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Brett Howden

East Notes: Panthers, Zuccarello, Howden, Devils

November 8, 2018 at 6:59 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The Panthers have gotten off to a slow start this season, posting a 3-5-3 record that has them last overall in the NHL.  Accordingly, speculation has picked up about whether it’s time for them to shake things up.  In an appearance on TSN 1260 (audio link), TSN’s Darren Dreger stated that he doesn’t expect GM Dale Tallon to make a significant move but instead may try to make a smaller one to see if that gets the team going:

“I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s pretty eager to try and shake the culture of this group a little bit. I don’t get the sense that there’s going to be anything significant, but if it continues to drag on where this team is still playing sluggishly, maybe then the general manager does step in in some way, shape or form.”

It’s at least worth noting that the Panthers have at least four games in hand on every team in the Atlantic Division so while they sit seven points out of a Wild Card spot heading into tonight’s action, they can work their way back into the mix fairly quickly.  A healthy Roberto Luongo should help their fortunes but if they continue to scuffle, a small move could be on the horizon.

Elsewhere in the East:

  • The Rangers will be without winger Mats Zuccarello for at least the next two games due to a groin strain, notes Newsday’s Anthony Rieber. He will be re-evaluated by team doctors when they return from their road trip this weekend.  New York will, however, have center Brett Howden back for their game on Friday though after he missed Tuesday’s victory over Montreal because of an upper-body injury.
  • New Jersey will have winger Jesper Bratt back in the lineup tomorrow against Toronto, reports Abbey Mastracco of the Bergen Record. He has missed the entire season due to a broken jaw.  The 20-year-old surprised many by making the Devils last season but he wound up having a strong rookie year, tallying 35 points in 74 games.  Meanwhile, winger Stefan Noesen and defenseman Steven Santini participated in practice but aren’t expected to be taken off IR.  As the team has a full roster (Bratt will be activated into Eddie Lack’s soon-to-be-opened slot), some more movement is likely on the way.

Florida Panthers| New Jersey Devils| New York Rangers Brett Howden| Jesper Bratt| Mats Zuccarello| Stefan Noesen| Steven Santini

0 comments

Snapshots: Schultz, Pettersson, Hicketts, Howden

October 13, 2018 at 8:53 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 5 Comments

The Pittsburgh Penguins could find themselves down a defenseman for a while after Justin Schultz went down Saturday with what looks to be a gruesome leg injury (video link here). According to the Penguins, he needed to be helped off the ice after falling awkwardly in slow motion and either injuring his ankle or knee, after getting tangled up with Montreal’s Tomas Plekanec.

While more information won’t be known until Sunday at least, the idea of losing Schultz, one of the top defenseman isn’t a good sign. The 28-year-old already had four assists in three games played this season. Assuming he’s out for any length of time, the team could look to insert Juuso Riikola into the rotation. The Finnish free-agent, who signed with the team this summer, has impressed the Penguins throughout training camp and earned a spot as an extra defenseman, but has played in just one game so far this season.

  • Vancouver Canucks fans have to be worried after rookie Elias Pettersson took a massive hit from Florida Panthers’ Mike Matheson and then was thrown down on top of that (video link here). The 19-year-old rookie immediately left the game with a trainer, according to TSN’s Brennan Klak. Pettersson had already put up a power play goal in the game and led all rookies with five goals and eight points this season. No word on the severity of the injury.
  • NBC Sports Joe Haggerty writes that Detroit Red Wings defenseman Joe Hicketts will likely struggle all season as the diminutive blueliner at works his way through his rookie campaign with his physical brand of hockey. While the 5-foot-8 defenseman played an impressive 23:39 against the Boston Bruins Saturday and had five hits, he finished with a minus-3 and showed that he’ll struggle against top competition and skaters such as the Bruins depth that he faced Saturday.
  • Rick Carpinello of The Athletic (subscription required) profiles the play of the New York Rangers’ Brett Howden, who seems to be showing the team that he’s more than just a grinder. The 20-year-old has been impressive since training camp and his play forced the Rangers to send 2017 first-rounder Lias Andersson to the AHL. The Rangers acquired Howden, a 2016 first-round pick, from Tampa Bay in the Ryan McDonagh deal last season, but has already posted two goals in the Rangers’ first five games.

Boston Bruins| Detroit Red Wings| Florida Panthers| Injury| New York Rangers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Rookies| Snapshots| Vancouver Canucks Brett Howden| Elias Pettersson| Justin Schultz| Juuso Riikola| Lias Andersson| Ryan McDonagh| Tomas Plekanec

5 comments

Ryan McDonagh Signs Seven-Year Extension With Tampa Bay Lightning

July 1, 2018 at 11:11 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

The Tampa Bay Lightning have done it again, extending one of their players for a reasonable cap hit. This time it is Ryan McDonagh, who has signed a seven-year extension that carries an average annual value of $6.75MM. The deal will kick in for the 2019-20 season, after the final year of his current contract.

The move allows Tampa Bay to keep their new defensive core. The team acquired McDonagh in a giant trade from the New York Rangers right at the trade deadline this year. The Rangers traded McDonagh, a dominant top-four shutdown defenseman along with J.T. Miller (who already signed an extension) for Vladislav Namestnikov, prospects Brett Howden and Libor Hajek, a 2018 first-round pick and a conditional second-round pick in 2019. While he was coming off an injury when he was traded, he came exactly as advertised, leading the defense’s second unit, while Victor Hedman manned the first.

The seven-year deal should run until McDonagh reaches 36 years of age. However, to get the veteraen defenseman at $6.75MM is a reasonable cost and much lower than some of the other defenseman who have recently signed such as Drew Doughty and Oliver Ekman-Larsson. McDonagh, who is solid two-way defenseman, didn’t post his best offensive numbers between both teams as he combined for four goals and 29 points, but a healthy full season in Tampa Bay should get him back to his regular numbers.

Tampa Bay still has to lock up superstar Nikita Kucherov, who is in the final year of his contract, although he will only become a restricted free agent next season if he gets there, although the general belief is that the Lightning fully expect to sign him to an extension in the next few months.

New York Rangers| Newsstand| Prospects| Tampa Bay Lightning Brett Howden| Drew Doughty| J.T. Miller| Nikita Kucherov| Oliver Ekman-Larsson| Ryan McDonagh

2 comments

Rangers Likely To Trade A Center This Offseason

June 17, 2018 at 11:12 am CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 7 Comments

With many teams in the league looking for center help this offseason and seeing few options on the free agent market, the trade market seems to be the best way to fill that heavily in-demand. Just earlier this week, the Montreal Canadiens traded Alex Galchenyuk, who failed to succeed at the center position for the team in previous years, to Arizona. The Coyotes have already stated they intend to move him back to center in hopes that he can make the conversion and fill their No. 2 center hole.

The New York Rangers seem to be in a unique situation. Despite the franchise suddenly finding themselves in rebuilding mode, the one thing the Rangers have plenty of is reliable centers. In fact, the team has eight potential centers currently on the roster, including Mika Zibanejad, Kevin Hayes, Lias Andersson, Filip Chytil, Vladislav Namestnikov, Ryan Spooner, Boo Nieves and Brett Howden. While some of those eight will be forced to move to the wing position, there is also a strong possibility that the team will move at least one of those centers during the offseason, and very possibly, before next week’s draft.

Larry Brooks of the New York Post writes that while the team has a solid combination of Zibanejad, Chytil, Hayes and Andersson currently penciled in as their top four centers next season, that’s a logjam at that position that likely would not aid the development of Chytil and Andersson, two teenagers who need as much playing time as possible at the NHL level. Andersson especially, last year’s No. 7 pick in the 2017 draft, needs time on the ice and a fourth-line role isn’t going to cut it.

The scribe writes that Hayes may be available after quietly putting up a career-high 25 goals while playing center for New York last year. The restricted free agent is in line for a potential five-year deal worth about $4.5MM per year based on his success last season and there is no guarantee that Hayes would earn the No. 2 center spot with all this depth. Regardless, Hayes would be a highly coveted commodity for many teams who are in desperate need for help at that position.

The key for the Rangers is to trade him straight out for help on their blueline, according to Brooks, who adds that New York is unlikely to use Hayes as part of a package to move up in the draft. The team’s biggest need is at defense and there are many teams that could use a center and have defense to trade, including the Calgary Flames who might be ready to move Dougie Hamilton.

Calgary Flames| New York Rangers Alex Galchenyuk| Boo Nieves| Brett Howden| Dougie Hamilton| Filip Chytil| Kevin Hayes| Lias Andersson| Mika Zibanejad| Ryan Spooner| Vladislav Namestnikov

7 comments

Poll: Which Conference Finals Team Benefitted The Most At Trade Deadline?

May 13, 2018 at 3:26 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 3 Comments

With a lot of attention that has gone towards the success of trade acquisition Paul Stastny in the playoffs this season, the Winnipeg Jets and general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff look to have scored at the trade deadline this offseason. The GM was able to pick up Stastny’s expiring contract (50 percent of which was retained) as the team traded away Providence College prospect Erik Foley as well as their 2018 first-rounder and a conditional 2020 fourth-rounder (if Foley doesn’t sign with the Blues before he can become an unrestricted free agent in 2019). While losing a prospect and a first-rounder, the Jets have defintely benefitted by Stastny’s play, especially in the playoffs. The 32-year-old center, alongside youngsters Nikolaj Ehlers and Patrik Laine has put up six goals and nine assists in 13 games during the playoffs and has helped vault Winnipeg into a one-game lead in the Western Conference finals.

Of the other three teams that remain in the playoffs, the trade deadline also seems to have benefitted the Tampa Bay Lightning. Their acquisition of defenseman Ryan McDonagh and forward J.T. Miller from the New York Rangers at the deadline also brought some stability to the Lightning from both players. McDonagh added a stable presence on the defense’s second line, while Miller has excelled playing next to Steven Stamkos and Nikita Kucherov. McDonagh has aided the team’s offense with five assists in 11 games, while Miller has had two goals and five asissts in 11 games as well. In exchange for those two, the Lightning were able to avoid trading off any elite prospects to the Rangers, but still gave up a lot of pieces, including Vladislav Namestnikov, prospects Brett Howden and Libor Hajek, their 2018 first-rounder and another potential first-round pick in 2019 if Tampa Bay wins the Stanley Cup in either of the next two years.

The Washington Capitals, with little cap room to work with at the trade deadline, still were able to pull off a couple of small trades, although the addition of Michal Kempny has had a major affect on the Capitals’ defense. With a number of young, inexperienced blueliners and little money to add a high-profile player, the team traded the Toronto Maple Leafs’ third-round pick in 2018 for Kempny. While the former Blackhawks’ defenseman had never played a full season in the NHL, he is 27 and had quite a bit of experience in the KHL and Czech Republic.

Finally, the Golden Knights did make one big trade at the deadline, sending a 2018 first-round pick, a 2019 second-round pick and a 2021 third-round pick to acquire Tomas Tatar. While the addition of Tatar is not a rental like many of the others (he has three years left at $5.3MM AAV after this year), the team gave up a lot for a player who has made little impact in Vegas. The 27-year-old has been a healthy scratch for much of the playoffs, having only played in four games with no points.

So, which team has benefiited the most from this year’s trade deadline?

Trade Rumors app users, click here to vote.

Chicago Blackhawks| Kevin Cheveldayoff| Tampa Bay Lightning| Vegas Golden Knights| Washington Capitals| Winnipeg Jets Brett Howden| Erik Foley| J.T. Miller| Michal Kempny| Nikita Kucherov| Nikolaj Ehlers| Patrik Laine| Paul Stastny

3 comments

Trade Deadline Recap: Eastern Conference

February 26, 2018 at 5:45 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 6 Comments

After a month of lead up, a sprinkling of trades over the last week or so, and a wild deadline day today, NHL teams are done with transactions for the 2017-18 NHL season. Here are the deals that improved contenders in the Eastern Conference:

Deadline Day

Tampa Bay Lightning receive:
D Ryan McDonagh
F J.T. Miller

New York Rangers receive:
F Vladislav Namestnikov
F Brett Howden
D Libor Hajek
2018 first-round pick
Conditional 2019 second-round pick

 

Columbus Blue Jackets receive:
F Thomas Vanek

Vancouver Canucks receive:
F Tyler Motte
F Jussi Jokinen

 

Columbus Blue Jackets receive:
D Ian Cole

Ottawa Senators receive:
F Nick Moutrey
2020 third-round pick

 

New Jersey Devils receive:
F Patrick Maroon

Edmonton Oilers receive:
F J.D. Dudek
2019 third-round pick

 

New York Islanders receive:
F Chris Wagner

Anaheim Ducks receive:
F Jason Chimera

 

Boston Bruins receive:
F Tommy Wingels

Chicago Blackhawks receive:
Conditional 2019 fifth-round pick

 

Pittsburgh Penguins receive:
F Josh Jooris

Carolina Hurricanes receive:
F Greg McKegg

Read more

February 25th

Boston Bruins receive:
F Rick Nash

New York Ranger receive:
F Ryan Spooner
F Matt Beleskey
D Ryan Lindgren
2018 first-round pick
2019 seventh-round pick

 

Toronto Maple Leafs receive:
F Tomas Plekanec
F Kyle Baun

Montreal Canadiens receive:
F Kerby Rychel
D Rinat Valiev
2018 second-round pick

 

Columbus Blue Jackets receive:
F Mark Letestu

Edmonton Oilers receive:
F Pontus Aberg

Nashville Predators receive:
2018 fourth-round pick

February 24th

New York Islanders receive:
D Brandon Davidson

Edmonton Oilers receive:
2019 third-round pick

February 23rd

Pittsburgh Penguins receive:
F Derick Brassard
F Tobias Lindberg
F Vincent Dunn
2018 third-round pick

Vegas Golden Knights receive:
F Ryan Reaves
2018 fourth-round pick

Ottawa Senators receive:
D Ian Cole
G Filip Gustavsson
2018 first-round pick
2019 third-round pick

February 22nd

New Jersey Devils receive:
F Michael Grabner

New York Rangers receive:
D Igor Rykov
2018 second-round pick

 

Florida Panthers receive:
F Frank Vatrano

Boston Bruins receive:
2018 third-round pick

February 21st

Washington Capitals receive:
D Jakub Jerabek

Montreal Canadiens receive:
2019 fifth-round pick

February 20th

Boston Bruins receive:
D Nick Holden

New York Rangers receive:
D Rob O’Gara
2018 third-round pick

February 19th

Philadelphia Flyers receive:
G Petr Mrazek

Detroit Red Wings receive:
Conditional 2019 third-round pick
Conditional 2018 fourth-round pick

 

Washington Capitals receive:
D Michal Kempny

Chicago Blackhawks receive:
2018 third-round pick

Anaheim Ducks| Boston Bruins| Carolina Hurricanes| Chicago Blackhawks| Columbus Blue Jackets| Detroit Red Wings| Edmonton Oilers| Florida Panthers| Minnesota Wild| Montreal Canadiens| NHL| Nashville Predators| New Jersey Devils| New York Islanders| New York Rangers| Ottawa Senators| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Tampa Bay Lightning| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions| Vancouver Canucks| Vegas Golden Knights| Washington Capitals Brandon Davidson| Brett Howden| Chris Wagner| Derick Brassard| Frank Vatrano| Greg McKegg| Ian Cole| J.T. Miller| Jakub Jerabek| Jason Chimera| Josh Jooris| Jussi Jokinen| Kerby Rychel| Mark Letestu| Matt Beleskey| Michael Grabner| Michal Kempny| Nick Holden| Patrick Maroon| Petr Mrazek| Pontus Aberg| Rick Nash| Ryan McDonagh| Ryan Reaves| Ryan Spooner| Thomas Vanek| Tomas Plekanec| Tommy Wingels| Tyler Motte| Vladislav Namestnikov

6 comments

Hockey Canada Announces Preliminary World Junior Roster

December 6, 2017 at 12:24 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 8 Comments

Like USA Hockey did yesterday, Hockey Canada has announced their preliminary World Junior Championship roster for the upcoming tournament in Buffalo, NY. The Canadian selection camp will have 32 players in it, but will have to whittle it down before the tournament begins. That group could potentially get a bonus should someone like Nolan Patrick or Victor Mete be sent back from their NHL squads in the next few weeks. The tournament officially begins on December 26th.

The roster is as follows:

G Carter Hart (PHI)
G Michael DiPietro (VAN)
G Colton Point (DAL)
G Samuel Harvey (2018 draft eligible)

D Kale Clague (LAK)
D Cale Makar (COL)
D Dante Fabbro (NSH)
D Jake Bean (CAR)
D Connor Timmins (COL)
D Logan Stanley (WPG)
D Cal Foote (TBL)
D Josh Mahura (ANA)
D Dennis Cholowski (DET)
D Mario Ferraro (SJS)

F Sam Steel (ANA)
F Michael McLeod (NJD)
F Jordan Kyrou (STL)
F Robert Thomas (STL)
F Dillon Dube (CGY)
F Brett Howden (TBL)
F Boris Katchouk (TBL)
F Nick Suzuki (VGK)
F Max Comtois (ANA)
F Alex Formenton (OTT)
F Jonathan Ang (FLA)
F Drake Batherson (OTT)
F Jonah Gadjovich (VAN)
F Cody Glass (VGK)
F Tanner Kaspick (STL)
F Kole Lind (VAN)
F Taylor Raddysh (TBL)
F Tyler Steenbergen (ARI)

The biggest surprises for Team Canada may be in the exclusions. Owen Tippett (FLA), Cliff Pu (BUF), Michael Rasmussen (DET), Adam Mascherin (FLA) and others were all expected to at least receive an invitation to the selection camp, but they will have to watch as their countrymen battle it out for the final spots.

NHL| Players Brett Howden| Cale Makar| Cody Glass| Dennis Cholowski| Logan Stanley| Michael McLeod| Nick Suzuki| Nolan Patrick

8 comments

WHL Trade Notes: Bargar, Bishop, Dumba, Henderson

August 3, 2017 at 6:40 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

While it has been relatively quiet on the NHL transaction front this week, there has been a flurry of activity in one of the main feeder leagues, the Western Hockey League. Off-season trades are not overly common in the Canadian junior leagues, but every year a few notable prospects end up on the move. Just recently, former Providence College commit Merrick Rippon was traded from one OHL squad to another, with a handful of other big OHL names potentially on the move soon. Not to be outdone, three trades have since gone down in the WHL as teams begin to sort things out ahead of the 2017-18 season.

  • Yesterday, a noteworthy one-for-one swap went down, with the Seattle Thunderbirds receiving forward Blake Bargar from the Victoria Royals in exchange for defenseman Anthony Bishop. This will be the third team in three years for Barger, an undrafted small, gritty winger who was dealt by the Moose Jaw Warriors last year. Bargar hopes that the third time is the charm as he looks to finally find some consistent scoring in Seattle during his fourth junior season. He should have a good chance with the defending WHL champion Thunderbirds, where he could find himself skating alongside promising NHL prospects like Ryan Gropp or Keegan Kolesar. Meanwhile, Bishop is in the same boat as Bargar. He too is beginning the new season with a new team for the third straight year, having began his WHL career with the Saskatoon Blades. Bishop, also undrafted, did show some growth last season and is trending towards a career year in 2017-18 with the Royals.
  • Another 19-year-old was on the move yesterday, as goaltender Kyle Dumba was traded to the Kamloops Blazers  from the Calgary Hitmen. The team announced that they had received a conditional seventh-round pick in the WHL Bantam Draft, though the conditions were not disclosed. The team release revealed that the team believes 2016-17 starter Connor Ingram, a 2016 Tampa Bay Lightning selection, will indeed be going pro, likely joining the Lightning’s AHL affiliate, the Syracuse Crunch, for the upcoming campaign. The team made the decision to bring in some competition for and depth behind Dylan Ferguson, who notably drafted in the seventh round by the Dallas Stars this past June, only to then be dealt to the Vegas Golden Knights not long after. Ferguson appeared in 31 games last year and is ready for the starter job, but Dumba made 28 appearances himself and will work to get his minutes in net. The younger brother of young Minnesota Wild defenseman Mathew Dumba, Kyle Dumba has something to prove in Kamloops after two tough seasons in Calgary.
  • Also heading to a new home for the upcoming season in defenseman Jordan Henderson. It is strange to see Henderson on the move yet again after being traded twice last season. After more than two years with the Spokane Chiefs, during which time Henderson showed little potential, he was moved to the Saskatoon Blades early last season, who then flipped him to the Medicine Hat Tigers later on in the year. However, Henderson could not have asked for a better fit, as he exploded in Medicine Hat with 19 points and a +29 rating in 26 games – both more than the rest of his WHL career combined. Henderson is 20 years old and in the final season of his junior career, but finally seemed to be coming into his own with the Tigers. However, the 2016-17 Central Division champs made the decision that a future prospect, a 2019 conditional sixth-round Bantam Draft pick, was more valuable than one more season of an overage defender. Now, the WHL veteran will head to the Kootenay Ice, the worst team in the WHL last year. Henderson may play the largest role of his career and will certainly get some attention playing alongside promising “D” prospect Cale Fleury, but it will be difficult for him to match the production he found with his talented teammates in Medicine Hat.
  • The 2018 NHL Draft is expect to have greater talent and depth than this year’s prospect crop, but the same can’t be true for the WHL’s group of upcoming talent. In fact, this may one of the smallest and least talented draft classes to ever come out of the WHL. For that reason, there is a lot riding on defensemen Jett Woo and Ty Smith, the WHL’s only surefire first-rounders at this point in time, as they head into next season. The pair has already been named to Team Canada’s Ivan Hlinka roster, which the league did not miss the opportunity to promote, but there is some question as to how much attention they can draw in this upcoming season. Smith’s Spokane Chiefs finished last in the U.S. Division in 2016-17 and missed the playoffs, and that was even with top 2017 NHL draft picks Kailer Yamamoto and Jaret Anderson-Dolan.  Woo’s Moose Jaw Warriors fared much better, finishing second in the East Division. However, the team will lose starting goalie Zach Sawchenko, while captain and top prospect Brett Howden could earn an NHL roster spot with the Tampa Bay Lightning. In either case, Woo and Smith could be major trade bait this season if their teams head in the wrong direction. The players – and the league – will want to find success this season, and that could mean new homes shortly.

Prospects| Tampa Bay Lightning| Team Canada| Transactions| WHL Brett Howden

0 comments

USA, Canada Release World Junior Camp Rosters

June 20, 2017 at 3:31 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

As national hockey programs start their development programs for this year’s World Junior Championships, rosters were revealed today for the reigning finalists. Team Canada released its development camp roster, while Team USA announced the roster for the Summer Showcase.

These are both U20 rosters, and include many players already selected by NHL teams. They also include top prospects for the upcoming entry draft, as well as some for 2018. They’ll be paired down considerably before the tournament, but even being part of the selection process is a help to a young player’s development. The teams will face off at the Showcase in a series of 12 games, also meeting squads from Finland and Sweden. The full rosters are below:

Read more

Team USA Summer Showcase:

G Jake Oettinger (2017 eligible)
G Keith Petruzzelli (2017 eligible)
G Dylan St. Cyr (2017 eligible)
G Joseph Woll (TOR)

D Mikey Anderson (2017 eligible)
D Sean Day (NYR)
D Adam Fox (CGY)
D Max Gildon (2017 eligible)
D Quinn Hughes (2018 eligible)
D Tyler Inamoto (2017 eligible)
D Phil Kemp (2017 eligible)
D Nate Knoepke (2017 eligible)
D Chad Krys (CHI)
D Ryan Lindgren (BOS)
D Luke Martin (2017 eligible)
D Andrew Peeke (CBJ)
D Dylan Samberg (2017 eligible)

F Joey Anderson (NJD)
F Jack Badini (2017 eligible)
F Evan Barratt (2017 eligible)
F Kieffer Bellows (NYI)
F Logan Brown (OTT)
F Sasha Chmelevski (2017 eligible)
F Logan Cockerill (2017 eligible)
F Sean Dhooghe (2017 eligible)
F Trent Frederic (BOS)
F Max Gerlach (2017 eligible)
F Tim Gettinger (NYR)
F Patrick Harper (NSH)
F Max Jones (ANA)
F Patrick Khodorenko (2017 eligible)
F Will Lockwood (VAN)
F Ivan Lodnia (2017 eligible)
F Grant Mismash (2017 eligible)
F Casey Mittelstadt (2017 eligible)
F Josh Norris (2017 eligible)
F Ryan Poehling (2017 eligible)
F Jason Robertson (2017 eligible)
F Brady Tkachuk (2018 eligible)
F Riley Tufte (DAL)
F Oliver Wahlstrom (2018 eligible)
F Kailer Yamamoto (2017 eligible)

Team Canada:

G Michael DiPietro (2017 eligible)
G Carter Hart (PHI)
G Stuart Skinner (2017 eligible)
G Dylan Wells (EDM)

D Jake Bean (CAR)
D Dennis Cholowski (DET)
D Kale Clague (LAK)
D Dante Fabbro (NSH)
D Cal Foote (2017 eligible)
D Samuel Girard (NSH)
D Nic Hague (2017 eligible)
D Josh Mahura (ANA)
D Cale Makar (2017 eligible)
D Victor Mete (MTL)
D David Quenneville (NYI)
D Conor Timmins (2017 eligible)
D Logan Stanley (WPG)

F Jonathan Ang (FLA)
F Tyler Benson (EDM)
F Will Bitten (MTL)
F Dillon Dube (CGY)
F Pierre-Luc Dubois (CBJ)
F Jonah Gadjovich (2017 eligible)
F Cody Glass (2017 eligible)
F Brett Howden (TB)
F Tyson Jost (COL)
F Tanner Kaspick (STL)
F Boris Katchouk (TB)
F Jordan Kyrou (STL)
F Adam Mascherin (FLA)
F Michael McLeod (NJD)
F Nolan Patrick (2017 eligible)
F Matthew Phillips (CGY)
F Cliff Pu (BUF)
F Taylor Raddysh (TB)
F Mason Shaw (2017 eligible)
F Givani Smith (DET)
F Sam Steel (ANA)
F Nick Suzuki (2017 eligible)
F Robert Thomas (2017 eligible)
F Owen Tippett (2017 eligible)
F Gabe Vilardi (2017 eligible)

Prospects| Team Canada| Team USA Brett Howden| Cale Makar| Casey Mittelstadt| Cody Glass| Dennis Cholowski| Gabe Vilardi| Kieffer Bellows| Logan Brown| Logan Stanley| Nolan Patrick| Pierre-Luc Dubois

1 comment

Snapshots: Jagr, Lightning, Martenet, Sharks

April 4, 2017 at 6:41 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

While he has stated that he fully plans to play next season, there have been no discussions between right winger Jaromir Jagr and the Panthers regarding a potential contract extension, reports George Richards of the Miami Herald.  Instead, the two sides plan to sit down following the season to see if they can work out a new deal.

The 45 year old Jagr has been on one year contracts for the last six seasons and undoubtedly will be signing another one wherever he winds up landing.  In his second season with Florida, his numbers have taken a dip but he sits fourth in team scoring with 16 goals and 27 assists in 79 games.  He may have to take a pay cut to remain with the team, however, as the Panthers already have over $61MM in payroll committed for next season.  Jagr is carrying a $4MM cap hit this season but has already reached an additional $1.5MM in games played bonuses.

Other notes from around the league:

  • After agreeing to terms on an entry-level deal with prospect goalie Connor Ingram earlier today, the Lightning also announced (via Twitter) that they’ve inked forward prospect Dennis Yan to an amateur tryout agreement and assigned him to their AHL affiliate in Syracuse. Joining them is 2015 first rounder Brett Howden who is now eligible to be sent down after his junior team was eliminated from the postseason.  The trio represent some reinforcements for a Crunch team who has been hit hard by injuries in Tampa Bay and are in a battle for top spot in the AHL’s North Division heading into the final two weeks of the season.
  • Also heading to the pros for the first time is Dallas defensive prospect Chris Martenet. The AHL’s Stars announced that he has been assigned to the team following his junior team, the Ottawa 67’s, was eliminated from the playoffs.  The 20 year old tied a career high in points at the OHL level with 16 in 55 games split between London and Ottawa.
  • Sharks head coach Peter DeBoer provided a brief injury update on forwards Logan Couture and Joe Thornton, classifying each as day-to-day, notes CSN Bay Area’s Kevin Kurz. He wouldn’t specify when either would be back, only saying that they’re expected back “at some point”.  Couture has been out since taking a puck to the mouth on March 25th while Thornton suffered a knee injury on Sunday against the Canucks.

Florida Panthers| Snapshots| Tampa Bay Lightning Brett Howden| Chris Martenet| Dennis Yan| Jaromir Jagr| Joe Thornton| Logan Couture

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