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Mikko Rantanen

Snapshots: MacTavish, Brouwer, Forbort, Avalanche

November 21, 2019 at 8:54 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Craig MacTavish’s tenure with Lokomotiv Yaroslavl of the KHL was certainly short-lived as he was let go after eight games with the team.  However, he’ll be back behind the bench next month as TSN’s Darren Dreger reports (Twitter link) that he will be Canada’s head coach at next month’s Spengler Cup.  The position had initially been offered to Wayne Gretzky but was declined.  Among those that are expected to be named to MacTavish’s staff is Misha Donskov, the Director of Hockey Operations for the Golden Knights.

More from around the hockey world:

  • While Troy Brouwer has been with the Blues for more than a week and recently signed a one-year deal, he hasn’t been given clearance to play just yet. Tom Timmermann of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch notes that the winger is still awaiting his work visa and he can’t suit up until he gets that.  Brouwer was expected to play on Thursday and is hopeful that the issue will be resolved in time for their next game on Saturday.
  • Kings defenseman Derek Forbort recently took part in a full skate with AHL Ontario, mentions Jon Rosen of LA Kings Insider. He has missed the entire season as he continues to work his way back from a back injury.  It’s a contract year for the 27-year-old who will enter unrestricted free agency for the first time in July so getting back is of particular importance for him.  As for Los Angeles, if Forbort returns to form, he could be one of the more intriguing trade candidates closer to the trade deadline.
  • It appears the Avalanche are getting close to getting at least one of their top forwards back. Ryan S. Clark of The Athletic reports (Twitter link) that winger Mikko Rantanen could rejoin the team soon as he continues to ramp up his skating while working his way back from a lower-body injury.  The news isn’t as good for Gabriel Landeskog though.  He has yet to start skating after suffering a foot injury last month and will be going to be re-evaluated later this week.

Colorado Avalanche| Los Angeles Kings| Snapshots| St. Louis Blues Craig MacTavish| Derek Forbort| Gabriel Landeskog| Mikko Rantanen| Spengler Cup| Troy Brouwer

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Western Notes: Walker, Rantanen, Tuch, Zucker

November 9, 2019 at 7:05 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg Leave a Comment

It isn’t hard to think of who the Los Angeles Kings’ best defenseman is — Drew Doughty. It’s an automatic response. However, that may not have been the case through 15 games this season. The Athletic’s Jordan Samuels-Thomas (subscription required) writes that Sean Walker has been the unsung hero on defense for a Kings’ team that has struggled this year.

The 5-foot-11, 194-pound blueliner has been the top performer in most statistical categories for the Kings’ this year. He ranks second among defensemen with six points, but is tops in 5×5 play in Corsi-for per/60 and Corsi-for percentage, while he is also third among Kings’ defensemen in expected goals per/60, while also showing off strong offense and possession numbers.

While Walker doesn’t have the immense talent that Doughty had, he has been a bright spot on the Kings’ current roster.

  • Las Vegas Review Journal’s David Schoen reports that Vegas Golden Knights forward Alex Tuch had a setback Friday after sustaining an upper-body injury last week. The original hope was for Tuch to meet up with the team on their road trip, but with just two days remaining on that trip, it doesn’t look like Tuch will be meeting up with the team. “I was hoping he was going to come in for this trip. He’s not coming in. There’s nothing that changed with his injury,” said head coach Gerard Gallant. Tuch has appeared in just two games for the Golden Knights this season.
  • Adrian Dater of ColoradoHockeyNow reports that Colorado Avalanche forward Mikko Rantanen’s status remains vague. Rantanen has been working out on his own, but has yet to skate on the ice as of yet. The forward was injured on Oct. 21, suffering a lower-body injury, but head coach Jared Bednar said he had no idea when Rantanen might get back on the ice.
  • Minnesota Wild forward Jason Zucker got the point after the first period Thursday night when head coach Bruce Boudreau benched him for a large amount of time in the final 40 minutes of play after the winger struggled defensively that allowed the San Jose Sharks to get out to an early lead. According to Michael Russo of The Athletic (subscription required), Zucker only played two shifts in the second period and five in the third, playing in a season-low 10:09. “We talk about it all the time. We show him all the time,” Boudreau said about Zucker’s defensive struggles. “He’s gotta be committed to doing it all the time, not just when you feel like it.”

Bruce Boudreau| Colorado Avalanche| Injury| Los Angeles Kings| Minnesota Wild| Vegas Golden Knights Alex Tuch| Jason Zucker| Mikko Rantanen

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Mikko Rantanen Out “Week-To-Week”

October 23, 2019 at 1:27 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

The Colorado Avalanche seem to have escaped total disaster in regards to Mikko Rantanen. The team announced today that the star forward will be out “week-to-week” with a lower-body injury. That’s obviously better than the fears of an ACL tear after Rantanen crumpled to the ground in Monday’s game. The team will re-evaluate the injury next week.

Rantanen’s injury looked brutal when it happened, as his skate blade caught the ice and twisted his leg awkwardly. Head coach Jared Bednar believes it won’t be a four-to-six type injury, which would be a blessing for a team looking like Stanley Cup contenders in the Western Conference.

The Avalanche are off to an outstanding 7-1-1 record this season and Rantanen represents a huge part of their offensive attack. In his absence Joonas Donskoi was skating on the top line alongside Gabriel Landeskog and Nathan MacKinnon, an incredible opportunity for the former San Jose Sharks forward that signed a four-year deal with Colorado this summer.

Colorado Avalanche| Injury Mikko Rantanen

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Snapshots: Stecher, Rantanen, AHL Suspensions

October 22, 2019 at 4:37 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Vancouver Canucks are sitting at 5-3 through the early part of the season thanks to the strong play of some of their young players, but are still fifth in what is shaping up to be an extremely tough Pacific Division. With the improved roster, one player that has lost some of his ice time is Troy Stecher. He was the topic of discussion on TSN radio today because of a “rumbling” that host Jason Brough had heard about potential trade talks. Insider Bob McKenzie gave his take on the situation:

The same little rumble that you’ve heard, I think everybody has kind of heard it and [are] trying to figure out how much significance to attach to it. But the reality is that if [Tyler] Myers and [Chris] Tanev are both going to be healthy and play ahead of him, then probably you’re right. Then he’s probably not going to love third-pair minutes, and maybe he’s an asset that’s more valuable than that, though not on the Canucks. 

McKenzie noted that if Stecher does become available there would likely be lots of teams interested, but was quick to explain how there might be an issue with how the Canucks would value him compared to what the offers may be. Through the first three years of his NHL career, Stecher has averaged close to 20 minutes a game for the Canucks, but has logged under 14 in six of eight games this season.

  • Colorado Avalanche fans will have to hold their collective breath for one more day as the team will not issue an update on Mikko Rantanen’s injury until Wednesday according to Mike Chambers of the Denver Post. The star forward’s foot got caught on the ice last night and twisted his left leg awkwardly, taking him immediately out of the game. Rantanen was off to another blistering start to his season with 12 points in his first nine games (including one in the eight minutes he managed last night), and hopefully won’t be out long-term with this injury.
  • The AHL has suspended several players for incidents over the last few days. Michael McCarron has been given a two-game ban for interference and Givani Smith has been suspended one game for clipping, while A.J. Greer and Jarred Tinordi have been given six and three games respectively for what happened on Saturday. Greer left the penalty box to fight Tinordi after already participating in a fight, meaning he actually earned himself three game misconducts and 40 penalty minutes all at once.

AHL| Colorado Avalanche| Injury| Snapshots| Suspensions| Vancouver Canucks A.J. Greer| Bob McKenzie| Jarred Tinordi| Michael McCarron| Mikko Rantanen

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Metropolitan Notes: Hischier, Barzal, Murray

October 19, 2019 at 7:33 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 3 Comments

Nico Hischier has been impressive in his first two years in the league since being drafted first-overall in 2017. However, while those numbers have been solid, they haven’t been exceptional either with a 20-goal rookie season the highlight of his career so far. That might make it look like the New Jersey Devils would have preferred to sign a bridge deal with their young prospect, which might give the team more flexibility in the short-term.

However, Chris Ryan of NJ.com writes that both sides made it clear to each other they both wanted a long-term deal, which is what he got in the end when Hischier signed a seven-year, $50.75MM contract on Friday. The 20-year-old made it quite clear that he wanted to stay in a Devils’ uniform and made it clear that signing an extension was a top priority.

“I felt really welcomed since day one here. I was really happy, was treated well,” Hischier said. “They give me the confidence a player needs. So I had no reason why I wouldn’t want to stay here. I was happy they felt the same way, so there wasn’t a lot of back and forth.”

Obviously, if Hischier continues to improve on his game, the $7.25MM AAV could end up being a bargain.

  • Speaking of Hischier’s contract, one person who took note of the deal was New York Islanders forward Mathew Barzal, who has been watching numerous pending restricted free agents already sign long-term deals. Barzal, represented by CAA’s Pat Brisson, will be a restricted free agent this summer, but so far has not signed an extension yet. Barzal says that while he’s noted the RFA signings, he isn’t worried about his contract, according to Newsday’s Andrew Gross. “At this point, it’s really just between my agent and Lou [Lamoriello] right now,” Barzal said. “I don’t talk to Lou about contract stuff. If it happens in the next two months or if it happens in June, it doesn’t really matter to me. I’m just focused on the season right now. “It’s something that eventually is going to happen,” Barzal added. I’m pretty good at just kind of pushing that stuff aside and just worrying about what’s going on right now.” While Hischier walked out with a $7.25MM AAV, Barzal could be getting something even higher, with Gross suggesting he could command a comparable contract to the one that Colorado Avalanche’s Mikko Rantanen signed this summer (six years at $55.5MM, a $9.25MM AAV).
  • The Columbus Blue Jackets were without defenseman Ryan Murray Saturday and will remain day-to-day with an upper-body injury after being injured in Friday’s loss to the Chicago Blackhawks, according to the team. Murray left the game in the third period, playing only one shift and missing the final 17 minutes of the game. The Athletic’s Aaron Portzline reports it’s not considered to be a serious injury. Dean Kukan came in to replace him in the lineup.

Columbus Blue Jackets| Injury| New Jersey Devils| New York Islanders| RFA Mathew Barzal| Mikko Rantanen| Nico Hischier| Ryan Murray

3 comments

Mikko Rantanen Signs Six-Year, $55.5MM Deal With Avalanche

September 28, 2019 at 5:03 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 7 Comments

With a number of key restricted free agents having signed in the last few days, only a few holdouts remain. However, one has come off the board as the Colorado Avalanche have signed star winger Mikko Rantanen to a six-year, $55.5MM contract with an AAV of $9.25MM, according to NHL.com’s Brennan Klak.

“Mikko has established himself as one of the premier young wingers in the NHL and is a big part of our core group,” general manager Joe Sakic said. “We look forward to having him back with the team as we get ready to start the season.”

The breakdown of the deal is here as Rantanen contract is all base salary with no signing bonuses (according to CapFriendly):

2019-20: $12MM base salary
2020-21: $12MM base salary
2021-22: $10MM base salary
2022-23: $6MM base salary
2023-24: $9.5MM base salary
2024-25: $6MM base salary

The deal looks like a good one for the Avalanche if compared to the only other significant long-term deal to compare it to, which was Mitch Marner’s six-year deal worth $65.36MM and a $10.89MM AAV. With Rantanen locked up at $9.25MM and Nathan MacKinnon’s $6.3MM AAV, the team has a young tandem locked up for a inexpensive $15.55MM for the next four years.

Considering Rantanen’s statistical production, Colorado looks to have gotten a steal. Rantanen has potted 80 goals and 209 points over three seasons including a career-high 31 goals and 87 points and many believe that there is plenty more to come. Marner, on the other hand, hasn’t come close to putting up the same points over his three-year span as he has tallied 67 goals and 224 points, yet walked away with the bigger contract, suggesting that Colorado may have walked away with a impressive contract considering what they were up against with the Marner contract hanging over their heads.

The Avalanche still have a significant amount of cap space remaining as Puckpedia reports that Colorado still has $7.1MM remaining in projected cap space even after signing Rantanen to his deal.

As for Rantanen, who is currently overseas, he must pass through immigration before he can come to Colorado, although reports suggest there is still a good chance Rantanen could be available to the team for their season opener on Thursday, Oct. 3 when they play the Calgary Flames at home.

Elliotte Friedman was the first to report on the signing.

Colorado Avalanche| Newsstand| Transactions Elliotte Friedman| Mikko Rantanen

7 comments

Snapshots: Rantanen, Slater, Abramov

September 20, 2019 at 1:40 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 16 Comments

The Colorado Avalanche have been in the headlines constantly thanks to their ongoing negotiations (or lack thereof) with Mikko Rantanen, and today more information came out about the contract talks. Ryan S. Clark of The Athletic reports (subscription required) that the Avalanche are trying to secure a six- to eight-year deal that would carry an average annual value somewhere between $8.4MM and $8.75MM. A three-year term with a $9.5MM cap hit would be a “non-starter” for the Avalanche according to Clark, and that the goal is still to get the young forward signed long-term.

Rantanen’s agent recently posed a comparison between his client and Toronto Maple Leafs forward Mitch Marner, who notably signed a six-year deal as well. Unfortunately for the Avalanche, Marner’s cap hit came in at $10.893MM, quite a bit higher than the reported numbers Colorado is looking for. The Avalanche begin their season on Thursday, October 3rd.

  • The Washington Capitals have hired former NHL forward Jim Slater, adding him to their player development department. Slater spent the last four seasons in Switzerland and announced his retirement earlier this summer. A first-round pick of the Atlanta Thrashers in 2002, Slater played 584 games in the NHL and recorded 138 points.
  • The Montreal Canadiens aren’t the only Canadian team with a young forward dealing with a concussion. Vitaly Abramov of the Ottawa Senators has suffered a concussion as well according to Bruce Garrioch of Postmedia, obviously putting the rest of his training camp in jeopardy. The 21-year old forward made his NHL debut last year after a trade brought him to Ottawa, and was expected to compete for a spot this season.

Colorado Avalanche| Ottawa Senators| Snapshots| Washington Capitals Mikko Rantanen

16 comments

More On Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche

September 19, 2019 at 2:17 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 7 Comments

“The Avs aren’t going to pay Mitch Marner money”

That’s what Pierre LeBrun writes in his latest column for The Athletic (subscription required), which examines some of the ongoing negotiations around the league including the one in Colorado with Avalanche forward Mikko Rantanen. While they aren’t ready to pay up to the $10.893MM average annual value Marner received from the Toronto Maple Leafs, LeBrun reports that the team did make Rantanen a long-term offer earlier this month and that they would match an offer sheet “in a heartbeat.”

Rantanen’s agent Mike Liut hit the airwaves this week and turned some stomachs in Colorado when he compared his client to Marner directly, noting that they both are playmaking wingers (though he admitted they go about their offensive games a bit differently). The 22-year old has actually outscored Marner if you combine the last two seasons, and has 13 more goals in his career despite playing fewer games. It’s hard to argue that the pair don’t belong in the same tax bracket, but the Avalanche apparently don’t see it that way.

The Avalanche have plenty of cap room if they ever wanted to go that high, but still have to worry about a few other contracts down the line. Nathan MacKinnon is locked into one of the best contracts in the league for the next four years, but Gabriel Landeskog, Philipp Grubauer and Cale Makar will all need new deals in the summer of 2021. Obviously there is time to handle those negotiations even if Rantanen gets a big deal, but locking him into “Marner money” won’t be the outcome here.

Colorado Avalanche Mikko Rantanen

7 comments

Poll: Which Star RFA Is Most Likely To Miss Games?

September 18, 2019 at 4:44 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 11 Comments

We’re now exactly two weeks from the start of the 2019-20 NHL regular season and eight* restricted free agents are still without contracts. While a few of those names represent depth or role players, five names stand out as potentially disastrous situations. Brayden Point, Mikko Rantanen, Matthew Tkachuk, Kyle Connor and Patrik Laine have all shown superstar ability in their short careers and would be huge talents to leave on the sideline when the season begins. All five forwards scored at least 30 goals last season, with Laine registering the fewest points (50) and Point the most (92).

It’s hard to know exactly when any of them will finally break down the barrier and report to camp at this point. Rantanen and Laine are skating in Switzerland, Tkachuk is with his old OHL team and there have been reports about nearly all of them that things still aren’t close. Just a few days ago Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic tweeted that last offer from the Tampa Bay Lightning to Point was a three-year deal that carried just a $5.7MM average annual value. That would represent a much lower number than someone like Mitch Marner signed for, but Tampa Bay has long maintained the philosophy of low-cost bridge deals for their star players coming out of the entry-level system.

It seems likely then that at least one of these five will miss games at the start of the season. Preseason games have already started without them in training camp and opening night is quickly approaching. But who is the most likely to be without a contract on October 2nd? Cast your vote below and make sure to explain your thoughts in the comment section.

Which star RFA is most likely to miss games?
Patrik Laine, Winnipeg Jets 64.24% (812 votes)
Brayden Point, Tampa Bay Lightning 15.19% (192 votes)
Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche 10.28% (130 votes)
Matthew Tkachuk, Calgary Flames 8.47% (107 votes)
Kyle Connor, Winnipeg Jets 1.82% (23 votes)
Total Votes: 1,264

[Mobile users click here to vote]

*There are actually several other RFAs that do not have NHL contracts, but they have already signed elsewhere around the globe to play in other leagues.

Polls Brayden Point| Kyle Connor| Matthew Tkachuk| Mikko Rantanen| Patrik Laine

11 comments

Latest On Patrik Laine, Mikko Rantanen

September 18, 2019 at 12:01 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 4 Comments

When the Mitch Marner saga came to an end, some believed that it would move along some of the other restricted free agent negotiations around the league. That may not be the case for two Finnish forwards, who are currently training overseas. Mikko Rantanen and Patrik Laine are both practicing with SC Bern of the Swiss NLA, and don’t appear close to new deals with the Colorado Avalanche and Winnipeg Jets respectively. In fact, their agent Mike Liut joined Sportsnet radio this morning and talked about the negotiations, bluntly stating that they’re “not close” on either player. Liut went on to draw comparisons for one of his clients to Marner:

I think that Mitch Marner and Mikko Rantanen are probably the two closest comparables in terms of how they play the game. Where you have wingers that are adept at creating offense for those that they’re playing with. They do it maybe a little bit differently. Mikko’s 225 (lbs) and Mitch is not, but Mitch is a carrier and a great player. The Leafs have really looked into the future. You’re going to have a salary cap at $81.5MM, there’s no growth factor, one half of one percent. History has shown what the league does on a year-over-year basis, it’s going to 2.5% revenue growth.

Your top line, your top three players whether they’re defensemen or forwards are going to be in that range that the Leafs have created.

Liut also discussed how teams are going to have to roll through players on a more constant basis in order to keep their top players paid. Laine and Rantanen both certainly want to be compensated like top players, and it’s easy to see why. Laine has scored 110 goals in his three-year career, one of the highest rates in the league thanks to his incredible shot and ability to float away from traffic at the right time. Though his overall point totals declined sharply last season, goal-scorers are rewarded handsomely in the NHL and Laine should be no different.

Rantanen meanwhile has become one of the most impressive offensive players in the league, recording 171 points over the last two seasons. While some of that is because of his time with Nathan MacKinnon, there’s no doubting Rantanen’s talent. The tenth overall pick from 2015, Rantanen stands 6’4″ but has the puck skills and playmaking ability often associated with much smaller players. Even in the playoffs where young players often struggle, the Colorado forward led his club with 14 points in 12 games and was a force on the ice on almost every shift. If his camp truly sees a direct comparison to Marner, they must be looking for a pretty big raise. The Toronto Maple Leafs forward recently signed a six-year deal worth more than $65MM, putting him among the top handful of salaries ($10.893MM AAV) in the NHL.

While both are practicing overseas at the moment, Liut downplayed the idea that either one would sign with a European club even if the contract included an NHL-out clause. That should settle some nerves in Colorado and Winnipeg, but if contracts aren’t close at this point there should be real concern that the Finns will miss a good chunk of training camp or perhaps even the start of the regular season.

Colorado Avalanche| Winnipeg Jets Mikko Rantanen| Patrik Laine

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