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Evander Kane

Evander Kane To Miss “Weeks”

October 14, 2016 at 12:44 pm CDT | by Brett Barrett Leave a Comment

Buffalo Sabres winger Evander Kane will miss “weeks” with three cracked ribs, according to coach Dan Bylsma (via Pierre LeBrun).

Kane slammed into the boards after losing his footing in a foot race with Alexei Emelin. There was no penalty on the play. Kane was taken to the hospital as a precaution.

Kane is the second Sabres forward to sustain a serious injury in the last three days, after Jack Eichel suffered a high ankle sprain in practice on Wednesday morning. On the bright side, new winger Kyle Okposo will return to the lineup on Sunday night in Edmonton, according to Mike Harrington of the Buffalo News.

Buffalo Sabres| Injury| Newsstand Evander Kane| Jack Eichel| Kyle Okposo

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Evander Kane Injured, Taken To Hospital

October 13, 2016 at 8:47 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

A bad night gets even worse for the Buffalo Sabres, who as of this writing are losing 4 – 1 to Montreal in both teams’ season-openers. LW Evander Kane was injured tonight while chasing a loose puck into the corner, tweets John Vogl of the Buffalo News. Kane was chasing a puck into the corner along with Canadiens defenseman Alexei Emelin when the Sabres winger lost his footing and crashed heavily into the end boards.

The Sabres announced via Twitter that Kane had been taken to the hospital “for further evaluation and precautionary measures.”

Vogel reminds us that Kane recently underwent surgery on his left shoulder, implying tonight’s injury might be related to that earlier procedure.

More to come.

Buffalo Sabres| Injury| Montreal Canadiens Evander Kane

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Snapshots: Tampa’s Goalies, Lindberg, Kane, Fraser

September 9, 2016 at 6:57 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

While it has long been speculated that the Tampa Bay Lightning will have to move one of their two goalies in the near future, GM Steve Yzerman isn’t ruling out keeping both around in the hopes of having above average goaltending for every game this season, writes Joe Smith of the Tampa Bay Times.

After signing Andrei Vasilevskiy to a three year, $10.5MM extension that begins in 2017-18, Bishop has been speculated as being the odd one out.  Those thoughts have become even more prevalent recently with the report that Bishop was close to being dealt to Calgary back at the draft.  Yzerman did add that he expects both goalies to be available when they open their season on October 13th.

With Bishop projected to be the top goaltender in next summer’s UFA market, the Lightning could be faced with a situation where they lose him for nothing if they don’t trade him.  However, as we saw last season with Steven Stamkos, Yzerman isn’t afraid to hold on to his pending free agents and use them as internal rentals to aid in what they hope to be a lengthy postseason run.

With the goalie market pretty well dried up at this point, they’ll likely have to wait until midseason to see if anyone struggles out of the gate or gets injured before determining whether or not it’s worth pursuing dealing Bishop who has been the Lightning’s starter each of the last three seasons.

Other news and notes from around the hockey world:

  • Rangers center Oscar Lindberg has been skating for the past three weeks as he continues to rehab from hip surgery back in May, reports Newsday’s Steve Zipay. The 24 year old had a quality rookie campaign with New York last season, recording 13 goals and 15 assists in 68 games.  With the team adding extra forward depth in players like Michael Grabner, Josh Jooris, Brandon Pirri, and Nathan Gerbe, Lindberg will be in a tough battle for a spot in the lineup when he returns to the lineup.
  • Prosecutors have submitted additional evidence against Sabres winger Evander Kane in his pending court case, writes John Wawrow of the Associated Press. Kane is facing four counts of non-criminal harassment, one count of disorderly conduct, and one count of misdemeanour trespass.  He pled not guilty to all charges back in August and is scheduled to next appear in  ourt on October 31st.
  • Chicago UFA winger Matt Fraser has signed a one year deal with Rogle BK of the SHL, the Swedish team announced (link in Swedish). The Blackhawks acquired him as part of the Andrew Ladd trade prior to the last trade deadline although he never got into a game with the team; he last suited up in the NHL in 2014-15 where he played 60 games between Edmonton and Boston.  The Blackhawks declined to tender him a qualifying offer back in June.

Snapshots| Tampa Bay Lightning Andrei Vasilevskiy| Ben Bishop| Evander Kane| Oscar Lindberg

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Jets Notes: Setoguchi, Trouba, Heritage Classic

September 8, 2016 at 4:53 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

In a heartbreaking (but wonderful) piece by David Pollak of The Hockey News yesterday, Devin Setoguchi comes clean about his history with alcoholism and how it almost destroyed his career. The former 8th overall pick was a thirty goal scorer in the NHL once upon a time, but yesterday signed a professional tryout with the Los Angeles Kings after spending last season in Switzerland.

It’s been six years since he last scored 20 goals in an NHL season, but is still only 29 years old and feels he has enough left to help a team on the ice – even if it’s at the AHL level or in Europe.

Today, on the Hustler and Lawless show on TSN 1290, Setoguchi related a story about how Evander Kane came to his house once while they were teammates on the Winnipeg Jets, and poured out all his alcohol in an attempt to help him break his addiction. Ironically, some may say, because of Kane’s own troubled history, it may have been a turning point in his battle and he now is working towards helping younger players understand the risks involved.

  • Also on TSN 1290, former NHL executive Bill Watters opined that the Jacob Trouba camp “wants out of Winnipeg”. While Watters isn’t close enough to either side to have any particular insight past what his hockey sense tells him, it does continue the narrative that has been going on. Both Matt Larkin of The Hockey News and Darren Dreger of TSN spoke recently on the station about a possible Trouba deal, with Larkin going so far as saying “I’m seeing a trade in Trouba’s future, because the two camps seem to be so far apart in terms of how they value what Trouba has done in the NHL so far.”  Indeed, Trouba is currently playing at the World Cup without a deal, and both sides seem just as far apart as ever on the future of the young defenseman.
  • The final rosters for the legends game at the Heritage Classic were announced today, after having their first group presented last month.  Among the final few additions were Curtis Joseph for the Edmonton Oilers, and Eddie Olczyk for the Winnipeg Jets.  The game will take place on October 22nd, with Dale Hawerchuk leading the hometown Jets against a star-studded Oilers squad captained by Wayne Gretzky.

AHL| Edmonton Oilers| Los Angeles Kings| Players| Winnipeg Jets Evander Kane| Jacob Trouba| Wayne Gretzky| World Cup

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Snapshots: Canucks, Avalanche, Nielsen, Donskoi

September 5, 2016 at 3:06 pm CDT | by Glen Miller 2 Comments

Many pundits feel the Vancouver Canucks are a team lacking direction. On the one hand, they introduced some much-needed youth to their aging core last season with young forwards Jake Virtanen and Jared McCann given their first extended NHL looks and joining second-year pro Bo Horvat as possible future building blocks. On the other hand, Vancouver failed to advance their rebuild by dealing expiring assets at the trade deadline for draft picks and/or prospects. Trading Dan Hamhuis and/or Radim Vrbata would have netted the Canucks multiple futures to further the team’s roster reconstruction.

Instead, the Canucks surprised many this spring by parting with the aforementioned McCann as part of a package to acquire veteran defenseman Erik Gudbranson in what was clearly a move designed to help the team win now. The free agent addition of winger Loui Eriksson also signals that Vancouver is not committed to a rebuild and will rather try to slowly integrate younger players onto the roster while at the same time attempting to remain in the mix for a playoff spot.

It’s with this mentality that GM Jim Benning continues his search for an impact offensive LW, as Ben Kuzma of The Province writes. Daniel Sedin remains the team’s top port side winger and the team expects young Sven Baertschi – currently listed as the team’s #2 LW – to improve upon his 15-goal output in 2015-16. Beyond those two the Canucks have a few wingers who can line up on either side of center – including Eriksson – but don’t have enough depth to switch a player to the left without creating another hole on the right side.

Kuzma lists several candidates who could fill the role of impact LW, both internal and external. The most interesting might be Anton Rodin, the team’s second-round pick in 2009 and whom the Canucks signed to a one-year deal worth just $950K. Rodin enjoyed an excellent 2015-16 campaign, netting 16 goals and 37 points in 33 contests with Brynas IF of the Swedish Elite League while capturing the league’s MVP award.

As for possibilities currently outside the Canucks organization, Kuzma lists Evander Kane as a potential trade option – a notion we’ve reported on in the past –  though he also brings up the off-ice issues surrounding Buffalo’s talented winger and suggests that might limit Vancouver’s interest. Kuzma also opines that the cost to acquire an established player like Kane would likely start with one of Chris Tanev or Horvat, and that’s simply a price the Canucks are unwilling to pay.

Surprisingly, Kuzma writes that the Canucks didn’t view Jiri Hudler as a short-term answer even though the Czech winger is just two seasons removed from a 76-point campaign and ultimately signed a one-year pact with Dallas worth $2MM. Hudler would have been a perfectly reasonable buy-low add for the Canucks. He’s capable of producing at a rate more than acceptable for a top-six forward and would have been a potentially valuable asset to possess at the 2017 deadline with contending teams always looking to augment their scoring depth.

Elsewhere in the NHL on this Labor Day:

  • At his introductory news conference last week, new Colorado head coach Jared Bednar confirmed he would be keeping all three assistant coaches – Tim Army, Dave Farrish and Nolan Pratt – from the previous regime, according to Terry Frei of the Denver Post. It’s not much of a surprise given the late hiring of Bednar meant that many coaches he may have considered for positions were already committed elsewhere. Additionally, Pratt worked under Bednar as an assistant with Lake Erie in 2015-16 so there was already a comfort level between the two coaches. After talking with each of his assistants, Bednar is satisfied he has the right mix of experience and knowledge among his staff.
  • An unheralded free agent signing by the Sharks in May of 2015, Joonas Donskoi would end up playing a key role for the Western Conference champions in 2015-16, scoring 11 goals and 36 points in 76 regular season games. He would ramp up his performance in the playoffs tallying six goals and 12 points in 24 contests. Now that Donskoi has established himself as an NHL regular, the expectations have been raised going into year two of his career, as Kevin Kurz of CSN Bay Area writes. After establishing solid chemistry with C Logan Couture, both down the stretch of the regular campaign and in the postseason, Donskoi is again likely to slot in on the right side of the skilled pivot. If he takes advantage of his opportunity to play with Couture, it’s conceivable Donskoi could approach 50 points in a full season.
  • After losing superstar center Pavel Datsyuk, who chose to return home to Russia to be closer to his family, the Detroit Red Wings were left with a gaping hole down the middle of their lineup. They attempted to address that loss in part by signing solid two-way pivot Frans Nielsen to a lucrative six-year, $31.5MM free agent deal this summer. While he won’t be expected to replace Datsyuk’s offense, he will be counted on to play a responsible game and appear in all situations for the Wings, says Ansar Khan of MLive.com. Nielsen has only ever tallied 20 goals or 50 points on two occasions but is known as an excellent playmaker and someone who should help improve both the Wings PP and PK units. He is also an elite shootout performer who might be worth an extra few standings points a year to Detroit in that area alone.

Coaches| Colorado Avalanche| Detroit Red Wings| Jim Benning| Players| San Jose Sharks| Snapshots| Vancouver Canucks Bo Horvat| Dan Hamhuis| Evander Kane| Frans Nielsen| Frans Nielsen| Jiri Hudler| Logan Couture| Loui Eriksson| Pavel Datsyuk

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Latest On Rasmus Ristolainen

August 30, 2016 at 10:25 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Buffalo Sabres have had a roller coaster of an offseason. While the team successfully brought in Kyle Okposo and Dmitry Kulikov to shore up two weaknesses, they’ve also had the headaches caused by Evander Kane’s continuing legal issues, and were spurned by Jimmy Vesey after trading a third-round pick to obtain his negotiating rights. Now, you’d think all their attention would be on re-signing their two remaining restricted free agents, starting with their stud defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen.

Rasmus RistolainenNot so fast, as according to Sami Hoffren of Urheilusanomat (a Finnish sports publication) Ristolainen told him he or his camp “haven’t heard anything in a while” from the Buffalo side regarding a new contract and doesn’t expect to sign anything during the World Cup; Ristolainen is competing for Finland in the upcoming tournament.

After being drafted eighth overall in 2013, Ristolainen has shown a steady progression into one of the better right-handed defensemen in the league. With 41 points last season, he led the Buffalo blueline and ranked 23rd in the league among defensemen. Going forward, the 21-year old will be looking for a substantial bump if he’s to sign long-term, as he’s proven his ability at this level over the past two seasons.

Buffalo also has Zemgus Girgensons, another former first round pick who took a step backwards last season left to sign. Girgensons only scored 18 points after two consecutive seasons with at least 22, including a 15 goal output in just 61 games in 2014-15.  Both players should eventually re-sign, but it is getting later and later into the summer without any news.  The Sabres have just over $8MM in cap space currently, more than enough to get both under contract.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Buffalo Sabres| Players Dmitry Kulikov| Evander Kane| Jimmy Vesey| Kyle Okposo| World Cup

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Roster Crunch: Atlantic Division

August 10, 2016 at 12:25 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

Over the past few days, we’ve looked at the final few spots on the roster for both the Pacific and Central divisions. This time, we’ll turn our attention to the East starting with the Atlantic.  This division will be in turmoil over the next few years, with clubs like the Buffalo Sabres and Toronto Maple Leafs going through slow, deliberate rebuilds, and perennial contending squads like the Detroit Red Wings finally starting to slow down.

Florida Panthers – While the Panthers have pretty much accomplished everything they set out to do this off-season – improving the blueline with Keith Yandle and Jason Demers, getting a capable replacement for Roberto Luongo in James Reimer, and locking up their young core – they failed in one, big $5.5MM way. Dave Bolland failed his physical and therefor couldn’t be bought out. He’ll try to prove he deserves some playing time this season, but may find himself buried in the AHL to make room for Jared McCann, the prize Florida received when they dealt Erik Gudbranson to the Canucks.

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Tampa Bay Lightning – If you’d said that Steve Yzerman would get Steven Stamkos and Victor Hedman locked up long-term for less than $17MM per season, many would have laughed you out of the building.  But, he did it, and it has let him spend some of the savings to build considerable depth for his hockey club.  The team has signed a glut of forwards with NHL experience to league-minimum contracts, and will have a tryout at camp for the bottom few spots. The team already has 13 forwards (including still-unsigned Nikita Kucherov) who should get spots, meaning these new signings will have to dethrone someone to find a spot.  Cory Conacher may have the best shot, after the diminutive winger scored 52 points last season in the improving Swiss League.

Detroit Red Wings – It was easy to understand why the Red Wings let Kyle Quincey hit free agency, but otherwise they’ve made some questionable moves this summer. The team signed Steve Ott, despite not having a clear place to play him, and have filled up the center position, seemingly ensuring that Dylan Larkin remains on the wing. Their proverbial fourth line will be anchored by Luke Glendening again after extending him for four years, but who will play with him is still up in the air. Ott, Teemu Pulkkinen, Drew Miller and Andreas Athanasiou all have claims to the wings, not to mention that many expect top prospect Anthony Mantha to force his way onto the club this season.

Boston Bruins – Didn’t Joe Morrow and Colin Miller do enough to lock up their spots on the bottom pairing last season? Apparently not, as the team brought back John-Michael Liles for $2MM despite his advanced age. Morrow and Miller are both waiver eligible, meaning that they’ll probably cycle through the press box instead of playing in the AHL. Depth on defense isn’t a bad thing, but sacrificing development time might be.

Ottawa Senators – For the Sens, a young group is getting decidedly older this season, with the deal to swap Mika Zibanejad for Derick Brassard and the signing of Chris Kelly. There doesn’t seem to be enough room left for all three of Curtis Lazar, Nick Paul and Ryan Dzingel in the bottom six, unless Chris Neil decides to hang ’em up in the next few months (he won’t). Mike Kostka looks like he signed on to sit in a press box, as the team’s defense is set without him.

Montreal Canadiens – Last year when Carey Price went down to injury, it was Mike Condon that took the reins of the club and made 51 starts. While he didn’t perform to the level the club was used to, it was expected that he’d return as Price’s backup, now with a healthy amount of NHL experience. It makes the signing of Al Montoya this summer interesting, as that would seemingly push Condon back down to the AHL. In camp, the two will battle along with Charlie Lindgren, an NCAA import, for the backup (and AHL starter) job.

Buffalo Sabres – The biggest story in Sabres camp this year will be that of Evander Kane, and whether he starts the season with the team.  If he does, he’ll complete a deadly top-six, all of which come in under the age of 30. If he doesn’t (be it either through trade or team suspension), it would probably bump either Marcus Foligno or Matt Moulson into the top-six, giving an opportunity to another youngster in limited action. Perhaps that would go to Hudson Fasching, who was signed out of the University of Minnesota to play seven games for the Sabres down the stretch. Obviously, another NCAA product in Jimmy Vesey would fit in nicely if the Sabres should get him signed – he becomes an unrestricted free agent in just five days.

Toronto Maple Leafs – The Leafs may be the most interesting of training camps (sorry hockey-world) this year, just due to the number of bodies they have vying for NHL spots.  The team has veterans like Milan Michalek and Joffrey Lupul penciled in right now, but have made it clear that they are willing to go with a number of kids in their lineup next year.  With Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner, William Nylander all expected to play a full season in Toronto (not to mention Zach Hyman, Nikita Soshnikov and Connor Brown, all who played well in their short stints last season) there may not be enough room for veteran Colin Greening and newcomer Kerby Rychel on the NHL roster.

AHL| Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| Detroit Red Wings| Florida Panthers| Free Agency| Injury| Montreal Canadiens| Ottawa Senators| Tampa Bay Lightning| Toronto Maple Leafs| Uncategorized| Vancouver Canucks Al Montoya| Andreas Athanasiou| Anthony Mantha| Auston Matthews| Colin Miller| Cory Conacher| Dave Bolland| Derick Brassard| Drew Miller| Dylan Larkin| Evander Kane| James Reimer| Jason Demers| Jimmy Vesey| Joe Morrow| John-Michael Liles| Keith Yandle| Luke Glendening| Marcus Foligno| Mika Zibanejad| Nikita Kucherov| Roberto Luongo| Steven Stamkos| Victor Hedman

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Revisiting Vancouver’s Search For Scoring Line Wing

August 7, 2016 at 1:38 pm CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

With franchise cornerstones Daniel Sedin and Henrik Sedin each nearing the end of their great careers and after missing the postseason by a whopping 12 points, it would appear the Vancouver Canucks should strongly consider tearing down then rebuilding their roster. Instead, Vancouver seems to be trying to walk the fine line between being competitive today while still trying to add youth to the organization to make them better tomorrow. The signing of Loui Eriksson and the trade for Erik Gudbranson – a deal that cost Vancouver young forward Jared McCann and a second-round pick – reinforces the idea the Canucks want to try to compete for a playoff berth this year, even if they sacrifice young talent to do so.

Along those lines, GM Jim Benning has been open about his efforts to add a scoring line winger, whether by trade or by signing one of the few remaining quality free agent forwards on the market, in an attempt to further improve his club’s chances at the postseason. The club has been linked to potential trade target Evander Kane, among others, this summer but James O’Brien, writing for NBC Sports, argues that Vancouver should steer clear of the trade market in their search for an “experienced 15-20 goal-scorer,” and instead add one of the skilled forwards left in free agency.

Vancouver likely has little chance to make the postseason in a division that includes three, near-certain playoff teams and three others who may have made enough roster improvements this summer to realistically challenge. Defending Western Conference champion San Jose should be a near lock for the playoffs, as should Los Angeles and Anaheim. Arizona, Calgary and Edmonton each made major moves that could result in postseason contention. With the playoffs unlikely, Vancouver shouldn’t give up any of the few valuable assets they have in exchange for a marginal increase in their postseason odds this year.

Considering a reunion with UFA Radim Vrbata is unlikely, signing one of Brandon Pirri or Jiri Hudler – two of PHR’s five top remaining UFA’s – would improve the Canucks on the ice for the 2016-17 campaign and won’t cost the team anything other than cash. Additionally, if either player has a productive season for Vancouver, the Canucks could move them at the deadline for future assets. Remember that Hudler, a pending free agent at the time, was dealt from Calgary to the Panthers for second and fourth-round draft choices. That’s exactly the type of move a club like Vancouver should make as opposed to dealing for a veteran player under contract long term.

Hudler, a three-time 20-goal-scorer, had a down season in 2015-16 but is just one year removed from a 31-goal campaign with the Flames. He still tallied 16 goals last year in 72 games, splitting the season with Calgary and Florida. But even in a “down” year, his goal-scoring rate was still comfortably that of a top-six winger. Hudler averaged 0.79 G/60 this past season, a total which ranked 91st overall among forwards who saw at least 500 minutes of even strength ice time. With 30 teams in the league, each with three top-line players, Hudler’s goal production ranks just outside what you would expect from a first-liner.

Pirri averaged 0.74 G/60 last season, good for the 105th best rate among forwards who played 500 minutes at even strength. As with Hudler, in terms of goal scoring alone Pirri is comfortably a second-line player. His career rate of 0.91 G/60 suggests that given more ice time, Pirri would easily exceed 20 goals in a full season.

If Vancouver is simply looking for a player who can put the puck in the net, signing Hudler or Pirri to a one-year deal makes far more sense than giving up assets to acquire a goal-scorer via trade. Considering how late in the summer we are and after seeing how much of a pay cut Sam Gagner took after a lackluster season, it’s likely Hudler is only worth around $2MM per at this point. Pirri probably would sign for less than that figure. Additionally, assuming the club signs one of those free agent wingers and they go on to produce solid numbers, the value Vancouver could extract from a contender at the deadline makes this route far and away the better option for a team that should be focusing more on the future than the present.

 

 

 

Calgary Flames| Florida Panthers| Free Agency| Players| Vancouver Canucks Brandon Pirri| Evander Kane| Jiri Hudler| Loui Eriksson

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Snapshots: Kane, Russell, Staal, Parise

August 4, 2016 at 1:15 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

There’s little doubt that Buffalo GM Tim Murray has shown a penchant for making bold decisions during his tenure with the Sabres.  As Bucky Gleason of the Buffalo News writes, Murray may be headed for another of those decisions when it comes to winger Evander Kane.

Kane pled not guilty earlier this week to charges of misdemeanor criminal trespass, non-criminal disorderly conduct, and four counts of non-criminal harassment.  He was also previously charged with assault although that suit was later dropped.  However, Gleason notes that Kane seems to have a penchant for finding trouble which has to be a concern for the Sabres.

Murray gave up a considerable amount to Winnipeg back in February of 2015, including defenseman Tyler Myers plus wingers Drew Stafford and Joel Armia as part of a package that also landed Buffalo blueliner Zach Bogosian.  However, given the off-ice concerns and the fact that Kane has not yet become the top liner the team was hoping he would, it’s unlikely that a Kane trade would yield anywhere near the type of value Buffalo gave up to get him just 18 months ago.

Even if Murray can’t get top value, Gleason suggests that he should still consider trading him for a lesser return under the concept of addition by subtraction.  Doing so would certainly be a bold move but the Buffalo GM hasn’t hesitated to make those types of deals yet so there’s little reason to think he’d do so now.

More from around the league:

  • Defenseman Kris Russell remains the most prominent of the remaining unrestricted free agents. TSN’s Darren Dreger reports that Russell’s camp is still waiting for some interested teams to free up some cap space.  It’s believed that Russell is still seeking a multi-year deal around the $4MM per year range but that may be a challenge at this stage of free agency.  Regardless, it appears the 29 year old blueliner is content to play the waiting game for now.  Dreger doesn’t mention any specific suitors but we took a look earlier at some teams that could potentially have a spot for Russell on their back end.
  • In an interview with KFAN 100.3 in Minnesota (and transcribed by Chris Nichols of Today’s Slapshot), Minnesota head coach Bruce Boudreau expects newly-signed center Eric Staal to play between Zach Parise and Charlie Coyle to start next season. Boudreau also noted that Parise told him that he is fully healthy after missing the postseason with a back injury.  Parise is slated to suit up for Team USA at next month’s World Cup of Hockey.

Snapshots Eric Staal| Evander Kane| Kris Russell| Zach Parise

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Snapshots: Kane, Bartkowski, Jets

August 1, 2016 at 12:50 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Sabres forward Evander Kane pled not guilty at his arraignment in Buffalo court today stemming from charges last month, reports Aaron Besecker of the Buffalo News.  Kane faces a charge of misdemeanor criminal trespass, non-criminal disorderly conduct, plus four counts of non-criminal harassment.  WBEN’s Brian Mazurowski adds that the maximum sentence for Kane would be 90 days but that District Attorney Michael Flaherty noted that first time offenders rarely receive prison sentences.

Other news and notes from around the league:

  • Free agent defenseman Matt Bartkowski has received a few offers so far but has yet to land with a new team, writes Jeff Paterson of the Vancouver Province. Bartkowski’s agent, Stephen Reich, suggests that a deal isn’t likely to come until later in the offseason but is optimistic that he will be able to land a one way contract.  Bartkowski earned $1.75MM with Vancouver last season and got into 80 games with the Canucks, collecting six goals and 12 assists while averaging 18:37 of ice time per night.
  • Ken Wiebe of the Winnipeg Sun takes a closer look at Winnipeg’s defense depth and notes that there could be a bit of a logjam, particularly when RFA Jacob Trouba inks his new deal. He speculates that 2013 first round pick Josh Morrissey could be ready for full-time NHL duty but the Jets may deem it would be better for him to play a #1 role in the AHL over a depth role with the big club.  Wiebe also suggests that Paul Postma could be a candidate to be dealt between now and the start of next season.

Snapshots Evander Kane| Matt Bartkowski

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