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Dave Bolland

Pacific Division Notes: Raymond, Etem, Coyotes

October 4, 2016 at 7:58 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

Mason Raymond is out to prove that lightning does indeed strike twice as he works to earn a roster spot with the Anaheim Ducks. Shortly after the final year of his contract was bought out by the Calgary Flames, Raymond inked a one-year, two-way deal with Anaheim that guarantees the nine-year vet $675K while on an NHL roster and $225K if he’s suiting up in the AHL. It’s fair to say Raymond has reached a proverbial crossroads in his career, though as the Orange County Register’s Eric Stepens writes, the former Canuck, Leaf and Flame has history to fall back on as he attempts to make the Ducks roster.

Just three seasons ago Raymond was in a similar boat. Unsigned well into the summer of 2013, Raymond would eventually accept a PTO from Toronto and made the Leafs roster out of training camp. Playing for head coach Randy Carlyle, now behind the bench in Anaheim, Raymond saw action in all 82 games for the second time in his career and responded with a 45-point campaign. His 19 goals that year represented the second-highest single-season total of his career. He would parley that strong performance into a three-year deal with Calgary prior to the start of the 2014-15 season.

Raymond is hoping for a similar outcome in Anaheim and for his former Leafs bench boss. For his part, Carlyle believes Raymond can still contribute to an NHL team.

“He’s a talented player and he can score. He doesn’t need a lot of chances to score goals. I always used to use the analogy where some guys need 10 chances to score a goal. With Mason Raymond – when looking at him and watching his number of chances, he gets three or four and he scores a goal. That’s what his history has been, for me.”

Raymond’s chances of making the team went up after the Ducks released both David Booth and David Jones from their PTO’s. Sean Bergenheim, also in camp on a PTO, is still fighting for a job but the Ducks would have room for both players should they choose to go that route. If he can crack the roster, Raymond would add plenty of speed and some offensive potential in a bottom-six role.

Elsewhere in the NHL’s Pacific Division:

  • The Arizona Coyotes find themselves in rarefied air these days as the club can fairly be called a “cap team.” Most seasons, the Coyotes payroll ranks among the lowest in the league but this year they have the third highest projected salary cap hit according to Cap Friendly. Of course a significant chunk of space is taken up by the contracts of Chris Pronger, Pavel Datsyuk and Dave Bolland; players not even expected to suit up for Arizona this season barring an unexpected development. As Greg Wyshynski of Yahoo Sports writes, Coyotes GM John Chayka has an interesting perspective on the club’s sudden willingness to spend. He feels that Arizona’s commitment to spend to the cap ceiling this year is “good practice” as the team builds his roster into one capable of contention and the prices of players currently on ELCs begin to rise.  “As we grow this thing, there’s a day when we foresee ourselves being a cap team. It’s good practice.” 
  • Former first-round pick Emerson Etem may well be in jeopardy of losing his job in Vancouver opines The Province’s Ben Kuzma. Kuzma believes the top nine spots are locked up and that young forward Brendan Gaunce has done enough to make the team while Jake Virtanen should be on the roster come opening night. He goes on to note that Mikael Granlund has been better than Etem in the preseason and also suggests young Joseph LaBate has played well enough to garner consideration for one of the final roster spots up front. If Etem does in fact fail to make the team it would represent a low point in what has already been a disappointing career. Etem was selected by Anaheim with the 29th overall selection in the 2010 entry draft and would see action in 112 games with the Ducks before he was shipped off to the New York Rangers last summer as part of the package used to acquire Carl Hagelin. He failed to make an impact on Manhattan in 19 games and was shipped off mid-season to Vancouver in exchange for Nicklas Jensen. Etem would go on to net seven goals and 12 points in 39 games with the Canucks but now it looks as if his days in British Columbia may be numbered. The Canucks would have to expose the four-year veteran to waivers prior to sending him down to the AHL. It’s conceivable another club could take a flier on Etem’s talent should he hit the waiver wire.

 

AHL| Anaheim Ducks| Calgary Flames| NHL| New York Rangers| Players| Randy Carlyle| Tampa Bay Lightning| Utah Mammoth| Vancouver Canucks| Waivers Dave Bolland| Emerson Etem| Mason Raymond| Mikael Granlund| Pavel Datsyuk| Salary Cap

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2016-17 Season Preview: Arizona Coyotes

September 24, 2016 at 5:40 pm CDT | by Glen Miller 2 Comments

With training camps opening around the league and the new season less than three weeks away, we continue our series of team previews with a look at the Arizona Coyotes.

Last Season: 35 – 39 – 8 (78 points), fourth place in the Pacific Division. Missed the playoffs.

Salary Cap Space Remaining: $2.347MM (per Cap Friendly). The Coyotes will be able to free up to an additional $10.5MM by placing Dave Bolland and Chris Pronger on LTIR.

Key Newcomers: Alex Goligoski (D) – trade with Dallas; Jamie McGinn (LW) – free agent from Anaheim; Luke Schenn (D) – free agent from L.A. Kings; Radim Vrbata (RW) – free agent from Vancouver; Lawson Crouse (LW) – trade with Florida.

Key Departures: Antoine Vermette (C) – contract buyout – signed with Anaheim as free agent; Alex Tanguay (LW) – free agent; Boyd Gordon (C) – signed with Philadelphia as a free agent.

Players to Watch: Mike Smith and Goligoski. The Coyotes allowed the third most goals in the entire league which was a function of substandard goaltending and a mediocre defense corps. GM John Chayka addressed the defense, dealing a fifth-round pick to Dallas in exchange for the negotiating rights to Goligoski and subsequently signed the veteran puck-mover to a five-year contract.

Oliver Ekman-Larsson is the Coyotes #1 blue liner but Goligoski adds a reliable veteran to the mix who can play in all situations and will strengthen the team’s top-four. Last season he tallied 37 points for the Stars and has averaged 40 points for every 82 games he has played during his career. Goligoski was a horse on the back end in 2015-16, averaging nearly 24 minutes a game for the Central Division champs.

Meanwhile, the team is hopeful Smith will be healthy and provide steady play between the pipes for the Coyotes. The team finished 23rd overall in goalie save percentage with Smith appearing in just 32 games. On a promising note, Smith led all NHL goalies with 15 or more games played in 2015-16 in High Danger Save % (HDsV%) with a mark of 87.4% and has stopped at least 84% of those high quality chances in three of the last four seasons.

Smith was superlative in 2011-12 – the last season the Coyotes qualified for the playoffs – winning 38 games and finishing with a Sv% of 93.0%. He has the ability to single-handedly keep the Coyotes in games and if Goligoski can help clean up the defensive end, the Coyotes will be a contender.

Storylines: The John Chayka experiment and the development of the kids. Chayka is not only the league’s youngest GM but he’s also the first to come from a more analytically-oriented background. Fair or not, how the Coyotes perform with the roster he has assembled will have a major impact on how analytics and advanced stats are perceived in the league. If he can build a winner in Arizona with a limited payroll, it might encourage more clubs to actively embrace the role of analytics in the game.

By all accounts Chayka is a bright guy and most of his offseason moves were met with positive reactions from hockey pundits. His actual reliance on analytics in roster construction may be overstated but there is no question old school managers and coaches will be watching with interest.

Although improved goaltending and more contributions from the club’s blue liners will be important, perhaps the key to this upcoming season is the continued development of its young talent. Max Domi and Anthony Duclair are already well on their way to becoming stars in this league but the team does lack an established #1 center. Fortunately, they do have Dylan Strome, the third overall pick in the 2015 entry draft and one of the game’s top prospects. Strome has been among the most explosive scorers in junior hockey, totaling 240 points in 124 games with Erie of the OHL, averaging nearly two points per contest. No one expects the young pivot to immediately fill the void at #1 but if he can establish himself as a legitimate NHL regular it will take some of the pressure of the team’s returning centers. Assuming Duclair, Domi and the team’s other young players take the next step in their development and Strome proves to be ready for the NHL, Arizona has a realistic shot at playoff contention.

Coaches| Dallas Stars| John Chayka| Los Angeles Kings| NHL| OHL| Players| Utah Mammoth Alex Goligoski| Alex Tanguay| Antoine Vermette| Boyd Gordon| Dave Bolland| Dylan Strome| Jamie McGinn| Lawson Crouse| Luke Schenn| Max Domi| Salary Cap| Season Previews

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Snapshots: Rangers, Bolland, Flyers, Rust, Sheary, Kuhnhackl

September 22, 2016 at 1:48 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

The New York Rangers directed much of their offseason focus to building up quality depth at the forward position, adding free agents Michael Grabner, Josh Jooris, Nathan Gerbe and Jimmy Vesey while also acquiring center Mika Zibanejad via trade. However, besides deepening their forward group, another intended consequence of their moves was to get younger across the board, as Steve Zipay of Newsday notes.

The team dealt 29-year-old pivot Derick Brassard to get the 23-year-old Zibanejad while also waving goodbye to free agent centers Eric Staal, 31, and Dominic Moore, 36. New York will be adding the 23-year-old Vesey to its lineup and expect Pavel Buchnevich, 21, to make a run at a regular role up front.

On the back end, 40-year-old Dan Boyle opted for retirement while the Rangers were forced to trade the rights to Keith Yandle for salary cap reasons. In their places, the Rangers acquired 29-year-old Nick Holden and will give 22-year-old former first-round pick Brady Skjei every opportunity to win a spot in the top-four.

All told, the team shaved about 2 1/2 years off the average age of the players on their roster from a year ago. Whether or not this infusion of youth will manifest into a deep playoff run after a disappointing first-round exit this past season remains to be seen, of course.

More notes from around the NHL:

  • As expected, Arizona’s Dave Bolland failed his physical and will be placed on LTIR to start the season, tweets Craig Morgan of AZ Sports. Bolland, who was acquired from Florida along with prospect Lawson Crouse in a deal motivated largely by finances, appeared in just 25 contests last season with Florida. Back and ankle problems will keep the veteran forward off the ice for the foreseeable future and could jeopardize his playing career. Bolland is due $5.5MM over each of the next three seasons but if placed on LTIR the Coyotes would be able to clear the cap hit from the books. Additionally, since the contract is insured, the club will only have to pay out $1.1MM in actual cash with insurance covering the balance.
  • The Philadelphia Flyers, under general manager Ron Hextall, have assembled one of the best prospect pools in the NHL and a few of those kids will have a chance to earn a roster spot this season, as Dave Isaac writes in his preview of three potential roster battles. Hextall was quoted as saying that, “whoever comes in, has to come in and make us a better team.” Isaac mentions that blue liner Ivan Provorov has the skill to make the Flyers better but also acknowledges it won’t necessarily be easy to beat out one of the veterans already on the roster. Up front, Isaac suggests Travis Konecny, who like Provorov was a first-round draft choice in 2015, could make the club as a bottom-six forward. Konecny potted 30 goals and tallied 71 assists last season in the OHL, splitting the campaign between the Ottawa 67’s and the Sarnia Sting.
  • The Pittsburgh Penguins impressive run down the stretch of the regular season coincided with the promotion of three relatively unheralded young players. Sam Werner of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette writes how just 12 months ago Conor Sheary, Bryan Rust and Tom Kuhnhackl were three rookies eager to make a good impression in training camp. Now a year later they are Stanley Cup champions with each having played a role in Pittsburgh’s dominant run through the postseason. The trio contributed 12 goals and 24 points during the playoffs while adding speed and tenacity to the lineup for the Penguins. As they enter what would be their first full seasons in the NHL, each player hopes to prove they can play at a consistent level throughout an 82-game schedule.

NHL| New York Rangers| OHL| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Players| Snapshots| Utah Mammoth Dan Boyle| Dave Bolland| Derick Brassard| Eric Staal| Jimmy Vesey| Keith Yandle| Lawson Crouse| Mika Zibanejad| Nathan Gerbe| Salary Cap

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Coyotes Notes: Bolland, Rieder, Tryouts

September 1, 2016 at 11:55 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

It will be a long time before Arizona gets to see Dave Bolland suit up for the team, writes Craig Morgan of Arizona Sports.  Bolland is dealing with a pair of significant injuries, one to his ankle and the other his back.  The ankle injury was sustained during his time with Toronto in 2013 but requires a lot of daily maintenance and the back issue is preventing that maintenance from happening.  Bolland’s agent, Anton Thun, commented about the process:

“There is a vertebra that is pinching a nerve so it’s not sending an electrical signal down to the ankle to provide that impulse to activate. Until his back is fully healed, it’s difficult to rehab the ankle. There’s nothing nefarious about this. It’s just a long process.”

While the Coyotes have assumed the remaining three years of Bolland’s deal which carries a cap hit of $5.5MM as part of their acquisition of prospect Lawson Crouse, he will be placed on Long-Term Injury Reserve to start the season; as a result, they will only wind up being responsible for 20% of his actual salary.

More Coyotes notes from Morgan’s column:

  • RFA winger Tobias Rieder will participate in the World Cup after securing an alternative form of insurance. (Other RFA’s such as Johnny Gaudreau and Jacob Trouba are also expected to do so in order to play.)  While the impasse has led some to wonder if GM John Chayka may wind up moving the 23 year old, a league source tells Morgan that there is no chance that they trade him.  Rieder is currently participating in an Olympic qualification tournament and had a goal and an assist in a 5-0 victory for Germany over Japan earlier today.
  • Arizona has added six people to their hockey operations department recently, including a trio of scouts and a new Director of Statistical Science.
  • While many teams are expected to bring in players on tryout deals for training camp, the Coyotes aren’t planning to add anyone via that route at this time. You can keep track of who is trying out where with our Invite Tracker.

Utah Mammoth Dave Bolland| Tobias Rieder

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Pacific Division Notes: Coyotes, Daly, Marleau, Goldobin

August 28, 2016 at 5:00 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

After acquiring Dave Bolland and Pavel Datsyuk in separate trades this summer, the Arizona Coyotes could be in a position to conceivably carry nearly $18MM – once Chris Pronger’s $4.935MM cap hit is added – on their salary cap for three players who won’t be suiting up for the this year. All told, the Coyotes will pay out just $1.675 in actual salary for those players (Pronger is set to earn $575K in the final season of a long-term arrangement he originally signed with Philadelphia, while the insurance policy on Bolland’s contract will cover all but $1.1MM once he is placed on LTIR). These maneuverings have allowed Arizona to easily cross the salary cap floor while at the same time limiting the actual salary obligations; not an unimportant factor for a small market, budget team.

In a piece appearing on Today’s Slapshot, Craig Morgan asked NHL deputy commissioner if Arizona’s handling of the salary cap was a growing concern for the league. Surprisingly, Daly indicated the league did not feel the Coyotes were exploiting a “loophole,” in the CBA while still leaving open the possibility the NHL could look to address the matter in future bargaining with the player’s union.

“I would say that it’s a matter that we monitor, like all other areas of the CBA (collective bargaining agreement), and if we believe it starts to be abused in a way that is inconsistent with how the system is designed to work, at that point, we would try to correct it in collective bargaining with the union. I would say we aren’t at that point on this issue — we do not view it as the loophole that‎ some describe it as.”

While most teams utilize their available cap space to sign or trade for players from other organizations, or to extend their own players, Coyotes GM John Chayka is using Arizona’s as a method to add more quality young talent to what is already considered a strong group of prospects. It’s simply good business and soon enough Chayka’s talent-acquisition strategies will start paying off on the ice for the Coyotes.

Elsewhere in the Pacific Division…

  • Patrick Marleau has spent the entirety of his excellent 18-year NHL career with the San Jose Sharks; a career which has seen the forward tally 481 regular season goals and 1,036 points. Marleau’s name has shown up in trade rumors on more than one occasion during his time in the Bay Area, most recently last season, but nothing has ever come of it. Yet, as Joey Alfieri of Pro Hockey Talk writes, the 2016-17 campaign will, in all probability, be the final one of Marleau’s storied Sharks career. As Alfieri points out, Marleau is in the final year of his contract and the team has several younger options on the LW – Mikkel Boedker, Tomas Hertl and Nikolay Goldobin – under team control for the next several seasons. Even if Marleau is willing to take a discount on the $6.66MM he is earning this season, the Sharks are far more likely to prioritize re-signing Brent Burns and Joe Thornton, both of whom are also scheduled to reach free agency next summer.
  • The Calgary Flames recently reached agreement with one of their top players, Sean Monahan, inking the restricted free agent to a monster seven-year deal worth $44.6MM. That’s quite an investment for a player just coming off his ELC but as the Calgary Sun’s Kristen Odland writes, Monahan is already well worth the financial commitment. She points out that he has produced more offense than other pivots comparable in age and who have also recently signed extensions. As good as Monahan is he may not even be the best player on his team. That distinction might belong to winger Johnny Gaudreau, a restricted free agent who remains unsigned. Inevitably the Flames will also get Gaudreau under contract but it will be interesting to see how his contract compares to that of Monahan’s.

CBA| Calgary Flames| Free Agency| John Chayka| Players| San Jose Sharks| Utah Mammoth Brent Burns| Dave Bolland| Joe Thornton| Johnny Gaudreau| Mikkel Boedker| Patrick Marleau| Pavel Datsyuk

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Week In Review: 8/22/16 – 8/28/16

August 28, 2016 at 3:30 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

With the World Cup of Hockey and NHL training camps both set to start next month, teams are actively trying to wrap up the last of their offseason business and finalizing their rosters. This week saw a couple of late unrestricted free agent signings that look to be bargains at first glance and a major trade completed by two of the league’s more analytically inclined organizations. We’ve got that and more in this installment of Week In Review.

Notable UFA Signings

Jiri Hudler (Dallas) – Hudler’s presence on the open market this late into the summer has been a bit of a mystery. He’s averaged at least 0.64 points-per-game in each of his last three seasons; a rate good enough to prorate into a 50-point campaign in a full schedule. With plenty of clubs looking to add scoring depth this summer it is somewhat surprising that it was the league’s most prolific offensive team that added Hudler on a one-year, $2MM deal. If Hudler remains healthy and in the lineup and reaches the 40-point mark, the deal will go down as a steal for Dallas.

Brandon Pirri (New York Rangers) – Pirri, like Hudler, has been a strong offensive player who surprisingly drew little interest this summer. Based on the last three seasons, Pirri places tied for 30th in goals-per-game averaging 0.33. But concerns about his defensive play may have limited his market. Ultimately the Rangers took a calculated risk and signed Pirri to a one-year pact worth $1.1MM.

Jhonas Enroth (Toronto Maple Leafs) – Toronto finalized their one-year agreement with the veteran backstop weeks after it was initially reported to be close. Enroth should provide a reliable backup to the newly-acquired Frederik Andersen at a great rate relative to other quality #2 goalies in the league.

Notable RFA Signings

Cody Ceci (Ottawa) – The Senators finally locked up RFA defenseman Cody Ceci, signing the three-year veteran to a two-year bridge deal with an AAV of $2.8MM. He will earn $2.25MM in 2016-17 and $3.35MM in year two of the agreement. Ceci tallied a career-high 10 goals and 26 points this past season and believes he has more to offer, particularly on the power play.

Notable ELC Signings

Max Jones (Anaheim) – The Ducks agreed to terms with Jones on an ELC that will pay the 24th overall selection in June $925K at the NHL level and $70K while suiting up in the AHL. As noted, the agreement does not contain any performance bonuses; a relative rarity for first-round picks.

Trades

The Arizona Coyotes continued to convert available cap space into young talent by agreeing to take on the remaining three years and $16.5MM of Dave Bolland’s contract while also adding Florida’s first-round pick in the 2015 draft, Lawson Crouse, in the transaction. In return, the Panthers acquired a conditional second in 2018 and a 2017 third-round choice.

Bolland is unlikely to suit up for Arizona this year and his injuries could actually spell the end of the road for the veteran forward. Consequently, the Coyotes will inevitably place Bolland on LTIR, subtracting his cap hit from their books. Meanwhile, since the contract is insured, the Coyotes will only have to pay Bolland $1.1MM in actual cash this season.

Opinions are mixed on Crouse’s potential with some thinking he profiles only as a bottom-six player who acquiring is not worth also absorbing Bolland’s deal. Others think he has top-six, power forward potential. Count Coyotes GM John Chayka among the latter as he feels players who share Crouse’s skill set are “rare to find, difficult to obtain.”

Florida, meanwhile, gains salary relief which can be reinvested in the 2016-17 product and two draft picks to help add to the team’s diminishing prospect pool.

PTOs

Rene Bourque – Bourque has been invited to attend camp with Colorado.

Brandon Prust – After a down year in Vancouver, Prust looks to latch on with the Leafs as a 4th liner who adds toughness.

Jeff Glass – With Toronto’s expected starter and backup, Frederik Andersen and Jhonas Enroth respectively, participating in the World Cup, Toronto decided to add a body to the training camp roster. Theoretically, Glass could earn a job somewhere in the Maple Leafs organization with a solid training cap performance.

Paul Bissonette – Bissonette will attempt to earn a job with the Kings but seems most likely destined for their AHL affiliate in Ontario, California.

AHL| Anaheim Ducks| Florida Panthers| John Chayka| Los Angeles Kings| New York Rangers| Ottawa Senators| Players| RFA| Toronto Maple Leafs| Utah Mammoth Brandon Pirri| Cody Ceci| Dave Bolland| Jhonas Enroth| Jiri Hudler| Lawson Crouse| Week In Review| World Cup

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Arizona Adds Three Players On AHL Deals

August 26, 2016 at 2:45 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Amid all the news about the Arizona Coyotes and their acquisition of Dave Bolland, Lawson Crouse and skating coach Dawn Braid, comes another announcement that the organization has signed three more players to minor-league deals with the AHL. Hunter Fejes, Mark Cooper and Austin Lotz have all agreed to two-way AHL deals.

Fejes, the most well-known out of the bunch, was drafted by the Coyotes in the sixth round in 2012 before heading to Colorado College for four seasons. He began his professional career last year when he got into 10 games for the Springfield Falcons (the former affiliate of Arizona, now known as the Tucson Roadrunners) down the stretch. The former high school stand out took a while to get his feet under him in college, but put up 22 points in 36 games in his senior year. Now 22-years old, he’ll have to work extremely hard if he’s to ever crack an NHL roster.

Cooper, 24, is coming off a more successful college career that saw him put up 91 points across four years at Bowling Green. Undrafted out of Scarborough, Ontario the big winger will add some leadership and a two-way presence for the Roadrunners this season.

The last signee was goaltender Austin Lotz out of the WHL. Lotz played four seasons for the Everett Silvertips before joining the Medicine Hat Tigers as an over-ager last year. Overall, he’s put up a 75-63-17 record with a 2.96 GAA and .902 save percentage in the Western Hockey League, and will fight for starts in the AHL or ECHL this season.

AHL| CHL| ECHL| Players| Utah Mammoth Dave Bolland| Lawson Crouse

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Chayka Speaks About Lawson Crouse, Dawn Braid

August 26, 2016 at 12:30 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Arizona Coyotes GM John Chayka joined Jeff Blair on Sportsnet 590 yesterday to talk about his coaching hires and the big trade from yesterday. The 27-year old hired three coaches including the NHL’s first full-time female coach, and dealt two draft picks for Dave Bolland and Lawson Crouse.

On why he decided to make the deal:

It’s about Lawson Crouse. It’s about a guy who we think is a rare asset. Usually when you acquire a power forward like this you’re giving up something in terms of speed or skill. We think that not only is he speedy and skilled, he’s going to enhance that for our group as well.

Usually these guys (power forwards) when they’re at the caliber Lawson is, they’re hard to find. Usually they don’t become available until they’re in their thirties. At that point you’re paying a premium for a guy who is not on the right side of his career, and we didn’t want to do that.

Read more

On projecting the future of power forwards:

Typically they take more time and any time a player takes more time, their risk increases. That’s where I think Lawson being the player he is, was drafted high and could have been drafted even higher. Usually a player’s feet have to catch up to them or their hands have to improve…for a big guy he (Lawson) is impressive in those areas.

On the recent addition of Dawn Braid, their new full-time skating coach:

It came down to the quality of the person. Dawn has consulted for a lot of NHL teams and had a lot of success. She’s someone that has gotten results from every player she’s worked with, and they’ve got a ton of respect for her.

She’s got a real good knowledge for the game that I think is fairly rare for skating coaches sometimes. She understands the strengths and weaknesses and how they apply to a player’s game…I use her on the management side of things to try and break down a player’s stride, and understand – ’Yeah it’s an amateur player, what’s the improvement potential of their stride.’  If it’s a pro player, Luke Schenn for instance, she’d take a look and give her honest feedback of how much she can help a player like that.

Indeed, Braid has worked with players all over the league and Schenn is a good example of the kind of player she could really help. Schenn has been derided for his skating ability since he entered the league as an 18-year old, eventually having to sign a two-year, $2.5MM contract to try and rebuild some value this summer. It sounds like even though she’s considered a skating coach, her experience is being used as sort of a scout as well, profiling players before they even enter the organization.

The Coyotes have a cupboard stocked with prospects that are ready to start making an impact at the NHL level, and are taking every shred of advantage from the top down to put them in the best position for success.

Coaches| Players| Utah Mammoth Dave Bolland| Lawson Crouse| Luke Schenn

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Atlantic Notes: Luongo, Panthers, Ceci

August 25, 2016 at 8:30 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Panthers goalie Roberto Luongo appears to be ahead of schedule in his recovery from offseason hip surgery and hopes to be ready for opening night, he told George Richards of the Miami Herald.  Luongo underwent the operation back in May and was expected to miss the first month of the season, which played a role in their June trade for Reto Berra (and to a lesser degree, the signing of James Reimer).  The 37 year old had the following to say about his rehab:

“I’m not 100 percent; it’s a five month rehab. But I’m feeling better than I thought I would. I thought it would be a slower progression, especially on the ice. It has gone fairly quickly and I’m happy about that. If the season were to start tomorrow, I probably wouldn’t be able to go. But I feel good where I’m at and I’m excited about it.”

Luongo noted that he was dealing with periodic groin pain throughout the season but didn’t think much of it as it would go away before too long.  He tore his labrum in early March but was able to finish out the year and play in Florida’s playoff first round loss to the Islanders.

In the article, Richards also reports that Reimer is expected to play more than former backup Al Montoya (who signed with Montreal last month).  Montoya saw action in 25 games last year, a mark that Reimer has surpassed in each of his six NHL seasons.

More from the Atlantic:

  • Earlier today, the Panthers traded Dave Bolland to Arizona in what basically amounts as a cap dump for them, particularly since Bolland isn’t likely to play in 2016-17. The cost to do so was Lawson Crouse, a first round pick back in 2015.  While that price may seem steep, Florida’s assistant GM Eric Joyce noted to the AP’s Stephen Whyno that it’s just “the cost of the business”.  The fact that Bolland has three years left on his deal meant that it was going to be more expensive in terms of assets to move him than it was Marc Savard, whose rights were dealt with a second round pick to the Devils back in June.
  • Ottawa defenseman Cody Ceci is hoping to have a larger role with the man advantage in 2016-17, writes Ken Warren of the Ottawa Citizen. Ceci averaged just 32 seconds per game in power play time last year and had just a pair of assists.  As Warren notes, Ceci should have a chance to make an early impression on new head coach Guy Boucher since Erik Karlsson (who logged 4:39 per game in PP time, second most in the NHL) will not be with the team to start training camp due to the World Cup of Hockey.  Ceci signed a two year, $5.6MM bridge deal with the Senators earlier this week.

Florida Panthers Cody Ceci| Dave Bolland| Lawson Crouse| Roberto Luongo

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Panthers Trade Bolland, Crouse To Arizona

August 25, 2016 at 9:58 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Sep 25, 2015; Tampa, FL, USA; Florida Panthers center Dave Bolland (63) during the second period at Amalie Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement-USA TODAY SportsIn another shrewd move by Arizona GM John Chayka today, the Coyotes have acquired Dave Bolland and Lawson Crouse in exchange for two draft picks, a 2017 third rounder and a 2018 second rounder. When combined with the deal that Chayka pulled at the draft to take on the Pavel Datsyuk cap hit, essentially in return for the right to draft Jakob Chychrun, the Arizona GM is using his cap space to build a system without paying out much actual cash.

Bolland, meanwhile, is still trying to come back from a variety of injuries and is just an empty cap-hit until he’s fit to play again (at which point he’d presumably be bought out, as Florida tried earlier this summer). He’s owed $16.5MM over the next three years, but is expected to be placed on long-term injured reserve when the season starts, making much of his deal covered by insurance.

The former Blackhawks has found nothing but pain since he left the windy city, playing in 101 total games in the three years since.  His point totals have dropped to almost negligible amounts, and it seems as though his days as an effective third-liner that could perform at both ends of the rink are behind him.

In Crouse, the Coyotes snatch a player who was drafted 11th overall in 2015 and has future NHLer written all over him. The Kingston Frontenacs forward is coming off another solid junior season where he scored 62 points in just 49 games before making his professional debut with the Portland Pirates of the AHL at the end of the year.  Crouse was regarded in his draft year as a prototypical power forward, capable of scoring double-digit goals while using the full effect of 6’4″, 212-pound frame.

While he may never become a top-line player, he fits in perfectly with the Arizona system as it’s currently constructed. With players like Dylan Strome, Max Domi and Christian Dvorak headed for the top-six, even if Crouse never fully reaches his potential he’ll have a place on the third line.

The draft picks are both conditional, with the third rounder being the higher of the two Arizona currently owns (their own, and Detroit’s) and the second rounder turning to a third if Crouse does not burn a year of his entry level contract (to do so, he’d need to play in at least ten NHL games).

The Coyotes have built an excellent group of prospects over the past few years, using high draft picks and smart moves to add talent wherever they can. With Strome and Dvorak set to make their debuts this season, it might not be long before we start seeing banners being raised to the Gila River Arena rafters.

Elliotte Friedman was the first to break the trade on Twitter, while Craig Custance provided the conditional details on the picks headed back.

Image courtesy of USA Today Images.

Florida Panthers| Newsstand| Transactions| Utah Mammoth Dave Bolland| Pavel Datsyuk

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