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Peter Budaj

Minor Transactions: 03/12/18

March 12, 2018 at 10:06 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Another week, another set of playoff-deciding matchups around the NHL. With so few games remaining in the regular season, every single day is of huge significance. We’ll keep track of all the transactions taking place on the fringes of rosters.

  • The Tampa Bay Lightning have officially recalled Peter Budaj from the AHL after his conditioning stint. The goaltender played a pair of games for Syracuse as part of his recovery from a lower-body injury, but will now stick around in the NHL. That move gives the Lightning three goaltenders for the time being, giving them plenty of opportunity to rest Andrei Vasilevskiy down the stretch.
  • Ville Husso is up under emergency conditions for the St. Louis Blues, as Carter Hutton deals with injury. Husso is the heir apparent in St. Louis should Hutton leave in free agency, as the 23-year old has shown he’s more than capable in the AHL. Through 34 games for the San Antonio Rampage, Husso has a sparkling .928 save percentage and 2.31 goals against average.
  • The Carolina Hurricanes announced that Valentin Zykov has been reassigned to the team’s AHL affiliate in Charlotte. Zykov was just recalled on Sunday and did not see any game action. The 2013 second-round pick has put up prolific numbers in each of the past two seasons with the Checkers, but has only two games with the ’Canes to show for it all the way back in March 2017.

AHL| Carolina Hurricanes| Injury| Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions Peter Budaj| Valentin Zykov

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Eastern Notes: Kane, Budaj, Sanheim, Reaves

March 3, 2018 at 3:52 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 2 Comments

Evander Kane has found a new home, at least for the rest of this year. While it’s too early to know whether he will stay in San Jose for the foreseeable future, the Buffalo News’ Mike Harrington writes that the Sharks might be the best fit for the 26-year-old personality. In a 10-point notebook on Kane, Harrington writes that what Kane really needs is to be on a veteran team who will tell him how things work, something that he did not have in Buffalo.

The Sharks, who are loaded in veterans such as Joe Thornton, Brent Burns, Joe Pavelski, Joel Ward and Marc-Edouard Vlasic, should be able to have some controlling effect on Kane. Thornton already proved that when the veteran picked Kane up from the airport in a limousine after the trade. He also writes that Kane already is showing off his speed with San Jose as he’s tallied up three assists in two games with the Sharks. That speed was not very apparent over the past couple of months in Buffalo, but the scribe writes that Kane was well aware Buffalo management wanted to move on from him and may have lost interest in sacrificing himself for the Sabres.

Harrington also adds that general manager Jason Botterill should have made a trade earlier when Kane was hot. Knowing his reputation, which only got worse in the last couple of months with his teammates, they never were likely to get the asking price that Botterill was demanding. In the end, it was quite obvious that only veteran teams showed interest in Kane as the runner-up at the deadline was the Anaheim Ducks.

Due to his reputation, Harrington wonders whether Kane will be forced to take a lesser deal this offseason. Players at his age and skill should be getting a long-term deals at $6-7MM, but Kane may be forced to accept something closer to a four-year term if teams continue to worry about his ability to co-exist with his teammates.

  • Tampa Bay Times’ Joe Smith tweets that Tampa Bay Lightning backup goalie Peter Budaj, who hasn’t played since Dec. 29, is really close to returning to the team. The team could have a decision to make, however, as emergency backup Louis Domingue has won four of his six starts and has played well for Tampa Bay. Domingue, who has a 3.29 GAA and a .905 save percentage would have to be officially recalled, however, if they want to keep the 25-year-old. The team has already used two of their four allotted recalls on Anthony Cirelli and Adam Erne, so the team may not want to use a third recall yet and might stick with Budaj. The 35-year-old has struggled with Tampa Bay this year, however, with a 3.80 GAA and a .878 save percentage.
  • John Boruk of NBC Sports Philadelphia writes that the Philadelphia Flyers talked to the Ottawa Senators right before the trade deadline about acquiring winger Mike Hoffman. The scribe writes that sources have said the Senators asked for a package that included defenseman Travis Sanheim and a first-round pick as a starting point. While a first-rounder (they have two of them this year) might have been a possibility, Sanheim proved to be the deal-breaker.
  • Providence Journal’s Mark Divver tweets that he spoke to a pro scout who believes the Pittsburgh Penguins made a mistake when they traded enforcer Ryan Reaves to the Vegas Golden Knights last week. While Reaves took a lot of criticism for his lack of offense with the Penguins, he provided the team with leadership and a physicality the team really needed. The scribe writes that the Penguins struggled when things got tough Thursday when they played the Boston Bruins.

Anaheim Ducks| Jason Botterill| Ottawa Senators| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| San Jose Sharks| Tampa Bay Lightning| Vegas Golden Knights Adam Erne| Anthony Cirelli| Brent Burns| Evander Kane| Joe Pavelski| Joe Thornton| Joel Ward| Louis Domingue| Marc-Edouard Vlasic| Mike Hoffman| Peter Budaj

2 comments

Canadian Juniors Could Change Approach To Foreign Goalies

February 28, 2018 at 8:15 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 3 Comments

In 2013, the Canadian Hockey League (CHL), the overarching body in major junior hockey that governs the Ontario Hockey League (OHL), Western Hockey League (WHL), and Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), decided to ban teams from drafting European goalies. The CHL holds an annual Import Draft in which all 60 teams across the three leagues are given two chances to draft foreign talent in an attempt to fill their two import slots on the roster for the following season. Sometimes the players who are drafted come over and other times they don’t. However, five years ago, CHL president David Branch and company decided to no longer take the risk of bringing in foreign keeper who could then in turn block young North American goalies by not allowing teams to select them in the import draft. While the idea was to protect the development and value of homegrown products, the result was a weaker product across the CHL and a more difficult time for their business partners in the NHL to evaluate foreign goalies.

In fairness, the decision was made after a stretch of dominant play by European keepers at the major junior level. In 2010-11, the top save percentage in both the OHL and QMJHL belonged to imports: Petr Mrazek and Christopher Gibson. Not long before, Michal Neuvirth was one of the OHL’s best as well. In the mid-2000’s, Ondrej Pavelec controlled the QMJHL, leading the league in goals against average in back-to-back seasons among other accomplishments, and is arguably still the league’s best goaltender in history.

This isn’t to say that Canadian and American goalies didn’t also flourish at that time as well, which calls the decision back into question. This was always a concern of quality over quantity, as the vast majority of teams still employed a North American starter and often a local backup or two as well. The CHL may have been concerned with the talent of some foreign prospects overshadowing Canada’s best, but they could never have honestly argued there was a lack of opportunity due to imported players. Top 2018 draft-eligible CHL prospects Andrei Svechnikov and Filip Zadina are both imports, yet they would never ban forwards.

Nevertheless, the CHL made a decision which clearly hurt their own competition level by excluding some of the top junior-level goaltending talent in the world without any evidence that it was truly hurting their domestic counterparts. Now, years later, the league is rethinking that decision. John Matisz of the Toronto Sun reports that the league is considering lifting the ban on foreign goalies, and for good reason. The ban has simply made it harder for NHL team to evaluate European keepers – with foreign leagues often dominated by older, experienced players, while the top young skaters come overseas – but hasn’t stopped them from being drafted into the pros at the same rate as CHL goalies. Meanwhile, top prospects such as Ukko-Pekka Luukonen (Buffalo), Filip Gustavsson (Ottawa), and 2018-eligible Jakub Skarek still reside overseas, but could surely benefit nearly any team in the CHL. The major juniors face little risk that a reversal would harm them in any way.

Interesting enough though, it may still be in European goalies’ best interests to remain in Europe and for NHL teams to focus on those who stay and face older, professional talent. The list of foreign goaltenders who played major junior in Canada and remain in the NHL – Mrazek, Neuvirth, Pavelec, Peter Budaj, Philipp Grubauer, Jaroslav Halak, Anton Khudobin, Marek Langhamer, Robin Lehner, and the most recent CHL import star, Oscar Dansk – all have one thing in common: they aren’t bona fide starters. Meanwhile, the likes of Sergei Bobrovsky, Henrik Lundqvist, Pekka Rinne, Tuukka Rask, and Andrei Vasilevskiy avoided North America until turning pro, and it worked out much better for them. With a new class of European goalies likely to join the CHL sooner rather than later, we’ll see if that trend continues.

CHL| OHL| Prospects| QMJHL| WHL Andrei Svechnikov| Andrei Vasilevskiy| Anton Khudobin| Christopher Gibson| Henrik Lundqvist| Jaroslav Halak| Louis Domingue| Marek Langhamer| Michal Neuvirth| Ondrej Pavelec| Oscar Dansk| Pekka Rinne| Peter Budaj| Petr Mrazek| Philipp Grubauer

3 comments

Minor Transactions: 01/16/18

January 16, 2018 at 9:04 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

After yesterday’s afternoon action, the NHL returns today with six evening matchups that include some interesting Metropolitan battles. The Devils, Islanders, Flyers and Rangers are all within four points of each other in the Metro, and today’s games will be another important chapter in the race for the wildcard spots. Though the Capitals have pulled away at the top of the division, the rest is still just as competitive as ever. For those teams, changes on the fringe of the roster are extremely important. We’ll keep track of all the minor moves around the league right here.

  • The Tampa Bay Lightning have recalled Louis Domingue from the AHL, sending Connor Ingram back after the bye week. Domingue recorded a pair of shutouts for the Syracuse Crunch during the break, continuing his confident run since leaving the Arizona Coyotes earlier this year. The goaltender has completely turned around his season, and will serve as the backup to Andrei Vasilevskiy at least until Peter Budaj is healthy (and perhaps beyond).
  • The Los Angeles kings have recalled Michael Amadio and Paul Ladue from the AHL after waiving Jussi Jokinen and sending Oscar Fantenberg and Kurtis MacDermid back down. Amadio is in the midst of a 17-game point streak in the AHL, and has 34 in 30 games. The Kings are on a four game losing steak and need to turn things around quickly if they expect to stay in a playoff position in the Western Conference.
  • The San Jose Sharks have indeed moved Paul Martin to the minor leagues after he cleared waivers today. Martin will try to prove that he’s still a valuable defenseman in the NHL, and attract a potential suitor from somewhere around the league.
  • The Columbus Blue Jackets have recalled Joonas Korpisalo now that their bye week is about to end. Korpisalo was sent to the minor leagues to stay in game ready shape during the time off, and is now back up in the NHL where he’s appeared in nine games this season.
  • Frederick Gaudreau is back in the NHL with the Nashville Predators for the fourth time this season, taking Viktor Arvidsson’s roster spot after he was moved to injured reserve. Gaudreau has played 18 games with the Predators this year, recording just three points. Arvidsson was injured at practice yesterday and is out with a lower-body injury, though according to Adam Vingan of The Tennessean, the IR stint is retroactive to the team’s last game on January 9th. Arvidsson took morning skate with the team, but won’t play tonight against the Vegas Golden Knights.
  • Cory Schneider won’t be starting tonight for the New Jersey Devils as he’s come down with an illness, so Keith Kinkaid will be in net with Ken Appleby recalled to serve as his backup. To make room on the roster for Appleby, Steven Santini has been sent to the AHL. Appleby has never entered an NHL game and will likely be sent down soon afterwards.
  • The Colorado Avalanche have recalled Dominic Toninato from the San Antonio Rampage, bringing up the 23-year old forward for the second time this season. Toninato has just 12 points in 30 games for the AHL club, but is a responsible two-way player that can provide some depth for the Avalanche.

AHL| Tampa Bay Lightning Louis Domingue| Peter Budaj

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East Notes: Panthers, Budaj, Murray, Gostisbehere

January 13, 2018 at 11:40 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Although the Panthers find themselves within striking distance of a playoff spot, don’t expect them to turn to the rental market to try to add someone to help make that push.  Speaking with reporters (video via the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel), GM Dale Tallon stated that they’re only going to be making a move if they can get someone who fits in long-term and that they have identified several targets around the league that could fit that bill.  This represents a shift from last year when they picked up Thomas Vanek from Detroit as a rental on deadline day in a move that did little to help their postseason aspirations.

Elsewhere in the East:

  • Lightning goaltender Peter Budaj will be out for a while yet. GM Steve Yzerman told Joe Smith of the Tampa Bay Times (Twitter link) that Budaj’s leg injury will keep him out for six-to-eight weeks from December 29th, the day he was hurt.  That means he will be out for the next month at a minimum so Louis Domingue will be sticking around as Andrei Vasilevskiy’s backup for the foreseeable future following their bye.
  • Pittsburgh’s recall of goaltender Casey DeSmith yesterday wasn’t due to an injury. Jonathan Bombulie of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review notes that netminder Matt Murray is away from the team due to personal reasons.  There’s no word on when he will return to the Penguins.  Tristan Jarry will get the extra workload in Murray’s absence.
  • Flyers defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere isn’t expected to play tonight due to an illness, notes Dave Isaac of the Courier-Post (Twitter link).  His absence is a big one for Philadelphia as he sits fourth in team scoring with 32 points in 39 games while logging nearly 21 minutes a night of playing time.  Travis Sanheim is slated to take his place in the lineup.

Dale Tallon| Florida Panthers| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Tampa Bay Lightning Matt Murray (b. 1994)| Peter Budaj| Shayne Gostisbehere

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Tampa Bay Places Budaj On IR, Recalls Domingue

December 30, 2017 at 5:23 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg Leave a Comment

The Tampa Bay Lightning will be without their backup goalie for a little while as the team placed Peter Budaj on injured reserve Saturday, according to Joe Smith of the Tampa Bay Times. The veteran goaltender started Friday and played well, stopping 29 of 33 shots, but needed to be helped off the ice after sustaining an apparent leg injury and was replaced by starter Andrei Vasilevskiy.

Despite playing well Friday behind a struggling defense, the 35-year-old Budaj’s overall numbers have been disappointing. In seven appearances, he has a 3.80 GAA and a .878 save percentage. No one is quite sure how long Budaj will be out, but the veteran was reportedly already walking on his own after the game Friday, according to Smith. He will have to miss the team’s next three games, but could be back on the roster for the Jan. 6 game against the Ottawa Senators.

Louis Domingue has been recalled from the Syracuse Crunch of the AHL to replace him.  Domingue started the year as the backup in Arizona, but struggled with a 4.33 GAA and a .856 save percentage in seven appearances and then was swapped to Tampa Bay for goaltender Michael Leighton and journeyman Tye McGinn. The 25-year-old was sent to Syracuse in hopes of finding his game, which he did. He has a 2.39 GAA in 13 games for the Crunch with a .911 save percentage.

AHL| Injury| Tampa Bay Lightning Andrei Vasilevskiy| Louis Domingue| Michael Leighton| Peter Budaj

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2017 Year In Review: February

December 24, 2017 at 12:38 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 1 Comment

2017 has been quite a busy year in the hockey world.  There have been several big trades, the first expansion team in over 15 years, and much more.  Over the coming days, PHR will take a look back at the top stories from around the game on a month-by-month basis. We already looked back at January yesterday.

Blues Fire Ken Hitchcock: After a slow start to the season (24-21) and his contract being up anyway at the end of the year, the St. Louis Blues decided to rid themselves of Hitchcock after six years with the franchise. Hitchcock had won 248 games with the Blues and took the team to the playoffs in each of the five years he coached the team, but only reached the conference finals once, in the 2015-16 season. He was immediately replaced by now-current head coach Mike Yeo, who was an assistant coach and was being groomed to replace Hitchcock after the veteran coaches’ deal expired. The move seemed to work as the team went 22-8-2 under Yeo and the team eventually lost in the second-round of the playoffs.

Robbi Fabbri’s Lower-Body Injury Begins His Demise: St. Louis Blues’ Robby Fabbri suffered what was described as a lower-body injury on Feb. 3 after sustaining a hit from Pittsburgh’s Carter Rowney, just three days after the team’s coaching change, and the young, talented stud prospect hasn’t played a game since. Two days later, he was listed as out for the season with a torn ACL, requiring surgery. Life only got worse for the Blues and Fabbri during training camp when he re-aggravated his knee and it was announced that he will miss all of the 2017-18 season as well to undergo a second surgery. The promising prospect will have missed more than a year and a half due to his knee injury as players with multiple knee injuries often have trouble returning to form.

Julien Fired By Bruins, Hired By Montreal: The Boston Bruins let go of head coach Claude Julien after 10 years with the franchise as the team was struggling with a 26-23-8 record on the season and didn’t look to be going anywhere in the playoff race. He had won 393 games with Boston in that span and was replaced by assistant and now-head coach Bruce Cassidy, who took Boston to the playoffs. However, just one week after being fired, Julien found employment again after the Montreal Canadiens fired Michel Therrien during his second-tenure with the team. Therrien had been coaching the team for five years (eight total), but Montreal was looking for a change after the team lost 10 of its previous 13 games and found Julien’s availability too good to pass up. Ironically, it was the second time that Julien replaced Therrien as the Canadiens’ head coach. He took over for him back in 2002 as well.

Lightning Trade Bishop To Los Angeles Kings: With the expectation that young prospect goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy would become the team’s future in the net, the Tampa Bay Lightning shipped veteran goaltender Ben Bishop off to the Los Angeles Kings for Peter Budaj, defensive prospect Erik Cernak, and and a 2017 seventh-round pick. A second pick was conditional on the Kings making the playoffs, which they didn’t. Bishop, who had been stellar for Tampa Bay in his tenure there, was just average with Tampa Bay last year with a 2.55 GAA in 32 games. He put up similar numbers with Los Angeles but only won two games for the franchise. Bishop was nothing more than a rental as he would be a free agent at the end of the season. The trade was especially confusing since the team had just gotten starter goaltender Jonathan Quick back from injury the day before the trade after he had missed all but one game due to injury. The trade was panned as many believed that the Kings needed a scorer, not more goalie support.

Blues Send Shattenkirk To Washington Capitals: While there were many interesting deals made at the trade deadline, none was more intriguing that the rumors that surrounded defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk and his expiring contract. It was strange to see a playoff caliber team that was playing well under Yeo, to trade their top defenseman, but the team didn’t want to lose the veteran for nothing. Instead, the team traded Shattenkirk to the dominant Washington Capitals in their quest for a Stanley Cup (didn’t happen) as they got back prospect Zachary Sanford, veteran Brad Malone, a first-round pick in 2017 (which they packaged to Philadelphia for Brayden Schenn) and a second-round pick in 2019. Shattenkirk joined a dominant group of defenders in Washington, but struggled along with the rest of the team in the playoffs before the team was bounced by the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Boston Bruins| Bruce Cassidy| Claude Julien| Coaches| Expansion| Injury| Los Angeles Kings| Montreal Canadiens| Pittsburgh Penguins| St. Louis Blues| Tampa Bay Lightning| Washington Capitals| Year In Review 2017 Andrei Vasilevskiy| Ben Bishop| Brayden Schenn| Carter Rowney| Jonathan Quick| Kevin Shattenkirk| Peter Budaj

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2017 NHL Free Agency Tracker

July 1, 2017 at 11:50 am CDT | by natebrown Leave a Comment

Stay with PHR for all of the free agency signings this off-season. As of noon ET on July 1st, unrestricted free agency is open, but not before many extensions earlier in June. This page serves to organize everything in one spot, and are linked to the PHR story that corresponds with the signing. All July signings will be separated by date while June signings are organized alphabetically by team. It will be updated as soon as stories post.

Please note that signings on this list start on June 12.

July 1st:

  • Anaheim re-signs Cam Fowler (8 years/$52MM)
  • Anaheim signs Ryan Miller (2 years/$4MM)
  • Arizona signs Adam Clendening (1 year/$650K)
  • Boston signs Paul Postma (1 year/$725K)
  • Buffalo signs Benoit Pouliot (1 year/$1.15MM)
  • Buffalo signs Chad Johnson (1 year/$2.5MM)
  • Carolina signs Justin Williams (2 years/$9MM)
  • Chicago signs Patrick Sharp (1 year/$1MM)
  • Chicago signs J-F Berube (2 years/$3MM)
  • Chicago signs Jordan Oesterle (2 years/$1.3MM)
  • Colorado signs Jonathan Bernier (1 year/$2.75MM)
  • Dallas signs Martin Hanzal (3 years/$14.25MM)
  • Dallas signs Tyler Pitlick (3 years/$3MM)
  • Detroit signs Trevor Daley (3 years/$9.534MM)
  • Florida signs Radim Vrbata (1 year/$2.5MM)
  • Los Angeles signs Mike Cammalleri (1 year)
  • Los Angeles signs Cal Petersen ( 2 year ELC)
  • Los Angeles signs Christian Folin (1 year/$850K)
  • Minnesota signs Ryan Murphy (1 year/$700k)
  • Minnesota signs Landon Ferraro (2 years/$1.4MM)
  • Minnesota signs Kyle Quincey (1 year/$1.25MM)
  • Minnesota signs Cal O’Reilly (2 years/$1.4MM)
  • Montreal signs Kyle Alzner (5 years/$22.5MM)
  • Montreal signs Byron Froese
  • Montreal signs Peter Holland
  • Nashville signs Nick Bonino (4 years)
  • Nashville signs Scott Hartnell (1 year/$1MM)
  • Nashville signs Anders Lindback (1 year/$650K)
  • Nashville signs Matt O’Connor (1 year/$650K)
  • New Jersey signs Brian Boyle (2 years/$5.1MM)
  • NY Rangers sign Ondrej Pavelec (1 year/$1.3MM)
  • NY Rangers sign Kevin Shattenkirk (4 year/$26.6MM)
  • Ottawa signs Nate Thompson (2 years/$3.3MM)
  • Philadelphia re-signs Mike Vecchione (2 years/$1.88MM)
  • Pittsburgh signs Antti Niemi (1 year/$700K)
  • Pittsburgh signs Matt Hunwick (3 years/$6.75MM
  • San Jose re-signs Martin Jones (6 years/$34.5MM)
  • San Jose re-signs Marc-Edouard Vlasic (8 years/$56MM)
  • San Jose re-signs Joe Thornton
  • St. Louis signs Beau Bennett (1 year/$650K)
  • St. Louis signs Chris Thorburn (2 years/$1.88MM)
  • St. Louis re-signs Oskar Sundqvist (1 year/$650K)
  • Tampa Bay signs Dan Girardi (2 years/$6MM)
  • Toronto signs Ron Hainsey (2 years/$3.25MM)
  • Toronto signs Curtis McElhinney (1 year/$850K)
  • Toronto signs Dominic Moore (1 year/$1MM)
  • Toronto signs Garret Sparks
  • Winnipeg signs Dmitri Kulikov (3 years/$13MM)
  • Winnipeg signs Steve Mason (2 years/$8.2MM)
  • Vancouver signs Sam Gagner (3 years/$9.45MM)
  • Vancouver signs Michael Del Zotto (2 years/$6MM)
  • Vancouver signs Anders Nilsson (2 years/$5MM)

Read more

June:

  • Anaheim re-signs Kevin Boyle
  • Anaheim re-signs Korbinian Holzer
  • Anaheim re-signs Nic Kerdiles
  • Anaheim re-signs Patrick Eaves
  • Boston re-signs Noel Acciari
  • Boston re-signs Tommy Cross
  • Buffalo re-signs Linus Ullmark
  • Buffalo re-signs Taylor Fedun
  • Calgary re-signs Kris Versteeg
  • Calgary re-signs Michael Stone
  • Carolina re-signs Andrew Miller
  • Carolina re-signs Brock McGinn and Philip Samuelsson
  • Carolina re-signs Derek Ryan
  • Carolina re-signs Patrick Brown and Jake Chelios
  • Carolina re-signs Teuvo Teravainen
  • Carolina re-signs Trevor Carrick
  • Chicago re-signs Anton Forsberg
  • Chicago re-signs Tomas Jurco
  • Chicago re-signs Ville Pokka
  • Colorado re-signs Sven Andrighetto
  • Columbus re-signs Alex Broadhurst
  • Columbus signs Jordan Schroeder
  • Dallas re-signs Esa Lindrell
  • Dallas re-signs Ludvig Bystrom
  • Dallas re-signs Mark McNeill
  • Detroit re-signs Ben Street
  • Detroit re-signs Brian Lashoff and Dylan McIlrath
  • Edmonton re-signs Eric Gryba
  • Edmonton re-signs Jujhar Khaira
  • Edmonton re-signs Kris Russell
  • Edmonton re-signs Zach Kassian
  • Los Angeles re-signs Andy Andreoff
  • Minnesota re-signs Gustav Olofsson
  • Montreal re-signs Charles Hudon
  • Montreal re-signs Jacob De La Rose
  • Montreal signs Jonathan Drouin
  • Nashville re-signs Yannick Weber
  • Nashville signs Joonas Lyytinen (ELC)
  • New Jersey re-signs Keith Kinkaid
  • New York Rangers re-sign Brendan Smith
  • New York Rangers re-sign Matt Puempel
  • Ottawa re-signs Max McCormick
  • Ottawa re-signs Mike Condon
  • Ottawa re-signs Tom Pyatt
  • Philadelphia re-signs Jordan Weal
  • Philadelphia re-signs Mark Alt
  • Pittsburgh re-signs Chad Ruhwedel
  • Pittsburgh signs Filip Gustavsson (ELC)
  • Pittsburgh signs Frederik Tiffels (ELC)
  • St. Louis re-signs Chris Butler
  • St. Louis re-signs Magnus Paajarvi
  • Tampa Bay re-signs Yanni Gourde
  • Tampa Bay re-signs Andrej Sustr
  • Tampa Bay re-signs Cory Conacher and Gabriel Dumont
  • Tampa Bay re-signs Peter Budaj
  • Tampa Bay signs Alex Volkov; Toronto signs Adam Brooks (ELC)
  • Vancouver re-signs Erik Gudbranson
  • Vegas signs Erik Haula
  • Washington re-signs Brett Connolly
  • Washington re-signs Chandler Stephenson
  • Washington re-signs Christian Djoos
  • Washington re-signs Dmitry Orlov
  • Washington re-signs Pheonix Copley
  • Washington re-signs T.J. Oshie
  • Winnipeg re-signs Ben Chiarot
  • Winnipeg re-signs Marko Dano

 

Anaheim Ducks| Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| Calgary Flames| Carolina Hurricanes| Chicago Blackhawks| Columbus Blue Jackets| Dallas Stars| Detroit Red Wings| Edmonton Oilers| Florida Panthers| Free Agency| Los Angeles Kings| Minnesota Wild| Montreal Canadiens| NHL| Nashville Predators| New Jersey Devils| New York Rangers| Newsstand| Ottawa Senators| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| St. Louis Blues| Tampa Bay Lightning| Toronto Maple Leafs| Vancouver Canucks Andrej Sustr| Andrew Miller| Andy Andreoff| Anton Forsberg| Ben Street| Brendan Smith| Brett Connolly| Brian Lashoff| Brock McGinn| Chad Ruhwedel| Chandler Stephenson| Chris Butler| Cory Conacher| Derek Ryan| Dmitry Orlov| Drew Miller| Dylan McIlrath| Eric Gryba| Erik Haula| Gabriel Dumont| Gustav Olofsson| Jacob de la Rose| Jonathan Drouin| Jordan Schroeder| Jordan Weal| Korbinian Holzer| Kris Russell| Kris Versteeg| Las Vegas| Linus Ullmark| Mark Alt| Mark McNeill| Marko Dano| Matt Puempel| Michael Stone| Mike Condon| Noel Acciari| Patrick Eaves| Peter Budaj| Pheonix Copley| Philip Samuelsson| Sven Andrighetto| T.J. Oshie| Taylor Fedun| Teuvo Teravainen| Tom Pyatt| Tomas Jurco| Tommy Cross| Ville Pokka| Yanni Gourde

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Tampa Bay Lightning Agree To Terms With Peter Budaj

June 22, 2017 at 11:10 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

Thursday: Now that the transaction freeze has lifted, the Lightning have made the signing official.

Monday:  According to Bob McKenzie of TSN, the Tampa Bay Lightning have agreed to terms with goaltender Peter Budaj on a two-year extension worth $1.025MM per season. Since the league is technically in a signing moratorium at present, the contract will not likely be announced until Thursday. Budaj was set to become an unrestricted free agent this summer.

Amazingly, Budaj had been on a two-way contract as recently as last season when he was summoned from the AHL to try and save the Los Angeles Kings season. When Jonathan Quick and Jeff Zatkoff both went down to injuries early in the year, Budaj was brought up and performed quite well in the Los Angeles net. At the deadline, he was dealt to the Lightning for Ben Bishop, who couldn’t help the Kings scrape their way into the playoffs and was eventually dealt to the Dallas Stars this offseason.

Budaj on the other hand will now be the full-time backup for starter Andrei Vasilevskiy in Tampa Bay, and help the young netminder try and get the Lightning back into the playoff hunt. Expected once again to be a Stanley Cup contender, Budaj’s experience is almost entirely limited to the regular season, but after a year in which he put up a .915 mark his low cap hit is still a nice value for the team. The duo will only cost GM Steve Yzerman ~$4.5MM per season combined over the next couple of years, one of the lowest numbers in the league.

35 by the time the 2017-18 season starts, Budaj is no lock to provide the above-average goaltending he put up this year but should still be able to provide ample value for this contract.

Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions Bob McKenzie| Peter Budaj

2 comments

Should Vegas Corner Goalie Market?

June 19, 2017 at 6:07 pm CDT | by Seth Lawrence 10 Comments

With the recent trade of Mike Smith to Calgary, the market for starting goaltenders is dwindling even further. An interesting dynamic for the Vegas Golden Knights as they choose their team will be whether they opt to select every quality goalie out there in order to flip them to other teams. There are quite a few available – Marc-Andre Fleury of Pittsburgh, Eddie Lack (and Cam Ward) of Carolina, Calvin Pickard of Colorado, Antti Raanta of New York, Petr Mrazek of Detroit, Roberto Luongo of Florida, Jaroslav Halak of the Islanders, Michal Neuvirth of Philadelphia, Peter Budaj of Tampa Bay, and Philipp Grubauer of Washington, with a few interesting prospects also exposed.  As we’ve seen in the past few seasons, dealing a goaltender for anything remotely resembling fair value can be an enormous challenge. The salary cap has really warped the value of a solid starting goaltender in a way that has not been totally beneficial to the players.

One down season and a tender’s value goes down quite heavily. The top ten goalies in the league always seem to find a home on the rare occasion they hit unrestricted free agency, but that has been a rare occurrence. Many might point to the 2010 Stanley Cup Final when they isolate a particular moment that the highly-paid goaltender became an oddity. In that Final, Michael Leighton, third-string for Philadelphia, faced off against the very pedestrian Antti Niemi, who was then  sacrificed for cap reasons. With the whole league watching, these teams ascended to hockey’s main stage with relative no names in the crease. While that moment may have been particularly damaging, the moment for me was the fiasco that was the Luongo and Cory Schneider trade saga in Vancouver, which lasted parts of 2 seasons. Then Canucks GM Mike Gillis had a terrible time finding a suitor for Luongo before finally being forced to ship Schneider off in the 2013 offseason for a 9th round pick. This too, was terrible value, considering that Schneider was one of the best young goalies in the league and coming off a scorching season where he had a .937 save percentage. This ordeal took place less than two years after Luongo had taken the team to its first Final since 1994. Granted, Luongo’s contract was considered a bit of an albatross, but it very publicly cemented the value of goaltenders on the trade market as minimal.

Looking forward to the present day, and the last two goaltenders have been traded for rather uninspiring returns. Arizona’s Smith only fetched a 3rd rounder, and Ben Bishop only netted a 4th from Dallas. GM George McPhee could end up hosting a goaltender buffet, with few paying customers. He would be wise to gauge the interest of other teams before deciding on their selections in net. They obviously want to draft a solid starter and a few young goaltenders as future cornerstones. They need to draft 3, and it’s difficult to envision them drafting less than 4 with the enticing names available out there. But if they decide to go into 5 or 6 goaltender territory, McPhee could manufacture a logjam that could be difficult to sort out. After all, only the WInnipeg Jets are truly desperate for a starting goaltender, and that’s assuming they don’t want one of Brian Elliott, Mike Condon, or another UFA to be their partner for Connor Hellebuyck. Philadelphia could be interested in a younger asset, and there are always teams who will desperately seek a starter mid-season when a keeper inevitably goes down to injury. That said, the market simply doesn’t favor the strategy of going all-in in net.

Free Agency| George McPhee| Injury| New York Islanders| Players| Prospects| Vancouver Canucks| Vegas Golden Knights| Winnipeg Jets Antti Niemi| Antti Raanta| Ben Bishop| Brian Elliott| Calvin Pickard| Cam Ward| Connor Hellebuyck| Cory Schneider| Eddie Lack| Jaroslav Halak| Marc-Andre Fleury| Michael Leighton| Michal Neuvirth| Mike Condon| Mike Smith| Peter Budaj| Petr Mrazek| Philipp Grubauer| Salary Cap

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