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Derek Dorsett

Oft-Injured Teams Likely To Rebound In 2017-18

August 8, 2017 at 6:13 pm CDT | by Seth Lawrence Leave a Comment

Every year, some teams invariably get the short straw when it comes to injury. The Washington Capitals, notably, were the healthiest team in the league, and ended up winning the Presidents’ Trophy. That said, organizational depth is absolutely vital, as the Penguins survived well enough to repeat championships, even though they were bottom-5 in man games lost. Ultimately, there are a few franchises that are merely anticipating a restart in 2017-18, in hopes of entirely forgetting the abuses of last season. These three teams are those which suffered the worst, and have a solid chance to rebound in the upcoming campaign.

Tampa Bay Lightning

The Lightning lost Steven Stamkos for the majority of the season after he was diagnosed with a torn meniscus in November. He missed an astounding total of 65 games. Ryan Callahan was also lost for the majority of the year, losing 64 games of action to a lower-body injury. After that, the onslaught of injuries kept hammering away. Nikita Kucherov only lost 8 games, but was felled on three separate occasions. Ondrej Palat missed only 9 games as well, but his presence was sorely missed when absent. Cedric Paquette lost 23 games, while Tyler Johnson missed 16. It seemed that no one was safe on Tampa’s squad more man-games than an other teams when you factor in essentially retired players.

Tampa will look to remain healthy this season, after an incredibly unlucky venture in 2016-17. They have the depth to endure losses, but the sheer carnage last season was too catastrophic to overcome. Still, they finished only one point out of the final wild card spot. They could easily have squeaked into the playoffs and inflicted serious damage. This year, as long as the fates turn their way, they should be right back in the competitive mix.

Winnipeg Jets

Tyler Myers lost out on the bulk of the season, only playing in 11 contests. As a big component of the team’s defense, he will need to be back to peak performance if the Jets hope to stop some of the bleeding in their own end of the ice. Center Bryan Little lost 23 games to a lower-body injury, while Shawn Matthias missed 37 contests to an upper-body ailment. Not a single player survived the entire year without succumbing to some sort of injury or sickness, and the team as a whole struggled to find a consistent groove with so many bodies filling in and falling out.

The Jets need consistent goaltending and less obnoxiously aggressive defense if they hope to reach the post-season again. That said, simply remaining healthy will go a long way in transforming Winnipeg into a dangerous team. Mark Scheifele was absolutely dominant last season, and with reliable depth behind him, only good results lie ahead. The Central is also slightly less intimidating this year, even with Dallas making as many transactions as they did. Nashville and Chicago both took steps backward, the Blues remained relatively the same, while the Wild made lateral moves.

Vancouver Canucks

Vancouver will have a tough time entering the playoff conversation. In the relatively weak Pacific however, anything can happen. The Sedin twins are another year older, and GM Jim Benning hasn’t acquired any game-breakers in the off-season (Michael Del Zotto doesn’t count). Still, when a team loses over 300 man-games to injury in a year, things should theoretically improve the following year. Admittedly, some of their most heavily injured players were nominal players, like Derek Dorsett (68 lost) and Anton Rodin (79 lost). Still, they missed the presence of multiple depth players at a time and ultimately relied too heavily upon call-ups to crawl through the year. Jannik Hansen (39 lost), Chris Tanev (29 lost), and Erik Gudbranson (52 lost) are far from world-beaters, but on a team as thin at both offense and defense as the Canucks, their losses were unsustainable.

It remains to be seen how much of an impact general health will play for the Canucks. They still need their top players to find consistent production, and their younger players (Bo Horvat, Sven Baertschi) must continue to progress. That said, with a little luck, they might find themselves somewhere near the mix yet again. With new coach Travis Green and a fresh beginning, perhaps there is one more Wild Card berth left in a team that has been prolonging their inevitable full-on rebuild.

Injury| Jim Benning| Minnesota Wild| Pittsburgh Penguins| Players| St. Louis Blues| Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions| Travis Green| Vancouver Canucks| Washington Capitals| Winnipeg Jets Anton Rodin| Bo Horvat| Bryan Little| Cedric Paquette| Chris Tanev| Derek Dorsett| Jannik Hansen| Mark Scheifele| Michael Del Zotto| Nikita Kucherov| Ondrej Palat

0 comments

Snapshots: Shalunov, Prust, Dorsett

August 4, 2017 at 12:56 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Chicago Blackhawks were disappointed when Maxim Shalunov signed a three-year deal in the KHL, but Scott Powers of The Athletic writes that doesn’t necessarily mean he’ll be out of their plans for that long. As we’ve seen multiple times over the past year, KHL contracts can be terminated early to allow players to come over to the NHL.

Remember this year that an entire team’s contracts were terminated after their new owners refused to pay debts. While that’s not going to happen to Shalunov’s new team, CSKA Moscow, there are always ways around their contracts.

  • Brandon Prust will be in NHL training camp again this year, as according to Jon Rosen of LA Kings Insider, he’ll be in Los Angeles come September. Prust spent last season playing in Germany after going through training camp with the Maple Leafs, and has been clear about his desire to return to the NHL. It’s unlikely that he’ll earn a contract, but perhaps Los Angeles will have room for a fourth-line veteran.
  • Derek Dorsett underwent surgery on his neck in December but is now on track to be ready for the start of the season. Rick Dhaliwal of NEWS 1130 in Vancouver reports that Dorsett has “no issues with his neck” and that he’s already skating to get ready for training camp. He played just 14 games for the Canucks last year, but has been a fairly effective bottom-six player for his career. In 2014-15 he set a career-high with 25 points, and will be in the lineup more than not to protect the young players Vancouver is set to use this year.

Chicago Blackhawks| KHL| Los Angeles Kings| Snapshots| Vancouver Canucks Brandon Prust| Derek Dorsett| Maxim Shalunov

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Pacific Notes: Coyotes Still Searching, Oilers, Dorsett

July 22, 2017 at 1:50 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The Coyotes have already been quite busy this offseason, bringing in a new starting goalie (Antti Raanta), a top four defenseman (Niklas Hjalmarsson), and a top center (Derek Stepan).  They also parted ways with long-time captain Shane Doan while losing Radim Vrbata to Florida as well.  Despite those changes, GM John Chayka told Arizona Sports’ Craig Morgan that he is still trying to work on one more move, although he declined to get into specifics about what they’re targeting.  He did acknowledge, however, that their heavy lifting is done which suggests this final move (if they’re able to make it) is likely a smaller one.

Other notes from the Pacific:

  • Also from Morgan’s column, Chayka was in Toronto recently to meet with some assistant coaching candidates. Morgan reports that long-time Coyote Teppo Numminen, who last worked behind the bench with Finland at the World Cup, is not among the candidates being considered.  The team is expecting to announce at least one hire next week.  The Coyotes are on the hunt for two assistants after Jim Playfair resigned following former head coach Dave Tippett’s departure while Newell Brown was let go back in April.
  • With a looming cap crunch next offseason, David Staples of the Edmonton Journal argues that the Oilers should be looking to try to extend some players – particularly defenseman Matt Benning and Darnell Nurse plus winger Patrick Maroon – now instead of waiting until next summer in the hopes of getting a value deal done. Edmonton has more than $52MM committed for 2018-19 already (an amount that will go up considerably when Leon Draisaitl’s new contract is done) so getting some more cost certainty now would also be beneficial for GM Peter Chiarelli in terms of figuring out who may need to be moved between now and the start of that season.
  • After missing the majority of this past season after undergoing cervical fusion surgery due to disc degeneration in his neck, Canucks winger Derek Dorsett is expected to be ready for training camp, notes Jason Botchford of the Vancouver Province. Dorsett has two years left on his contract with a $2.65MM cap hit and will likely battle for a fourth line spot with Vancouver.

Edmonton Oilers| Utah Mammoth| Vancouver Canucks Derek Dorsett

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Derek Dorsett To Undergo Neck Surgery

December 5, 2016 at 2:38 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

2:38pm: Darren Dreger of TSN reports that Dorsett will be out for the season following the surgery. The hop is that following a full recovery the Canucks forward will be ready for the start of the 2017-18 season.

1:06pm: Vancouver Canucks forward Derek Dorsett will undergo cervical fusion surgery to repair disc degeneration in his neck. While it’s not clear when exactly the surgery will take place, or how long Dorsett will be sidelined, this is just the latest episode in a nightmare season for the Canucks.

Dorsett last played for the Canucks on November 17th, but was put on the injured reserve with a reported shoulder injury. This is the first we’ve heard of a degenerative neck injury.  Obviously, any surgery usually comes with a lengthy recovery period, but it’s unclear how invasive the procedure will be and what kind of timeline will be established for Dorsett’s return.  The 29-year old (who turns 30 on the 20th) has four points in fourteen games this season playing his usual high-energy, aggressive style.

For the 11-12-2 Canucks, they’ve actually started to turn around their season of late after a dreadful start. With four wins in their last six games they’ve pulled to within four points of the Los Angeles Kings and Winnipeg Jets for the wild card spots in the Western Conference. While losing Dorsett isn’t a game-changer for the team, it does take more depth away from a team desperate for a playoff berth. For now, they’ll have to move on without him and find another body to inject that energy and passion to the bottom-six.

Injury| Los Angeles Kings| Minnesota Wild| Vancouver Canucks| Winnipeg Jets Derek Dorsett

0 comments

How Will The Expansion Draft Impact Canadian Teams?

November 24, 2016 at 8:00 pm CDT | by natebrown 8 Comments

Continuing our look at different expansion draft angles,  CBC’s Amy Cleveland examines how the draft will affect the seven teams in Canada. Laying out the rules for the draft, Cleveland looks further and prognosticates who she sees as “potentially protected” versus those players who would be “intriguing” in being exposed. She further writes that all seven Canadian teams will be able to protect the bulk of their important players. The Flames sit prettiest without any non-movement clauses in contracts while the Leafs and Senators have only one player with an NMC (Nathan Horton, and Dion Phaneuf respectively).

Below are Cleveland’s picks for each team. Going to CBC’s page with the story includes in depth reasoning behind each of Cleveland’s choices.

Calgary Flames
NMC protected players: None.

Potentially protected: 

  • Forwards Johnny Gaudreau, Sean Monahan, Troy Brouwer, Michael Frolik, Mikael Backlund, Sam Bennett, Micheal Ferland
  • Defencemen Dougie Hamilton, T.J. Brodie, Mark Giordano
  • Goalie Chad Johnson

Intriguing exposed:

  • Matt Stajan (F), Lance Bouma (F), Brett Kulak (D)

Edmonton Oilers
NMC protected players: Milan Lucic (F), Andrej Sekera (D), Cam Talbot (G)

Potentially protected: 

  • Forwards: Lucic, Leon Draisaitl, Jordan Eberle, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Patrick Maroon, Tyler Pitlick, Zack Kassian
  • Defencemen: Sekera, Oscar Klefbom, Adam Larsson
  • Goalie: Talbot

Intriguing exposed:

  • Benoit Pouliot (F), Mark Letestu (F)

Montreal Canadiens
NMC protected players: Carey Price (G), Jeff Petry (D)

Potentially protected: 

  • Forwards Alex Galchenyuk, Brendan Gallagher, Alexander Radulov, Max Pacioretty, Paul Byron, Andrew Shaw, Phillip Danault
  • Defencemen Petry, Shea Weber, Nathan Beaulieu
  • Goalie: Price

Intriguing exposed: 

  • Tomas Plekanec (F), Jacob De la Rose (F- RFA), Alexei Emelin (D), Greg Pateryn (D)

Ottawa Senators
NMC protected players: Dion Phaneuf (D)

Potentially protected: 

  • Forwards: Kyle Turris, Mark Stone, Mike Hoffman, Derick Brassard, Ryan Dzingel, Jean-Gabriel Pageau, Curtis Lazar
  • Defencemen: Phaneuf, Erik Karlsson, Cody Ceci
  • Goalie: Craig Anderson

Intriguing exposed: 

  • Bobby Ryan (F), Marc Methot (D)

Toronto Maple Leafs
NMC protected players: Nathan Horton (F)

Potentially protected: 

  • Forwards Nazem Kadri, James van Riemsdyk, Tyler Bozak, Leo Komarov, Matt Martin, Connor Brown
  • Defencemen Morgan Rielly, Jake Gardiner, Connor Carrick
  • Goalie Frederik Andersen

Vancouver Canucks
NMC protected players: Loui Eriksson (F), Daniel Sedin (F), Henrik Sedin (F)

Potentially protected: 

  • Forwards: Eriksson, Sedin twins, Brandon Sutter, Bo Horvat, Markus Granlund, Jannik Hansen
  • Defencemen Alexander Edler, Christopher Tanev, Erik Gudbranson
  • Goalie Jacob Markstrom

​Intriguing exposed: 

  • Sven Baertschi (F), Derek Dorsett (F), Luca Sbisa (D)

Winnipeg Jets
NMC protected players: Dustin Byfuglien (D), Toby Enstrom (D)

Potentially protected: 

  • Forwards: Mark Scheifele, Blake Wheeler, Bryan Little, Adam Lowry
  • Defencemen: Byfuglien, Enstrom, Tyler Myers, Jacob Trouba
  • Goalie Connor Hellebuyck

Intriguing exposed:

  • Mathieu Perreault (F), Marko Dano (F), Mark Stuart (D)

 

Calgary Flames| Edmonton Oilers| Expansion| Montreal Canadiens| Ottawa Senators| Players| RFA| Toronto Maple Leafs| Uncategorized| Vancouver Canucks| Winnipeg Jets Adam Larsson| Alexander Radulov| Andrew Shaw| Benoit Pouliot| Blake Wheeler| Bo Horvat| Bobby Ryan| Bryan Little| Cam Talbot| Carey Price| Chad Johnson| Cody Ceci| Connor Hellebuyck| Craig Anderson| Curtis Lazar| Daniel Sedin| Derek Dorsett| Derick Brassard| Dion Phaneuf| Dougie Hamilton| Dustin Byfuglien| Erik Karlsson| Frederik Andersen| Henrik Sedin| Jacob Trouba| James van Riemsdyk| Jannik Hansen| Johnny Gaudreau| Jordan Eberle| Lance Bouma| Loui Eriksson| Mark Giordano| Mark Stone| Mathieu Perreault| Max Pacioretty| Mike Hoffman| Milan Lucic| Nathan Beaulieu| Nathan Horton| Nazem Kadri| Oscar Klefbom| Patrick Maroon| Paul Byron

8 comments

Pacific Notes: Flames, Nurse, Canucks, Capobianco

October 31, 2016 at 1:30 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

One of the concerns for the Calgary Flames so far this season has been their struggles with staying out of the penalty box.  Through nine games, the team has taken 49 minor penalties and are killing penalties with a success rate of only 73.2%.  As Postmedia’s Kristen Odland notes, head coach Glen Gulutzan is beginning to bench players who commit too many unnecessary fouls.

Recently, Sam Bennett, Matthew Tkachuk, and Kris Versteeg were all sat down for a long stretch during a game after taking bad penalties, two of which came back to bite them in the form of a power play goal allowed.  In particular, Bennett has been a frequent offender as his ten penalties taken leads the entire league.  He’s already more than halfway to surpassing his penalties minute total from last season in just the first month of the season alone.

Last season, Bennett was ineligible to be assigned to the AHL as he was still of junior age.  That isn’t the case this time around which means that if his penalty troubles continue, Gulutzan could opt to send him down to send him a message.  There is precedence for him sending a young player down for that reason too as he did that back in Dallas with Antoine Roussel.  With six points through nine games, Bennett is off to a good start offensively but could be even more effective if he can stay out of the sin bin more consistently.

More from the Pacific Division:

  • Edmonton defenseman Darnell Nurse has seen his role and ice time scaled back this year and is responding with a strong start to his sophomore campaign, writes Jim Matheson of the Edmonton Journal. Head coach Todd McLellan acknowledged that due to injuries last season, the team gave Nurse too many tasks and have made a concerted effort to scale back on those this season.  As their top blueline prospect, McLellan also added that the team still plans to give him more responsibility over time.  Nurse has a goal and two assists through eight games so far this season while averaging 17:19 per night, down nearly three minutes per contest compared to 2015-16.
  • Vancouver wingers Alexandre Burrows (neck) and Derek Dorsett (shoulder) could be ready to play in time for their next game on Wednesday in Montreal, reports Iain MacIntyre of the Vancouver Sun. Both players have missed the last four games and are currently on injured reserve.  The Canucks sit dead last in the NHL in goals per game with just 1.78 so even though Burrows and Dorsett aren’t big offensive contributors for the team, they still might be able to give Vancouver a boost as they embark on a six game Eastern road trip.
  • The Coyotes announced that they have signed defenceman Kyle Capobianco to a three year, entry-level contract. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.  Capobianco was Arizona’s third round pick (63rd overall) back in 2015.  He’s off to a strong start with Sudbury of the OHL this season with four goals and seven assists in 12 games so far.

Calgary Flames| Transactions| Utah Mammoth Alex Burrows| Darnell Nurse| Derek Dorsett

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