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Nate Schmidt

Western Notes: Kase, Sikura, Schmidt, Gurianov

November 11, 2018 at 4:30 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 1 Comment

Good news for the Anaheim Ducks as the team learned today that barring a setback, forward Ondrej Kase is expected to make his debut on Monday, according to Eric Stephens of The Athletic. Kase has been reportedly skating on a line with teammates Ryan Kesler and Nick Ritchie.

Many people felt that Kase might take his game to a new level this year after posting a 20-goal season a year ago. The 23-year-old, however, suffered a concussion during the team’s final preseason game and has been out since then. The former seventh-round pick has done a nice job working his way through the Ducks’ system and earning a full-time role with the team. He was rewarded over the summer with a three-year, $7.8MM ($2.6MM AAV) bridge deal. Hopefully, he can step in right away and help out a struggling team that has gone 2-7-2 in their last 11 games.

  • NBC Sports’ Charlie Roumeliotis suggests that new Chicago Blackhawks head coach Jeremy Colliton will be keeping a close eye on his former team, the Rockford Ice Hogs as its very likely he will want to continue the team’s youth movement by bringing up several of their top players from there at some point during the season. At the top of the list would likely be winger Dylan Sikura, who is faring well there in his rookie campaign after four years at Northeastern University. Sikura has five goals and 12 points in 15 AHL games. “First of all, I care about the team, I care about the players, I care about the people who are down there,” said Colliton. “So it’s only natural for me to keep my fingers on the pulse. But we want to build as much depth as we can within this group and that includes the guys in Rockford. Because there are going to be injuries, and we want competition, that it’s not a given you’re going to play or not a given you’re going to have a certain role and that’s healthy for everyone and it’s going to push everyone to be better.”
  • The Vegas Golden Knights should get a boost in one week when suspended defenseman Nate Schmidt becomes eligible to return. The speedy defenseman has been missed by his team as they struggle through the early part of the schedule. SinBin Vegas’ Steve Carp writes that Schmidt should immediately return to the role as the team’s leader in minutes played and shutdown defender as well inject both special teams’ units with his talents. However, the team doesn’t have the luxury of easing him in as other teams might considering the team’s inability to string together wins.
  • Despite scoring his first NHL goal of his career, Dallas Stars prospect Denis Gurianov was returned back to the AHL Sunday and while the 21-year-old impressed, The Athletic’s Sean Shapiro reports that the team made the move for cap reasons. Regardless, the team believes that while Gurianov has come a long way since last season when he was scratched during multiple games in the AHL playoffs, he still hasn’t done enough to force his way into a permanent role with Dallas.

AHL| Anaheim Ducks| Chicago Blackhawks| Dallas Stars| Vegas Golden Knights Dylan Sikura| Nate Schmidt| Nick Ritchie| Ondrej Kase

1 comment

Snapshots: Bouchard, Raanta, Schmidt

November 7, 2018 at 3:48 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The London Knights have announced their new leadership group for the 2018-19 season now that several key players have returned, and Edmonton Oilers defenseman Evan Bouchard has been given the captaincy once again. Bouchard played seven games for the Oilers before being sent back to junior for the rest of the year, and should immediately step into his role playing nearly 30 minutes a night for London. One of the most effective players in the OHL, Bouchard will also likely be a key member of the Canadian World Junior squad in the coming months.

Joining him with letters for the Knights are several other well known prospects, including Alex Formenton of the Ottawa Senators and Liam Foudy of the Columbus Blue Jackets. Formenton played nine games for the Senators this season and scored his first NHL goal, while Foudy was the 18th-overall pick in June after dominating the NHL Draft Combine. William Lochead and Cole Tymkin, both undrafted, will round out the group of alternates for the Knights this season.

  • Antti Raanta will be out at least a few days with a lower-body injury for the Arizona Coyotes, meaning they were forced to recall Hunter Miska under emergency conditions. Craig Morgan of The Athletic adds that Raanta has subsequently been placed on IR and will be out until November 13th at the earliest.  Miska will serve as the backup to Darcy Kuemper for tomorrow’s game in Philadelphia, but perhaps he will be forced into action before too long given the team has a back-to-back against Pittsburgh and Washington that are scheduled fewer than 24 hours apart.
  • Though the Vegas Golden Knights will be without Erik Haula for at least a few games—and perhaps many more given the optics of last night’s injury—they welcomed back another familiar face to practice today. Nate Schmidt was back on the ice with the team, and can now take full part of practice as he waits out the last ten days of his PED suspension. November 18th is the first game action Schmidt is eligible for, when the Golden Knights head to Edmonton to take on Connor McDavid and the Oilers.

Columbus Blue Jackets| Edmonton Oilers| Injury| London Knights| OHL| Ottawa Senators| Prospects| Schedule| Snapshots| Utah Mammoth| Vegas Golden Knights Antti Raanta| Darcy Kuemper| Erik Haula| Hunter Miska| Nate Schmidt

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Atlantic Notes: Gardiner, Kotkaniemi, Abdelkader, Rask

October 27, 2018 at 5:32 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 3 Comments

Even though the Toronto Maple Leafs have their hands full with the contract negotiations with William Nylander and the future negotiations with Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner, The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun (subscription required) writes that the team also will likely have issues with defenseman Jake Gardiner.

The scribe writes that while Gardiner has expressed his desire to remain with Toronto long-term and general manager Kyle Dubas has met up with Gardiners’ representative, Pat Brisson, it’s likely that Gardiner will have to wait until the contracts of Nylander, Matthews and Marner are finalized, which could edge him out if those players don’t take hometown discounts. Regardless, after Nate Schmidt signed for $5.95MM AAV a few days ago, Gardiner could get quite a bit more on the open market especially with so few quality blueliners available on the free agent market next season. He might be able to command $7MM per year. However, he will likely have to take less than $6MM if he wants to remain in Toronto.

  • Pat Hickey of the Montreal Gazette writes that today’s game against the Boston Bruins will be the 10th game for rookie Jesperi Kotkaniemi, signifiying that the team intends to burn the first year of the 18-year-old’s entry-level contract. While a few weeks ago, a move like this might have been in doubt, Kotkaniemi has shown considerable improvement over the past couple of weeks, making this move automatic for the team. He is averaging 14:04 ATOI and has four assists through his first nine games. Head coach Claude Julien compared him to Boston’s David Pastrnak at the same age. “They’re both guys who had to fill out and get stronger, but you can see the kill level,” said Julien. “With both players, you have to protect them a bit and that’s what I’ve done with K-K. It’s a little tougher when you’re on the road and you don’t get the last line change but he’s been in tough situations and he’s handled them well.”
  • Helene St. James of the Detroit Free-Press writes that one of the biggest problems to the Detroit Red Wings dismal performance through the first 10 games of the season has been the play of some of the veterans, especially the performance of Justin Abdelkader, who not only is quite offensively with one assist in 10 games, but is also struggling playing his physical brand of hockey. “You want to physically be engaged every game,” Abdelkader said. “You look for hits, and they’re definitely harder to come by in this game now. But that’s a part of my game. I’ve felt really good — had a really good summer, good training camp.”
  • In a mailbag series, NBC Sports Joe Haggerty questions whether Boston Bruins goaltender Tuukka Rask is really a No. 1 goalie, pointing out that he struggles when he is used regularly, which forced the Bruins to sign Jaroslav Halak to a $2.75MM contract. A true No. 1 goaltender wouldn’t require a team to pay that much for a backup and play 30 games for him. Add to that that Rask is known to be a slow starter and really struggles when the defense in front of him isn’t at their best, Haggerty doesn’t believe that the team currently can look at him as a top-rated goalie.

Boston Bruins| Claude Julien| Detroit Red Wings| Toronto Maple Leafs Auston Matthews| David Pastrnak| Jake Gardiner| Jaroslav Halak| Jesperi Kotkaniemi| Justin Abdelkader| Mitch Marner| Nate Schmidt

3 comments

Nate Schmidt Signs Six-Year Extension With Vegas Golden Knights

October 25, 2018 at 8:20 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

Now we know why Nate Schmidt had returned early from Europe. The Vegas Golden Knights announced late last night that Schmidt has signed a six-year extension with the team, a deal which carries an average annual value of $5.95MM through the 2024-25 season. Schmidt was scheduled to become an unrestricted free agent in the summer, but has spoken about his love for the Golden Knights in the past. The deal also includes a 10-team no-trade clause, and is front loaded:

  • 2019-20: $6.8MM salary + $2.0MM signing bonus
  • 2020-21: $6.1MM salary
  • 2021-22: $6.0MM salary
  • 2022-23: $5.0MM salary
  • 2023-24: $4.95MM salary
  • 2024-25: $4.85MM salary

Schmidt, 27, is still dealing with a 20-game suspension for a positive banned substance test in the offseason, and will not be eligible to return to game action for the Golden Knights until November 18th against the Edmonton Oilers. Though the defenseman vehemently denies taking any sort of performance enhancing drug, he’s serving his suspension and had been practicing in Austria with a professional team. Staying game-ready is important at this point, as the Golden Knights will likely put a ton on Schmidt’s plate as soon as he’s eligible to return.

After being picked from the Washington Capitals in the expansion draft, Schmidt immediately saw a huge increase in responsibility and turned in a career-best performance in 2017-18. Logging more than 22 minutes a night in the regular season, the smooth-skating defenseman recorded 36 points in 76 games and then was pushed even further in the playoffs to help Vegas climb all the way to the Stanley Cup Finals. One of the most important players on the team, his absence has been felt in the early going of this season.

The Golden Knights are off to a shaky start in 2018-19, posting a 4-4-1 record through their first nine games including a loss last night to the Vancouver Canucks in overtime. For the team that shocked the hockey world on a nightly basis a year ago, things haven’t gone quite as smoothly in their sophomore effort. Getting Schmidt back will certainly help that, and locking him up going forward allows them to build around him in the coming years.

Those years though don’t come without substantial risk. While Schmidt has been good for the team so far, he still does have just 276 NHL games under his belt and will turn 28 before the extension kicks in. An undrafted free agent from the University of Minnesota, he’ll need to provide even more offense for the Golden Knights to really warrant a deal of this magnitude. Schmidt would have been highly sought after on the unrestricted market, but the direct comparables to this deal don’t paint a very pretty picture. Jeff Petry, Andrew MacDonald, Marc Staal, Jonathan Ericsson and Andrej Sekera are the five closest contracts according to CapFriendly, a group that inspires very little confidence at this point. Still, the Golden Knights believe they have a player who can be a key contributor for them as they attempt to get back to the Stanley Cup right away.

The attempt to compete right away was likely caused by the unprecedented success Vegas experienced last season as an expansion team, but also could be misguided at this point in team history. While last season was an outstanding performance from all involved, signing contracts like this has quickly taken away any long-term advantage the Golden Knights had with their empty balance sheet. The team at one point had oodles of cap space available to use as leverage in trade talks, taking on bad contracts in order to beef up their prospect cupboards, but have used up almost all of it on their key contributors from last season and a few new faces.

Jon Marchessault, Alex Tuch, Max Pacioretty, Paul Stastny, Shea Theodore, Colin Miller, Brayden McNabb, Marc-Andre Fleury and now Schmidt have all signed contracts or extensions of at least three years in length, and now make up the do-or-die core of the team. That group of nine players will be owed nearly $48MM next season and beyond, while the team also has a long-term commitment still with Reilly Smith and will likely sign one with William Karlsson before long. There’s obviously nothing wrong with building around a group like that, but the Golden Knights no longer have that unprecedented advantage of having an empty salary structure.

Still, that’s obviously a decision they’re willing to make to sign players like Schmidt long-term. The team has built a strong fan base in Vegas and around the league, and have ensured that they’ll be at least competitive with this group for years to come. Whether it’s good enough to really contend for the Stanley Cup down the line is yet to be seen, but it’ll at least be a fun ride while we find out.

Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic reported the contract breakdown.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Newsstand| Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights Nate Schmidt

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Snapshots: Schmidt, Versteeg, Wolski

October 23, 2018 at 6:19 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Nate Schmidt is still weeks away from making his season debut, but he’s taking his first step toward returning to normality. Schmidt, who was suspended 20 games for testing positive for a banned substance in violation of the NHL’s PED policy, opted to spend the early season in Europe. Schmidt has been practicing with the Vienna Capitals of Austria’s EBEL this month, but is now wrapping up his time with the team. Sports Illustrated’s Alex Prewitt reports that Schmidt plans to return to North America in the next week as the month of October comes to an end. With close to a month still remaining before his 20 games are up and he can return to game action with Vegas, Schmidt will not go right back to his current squad. Instead, Prewitt adds that he will join his former team at the University of Minnesota as a practice participant for a short period of time. However, Prewitt notes that the CBA allows Schmidt to join the Golden Knights in a limited capacity beginning on November 8th. At that time, he can join in team meetings and practices. November 18th, a road game against the Edmonton Oilers, will mark Schmidt’s official return to the team. While the defense has held up in Schmidt’s absence, the defending Western Conference champs are only a .500 team through eight games and the third-worst offense in the league. Schmidt, who was second among defensemen and ninth overall in points for Vegas last year, will be a welcome addition to a team that needs a spark early this season.

  • Kris Versteeg’s season overseas was short-lived. The veteran winger was unable to find NHL employment this off-season and ended up signing with the KHL’s Avangard Omsk in early September. However, NHL.com’s European insider Igor Eronko reports that Versteeg is leaving the team to return to North America. Eronko did not have any more information on the reasoning behind Versteeg’s early exit, but this isn’t the first time that the 32-year-old forward has backed out of an opportunity abroad. Versteeg signed in Switzerland back in the summer of 2016, only to terminate his contract before ever playing with the club, the NLA’s SC Bern, allegedly due to medical insurance issues. He soon after committed to a PTO with the Edmonton Oilers that turned into a contract with the Calgary Flames. Perhaps Versteeg again senses an opportunity back in the NHL and has found a way out of his KHL obligations. For his part, TSN’s Darren Dreger states that Versteeg has been sick with shingles and proffers this could be the primary reason for the departure. One way or another, Versteeg’s time with Avangard is over after just 11 games and we will soon know about about his immediate plans.
  • One player not returning to the NHL, despite some speculation, is forward Wojtek Wolski. Wolski recently terminated his contract with KHL club Mettalurg Magnitogorsk and was seeking a new place to play. That appears to be limited to either remaining in the KHL or moving to the NLA in Switzerland, rather than a return to North America, per a report from a Swiss news source. A return to the NHL for the 32-year-old Wolski, now six years separated from his last action at the highest level, was always a stretch, but many fans would not have minded seeing the Polish-Canadian star try his hand at a comeback.

CBA| Calgary Flames| KHL| NLA| Snapshots| Vegas Golden Knights| Washington Capitals Kris Versteeg| Nate Schmidt

1 comment

Snapshots: Bobrovsky, Flyers Defense, O’Reilly, Holden, Gurianov

October 21, 2018 at 5:56 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 4 Comments

This offseason could be a very interesting one assuming that teams don’t lock all the potential unrestricted free agents to contract extensions in the coming months. The Athletic’s Craig Custance (subscription required) breaks down the top 25 UFA’s this coming offseason with an update on how contract negotiations are going.

One interesting note is for the No. 3 UFA in Columbus Blue Jackets’ Sergei Bobrovsky, who is rumored to be asking for Carey Price money (around $10.5MM). That might be too much money for Columbus to offer, especially for a 30-year-old goaltender. Custance adds that the team could easily get outbid for the netminder’s services by the New York Islanders who might be extremely aggressive in adding a franchise-changing goaltender. Islanders’ general manager Lou Lamoriello is known to be a big fan of impact goaltenders, which goes all the way back to Martin Brodeur when he was in New Jersey.

After all, in 315 games between Philadelphia and Columbus, Bobrovsky has a .922 save percentage, two Vezina Trophies and has finished in the top 10 in Vezina voting four times.

  • The Philadelphia Flyers had lost four of six games before Saturday’s game and Sam Carchidi of Philly.com writes that head coach Dave Hakstol decided to make a change as he separated his top pair defensemen in Shayne Gostisbehere and Ivan Provorov which turned out to be key in their 5-2 win over New Jersey. Gostisbehere was matched with Christian Folin, while Provorov was paired with Robert Hagg. The top four held to the Devils to just 21 shots on goal in the victory. Provorov was also much more noticeable on the offensive end of the ice. Previously held to just one point in the first seven games of the season, the 21-year-old posted two assists on Saturday. “(Hagg) is a little heavier body to play with Provy in some of those situations,” said Hakstol. “He obviously has a different look than Ghost. He doesn’t do as much with the puck, but he provides a heavier presence, so that changes the look of that pair.”
  • Speaking of lines, the St. Louis Blues shook up their lines Saturday as well as center Ryan O’Reilly found himself with two new wingers Zachary Sanford and David Perron on the second line, according to St. Louis Post-Dispatch’s Jim Thomas. After his line put up two goals and three assists Saturday (including O’Reilly’s first goal as a member of the Blues), that line may not break up any time soon. “I thought ’O’Ry’ was outstanding obviously in all areas of the game,” Yeo said. “So that line gave us some really good minutes.”
  • NHL.com’s Gary Lawless writes that some of the Vegas Golden Knights’ success in their last three games comes from moving defenseman Nick Holden into the top-four. The veteran defenseman was originally signed to serve as a third pairing defenseman this offseason, but with Nate Schmidt (suspension) and Deryk Engelland (injury) both out, Holden has filled in admirably, averaging 18:54 ATOI. Holden did have a similar role back in 2016-17 when he was with the New York Rangers, so the 31-year-old already has quite a bit of experience playing in that role.
  • After a postseason run last year where Dallas Stars prospect Denis Gurianov was often a healthy scratch and was beginning to look like a bust, the 21-year-old seems to have turned the corner early this season as he has been dominant as he enters his third year with the AHL, writes SportsDay’s Matthew DeFranks. The 12th-overall pick in the 2015 draft is starting to show off his potential as he is riding a five-game scoring streak and has five goals and seven points in seven games.

Columbus Blue Jackets| Dallas Stars| Dave Hakstol| Lou Lamoriello| New York Islanders| Philadelphia Flyers| Snapshots| St. Louis Blues| Vegas Golden Knights Carey Price| Christian Folin| David Perron| Ivan Provorov| Nate Schmidt| Nick Holden| Robert Hagg| Sergei Bobrovsky| Zach Sanford

4 comments

NHL Grants Suspended Tom Wilson “Non-Roster Player” Status

October 10, 2018 at 7:19 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 8 Comments

The Washington Capitals activated defenseman Michal Kempny from the injured reserve today, but it’s what they didn’t do that’s making headlines. The Capitals made no corresponding move after adding Kempny to the roster, presumably leaving them with more than the CBA-allotted 23 roster players. How this was possible sent reporters scrambling for information. What they found was both surprising and potentially dangerous.

It turns out that the Capitals had not exceeded the roster limit, as suspended forward Tom Wilson had been granted “non-roster player” status. CapFriendly relays the information from the Washington Post’s Isabelle Khurshudyan, while adding some context to what that label means. A “non-roster player” does not count against the roster, allowing the Capitals to activate Kempny by discounting Wilson. The CBA states that “non-roster player” status must be specifically granted by the Commissioner  and it is reserved for special instances of non-injury absence. Among the examples given are the birth of a child or bereavement. Notably not present is suspension and there is little precedent for suspended players being placed on this list. Granted, a suspension is a non-injury absence, but use of the “non-roster” exemption begs the question of whether teams should share in the punishment of a suspension.

Wilson’s 20-game suspension for yet another illegal check, this time to the head of St. Louis Blues forward Oskar Sundqvist in the preseason, is obviously a blow to Capitals. They won’t have their menacing power forward for the first quarter of the season, perhaps when they need him most as the defending Stanley Cup champs who everyone wants to play hard against. Yet, shouldn’t Washington also bear the weight of one of their regular players being worthy of such as suspension? Why should the team that employs a frequent offender be given a roster exemption and added flexibility while he remains out? The San Jose Sharks were given this same treatment when Raffi Torres was suspended for half of the 2015-16 season, CapFriendly reports, so the league is seemingly comfortable with using the “non-roster player” exemption for suspensions, but there are certainly reasons that they shouldn’t be.

The next question is where do they draw the line? It seems that the NHL is heading down a slippery slope by using this exemption for suspensions and could be setting a dangerous precedent. Case in point: the Capitals are enjoying Wilson’s “non-roster” status through 20 games for a dirty hit, whereas the Vegas Golden Knights have seemingly not been afforded the same luxury for defenseman Nate Schmidt’s 20-game suspension for a failed drug test on little more than a technicality. Why are the two treated differently? Why aren’t all suspended players exempt from the roster limit? The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler opines that the NHL has gone “down the rabbit hole” with this decision and now nothing is stopping every team from requesting a “non-roster player” exemption for each and every suspension. The league simply can’t go case-by-case and assign “non-roster” status behind the scenes. A can of worms has been opened and a blanket policy on the “non-roster player” status of suspended players seems to be the only solution.

CBA| Injury| Legal| St. Louis Blues| Suspensions| Vegas Golden Knights| Washington Capitals Michal Kempny| Nate Schmidt| Oskar Sundqvist

8 comments

Minor Transactions: 10/03/18

October 3, 2018 at 2:13 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The NHL season will get underway in just a few hours, and teams have already started tinkering with their rosters. Throughout the year we’ll keep track of all the minor moves around the league and elsewhere in the hockey world.

  • The Colorado Avalanche are sending Dominic Toninato to the AHL for the time being, signaling that one of their injured players may be close to returning to the lineup.  Mike Chambers of the Denver Post also tweets that the team is likely to carry fewer than 23 players at times during this season, given the new geographical proximity of their primary affiliate. The Colorado Eagles joined the AHL this season, giving the Avalanche a team that they can quickly get players up from on short notice.
  • Nate Schmidt won’t be with the Vegas Golden Knights for the next 20 games after his PED suspension, but that doesn’t mean he won’t be on the ice with a professional team. Schmidt—hilariously, given his former team in Washington—will practice with the Vienna Capitals in Austria while he waits out his NHL ban.
  • The Columbus Blue Jackets have activated Ryan Murray from injured reserve in time for their opener, while moving Scott Harrington to the IR with his concussion. Murray has a lot to prove this season after signing a one-year deal in the offseason, and should get increased opportunity with Seth Jones starting the year on the shelf.
  • It didn’t take long for the Detroit Red Wings to bring some players back up, as Ansar Khan of MLive reports that Filip Hronek, Joe Hicketts and Luke Witkowski have all been recalled. The trio were sent down to finalize the roster this week, but with Jonathan Ericsson and Niklas Kronwall being moved to injured reserve, reinforcements were needed.
  • Emerson Etem had his NHL tryout ended this week, but has signed another one with the Ontario Reign. Etem is trying to catch on somewhere and show that he still has some of that immense potential he showed early in his career. The 26-year old has played so few games over the last few years that it’s hard to believe he’ll be back in the NHL at some point, but he’s still a name to keep an eye on.

AHL| Colorado Avalanche| Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights| Washington Capitals Dominic Toninato| Nate Schmidt

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Pacific Notes: Brannstrom, Goldobin, Rattie, Suomela

September 22, 2018 at 5:15 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg Leave a Comment

The Vegas Goldent Knights are in a much different situation than they were a season ago when there were little to no expectations in front of them. The team made the decision to protect their young prospects, returning them all to juniors as well as sending several key prospects such as Shea Theodore and Alex Tuch to the Chicago Wolves of the AHL at the start of the season to protect as many of their players as possible.

However, this year looks like a whole different story. With the team without Nate Schmidt for 20 games and Theodore, who is holding out without a contract, there are many opportunities available to their young defensive prospects and several of them remain in camp, including Erik Brannstrom, Nicolas Hague and Jake Bischoff and it’s possible the team may keep one of them. Ken Boehlke of SinBin Vegas writes that head coach Gerard Gallant may have tipped his hand when asked about the prospects today.

“It’s always been we’re taking our best players,” said Gallant. “It’s not like the situation we had last year, if that’s what your trying to get to, it’s not like that situation, we want to win it’s a completely different scenario than it was last year.”

At the moment, the scribe writes that Brannstrom, the Golden Knights’ 15th-overall pick in 2017 is the leading candidate to win a NHL job. However, Hague, the team’s second-rounder in 2017, has also been extremely impressive on the power play.

  • J.D. Burke of The Athletic (subscription required) released his stock report and writes that Vancouver Canucks winger Nikolay Goldobin has really impressed the team in the preseason and has his stock soaring high. The winger had a strong end-run with the Canucks late last season and the team had hoped that the 22-year-old might continue that streak this year. Goldobin has thrived on the team’s first line next to rookie Elias Pettersson and veteran Sven Baertschi. He’s improved his play and has proven to be both fitter and faster this season.
  • Terry Jones of the Edmonton Sun writes that the Edmonton Oilers should be happy with the impressive play of many of their young wingers, including Ty Rattie, Kailer Yamamoto and Jesse Puljujarvi. Rattie may be the most impressive player so far as the 25-year-old has potted four goals and three assists in just two preseason games and is expected to play on the team’s first line alongside Connor McDavid and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins when the regular season begins.
  • When the San Jose Sharks included center Chris Tierney in the Erik Karlsson trade with the Ottawa Senators, it opened up a spot in the Sharks lineup and two youngsters are quietly fighting hard for that center position, according to The Mercury News’ Curtis Pashelka. Both Antti Suomela and Rourke Chartier have been impressive in recent preseason games as Suomela had two goals and an assist in his second preseason game on Thursday, while Chartier has had a goal and three assists in two games. Suomela came over from Finland’s Liiga after posting 43 goals over the last two seasons there. Cartier suffered through an injury-plagued season with the San Jose Barracuda in which he played in just 28 games, but still produced 21 points in that time.

Edmonton Oilers| Gerard Gallant| San Jose Sharks| Vancouver Canucks| Vegas Golden Knights Alex Tuch| Antti Suomela| Chris Tierney| Connor McDavid| Elias Pettersson| Erik Brannstrom| Erik Karlsson| Jesse Puljujarvi| Kailer Yamamoto| Nate Schmidt| Nikolay Goldobin

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Shea Theodore, Vegas Golden Knights Not Close On Contract

September 17, 2018 at 4:31 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 6 Comments

Though Darnell Nurse and Josh Morrissey have both ended their contract negotiations the last few days and signed with their respective organizations, John Shannon of Sportsnet cautions any optimism that Shea Theodore could follow suit. Shannon reports that the Vegas Golden Knights and Theodore are not close to a deal currently, though obviously that could change at a moment’s notice.

Theodore, 23, is in a slightly different situation than his contemporaries, given that he has just 114 NHL games under his belt through three seasons. Even in 2017-18 he began the year in the minor leagues due to Vegas roster constraints, and ended up playing in just 61 games with the club. That obviously changed in the playoffs, where Theodore was a core piece of the blue line led all Golden Knights defensemen with 10 points in 20 games, but the team can still point to a relative lack of experience in negotiations in order to keep his cap hit down.

It’s not clear what exactly Theodore is looking for, but with the Golden Knights already without Nate Schmidt for a quarter of the season due to suspension the young defenseman does hold a fair bit leverage even in a situation where the free agent is normally at a disadvantage. Without Schmidt or Theodore in the lineup the Golden Knights really lack a puck-moving option on the left side, and could struggle to get it quickly out of their end and up to the talented forwards. Nick Holden could potentially fill part of that role, but has a ton of experience playing on the right side despite his left handedness.

Unlike Morrissey and Nurse, the Golden Knights do have the financial situation to extend Theodore long-term if they choose. While the Oilers are pushed right up to the cap already, and the Jets will be a year from now when they have to re-sign Patrik Laine, Kyle Connor, Tyler Myers and Jacob Trouba, the Golden Knights have plenty of cap room to work with going forward even after the recent Max Pacioretty extension. If the team wanted to buy out unrestricted free agent years—something that is by no means certain—they could afford the extra bump in cap space in the short term.

Still, Theodore may have cause to prefer a bridge deal himself. After putting up 29 points in those 61 regular season games last season, and knowing that Schmidt will be out for the first part of the season, there is reason to believe that Theodore could easily come close to or even eclipse a 50-point season given ample powerplay usage. That kind of output would set him up for a much bigger deal down the road after he’s proven he can stay healthy and productive for a full season, an opportunity he may not want to give up by signing long-term right now.

Vegas Golden Knights Darnell Nurse| Josh Morrissey| Nate Schmidt| Shea Theodore

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