Rangers Claim Cody McLeod; Blues Waive Magnus Paajarvi
The New York Rangers have decided to add a little toughness to their lineup, today claiming Cody McLeod off waivers from the Nashville Predators. Nathan Gerbe, who was also on waivers after signing with the Columbus Blue Jackets, has cleared and will be assigned to the Cleveland Monsters of the AHL. In addition, Magnus Paajarvi has been waived by the St. Louis Blues.
This is the second time the Rangers have claimed a physical fourth-line presence this season after adding Adam Cracknell earlier in the year. While Cracknell was eventually flipped in a minor trade, McLeod could catch on as a bang-and-crash winger who is ready to drop the gloves in defense of a teammate. Though that style is rarely seen in the game these days, McLeod has continued to find work and will try to prove his value in New York.
The Rangers needed to make a corresponding roster move to fit McLeod in, and sent Daniel Catenacci to the minor leagues to make room. Vinni Lettieri and Anthony DeAngelo are the only players on the roster who are waiver exempt, however Peter Holland could’ve also still also been sent without having to clear waivers again, as he hasn’t been up long enough for his clock to reset.
Paajarvi’s inclusion on waivers is interesting, if not entirely unexpected. The Blues have activated Jaden Schwartz from injured reserve, and needed a roster spot for him to fit in. While Tage Thompson and Ivan Barbashev are both waiver-exempt, both have proven themselves as key parts of the forward group and won’t be sent down anytime soon.
Instead, it’s Paajarvi’s turn to be risked on waivers. The 10th-overall pick in 2009 hasn’t ever established himself as an offensive presence in the NHL, instead playing the roll of checking forward and penalty killer. In 352 career games, Paajarvi has 97 points including just four this season. While his age (26), size (6’3″ 206-lbs) and draft pedigree all suggest that there still could be another level to his play, nothing on the ice confirms it.
Still, he could be an interesting player for a contending team to add if they’re not happy with their own depth. Earning just $800K before hitting unrestricted free agency this summer, Paajarvi poses very little risk in terms of financial commitment. It’s important to note that Arizona, Toronto and Minnesota are all at their 50 contract limit, meaning they’d need to rid themselves of another player before making a claim.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
West Notes: Kraskovsky, Chiarot, Mitchell, Paajarvi
Jets prospect Pavel Kraskovsky told Daria Tuboltseva of Championat (link in Russian) that he has pushed talks of a possible contract extension with Lokomotiv Yaroslavl of the KHL until the offseason and that he would be open to signing with Winnipeg. Kraskovsky was a fourth-round pick of the Jets (164th overall) back in 2014 and has played in all 35 games this season, recording two goals and four assists. Even if he doesn’t sign an NHL contract, Winnipeg will still retain his rights indefinitely since there is no current player transfer agreement between the NHL and the KHL.
Elsewhere in the Western Conference:
- Still with the Jets, defenseman Ben Chiarot was fined $3,763.44 for butt-ending Anaheim winger Corey Perry on Friday night, the Department of Player Safety announced (Twitter link). That represents exactly 50% of his cap hit, which is the maximum fine percentage allowable in the CBA.
- Although newly-acquired Kings center Torrey Mitchell is with the team and took part in the morning skate today, he will not be eligible to make his debut tonight against Anaheim, reports Jon Rosen of LA Kings Insider. Mitchell has yet to receive his work visa and no update on that end is expected until Monday. Once he gets the green light to suit up, the 32-year-old should slide in on the fourth line for Los Angeles.
- Blues winger Magnus Paajarvi will not play tonight against Minnesota after taking a shot off his foot last night against the Predators, notes Tom Timmermann of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Head coach Mike Yeo stated that this isn’t expected to keep the 26-year-old out for long. Recently-recalled Samuel Blais will take his place which will be his first NHL game in more than a month.
