Nineteen Players Placed On Waivers
As always during the last few days of training camp, the waiver wire is filled up with fringe NHL players that have been cut from their teams. Jordan Nolan was the only player claimed from yesterday’s crop, but there are some more interesting name in today’s group. Here are the waivers for September 27th, thanks to Renaud Lavoie of TVA Sports:
Emerson Etem (ARI)
Ty Rattie (EDM)
Dillon Simpson (EDM)
Michael Mersch (LAK)
Andrew Crescenzi (LAK)
Niklas Svedberg (MIN)
Cal O’Reilly (MIN)
Zack Mitchell (MIN)
Alex Grant (MIN)
Kurtis Gabriel (MIN)
Landon Ferraro (MIN)
Patrick Cannone (MIN)
Matt Taormina (MTL)
Petteri Lindbohm (STL)
Chris Butler (STL)
Beau Bennett (STL)
Stefan Matteau (VGK)
Liam O’Brien (WSH)
Zach Sill (WSH)
Jordan Nolan Claimed By Buffalo Sabres
The Buffalo Sabres have claimed forward Jordan Nolan from the Los Angeles Kings, after the team placed him on waivers yesterday in an attempt to send him to the minor leagues. Nolan was a somewhat surprising cut after playing at least 44 games for the Kings in each of the last five seasons.
Nolan, 28, is a big-bodied gritty fourth-line forward who actually saw the most ice-time of his career last season, averaging almost 11 minutes a night. While he’s not an offensive force—his career-high is 10 points in a season—he can still add some toughness and quite a bit of NHL experience to a Buffalo lineup that will be relying on several young players. Buffalo GM Jason Botterill had this to say about his newest acquisition:
We’re happy to bring Jordan into the mix. His size and speed, along with his experience with a successful organization like the Kings, make him an asset to the organization.
There is no guarantee that Nolan makes the Sabres either, but he’ll have a chance to show what he can do. The team may try to sneak him through waivers of their own in the next few days, which would allow the Kings to reclaim him.
Lisa Dillman of NHL.com was first to break the news.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Waivers & Recalls: 09/26/17
After all eighteen players placed on waivers yesterday cleared, there is a new group available to teams around the league today. While these waivers rarely see players change squads, as very few have room on their NHL roster, there is a chance some veteran NHL names will get picked. We’ll keep track of everyone placed on waivers right here.
On waivers:
Andrew Campbell (ARZ)
Hunter Shinkaruk (CGY)
Tyler Wotherspoon (CGY)
Emile Poirier (CGY)
Cameron Gaunce (CBJ)
Alexander Broadhurst (CBJ)
Andre Benoit (CBJ)
Brian Flynn (DAL)
Brent Regner (DAL)
Turner Elson (DET)
Jordan Nolan (LAK)
Jeff Zatkoff (LAK)
Scott Wedgewood (NJD)
Ben Thomson (NJD)
Bracken Kearns (NJD)
Tyler Randell (OTT)
Frank Corrado (PIT)
Jarred Tinordi (PIT)
Zach Trotman (PIT)
Chris Summers (PIT)
Garrett Wilson (PIT)
Jean-Sebastien Dea (PIT)
Kevin Czuczman (PIT)
There will also be some recalls over the next week or so to help out in preseason games or fill in for injured players, such as Charlie Lindgren, who was pulled from the Montreal lineup last night just before puck drop.
Recalled:
Mikhail Vorobyev (PHI)
Zach Fucale (MTL)
Salary Cap Deep Dive: Los Angeles Kings
Navigating the Salary Cap is probably one of the more important tasks for any general manager to have. Teams that can avert total cap chaos by walking the tightrope of inking players to deals that match their value (or compensate for future value without breaking the bank) remain successful. Those that don’t see struggles and front office changes.
PHR will look at every NHL team and give a thorough look at their cap situation heading into the 2017-18 season. This will focus more on those players who are integral parts of the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL. All cap figures are courtesy of CapFriendly.
Los Angeles Kings
Current Cap Hit: $68,168,560 (under the $75MM Upper Limit)
Entry-Level Contracts
D Oscar Fantenberg (One year remaining, $925K)
Potential Bonuses
None
This is not a very young team and the only player to have an entry-level deal is Fantenberg, who is the 25-year-old blueliner, who signed a one-year, two-way deal earlier this year. The defenseman has never played in the U.S. before, but he opened some eyes recently when he found himself on the Kings’ roster to travel to Japan for some exhibition games, suggesting he has a legitimate chance to earn a starting job on the team’s defense.
One Year Remaining, Non-Entry-Level
F Mike Cammalleri ($1MM, UFA)
F Jordan Nolan ($950K, UFA)
F Nick Shore ($925K, RFA)
D Christian Folin ($800K, UFA)
D Derek Forbort ($650K, RFA)
D Kevin Gravel ($650K, RFA)
G Darcy Kuemper ($650K, UFA)
F Nic Dowd ($640K, UFA)
Have originally started his career in L.A., Cammalleri returns to his former team after a three-year stint in New Jersey, which came after a three-year stint in Calgary and after a three-year stint in Montreal. The 35-year-old wing isn’t the same guy who put up many 20-plus goal seasons, but the hope is he can fill a back-six line for the coming season at a low price. Nolan will fight for a fourth-line role, while Gravel may also have to fight for a bottom pairing on defense, especially since he is still waiver-exempt.
Shore is one of those young players the Kings hope will have a breakout year. The 24-year-old wing has not been able to put it all together yet. He finished last year with six goals and 11 assists for 17 points, but is capable of more if he can put it all together.
Forbert played on the first line a year ago and managed to play in all 82 games. The team now hopes the 25-year-old starts to cash in on the team’s promise when they drafted him in the first round back in 2010. His defensive proficiency is designed to allow others to focus on offense more. The team also hopes Folin, signed away from Minnesota this offseason, will grab one of the last couple of defensive openings. The 26-year-old played 51 games for the Wild last season, but has had trouble getting a full-time role.
Pacific Notes: Shore, Nolan, Dell, Marchant
After leaving Thursday’s game against Toronto due to an upper body injury, Kings center Nick Shore is listed as day-to-day for the time being but was seen with his arm in a sling today, reports Jon Rosen of LA Kings Insider. He will be evaluated further on Saturday. Shore is in his second full season at the NHL level and recently passed his career high in points last week; he has 12 on the year in 63 games.
Still with the Kings, left winger Jordan Nolan didn’t skate with the team at practice today and he is also listed as day-to-day. The 27 year old has missed the last three games with a leg injury and the fact he didn’t skate today would put his status for tomorrow’s game against Vancouver in serious doubt.
Elsewhere in the Pacific Division:
- The Sharks are planning to play backup goaltender Aaron Dell more often down the stretch, notes CSN Bay Area’s Kevin Kurz. Dell has made just 11 starts through 63 games this season and as a result, starter Martin Jones is on pace to play in nearly 70 games which many believe is too high of a workload. To his credit, Dell has been more than solid in his limited body of work this year, posting a 1.88 GAA and a .935 SV% when he does get to play. San Jose has five back-to-back games in March (the first set coming this weekend) so there’s a good chance Dell will get to play more regularly in the weeks ahead.
- The Ducks recently added former NHL center Todd Marchant to serve as an assistant coach for the remainder of the season although he will remain their Director of Player Development. Eric Stephens of the Orange County Register outlines his role with the team, which will involve serving as an ‘eye in the sky’ during games while working with the team on faceoffs and the penalty kill. That role should come as no surprise as Marchant was a strong penalty killer for much of his 17 year NHL career.
