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Oliver Ekman-Larsson

2021 King Clancy Trophy Nominees Announced

May 18, 2021 at 11:05 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

The NHL has announced the 31 nominees for the King Clancy Memorial Trophy, annually presented to “the player who best exemplifies leadership qualities on and off the ice and has made a noteworthy humanitarian contribution in his community.” Last year’s winner was Matt Dumba of the Minnesota Wild.

Each team submits one nominee. This year’s are:

Anaheim: Cam Fowler

Arizona: Oliver Ekman-Larsson

Boston: Charlie Coyle

Buffalo: Jack Eichel

Calgary: Mikael Backlund

Carolina: Jordan Staal

Chicago: Connor Murphy

Colorado: Pierre-Edouard Bellemare

Columbus: Cam Atkinson

Dallas: Esa Lindell

Detroit: Dylan Larkin

Edmonton: Kyle Turris

Florida: Sergei Bobrovsky

Los Angeles: Trevor Moore

Minnesota: Mats Zuccarello

Montreal: Jonathan Drouin

Nashville: Pekka Rinne

New Jersey: P.K. Subban

NY Islanders: Anders Lee

NY Rangers: Chris Kreider

Ottawa: Thomas Chabot

Philadelphia: Scott Laughton

Pittsburgh: Sidney Crosby

San Jose: Kurtis Gabriel

St. Louis: Ryan O’Reilly

Tampa Bay: Alex Killorn

Toronto: John Tavares

Vancouver: Tyler Motte

Vegas: Marc-Andre Fleury

Washington: Garnet Hathaway

Winnipeg: Blake Wheeler

Uncategorized Alex Killorn| Anders Lee| Blake Wheeler| Cam Atkinson| Cam Fowler| Charlie Coyle| Chris Kreider| Connor Murphy| Dylan Larkin| Esa Lindell| Garnet Hathaway| Jack Eichel| John Tavares| Jonathan Drouin| Jordan Staal| Kyle Turris| Marc-Andre Fleury| Mats Zuccarello| Mikael Backlund| Oliver Ekman-Larsson| P.K. Subban| Pekka Rinne| Scott Laughton| Sergei Bobrovsky| Sidney Crosby| Thomas Chabot| Trevor Moore| Tyler Motte

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Oliver Ekman-Larsson To Miss Several Weeks

January 18, 2021 at 5:21 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Though he was listed as day-to-day over the weekend, the recovery timeline for Arizona Coyotes captain Oliver Ekman-Larsson appears to have changed. The team confirmed to Jose M. Romero of AZ Central that the captain will be out for three to four weeks with a lower-body injury. Kyle Capobianco is expected to be inserted into the lineup in his place.

Ekman-Larsson, 29, was embroiled in trade rumors over the offseason that included him willing to waive his no-trade clause to go to Vancouver or Boston, but after nothing came of it he focused on the season and the Coyotes. In Saturday’s game he had three assists before exiting in the third period following a hit from San Jose Sharks forward Evander Kane, ending what was a brilliant start to his season. Missing the next several weeks in such a condensed schedule means he’ll be out for a good chunk of games.

In fact, four weeks would mean he could miss 14 games, a quarter of the 56-game schedule. That’s a huge blow for an Arizona team that is competing for the playoffs in a lopsided West division. While many expect the Vegas Golden Knights, Colorado Avalanche, and St. Louis Blues to easily make the playoffs, that fourth spot is certainly up for the taking and the Coyotes are off to a nice start with three points in their first two games. In Ekman-Larsson’s absence, they’ll need a huge effort from some of their other veteran defenders to pick up the slack.

Injury| Utah Mammoth Oliver Ekman-Larsson

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West Notes: Ekman-Larsson, Johnson, Vegas, San Diego Gulls

January 17, 2021 at 3:04 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 1 Comment

While there was some concern that he might miss significant time, Arizona Coyotes head coach Rick Tocchet said that defenseman Oliver Ekman-Larsson, who took a big hit from San Jose’s Evander Kane (video here), Saturday, is considered to be day-to-day with a lower-body injury, although he is expected to skip the road trip to Las Vegas, according to azcsports’ Jose Romero. That likely means he will miss at least two games.

Ekman-Larsson was forced to leave the game and only played 17:11 Saturday, but still managed to pick up three assists. No word on who will be recalled to replace him, but Coyotes’ insider Craig Morgan believes it will either be Kyle Capobianco or Jordan Gross.

  • The Colorado Avalanche got some good news as veteran defenseman Erik Johnson returned to the Avalanche after missing training camp, while dealing with a positive COVID-19 test and quarantining,” according to The Athletic’s Peter Baugh. He is now practicing with the team, although he may need a few more days to get back into game shape. “I had some symptoms, but in the grand scheme of things it wasn’t that big a deal compared to what some people are dealing with. I just consider myself lucky to recover,” Johnson said.
  • The Vegas Golden Knights, who played the first two games of the season with just five defensemen could be ready to make a change. The team’s new practice lines suggest the team could be ready to use Nicolas Hague as their sixth defenseman, despite the team’s success. The Athletic’s Jesse Granger writes that head coach Peter DeBoer likes what he’s seen from his five-man defense, but also said he’s worried about the workload that might create on them. Defenseman Alex Pietrangelo played 29:26 Saturday, a lot to ask out of any blueliner.
  • The San Diego Gulls, the AHL affiliate of the Anaheim Ducks, announced they have postponed Sunday’s exhibition game against the Ontario Reign out of an abundance of caution due to COVID-19 protocols. This was supposed to be the second exhibition game. The first game, originally scheduled for Saturday, was postponed as well. This game was pushed back for the same reasons. The team will make a decision at a later date on when to play these game.

AHL| Anaheim Ducks| Colorado Avalanche| Injury| Utah Mammoth| Vegas Golden Knights Erik Johnson| Oliver Ekman-Larsson

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Salary Cap Deep Dive: Arizona Coyotes

November 22, 2020 at 3:33 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 3 Comments

Navigating the salary cap is one of the more important tasks for any GM.  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 2020-21 season.  This will focus more on players who are regulars on the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL.  All cap figures are courtesy of CapFriendly.

Arizona Coyotes

Current Cap Hit: $84,270,284 (over the $81.5MM Upper Limit)

Entry-Level Contracts

F Barrett Hayton (two years, $894K)

Potential Bonuses

Hayton: $1.75MM

Once considered a team full of young players, the Coyotes have changed their image over the last few years and have only one young player on their team under a cheap entry-level deal with only a handful of entry-level players that are even close to joining the team. Hayton, however, could be ready for a breakout season after spending the season with the team last year. Unfortunately for Hayton, he would have benefitted the most with one year in the AHL, but wasn’t eligible to play there, so instead of returning him to his junior team, the Coyotes kept him around. He only appeared in 20 games (although he did miss time with a shoulder injury at the World Juniors), but showed enough potential that he should be an everyday player next season. A big year from the 2019 fifth-overall pick would be a boost to the team’s center position.

One Year Remaining, Non-Entry-Level

F Derek Stepan ($6.5MM, UFA)
D Alex Goligoski ($5.48MM, UFA)
F Marian Hossa ($5.28MM, UFA)
D Niklas Hjalmarsson ($5MM, UFA)
G Antti Raanta ($4.25MM, UFA)
D Jason Demers ($3.94MM, UFA)
D Jordan Oesterle ($1.4MM, UFA)
D Ilya Lyubushkin ($1MM, UFA)
F Conor Garland ($775K, RFA)
F John Hayden ($750K, RFA)
F Dryden Hunt ($700K, RFA)

For a team that is looking to cut salary, the team has a lot of money coming off the books next year, suggesting the team could look drastically different in just one year. Some of those players could find themselves to be trade bait when the trade deadline comes around. The most interesting decision the team might have to make is what to do with Stepan, however. The 30-year-old was brought in from New York to stabilize their top line three years ago. He had four straight seasons of 50 or more points while with the Rangers and posted a 56-point season with the Coyotes in 2017-18. However, his production has taken a dive over the past two years as Stepan posted just 35 points (in 72 games) in 2018-19 and then dropped even further last year with just 28 points in 70 games. A team leader, the Coyotes have to hope that Stepan can return to form this season or the team could choose to move on from him.

The team’s defense is loaded with several high-priced veteran blueliners and almost all of their contracts come up next season, including Goligoski, Hjalmarsson and Demers. Goligoski is 35, but is still playing major minutes for Arizona and could be a candidate to return at a slightly lesser deal. Hjalmarsson is 33, but has seen his game break down a bit as he has dealt with numerous injuries the last couple of years, including a fractured fibula that cost him 43 games last year. The 32-year-old Demers also averaged more than 20 minutes of ATOI per game. The team may keep one or two of those players, but likely will not keep all three.

The team will also want to evaluate the play of Raanta, who has showed flashes of dominance, but also has dealt with injuries and inconsistent play at times as well. Raanta did play well last season, posting a .921 save percentage in 33 games and gives the team several options in the net. Raanta could easily be re-signed to new deal or could be a trade candidate as well.

The team will also finally be free of Hossa’s $5.28MM contract the team took on years ago.

Two Years Remaining

F Phil Kessel ($6.8MM, UFA)
G Darcy Kuemper ($4.5MM, UFA)
F Tyler Pitlick ($1.75MM, UFA)
F Lawson Crouse ($1.53MM, RFA)
F Johan Larsson ($1.4MM, UFA)
F Christian Fischer ($1MM, RFA)

The team brought in Kessel to bring in the firepower that the team needed as goal scoring remains one of the team’s biggest weak points. Unfortunately, the first year with Kessel didn’t turn out to be the big acquisition that the team was hoping for. After an 28-goal, 82-point season in 2018-19, the 33-year-old saw quite a decline in his play with just 14 goals and 38 points in 70 games. That’s way below what they were hoping for and Arizona has to hope that Kessel can return to form this year in hopes of increasing his value if the team wants to move him at the trade deadline or next offseason when he has just one year left on his deal.

Kuemper has become the Coyotes’ top asset as the 30-year-old has been nothing short of dominant over the past two years and remains on a manageable contract. His name came up in trade speculation this offseason, but with so many free-agent goalies available, Arizona didn’t get the offers it was hoping for. That could change down the road. Yet at the same time, Kuemper might be worth keeping around down the road.

Three Years Remaining

None

Read more

Four Or More Years Remaining

D Oliver Ekman-Larsson ($8.25MM through 2026-27)
F Clayton Keller ($7.15MM through 2027-28)
F Nick Schmaltz ($5.85MM through 2025-26)
D Jakob Chychrun ($4.6MM through 2024-25)
F Christian Dvorak ($4.45MM through 2024-25)

Currently, the Coyotes have only five players locked in two years from now with Ekman-Larsson leading the way. Unfortunately, the impressive defenseman saw his play take a step back last season and he saw his name running through the rumor mill all offseason and likely will be talked about again at the trade deadline, despite his no-movement clause and only his willingness to go to either Vancouver of Boston.

One thing the Coyotes did do was invest in their youth, which they did with Keller and Chychrun. Both players have showed plenty of promise, but neither has established themselves as elite players as of yet. However, the team is hoping that by signing them long-term, the contracts will look like solid, affordable deals down the road. Keller has not taken that step yet after a dominant rookie season where he scored 23 goals and 65 points in 2017-18. Those numbers dropped the following year (14 goals, 47 points). Keller’s numbers jumped a bit last year in 12 fewer games (17 goals, 44 points), but the team continues to wait on him to take that next step. Chychrun has dealt with minor injuries throughout his pro career, but posted a 12-goal campaign last year, suggested he was ready to assume a bigger role on the team’s offense.

Schmaltz was brought in for Dylan Strome a couple of years ago and despite a season-ending injury in 2018-19, he looked like a solid second-line center, who posted 45 points last year. However, the team hopes that he can take that next step and put up even more down the road, including upping his goal-scoring numbers which were only at 11 last season. Dvorak, on the other hand, scored 18 goals last season and slowly has improved every season with the team and is pushing Schmaltz for the second-line center duties.

Buyouts

F Michael Grabner ($833K in 2020-21 and $1.26MM in 2021-22)

Retained Salary Transactions

None

Best Value: Kuemper
Worst Value: Ekman-Larsson

Looking Ahead

In many ways, the Coyotes team has a feel that they are still a young team about to take that next step. However, when you look at the roster, the team added quite a few veterans over the last few years and many of those contracts are close to expiring. Only five players are locked up beyond the next two years, but the one missing key to the team is a lack of superstar talent. The team was obviously hoping that Taylor Hall might fill that void, but that didn’t happen, but is Clayton Keller their superstar? The other issue is that while this team is young, the team has not accumulated many draft picks (they already don’t have their 2021 first-rounder after the league took it away for violating the league’s combine testing policy), having traded many of them away and there isn’t a major group of kids ready to step in, which could really change the look of the Coyotes down the road too.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Salary Cap Deep Dive 2020| Utah Mammoth Alex Goligoski| Antti Raanta| Barrett Hayton| Christian Dvorak| Clayton Keller| Darcy Kuemper| Derek Stepan| Jakob Chychrun| Jason Demers| Lawson Crouse| Marian Hossa| Michael Grabner| Nick Schmaltz| Niklas Hjalmarsson| Oliver Ekman-Larsson| Phil Kessel| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Ekman-Larsson Could Still Be Traded To Bruins

November 22, 2020 at 2:06 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 4 Comments

The Arizona Coyotes, attempting to free up some salary during the offseason, tried to trade their top defenseman, Oliver Ekman-Larsson. With a no-movement clause embedded within his eight-year, $66MM contract, Ekman-Larsson only gave the team two teams, the Boston Bruins and Vancouver Canucks, he would be willing to accept a trade to and refused any other suggestions. It proved to be a challenging task for new general manager Bill Armstrong and with no quality offers from either team, the Coyotes opted to keep him in house.

However, Boston Hockey Now’s Joe Haggerty writes that there remains a chance that the Boston Bruins could still end up with Ekman-Larsson. While the Canucks have since acquired Nate Schmidt to augment their defensive corps, the Bruins still have a number of holes in their defense after the departure of Torey Krug to St. Louis and with the uncertain status of veteran Zdeno Chara. The team only has three established top-four players in Charlie McAvoy, Matt Grzelcyk and Brandon Carlo and are hoping veterans Kevan Miller and John Moore can bounce back or youngsters Urho Vaakanainen or Jakub Zboril can step up and establish themselves as full-time players next season.

However, if the team can’t get some of those defensemen to take that next step, the Bruins might be more open to re-engage with Arizona about trading for Ekman-Larsson. With Krug gone, it’s likely that McAvoy and Grzelcyk would see a jump in their offensive numbers next year, but the team could definitely benefit from a player who has scored 10 goals of more for six straight years (would have been seven had the league not been shut down due to COVID-19), as well as two 20-goal seasons.

While Ekman-Larsson gave Arizona a window of time earlier in the offseason to send him to either Vancouver or Boston, that window has closed. However, in a recent interview with Coyotes’ insider Craig Morgan (subscription required), Ekman-Larsson suggested he’d still be open to being traded.

“That’s a question for (GM) Bill (Armstrong) to be honest with you,” said Ekman-Larsson. “There’s not much I can do about it. I’m just trying to stay in the moment. I know everybody says that but I really had a good offseason. I worked out really hard to show that I wanted to be here, wanted to get better and hopefully that transfers into the stuff on the ice. I feel really happy that I am here but if that day comes where they ask again, I will deal with it then.”

Haggerty writes that the likely timeline for a trade would be closer to the trade deadline as the Bruins want to give Vaakanainen and Zboril a chance to prove that they can handle everyday NHL duties first. If one or both can step up and prove themselves, then the team doesn’t have to do anything. However, with many questions if they are potential top-four options down the road, the team could choose to add Ekman-Larsson for their stretch run.

Boston has approximately $6.7MM in available cap space, which sounds good if they want to go out and get Ekman-Larsson. However, the Bruins still have to work out a deal with restricted free-agent Jake Debrusk and still hope to bring Chara back, if he so chooses. That likely will use up their remaining cap space. Haggerty writes for Arizona to make the trade work, the Coyotes would have to take back Moore’s contract. The veteran still has three years at $2.75MM and potentially another contract. Boston would almost certainly have to include a prospect like Vaakanainen as well.

Boston Bruins| Utah Mammoth John Moore| Oliver Ekman-Larsson

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Negotiation Notes: Ekman-Larsson, Bertuzzi, Gushchin

October 30, 2020 at 5:20 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 2 Comments

While the Oliver Ekman-Larsson trade rumors dominated the pre-free agency headlines, the Arizona Coyotes’ star defenseman ultimately stayed put. Now, the ’Yotes captain tells AZ Central’s Jose Romero that this was the result that he had hoped for:

I have a clause in my contract, a no-trade, no-move clause. At the same time, I did not want to stand in the way if the organization felt otherwise. That’s how I am as a person. It was more that if they wanted to remove me, I set up the two clubs as an alternative, but, as I said, I wanted nothing better than to continue in Arizona so it feels good that it turned out the way it did.

Ekman-Larsson didn’t stand in the Coyotes’ way of making a trade per say, but the longest-tenured Coyote provided as little flexibility as he could while seeming open to a deal. Ekman-Larsson provided Arizona with just two teams he would accept a trade to, the Boston Bruins and Vancouver Canucks, and also set a deadline of October 9 for a deal to be completed. While the team reportedly had talks with both Boston and Vancouver, no deal could be reached in time and Ekman-Larsson stayed put. While he admits that even being available on his own terms was uncomfortable, Ekman-Larsson feels happy to still be a Coyote and has moved past the whole situation. Arizona meanwhile will have to find another way to solve their current salary cap crisis.

  • While there is a negative correlation between reaching a salary arbitration hearing and the number of seasons that player spends with his team after the fact, Tyler Bertuzzi remains on good terms with the Detroit Red Wings, according to Helene St. James of the Detroit Free Press. Bertuzzi tells James that all is well, even after the player was critically examined by his own team in front of an arbitrator, who seemingly agreed with an award closer to where the Red Wings filed. Bertuzzi went so far as to say the process “went smoothly” and stated that it was “nothing personal at all.” Congratulations are due to Detroit and GM Steve Yzerman on not only winning the arbitration battle, but maintaining such good terms with the subject. Bertuzzi’s experience with an arbitration hearing is far from the norm.
  • Daniil Gushchin, selected in the third round by the San Jose Sharks earlier this month, had previously signed with the OHL’s Niagara Ice Dogs this summer after the team picked him fourth overall in the 2020 CHL Import Draft. This seemingly marked the end of his consideration of going the collegiate route as well as his time in the USHL. Yet, with the OHL season delayed, Gushchin’s USHL club, the Muskegon Lumberjacks, have revealed that their star forward is still very much in the mix for the 2020-21. It is possible that the Ice Dogs have negotiated a loan of Gushchin to the Lumberjacks until OHL training camps open, but it also may be that the skilled forward has simply found himself a place to play. So long as Gushchin stays in the USHL this season and does not suit up in the OHL, he would maintain his NCAA eligibility and could still wind up joining a college program, many of whom had interest before he committed to Niagara.

Arbitration| Detroit Red Wings| Loan| OHL| San Jose Sharks| Steve Yzerman| USHL| Utah Mammoth Oliver Ekman-Larsson| Tyler Bertuzzi

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Oliver Ekman-Larsson Places Deadline On Potential Trade

October 6, 2020 at 11:17 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 10 Comments

The Arizona Coyotes have been trying to trade captain Oliver Ekman-Larsson over the past few weeks, asking him to give them a list of teams that he would be willing to waive his no-trade clause to go to. The star defenseman has given them an option of just the Vancouver Canucks or Boston Bruins and has now put a clock on the negotiations as well.

Ekman-Larsson’s agent Kevin Epp of Titan Sports Management has contacted several media members including Darren Dreger of TSN, explaining that his client wishes to be traded before free agency opens on Friday. If a deal cannot be completed before then, Ekman-Larsson will remain in Arizona.

The 29-year-old defenseman is heading into just the second season of an eight-year, $66MM contract extension he signed in 2018 to stay in Arizona. When Ekman-Larsson signed that contract and included a full no-movement clause throughout, he likely believed that he would spend his entire career with the Coyotes, the team that drafted him sixth overall in 2009.

Instead, new management approached him this offseason with the potential of a trade, likely due to the need to cut payroll drastically after the coronavirus shutdown. Ekman-Larsson is the Coyotes’ highest-paid player and will be entering the most expensive years of his contract after this season. In each of the three seasons following 2020-21, he is owed $10.5MM in total salary, before his contract starts to fall off. Getting out from under that now would save Arizona plenty of cash, plus hopefully recoup several valuable assets.

If they’re going to pull it off, it’s going to have to happen quickly. Notably, the Coyotes do not have a selection in the first three rounds of tonight’s entry draft.

Boston Bruins| Free Agency| Utah Mammoth| Vancouver Canucks Oliver Ekman-Larsson

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Latest On Oliver Ekman-Larsson Trade

October 4, 2020 at 2:00 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 6 Comments

With the complexities of a trade involving Arizona Coyotes’ Oliver Ekman-Larsson increasing between the two teams the defenseman put on his short list, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported Saturday evening on Sportsnet’s Hockey Central that Arizona went back to their captain and asked him to expand his list of teams. His response was ’No.’

“Ekman-Larsson is only willing to stay at Boston or Vancouver, so that’s how Arizona has to proceed if it wants to get this done,” said Friedman.

Friedman also notes that Arizona Coyotes’ new general manager Bill Armstrong was with the St. Louis Blues when they acquired center Ryan O’Reilly from Buffalo in which there was some money exchanged as Buffalo had to take back Patrik Berglund and Vladimir Sobotka. However, essentially, the team got a prospect, a first-round pick and a second-round pick as the key to that deal. That is what the Armstrong is looking for in an Ekman-Larsson deal.

“Berglund and Sobotka were part of that deal, but it was Tage Thompson, a first and a second and that’s what he would like to do, I think, if he can,” said Friedman. “I believe that the Coyotes like the prospects in Boston better than they like the prospects in Vancouver. But I think that at this point in time, Vancouver might be the team that’s more eager to get the deal done than Boston in terms of the want.”

While that might be a case, getting a deal done won’t be easy. The Canucks have plenty of cap issues to deal with that that’s without factoring in Ekman-Larsson’s $8.25MM AAV for the next seven years, which they have to factor in. The team still has three key unrestricted free agents to deal with, including Tyler Toffoli, Jacob Markstrom and Chris Tanev, and little cap room to accommodate all three, plus a number of restricted free agents, including Jake Virtanen. The Canucks also have to consider soon-to-be RFA’s Elias Pettersson and Quinn Hughes to long-term deals next year, as well as the fact that they are still paying $3.04MM for the next two years on the recapture penalty from Roberto Luongo. The Canucks also lack some of the necessary draft capital with no first or second-rounder to deal in the upcoming draft on Tuesday and Wednesday. The team may also be hesitant to move future picks.

Regardless, the team would still be interested in bringing in Ekman-Larsson, who along with Hughes, would give the team a solid No. 1 and No. 2 defenseman on the left side for the next seven years. The team has little depth on their defense after the 2020-21 season. The team has Tyler Myers locked up at $6MM until 2023-24, but veterans Alexander Edler and Jordie Benn will both be unrestricted free agents in one year.

While Boston was considered the frontrunners only a few days before, Friedman reports that the Bruins may not be ready to make a strong offer as the team can just bring back UFA Torey Krug as a less costly option rather than trade prospects and picks to get Ekman-Larsson.

Boston Bruins| Utah Mammoth| Vancouver Canucks Elliotte Friedman| Oliver Ekman-Larsson

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Latest On Oliver Ekman-Larsson’s Trade Market

October 1, 2020 at 2:28 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 13 Comments

The hot stove is heating up in the NHL and Oliver Ekman-Larsson is at the center of it all. He was listed as the top name on Frank Seravalli’s Trade Bait board for TSN and linked to the Edmonton Oilers. Darren Dreger threw cold water on the Edmonton connection as the Oilers are not currently on a short list of teams that the Coyotes captain would waive his no-movement clause for, but Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet has turned up the heat once again. Friedman tweets that the Boston Bruins and Vancouver Canucks are on that list of approved teams, while Craig Morgan of AZ Coyotes Insider says that Boston is a “favored destination.”

When a GM told Seravalli that a number of “franchise-changing” players are being discussed each day, perhaps this is what he meant. Ekman-Larsson is the Coyotes highest-paid player, their captain and has been an anchor on their blue line for years now. The 29-year-old defenseman has seven years remaining on a $66MM extension he signed in 2018 and carries an $8.25MM cap hit.

In a normal year, it’s hard to imagine Arizona even considering a move like this. But with new management in GM Bill Armstrong and a payroll that could need to be drastically slashed thanks to lost current and future revenue, Ekman-Larsson may have played his last game for the Coyotes.

If that’s true, he leaves behind quite a legacy in the organization. The sixth-overall pick in 2009, Ekman-Larsson was a full-time player for the Coyotes by the 2010-11 season and tallied 364 points over 723 regular season games. That puts him behind only Teppo Numminen for the franchise lead, even counting the original Winnipeg Jets years. His 125 goals lead all franchise defensemen and put him among the upper-echelon in scoring defenders in the NHL.

That offensive production could certainly be why the Bruins have checked in, given they could be losing Torey Krug to unrestricted free agency in the coming days. Krug is one of the top offensive defensemen in the league, but his role could certainly be filled by Ekman-Larsson in the coming years.

How either Boston or Vancouver fit an $8.25MM cap hit into their current structure is unclear, but a deal like this would require plenty of moving pieces even without cap implications. Vancouver for instance could potentially get out of a bad contract like Loui Eriksson, who is owed just $5MM in actual salary over the last two years of his contract once his signing bonus is paid. That said, adding long-term cap doesn’t seem prudent for a Canucks team that will have to sign Elias Pettersson and Quinn Hughes before long.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Boston Bruins| Utah Mammoth| Vancouver Canucks Elliotte Friedman| Oliver Ekman-Larsson

13 comments

Oilers Notes: Ekman-Larsson, Nugent-Hopkins, Wings

October 1, 2020 at 1:40 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 4 Comments

Update 1:40pm: Darren Dreger of TSN reports that the Oilers are not on the shortlist of teams that Ekman-Larsson would waive his no-movement clause to go to.

The Edmonton Oilers are a team to watch in the coming days and Frank Seravalli of TSN has some inside information on their plans as we head into the first part of the NHL offseason. On his latest Trade Bait board, Seravalli lists Arizona Coyotes captain Oliver Ekman-Larsson first and explains that the Oilers have had “preliminary discussions” on the star defenseman. Edmonton would need Arizona to retain some of Ekman-Larsson’s salary, while Seravalli suggests that top prospect Evan Bouchard and a first-round selection could be involved in any deal.

Now 29, Ekman-Larsson is under contract through the 2026-27 season and carries a cap hit of $8.25MM. He also holds a full no-movement clause but has been in the rumor mill for weeks now as the Coyotes are expected to have to cut payroll. Though some of the shine has come off his game over the last few years, Ekman-Larsson is still one of the most effective goal-scoring defensemen in the league, with 125 over his career and double-digit totals in seven of his ten partial seasons.

  • Speaking of goal-scoring, the Oilers are also making progress on a long-term contract extension for Ryan Nugent-Hopkins according to Seravalli. The 2011 first-overall pick is scheduled to become an unrestricted free agent following the upcoming season and currently carries a $6MM cap hit. Though he has settled into more of a support role behind Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl in Edmonton, Nugent-Hopkins is coming off his most effective season to date with 61 points in 65 games and is only 27. Just to set the Twitter machine alight, Seravalli also suggests that if a deal can’t be done with Nugent-Hopkins, the Oilers might look at bringing back Taylor Hall.
  • Yesterday’s news of a repairing relationship between the Oilers and Jesse Puljujarvi puts the team into a bit of a bind on the right side, with too many right-wing options to fit into the lineup. Seravalli reports that the team has tried to make some wing swaps to balance out their lineup, including a potential Alex Chiasson-for-Anders Bjork deal. With so many balls up in the air at the moment, there’s no telling what will happen in Edmonton, but it will be a busy week to be sure.

Edmonton Oilers Oliver Ekman-Larsson| Ryan Nugent-Hopkins

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