Roster Crunch: Central Division

Previously, we looked at some of the battles for the last few spots among Pacific Division teams, happening to focus mostly on the third pairing on many teams.  With the Anaheim Ducks leading the way with their glut of young defenders, we’ll head to the Central Division next where there are a few teams who might be contenders to scoop up one of extra Ducks pieces.

Dallas Stars –  It’s not often you see a team lose three of it’s top-four defenders in one offseason, but that’s what happened to the Stars this summer after Alex Goligoski, Jason Demers and Kris Russell all became unrestricted free agents. While Russell has yet to sign, he was probably miscast as the 24-minute-a-night player the Stars used him as down the stretch. They brought in Dan Hamhuis to fill one of the spots, but it’ll be a battle between Jamie Oleksiak, Stephen Johns, Patrik Nemeth, Jordie Benn and Esa Lindell for playing time this year. Because Johns is the only right-handed member of that group, perhaps Julius Honka, a former first-round pick, will make his NHL debut this season as well.

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Snapshots: Predators Defense, Elliott, Yakimov

The Nashville Predators bolstered their already-impressive defense on Wednesday with the Matt Carle signing. While Carle is no longer the top-four defenseman he once was, he remains a decent bottom-pairing option. His time in Tampa Bay came to an end after he was passed by younger and cheaper players. Carle said he’s excited by the chance to play under coach Peter Laviolette, with whom Carle enjoyed his best seasons in Philadelphia. He’ll play with younger pros like Petter Granberg on the third pairing of what very well could be the best defense in hockey:

Roman JosiP.K. Subban
Mattias EkholmRyan Ellis
Carle – Petter Granberg/ Yannick Weber

The top pairing consists of a Norris Trophy-winner and Josi, who has been as good or better than former partner Shea Weber for the last couple seasons. Dynamic offensive defenseman Ellis and the two-way Ekholm form a dependable and competent second pairing, and now the veteran Carle will anchor a third pairing.

In other news from around pro hockey:

  • The Calgary Flames introduced new starting goalie Brian Elliott today. Elliott said he’s looking forward to getting settled and playing in front of a young and skilled Flames team on the rise. He went 23-8-2 in 41 appearances with St. Louis last season, posting a 0.930 save percentage and a 2.07 GAA. Elliott will wear number one in Calgary.
  • The Edmonton Oilers have loaned prospect Bogdan Yakimov to HC Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk of the KHL. The monster center (6’5, 203 lbs) appeared in one NHL game (October 2014 versus Los Angeles) in two pro seasons in North America. He posted 43 points in 93 AHL games in that time, which included an 11-game stint in with Nizhnekamsk last season before returning to the AHL. Yakimov has one year remaining on his entry-level contract. It’s not yet known what the Oilers will do with Yakimov; in the past they retained the rights to KHL-bound Roman Horak and Philip Larsen, but terminated Toni Rajala‘s contract for wanting to play in Europe.

Predators Sign Matt Carle For $700K

The Nashville Predators have dipped into the free agent market Wednesday, signing UFA Matt Carle to a one-year, $700K contract.  Recently bought out by the Tampa Bay Lightning, we profiled Carle’s free agency and projected a contract between $750K-$1MM.  Obviously, this comes in below that and with it the Predators get a veteran blueliner with over 700 games experience.

After signing a huge six-year, $33MM contract with Tampa Bay before the 2012-13 season, Carle was never able to replicate the strong two-way play he provided for Philadelphia.  Last season, he only contributed 9 points (2-7) in 64 games, though he did chip in five assists in the playoffs.

The Predators came to an agreement with Petter Granberg the other day, avoiding arbitration and seemingly putting him in contention for a bottom-pairing spot; this Carle deal may throw a wrench in those plans, unless Nashville decides to start him in the AHL to try and rediscover his game.

Only 31, Carle has two 40+ point seasons under his belt and was once considered an excellent puck-moving defenseman. With P.K. Subban, Roman Josi, Ryan Ellis and Mattias Ekholm already locked into the top-four in Nashville, all Carle would have to do is provide solid bottom-pairing minutes against team’s third or fourth lines.  For a player who once logged over 23 minutes a night on a consistent basis, this is a low-risk, fairly high-reward move for the Predators.

Thursday Buyout Waivers: Boll, Korpikoski, Carle, Seidenberg, Greene, Jackman

Today is the last day to place players on waivers for the purposes of buying out their contract in advance of Friday’s free agency period.  Here are the players that are on the waiver wire.

Jared Boll (Columbus) – The Blue Jackets announced that they will buy out the final year of his deal.  The enforcer played in just 30 games last year, picking up a goal and two assists with 61 PIMS.  The buyout will carry a cap charge of $567K in each of the next two seasons.

Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports that Lauri Korpikoski, Matt Carle, Dennis Seidenberg, Matt Greene, and Barret Jackman are also all on buyout waivers.

Korpikoski (Edmonton) played in 71 games with the Oilers last season – his first with the team – collecting 10 goals and 12 assists.  The 29 year old has 181 career points in 540 NHL games, split between the Rangers, Coyotes, and Oilers.  Edmonton will carry a cap hit of $500K in 2016-17 and $1MM in 2017-18 as a result of the buyout.

Carle (Tampa Bay) is by far the biggest of the buyouts.  He collected just 9 points in 64 games last year despite collecting a $5.5MM salary.  He has 45 goals and 237 assists in 724 career games between San Jose, Philadelphia, and Tampa.  The Lightning will be charged with a cap hit of $1.833M for the next four years.

Seidenberg (Boston) has spent the last four years with the Bruins.  In 2015-16, he played in 61 games, picking up a goal and 11 helpers.  In 758 games split between the Flyers, Coyotes, Hurricanes, Panthers, and Bruins, he has 224 career points.  Boston will carry a cap hit of $1.167M in 2016-17, 2018-19, and 2019-20 as well as a $2.167MM cap charge in 2017-18.

Greene (Los Angeles) played in just three games with the Kings and missed the rest of the year with shoulder problems.  He has played in 589 career games with Edmonton and LA, picking up 78 points and 644 PIMS.  The Kings will have a cap charge of $833K for each of the next 4 years.

Update: Pierre LeBrun of TSN/ESPN reports that Greene’s waiving may not result in a buyout after all.

Jackman (Nashville) played his first season with the Preds last year after spending parts of 13 seasons with St. Louis.  Last year, he had a goal and four assists in 73 games while playing a smaller role as the season progressed.  In his career, he has 186 points and 1,102 PIMS in 876 games.  The Predators will be charged with a cap hit of $667K for each of the next two seasons.

Players that have a no-move clause in their contracts do not have to go through the waiver process to be bought out.  The deadline for those moves to happen is 4:00 PM CST.

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