Latest On A Potential Adam Fox Trade
The Carolina Hurricanes won’t be signing Adam Fox this summer, meaning the team has to consider trading his rights at some point in order to receive some sort of compensation before he becomes an unrestricted free agent in August of 2020. If they can find a team that he’s willing to sign with in time for the 2019-20 season, they may be able to coax some value out of them by leveraging the idea of getting him a year early. That’s a tough idea to sell given that teams could just wait a year and try to convince him themselves without giving up an asset, but the Hurricanes are certainly going to try. Owner Tom Dundon told Chip Alexander of the Raleigh News & Observer that the team would try to trade him, and today Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic (subscription required) examined the situation further.
Interestingly, LeBrun notes that the league would void a sign-and-trade situation that was meant to burn the first year of an entry-level contract in 2018-19. That was the immediate speculation surrounding the situation, and a potential selling point for the Hurricanes when bringing deals to other teams. The Hurricanes have talked to the New York Rangers about Fox—who grew up a fan of the team—but LeBrun believes that Carolina would be looking for a late first-round pick in exchange for the Harvard defenseman. That’s obviously a big price for the Rangers or any other team to pay just to get their hands on a player’s rights, especially when he will become an unrestricted free agent down the road.
It is important to remember here that Fox will be turning 22 in February of next year, meaning if he goes back to school he will only be required to sign a two-year entry-level contract with whatever team he chooses in free agency in the summer of 2020. Right now he would have to ink a three-year deal, meaning he’s going to get to restricted free agency—and a chance at a bigger payday—in the summer of 2022 either way (unless of course Carolina can somehow convince him in the next few days).
Latest On Adam Fox, Carolina Hurricanes
After another outstanding season at Harvard, top college defenseman Adam Fox had a decision to make. Would he turn pro and sign with the Carolina Hurricanes or return for his senior season and a chance at unrestricted free agency in the summer of 2020. Despite having said several times throughout the year that he hadn’t made a decision yet, rumors still surfaced that Fox didn’t want to sign with Carolina. That appears to be true, as Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic tweets that the young defenseman “isn’t likely to sign” with the Hurricanes.
That doesn’t necessarily mean he’ll be returning to Harvard though, as it appears a trade is a potential outcome. Team owner Tom Dundon told Chip Alexander of the Raleigh News and Observer that they will indeed try to deal him. The Hurricanes could also sign him and then immediately send Fox to another team—like the New York Rangers, perhaps—in order for him to still burn a year off his eventual entry-level contract. Though the deadline in late February is usually referred to as the trade deadline, deals can actually still happen afterwards. The players involved however are not playoff eligible, which is why they rarely happen.
For a defenseman like Fox, almost all of the leverage is on his side. At very worst he can return to Harvard, finish his degree and wait until next August to become an unrestricted free agent. He’d obviously miss a year of professional experience and income, but could choose his destination.
This is exactly the situation that the Calgary Flames meant to avoid when they traded Fox in the blockbuster Dougie Hamilton–Elias Lindholm deal last year. It was clear the young defenseman wasn’t going to sign in Calgary so they leveraged his potential as part of the deal. Carolina had seemed confident that they would get him under contract—which to be clear is still a potential outcome—but things appear to have changed since then.
Snapshots: Svechnikov, Maatta, Fox
The Detroit Red Wings have found some success with several young forwards this year as they try to move on from the Henrik Zetterberg era and embrace a youth movement, but one that was expected to play a big part was nowhere to be found. Evgeny Svechnikov, selected 19th overall in 2015, was forced to undergo knee surgery to reconstruct his ACL in October. He was expected to return to action near the end of the season, but Helene St. James of the Detroit Free Press is now reporting that he will not play at all in 2018-19.
Interestingly, as St. James notes, that may actually be a blessing in disguise for the Red Wings. The young forward will now not be waiver eligible in the 2019-20 season as he was scheduled to be, meaning the team can start him in the AHL right out of training camp if he’s not ready to help the NHL lineup. Svechnikov wouldn’t have maintained his waiver-exempt status if he’d played in even a single professional game—NHL or AHL—this season.
- Olli Maatta has been activated from injured reserve by the Pittsburgh Penguins and will return after missing 21 games with a lower-body injury. The 24-year old is coming back with just enough time to get his legs under him before the playoffs begin, a huge boost for a Penguins team that has suffered from several injuries on the back end this season. It’s tough to know exactly how much the team will push Maatta over the last few games of the regular season, but he lengthens out the team’s defense group by a considerable amount. Brian Dumoulin switched over to the right side in practice recently to accommodate Maatta’s return, though it’s not clear if that pair will stay together.
- With Adam Fox and Harvard losing today in the NCAA tournament, we will soon find out what his official decision is regarding signing or returning to school next season. Fox has repeatedly said that his mind is not yet made up, something that Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic (subscription required) also reported earlier today. Though there is obviously a draw to turning pro and getting into the Carolina Hurricanes organization right away, Fox could potentially graduate next year with a Harvard degree and the chance to become an unrestricted free agent in August 2020. LeBrun also explores the idea of Carolina trading Fox’s rights this season instead of waiting for the summer, in order to get full value if they do not believe he will sign with them down the road. If Fox signs this season he would burn the first year of his entry-level deal, and would be eligible for the expansion draft if he played just a single game.
Snapshots: Fox, Raanta, Tippett
The Carolina Hurricanes and their fans have been waiting patiently for the Harvard hockey season to come to an end so they can get a chance to sign top prospect Adam Fox, but the team is still alive in the NCAA tournament. Fox’s rights were acquired from the Calgary Flames as part of the Dougie Hamilton–Elias Lindholm trade from last summer, and the front office has been open with their belief that they could sign the young defenseman after he finished his college career. Today, Jeff Cox of the New England Hockey Journal tweeted that Fox will be returning to Harvard next season for his senior year and that he “favors” the idea of becoming an unrestricted free agent in the summer of 2020 when his draft rights would expire.
In response however, Carolina GM Don Waddell told Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic that he believes Fox has not yet made his decision with regards to signing with the Hurricanes, and Luke DeCock of the Raleigh News & Observer tweeted it is “still a bit premature to jump to conclusions.” If the 21-year old returns to Harvard next season and then waits until August 2020, he will get his chance to sign with any team he wants. There certainly wouldn’t be any shortage of interest, as the third-round pick is among the best college players in the entire country and is a right-handed defenseman to boot.
- The Arizona Coyotes have Darcy Kuemper to thank for their impressive playoff push, but he might be getting some help in the near future. Craig Morgan of the Athletic tweeted today that Antti Raanta is expected to start practicing with the Coyotes this week. Raanta hasn’t played a game since late November but has shown his ability as a top tier goaltender whenever he is at full strength. If Raanta can return in time for the playoffs (provided Arizona makes the postseason at all), it would be interesting to see how the Coyotes would play it. Kuemper has been among the best goaltenders in the league since Raanta’s injury, and would be a huge reason why they made the playoffs.
- While many have assumed that Dave Tippett would stay with the Seattle expansion franchise after his comments about his role in the new team, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet writes in his latest edition of 31 Thoughts that he’s heard “the coaching bug has bit [Tippett] again” and that one team has already reached out. Tippett was hired as a senior advisor for the Seattle group and was expected to join the front office in some capacity. He last coached in the NHL during the 2016-17 season.
