. Blue Jackets GM Jarmo Kekalainen has found his upgrade in Provorov, 26.

Provorov was the seventh-overall pick at that 2015 draft and at times looked to be a potential top-of-the-lineup, all-situations force for Philadelphia. He averages over 24 minutes per night for his career, and has a career-high of 17 goals and 41 points.

But in recent seasons, as the Flyers themselves have descended from consistent playoff team to league basement-dweller, Provorov’s form has declined and this season he played a full minute less per game than his career average, earning 23:01 time on ice per contest.

As Provorov’s inconsistency became harder and harder to ignore and the Flyers organization began to pivot to more of a rebuild-like direction, it became clear that a change of scenery would likely be in the best interest of all parties.

Now Provorov gets his change of scenery with two seasons remaining on his contract. He’ll land in Columbus, where he’ll be slotted more appropriately as the team’s number-two left-shot defenseman behind franchise face Zach Werenski.

Assuming Werenski can return to form next season after an injury cost him most of his 2022-23, Provorov will be in a more comfortable position as a second-pairing anchor. It’s likely that the Blue Jackets believe he’ll be able to reach the heights he hit earlier in his career in that position sort of position, when he’s not being leaned on as his coach’s number-one option.

For the Kings, the motivations behind this deal seem relatively clear. First and foremost, creating cap space was an important priority, and is something the Kings have done by sending Petersen and his $5MM AAV deal to the Flyers.

Petersen once looked like a potential successor to Jonathan Quick for the Kings, posting a solid .911 save percentage in 35 games in 2020-21. Since that point, though, Petersen has declined sharply and this season spent most of the year in the AHL as he had a grisly .868 save percentage in his 10 NHL games. Now Petersen will get a fresh start in Philadelphia while the Kings clear his hefty cap hit off their books, save for any money they retain. (which will be revealed when the official trade details come in)

Cap space is of importance to the Kings as they are looking to sign an extension with Gavrikov, their mid-season trade acquisition. ESPN’s John Buccigross on Twitter cited a conversation with a Kings executive who pegged the cost of Gavrikov’s contract extension to be in the “$6-7 million” range, with the team preferring to keep the number as early in the $6MM range as possible. If the Kings do end up finalizing that sort of contract extension with the 27-year-old Russian rearguard, this trade of Petersen is an essential one.

ESPN’s Kevin Weekes reports that Gavrikov is “only interested in a two-year contract extension with the Kings,” which could contribute to the higher price tag Buccigross is reporting, as the conventional wisdom is that short-term contracts for coveted players who are in their prime would carry higher average annual values than the more traditional long-term commitments.

Meanwhile, the trade of Walker (reportedly to Philadelphia) is no surprise seeing as the Kings have been long expected to deal from their surplus of right-shot NHL-ready blueliners. With Sean Durzi a breakout talent and 22-year-old Jordan Spence clearly ready to take on the challenge of the NHL, it seems Walker was the odd man out in the team’s right-shot defensive picture.

Walker is a 28-year-old undrafted Bowling Green State University product who is making $2.65MM against the cap for one more season. He scored 13 points in 70 games this season and contributed to the team’s penalty kill, but his average ice time was cut from 18:22 per game last year to just 14:50 this season.

Perhaps he’ll be able to earn a larger role in Philadelphia, or the Flyers could even opt to flip him to another team to earn even more draft capital to further their rebuild process.

They’ll also get Connauton, a 33-year-old defender with 360 games of NHL experience on a $762.5k cap hit for next season. He scored 15 points in 63 games in 2022-23 for the Lehigh Valley Phantoms of the AHL, and it was his first season since 2013 spent without a single NHL game played. He’ll likely play with the Ontario Reign in the AHL and add to the Kings’ defensive depth.

Hodgson, 27, has just seven games of NHL experience but scored 19 goals and 31 points in 46 AHL games in 2021-22. His point total dropped to eight this past year, but perhaps the physical forward can return to AHL prominence in Ontario.

For Philadelphia, this deal is all about adding as much draft and prospect capital to further their rebuild under new GM Daniel Briere. Getting a first-rounder in a highly-regarded draft is a solid return for Provorov, and the additional two second-rounders are a great bonus. Grans has had an uneven time in the AHL with the Kings organization, but he’s still just 21 years old and was the 35th overall pick at the 2020 draft. He’s a talented prospect who could quickly put himself in the Flyers’ blueline mix.

This trade is Briere’s first move in what is likely to be a summer of major change for the Flyers. If they are indeed pursuing a complete rebuilding process, (perhaps including a trade of netminder Carter Hart, who has been the subject of “industry rumblings” about a potential trade) this is a strong first transaction to get that rebuild started.

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman first reported the deal taking place. ESPN’s Kevin Weekes, The Athletic’s Aaron Portzline, Sportsnet’s Jeff Marek, and ESPN’s Greg Wyshynski each first reported other elements of the deal.  

Columbus Blue Jackets| Los Angeles Kings| Newsstand| Philadelphia Flyers Cal Petersen| Ivan Provorov| Sean Walker

69 comments

Dallas Stars Extend Fredrik Karlström

June 6, 2023 at 2:25 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu Leave a Comment

The Dallas Stars have announced a one-year, two-way contract extension for pending Group Six unrestricted free agent forward Fredrik Karlström. The financial terms of the deal were not included as part of Dallas’ announcement, but have been reported by PuckPedia. Karlström’s deal will carry a league-minimum $775k AAV as well as a $225k AHL salary and a $250k total guarantee.

Karlström, 25, was a third-round pick of the Stars back at the 2015 draft who has been a depth forward in Dallas for the past two seasons.

He took an extended development path to reach his current role, spending four full seasons in the SHL with Linkoping HC and Vaxjo Lakers. Karlström signed a two-year entry-level deal with Dallas in the summer of 2020 and was loaned back to Vaxjo for the following campaign, where he won a championship and scored a combined 35 points in 65 regular season and playoff SHL games.

After that year he decided to try his luck in North America and spent most of his 2021-22 season with the AHL’s Texas Stars. He registered a respectable 16 goals and 29 points in 65 games, helping his team reach the AHL’s playoffs. He also earned the right to make his NHL debut in an April 21st, 2022 contest against the Calgary Flames, a game where he also scored his first NHL point.

This season was more of the same for Karlström, as he was a consistent, versatile middle-six forward in the AHL while managing to competently handle fill-in duty in the NHL when Dallas was hit with the injury bug. He managed to dress in five NHL games in 2022-23, and he played well enough to earn this one-year extension that will allow him to occupy a similar role next season.

AHL| Dallas Stars Fredrik Karlstrom

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Free Agent Focus: Ottawa Senators

June 6, 2023 at 12:38 pm CDT | by Josh Cybulski 1 Comment

Free agency is less than a month away and teams are looking ahead to when it opens.  There will be several impact players set to hit the open market in July while many teams have key restricted free agents to re-sign as well.  We continue our look around the NHL with an overview of the free agent situation for the Ottawa Senators. 

Key Restricted Free Agents

F Alex DeBrincat – Ottawa general manager Pierre Dorion has said numerous times that the team will explore all options when it comes to DeBrincat. This includes the trade market or a long-term deal. DeBrincat had an uneven first season in Ottawa but appeared to get more comfortable as the season went on. While he wasn’t as good as he was in previous seasons in Chicago, he was still a machine on the powerplay putting up 11 goals and 19 assists with the man advantage. Overall DeBrincat was fine in his first season with the Senators putting up 27 goals and 39 assists in 82 games.

Ottawa acquired the Michigan native last year prior to the draft with the intention of signing him long term, however the 25-year-old forward still isn’t ready to discuss a long-term deal with the Senators which has prompted Dorion to explore the trade market. Given Ottawa’s needs this may be the best course of action, Ottawa has a lot of cap space tied up in the forward group and DeBrincat may be a luxury they can no longer afford.

Ottawa badly needs to improve their bottom six and goaltending situation and $9MM can go a long way towards doing that. DeBrincat will be looking for an eight-year deal on an extension and one would have to assume that it will exceed $8MM annually. The Senators may be wise to recoup their assets and try to fill out their roster with more depth as they attempt to get back to the playoffs for the first time in six seasons.

C Shane Pinto – Pinto is an interesting RFA case as he has Group 10.2 (c) status which basically means he hasn’t accumulated enough playing time to qualify for Group 2 RFA status. This provision will keep Pinto from being eligible for arbitration which allows Ottawa more bargaining power when talking contract with Pinto.

In his first full NHL season Pinto was expected to handle third line center duties but was elevated when Josh Norris went down with a should injury early in the season. Pinto filled in admirably putting up 20 goals and 15 assists in 82 games. The 22-year-old saw some powerplay time with Ottawa on their second unit but did most of his damage at 5v5.

Pinto doesn’t have much in the way of leverage as he enters his contract negotiations and will most likely sign a one-year deal for something between $1MM and $2MM and hope he can improve upon his performance last season and sign a longer-term deal down the road at a much higher cap number.

D Erik Brännström – Brännström took a step forward in 2022-23 as he set a career high with two goals and 16 assists in 74 games. While those numbers aren’t lofty, they do represent a moderate improvement for the young rearguard. Brännström will continue to have unrealistic expectations placed on him due to his draft selection as well as the fact that he was traded for the beloved Mark Stone. While he was drafted 15th overall in 2017, it is unlikely he will ever live up to those kinds of expectations. Despite his draft position, Brännström has become a productive player who should be a good piece for the Senators as a bottom pairing defenseman should they choose to keep him.

It’s hard to see Brännström topping $2MM annually on his next contract, but he could find himself pushed out of the Senators depth charts given how many left-shot defensemen the team already employs. He does still hold some value, and Pierre Dorion could view him as a piece to try and acquire forward help or another goaltender.

Other RFAs: D Jonathan Aspirot, D Jacob Bernard-Docker, G Dylan Ferguson, F Dylan Gambrell, F Julien Gauthier, D Jacob Larsson, F Viktor Lodin, G Kevin Mandolese, F Egor Sokolov

Key Unrestricted Free Agents

G Cam Talbot – Talbot came over from the Minnesota Wild in the now ill-fated one-for-one trade for Filip Gustavsson. While Talbot struggled with injuries and inconsistency, Gustavsson quickly develop into one of the best young goalies in the game and exactly the type of netminder the Senators were starving for. Dorion has already stated that Talbot will not be back, making the 36-year-old an unrestricted free agent coming off a down year in which he posted an .898 save percentage and a 2.93 goals against average. Talbot will likely be staring down a one-year deal with a cap hit somewhere between $1MM and $1.5MM with some incentives added in.

D Travis Hamonic – Hamonic came over in a trade from the Vancouver Canucks that was widely panned. Despite some shortcomings, Hamonic was relatively steady for the Senators this past season. He will never be an offensive juggernaut evidenced by his six goals and 15 assists in 75 games. But he did provide stability to Jake Sanderson during his rookie season. Sanderson praised Hamonic for the steadiness of his game and how easy it was to play with him.  At 32 years old Hamonic could still be a part of the Senators defense, but it would likely be in a bottom pairing role on a cap number far less than the $3MM he made last season.

F Derick Brassard – Brassard had his best season since 2019-20 as he put up 13 goals and 10 assists in 62 games before finishing the season on IR with an injury. While he isn’t the offensive threat he was in his prime, Brassard proved that he could still provide depth scoring in the bottom six while jumping up to play on the top two lines in a pinch. At 35 years old the Hull, Quebec native might elect to hang up his skates and move on, however he is still an effective player who could find a role on a one-year contract around league minimum. Given that the Senators badly need help in the bottom six, they might be wise to hang onto Brassard as a cheap depth option who can slide up and down the lineup.

Other UFAs: G Antoine Bibeau, F Patrick Brown, F Rourke Chartier, D Nick Holden, F Jake Lucchini, F Scott Sabourin, F Austin Watson

Projected Cap Space

The Ottawa Senators provide a very good example of how quickly cap space can disappear as effective young players enter your depth charts. Just a few short years ago the Senators struggled to reach the cap floor and at times had to bring in expensive veterans on bad contracts just to reach the minimum. Now with so many good young players in the system and signed long-term, Ottawa is going to need to be creative to fill out their depth with inexpensive and effective players. This is something they haven’t been able to do the past few years, but it will be of utmost importance if they are going to become a contender in the Eastern Conference. Ottawa has just a shade over $17MM in remaining cap space for next season, but they have just 13 players signed to guaranteed NHL money next year. Pierre Dorion is going to be in tough to improve upon a roster that missed the playoffs this past year and is trending in the direction of being very top-heavy. Ottawa also must contend with possibly trying to fit in another big contract extension should they decide to keep Alex DeBrincat in the fold for the foreseeable future.

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.  Contract information courtesy of CapFriendly.

Free Agent Focus 2023| Ottawa Senators| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Calgary Flames Re-Sign Oscar Dansk

June 6, 2023 at 10:40 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The answer to the trivia question “Who was the first player Craig Conroy signed as general manager of the Calgary Flames?” will not be who you expect. Oscar Dansk, the organization’s minor league backup, has inked a one-year, two-way contract extension. The deal carries an NHL salary of $775K.

Dansk, 29, had been heading for unrestricted free agency after appearing 18 times with the Calgary Wranglers this season. The veteran minor league netminder put up a .905 save percentage in the regular season, far outpaced by starter Dustin Wolf’s .932 in 55 games.

With Wolf pushing for an NHL spot but the Flames still financially committed to Jacob Markstrom and Daniel Vladar, it’s unclear where Dansk fits into the picture. He very well could be the AHL backup once again—a fourth-string option that could be used in a pinch.

There is a small amount of NHL experience in his past. Dansk has appeared in six games, all with the Vegas Golden Knights, and actually won four of them. His most recent appearance was in the 2020-21 season.

AHL| Calgary Flames Oscar Dansk

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Minor Transactions: 06/06/23

June 6, 2023 at 9:34 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The offseason is right around the corner, and players are already trying to sort out their 2023-24 season plans. Minor league names will be shuffling, with many taking jobs in Europe to secure their place next year.

As those moves happen, we’ll keep track of any notable transactions right here:

  • Kristians Rubins has signed a one-year deal with MODO of the Swedish Hockey League, after being part of the recent history-making Latvian World Championship team. Rubins, 25, split last season between the Belleville Senators and Calgary Wranglers. After several years toiling in the minor leagues, he is scheduled for Group VI unrestricted free agency this summer.
  • Minor league veteran Zach O’Brien has signed a one-year contract with HC Slovan Bratislava in Slovakia for next season. One of the ECHL’s best players, he had 100 total points this year for the Newfoundland Growlers. Despite a ton of minor league accolades, O’Brien never did make it to the NHL.

This page will be updated throughout the day

Transactions Kristians Rubins

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Katey Stone Retires From Harvard Women’s Hockey Program

June 6, 2023 at 8:24 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 7 Comments

Katey Stone has retired after nearly three decades as head coach of the Harvard women’s hockey program.

The announcement comes just weeks after bombshell reporting from Bob Hohler of the Boston Globe, Katie Strang of The Athletic, and others that the Harvard program encouraged hazing and other alleged abusive behavior.

Harvard makes no mention of the reporting in the retirement announcement, instead releasing a boilerplate statement from athletic director Erin McDermott:

We recognize the decades of service and commitment that Katey has given to this University and Athletic Department. We thank her for all she has done to build the women’s hockey program here, and we wish her the best in her future endeavors.

Stone, 56, is one of the most recognizable coaches in women’s hockey, having led Harvard for 29 years and served as head coach of Team USA at World Championships and Olympics.

The team will begin the search for a new head coach immediately.

OHL| Retirement

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Lawrence Pilut Signs In Switzerland

June 6, 2023 at 7:39 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

It’s back overseas for Lawrence Pilut, who has yet to find any sort of consistency in his professional hockey career. The defenseman has signed a contract with Lausanne HC of the Swiss National League that runs through the 2024-25 season.

Pilut, 27, is scheduled for unrestricted free agency this summer after re-joining the Buffalo Sabres in 2022-23. The Swedish defender played 17 games at the NHL level this year, spending most of his time in the minors with the Rochester Americans.

That sentence could describe most of his time in North America, as, despite rather strong results, Pilut has been constantly shuffled between the two levels. He first joined the Sabres in 2018 after a breakout campaign in the SHL and played 33 games in the NHL. That was followed by 13 appearances in 2019-20, before he decided to head to the KHL for two years.

Overall, Pilut has played 63 NHL games, registering nine points. A two-year deal in Switzerland doesn’t necessarily rule out a North American return, but it does make it much less likely.

He will be free to sign with anyone down the road, but his chance at becoming an NHL regular has likely passed.

Buffalo Sabres| SHL Lawrence Pilut

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