Rangers Not Among Teams Interested In Vince Dunn
- While there are several teams believed to be interested in Blues defenseman Vince Dunn, the Rangers are not among them, reports Larry Brooks of the New York Post. New York certainly has a need on their back end – particularly on the offensive side of things – following the dismissal of Anthony DeAngelo but for now at least, they’re staying away. St. Louis is seeking a first-round pick for Dunn who is making an affordable $1.875MM this season but will be a restricted free agent again this summer and will have arbitration eligibility this time around.
NHL Moves Up Games From Later In Season
The NHL has done what many fans and media members have suggested. Two games scheduled to take place between the Arizona Coyotes and St. Louis Blues later in the season have been moved up. Originally scheduled for March 29 and 31, the two teams will now play on February 6 and 8.
This move comes with the Coyotes and Blues both facing changes in their schedule next week. Arizona was supposed to face the Minnesota Wild and the Colorado Avalanche, but both teams have been shut down due to COVID cases. The Blues too were supposed to take on the Avalanche and then Wild, meaning St. Louis and Arizona have nothing better to do than get some of their matches finished.
The schedule maker is certainly earning his salary this season. The two teams are currently playing the second of a pair, and they had another two-game series set to start next weekend, meaning the Coyotes now have six straight games on the schedule against the Blues. St. Louis technically has a game against the Wild squeezed into that stretch, though it’s unclear whether it will be played.
Vladimir Tarasenko Resumes Skating
There appears to be some good news at least on the horizon for the Blues. Speaking with reporters today (video link), GM Doug Armstrong indicated that winger Vladimir Tarasenko has resumed skating as he works his way back from offseason surgery:
Tarasenko has been out since re-aggravating his previous shoulder injury back in the bubble which played a role in the Blues signing Mike Hoffman just before the season started. While it will be several weeks yet before he returns, he’s on track to be a big second-half addition to a team that has gotten off to a solid start this season with a 7-2-1 record.
Tuesday's Game Against Wild Postponed
The Wild will shut down their training facilities indefinitely and the schedule will continue to be revised as testing comes in. After tomorrow’s game against the Avalanche, the team was scheduled to host the Arizona Coyotes for a back-to-back this weekend, before welcoming in the St. Louis Blues on Tuesday and Thursday next week.
Hockey Canada Announces Olympic Management Team
Hockey Canada has announced the management team for the 2022 Beijing Olympics, which will be led by St. Louis Blues general manager Doug Armstrong. He’ll be joined by Edmonton Oilers GM Ken Holland, Seattle Kraken GM Ron Francis, Boston Bruins GM Don Sweeney, and Florida Panthers special assistant Roberto Luongo, who will all serve as assistant general managers for the event. Tom Renney, CEO of Hockey Canada, released a statement on the management group:
It is an exciting time to be able to introduce the members of Canada’s management group, who each bring a tremendous amount of international and championship experience that will benefit our team if NHL players are able to participate in the 2022 Winter Olympics. Under Doug’s leadership, as well as that of our entire management group, we’re thrilled to task them to lead us into 2022, with the opportunity to oversee our staff and players as they compete for an Olympic gold medal.
The management staff’s resumes speak for themselves, including Luongo who is a relative newcomer to front office work but won two Olympic gold medals as a player. Armstrong, Holland, and Francis have been involved in international events many times before, but Sweeney is getting his first taste of Hockey Canada after a long successful stretch with the Bruins. He joined Boston in 2006 as director of player development and worked his way up to GM in 2015.
Though the NHL’s inclusion in the Olympics isn’t an absolute guarantee, it does feel inevitable because of the work the league and union put in on the last CBA. These appointments only strengthen the idea that players like Connor McDavid, Sidney Crosby, and Nathan MacKinnon will be teammates next year.
Tyler Bozak To Miss This Weekend's Games
- The Blues will be without center Tyler Bozak for their two games this weekend against Anaheim, reports Jim Thomas of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. He was injured on a hit from Vegas winger Mark Stone on Tuesday night, one that had St. Louis hoping for some sort of supplemental discipline although none was coming. Sammy Blais will take Bozak’s spot in the lineup. As for defenseman Robert Bortuzzo, he’s expected to take the gameday skate today with head coach Craig Berube hoping that he’ll be available on Sunday.
Discrepancy Over Perceived Long-Term Value Could Be Additional Factor In Vince Dunn's Availability
The report earlier this week that the Blues are engaging in trade discussions around defenseman Vince Dunn came as a surprise to some but a slow start and eventual cap challenges once Vladimir Tarasenko is cleared to return is certainly among the reasons his name is out there. In a reader chat, Tom Timmermann of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch posits another idea in that there is potentially a wide divide between what the team feels he’s worth versus what Dunn believes he’s worth. Timmermann draws some parallels to former Blue Joel Edmundson who went year-to-year on his deal as the two sides were just too far apart to find common ground on a long-term agreement. If that is indeed the case, moving Dunn now with three years of team control left after this one would make more sense than what happened with Edmundson who was moved to Carolina last year as salary ballast in the Justin Faulk trade.
League Postpones Vegas-St. Louis
The latest NHL postponement has come down today, as the Vegas Golden Knights and St. Louis Blues will not play this evening. The Golden Knights regular coaching staff was put into self-isolation earlier this week due to an “abundance of caution” while GM Kelly McCrimmon and the AHL staff took over behind the bench. The two teams played on Tuesday night, but today a player and another member of the Golden Knights coaching staff have entered the league’s COVID protocols, leading to the postponement. The team’s training facilities have been closed until further notice.
The Golden Knights were set to meet the San Jose Sharks for games on Monday and Wednesday, then travel back to Las Vegas for a six-game homestand that included the Los Angeles Kings, Anaheim Ducks and Colorado Avalanche. It’s not clear at this point whether there will be more postponements. The Blues meanwhile were headed to Anaheim after today’s game for a back-to-back series on Saturday and Sunday, before returning home to welcome the Arizona Coyotes on Tuesday. Importantly, the Blues did take the ice today for an optional morning skate, while the Golden Knights saw their practice canceled.
The Carolina Hurricanes and Dallas Stars have both previously required postponements, creating some serious imbalance on the Central Division table. The Chicago Blackhawks have already played eight games, while the Stars, Hurricanes and Florida Panthers have all played just three to this point. With the league’s focus on getting in all 56 matches for every club, these postponements will have to be squeezed in down the road. The Golden Knights and Blues do finish the season against each other, perhaps a spot to put in an additional game.
Snapshots: Laine, Penguins, Blues
The Columbus Blue Jackets will get to see Jack Roslovic in action on Thursday evening against the Florida Panthers but are still waiting on Patrik Laine to even show up on the COVID Protocol Absences List, let alone the roster. Laine remains in Canada for the time being, though Aaron Portzline of The Athletic reported this morning that the forward is in Ottawa now finishing paperwork with the U.S. consolute to acquire his work visa. Once all of the paperwork is finished, Laine is expected to take a private charter to Columbus, where he’ll enter the protocol. It could be as short as 48 hours, though that is not a guarantee at this point.
It will be interesting to see where Laine fits in once he does clear the protocol, especially after a very up-and-down start to the season for Columbus. The team has scored 18 goals in seven games, but also given up 22. The only reason they are leading the Central Division at the moment is that several other teams have only played three games, as the 2-2-3 Blue Jackets’ record isn’t really something to be excited about. Laine of course was dealing with a minor injury before the trade to Columbus and now hasn’t played since January 14.
- Pittsburgh Penguins CEO David Morehouse spoke to Greg Wyshynski of ESPN and explained that the team is not heading into a rebuilding phase now that Jim Rutherford has resigned as GM. In fact, Morehouse doubled down on the “win-now” phrase and explained that the team will look for a new GM that will “come in and continue having us work towards winning another Cup.” The Penguins still have Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, which is usually good enough for any front office to believe they can win the Stanley Cup.
- The St. Louis Blues will be the fifth NHL team to allow fans into their building this season, announcing that 1,400 spectators will be allowed into Enterprise Center for their games beginning on February 2. Those will be in addition to the limited amount of frontline workers that had already been attending. The Blues credit the success of local and NHL safety protocols during the initial homestands this season as the reason for increasing capacity. As Sean Shapiro of The Athletic reports, The Dallas Stars, Florida Panthers, Arizona Coyotes and Nashville Predators have also allowed a certain number of fans into their arenas.
St. Louis Blues Engaging In Trade Talks On Vince Dunn
After the St. Louis Blues lost 6-3 to the Los Angeles Kings on Sunday, head coach Craig Berube took the podium to answer questions. When asked about Vince Dunn‘s tough night, he let slip some of his feelings on the defenseman’s rough night.
Gotta play better. Can’t get walked one-on-one. I dunno. We’ll keep that in house and talk to him about it.
It seems as though the house is leaky, as both Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet and Frank Seravalli of TSN reported on trade talks the team has had revolving around the young player. Friedman writes that there were a “lot of trade talks about him” before the team signed Dunn to a one-year, $1.875MM deal and notes that the Blues are believed to be looking for a first-round pick in return. Seravalli meanwhile admits it’s not “inevitable” that the team trades him, reports that the Blues have engaged with teams in discussions about him, and suggests Dunn’s “time might be done” in St. Louis.
Dunn, 24, has struggled in the defensive end of the rink but posted seasons of 24, 35, and 23 points through the first three years of his career. The 2015 second-round pick is a strong offensive weapon that could be valuable to a team that can offer sheltered minutes with the right partner. That appears to not be in St. Louis anymore, though obviously it’s not clear when a trade will be completed, if at all.
In the meantime, it appears as though he may be a healthy scratch or at least lose his powerplay duties for the Blues this evening. Berube explained his reasoning even further to Jeremy Rutherford of The Athletic, saying that Dunn “has to keep the game in front of him more than anything” and limit the turnovers he has been known to give up.
