Toronto Maple Leafs Sign Jani Hakanpää

Sunday: Toronto has officially registered the contract, per PuckPedia.  The deal contains a signing bonus of $695K and a base salary of $775K, the league minimum.  Hakanpää also received an eight-team no-trade clause.

Wednesday: Defenseman Jani Hakanpää‘s eventful trip through unrestricted free agency ended after an offseason full of speculation. The Toronto Maple Leafs made public that the team has signed Hakanpää to a one-year contract worth $1.47MM.

Back at the beginning of the offseason on July 1st TSN’s Darren Dreger reported that the Maple Leafs and Hakanpää agreed to a two-year contract with Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman relaying a $1.5MM cap hit each season. Mum was the word after that as Toronto never registered the contract with the league offices as Hakanpää’s knee injury became a cause for concern. Hakanpää’s year during the 2023-24 season was cut short on March 16th as he underwent an arthroscopic procedure.

After debating whether or not Hakanpää would be healthy enough to play on Toronto’s blue line the team ultimately decided to mitigate their risk with a one-year deal. Despite the relatively low cap hit it complicates an already tight Maple Leafs’ cap structure. The team entered the afternoon with approximately $400K in salary cap room according to PuckPedia and Hakanpää’s salary will now put them in negative territory.

The risk may be solid as Hakanpää’s last three years with the Dallas Stars were more than quality. He scored a mild 12 goals and 40 points over 226 games but his 668 hits and 363 blocked shots over that span made him one of the more physically oppressive defensemen in the league. The Stars played a suffocating style on defenseman and Hakanpää was one of the reasons their structure became so restrictive for opponents.

There won’t be much expectation for high levels of ice time at 5on5 play for Hakanpää but he should see a healthy amount of minutes on the team’s penalty kill. He jumps from a penalty kill ranked 8th last season to one that was ranked 23rd. He also should help Toronto keep the puck out of their net. The team wasn’t horrible in that category last season by any stretch of the imagination but their 3.18 GA/G did rank 21st in the league which could be improved upon.

His benefit to Toronto’s blue line will only be important if he is available making his knee injury something to monitor. If he can play much of the regular season the Maple Leafs’ defense will certainly be nastier to play against this year, especially after factoring in the team’s free addition of Chris Tanev earlier in the summer.

Columbus Blue Jackets Sign James Van Riemsdyk

4:56 PM: The Blue Jackets made the deal official according to a team announcement. Waddell said, “James van Riemsdyk has been a very consistent, productive player throughout his career and bringing him to Columbus will not only provide depth to our group up front, but also valuable leadership and another veteran presence in our dressing room“.

3:34 PM: TSN’s Chris Johnston is reporting the Columbus Blue Jackets have signed UFA forward James van Riemsdyk. A few moments later, David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period reported that it would be a one-year, $900K contract for van Riemsdyk in Columbus.

The veteran sniper will join the fourth team of his career as the Blue Jackets inch closer to the salary cap floor. It was reported only yesterday that Columbus would be looking to add up front after moving on from Patrik Laine this summer and the tragic loss of winger Johnny Gaudreau at the end of last month. Forward Justin Danforth is not expected to be ready for the start of the regular season due to a wrist injury that knocks the Blue Jackets down to 10 healthy forwards. Putting together a complete lineup is more forward in the mind of general manager Don Waddell, as there isn’t an expectation the team will be penalized for starting the year under the salary cap floor.

JVR is no longer the offensive threat he used to be with the Philadelphia Flyers and Toronto Maple Leafs but should reasonably add some punch to the middle-six of Columbus’ forward core. He’s coming off a one-year deal with the Boston Bruins in which he scored 11 goals and 38 points in 71 games while also skating in his 1000th NHL contest. Most of his points in Boston came in the first half of the season, with seven goals and 29 points through the first 41 games. He only managed four goals and nine points in the last 30 games without having a major decline in ATOI.

Columbus can reasonably expect 30 to 35 points from JVR this year but his real value may come through his leadership skills. He made it to the Stanley Cup Final in his rookie campaign with the Philadelphia Flyers in 2009-10 with seven more appearances in the postseason since. He’s scored over 300 goals at the NHL level and could be a tremendous teacher to the number of young guns on the Blue Jackets’ roster.

He may become a buy-low trade candidate this season for contending teams looking to add scoring in their bottom six. The Blue Jackets are not expected to compete, and van Riemsdyk’s $900K salary will be more than affordable for interested parties. The now second-oldest player in Columbus will have to take advantage of the first half of the year if he hopes to compete for a Stanley Cup by the end of next season.

Islanders To Sign Artyom Kudashov To PTO

The New York Islanders reportedly have brought in defensive prospect Artyom Kudashov on a professional tryout agreement according to Stefen Rosner of The Hockey News. Kudashov, 19, will attend the Islanders’ rookie and training camp over the next several weeks hoping to earn a contract.

Kudashov will be the second player poached by the Islanders this summer from the KHL if he signs a contract joining Maxim Tsyplakov who signed his entry-level deal in May. He doesn’t carry the same pedigree as Tsyplakov so he must earn his spot on the team before New York offers him a contract.

It won’t be the first time he’s skated with an NHL team as the undrafted Russian skated with the Philadelphia Flyers during their summer camp. According to Rosner, the Islanders took an interest then and followed him back overseas while he started the 2024-25 KHL season with Dynamo Moskva.

He spent much of last year with Dynamo’s MHL team scoring five goals and eight points in 21 games. His time in the KHL wasn’t as fruitful with Kudashov failing to put up any points in 25 contests. He considers himself a two-way defenseman but leans much heavier into the defensive side — something New York could use at all levels of their organization.

Artyom is excited about an NHL opportunity after watching his father, Alexei Kudashov, play 25 games for the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1993-94 season. Given that New York could use two-way depth on defense, Kudashov should have every opportunity to earn himself a two-way contract out of camp.

Markus Niemeläinen Signs In Germany

Ex-Oilers defenseman Markus Niemeläinen is headed back to Europe, signing a one-year deal today with Germany’s Eisbären Berlin.

The 26-year-old was a Group VI unrestricted free agent this summer after the two-year, $1.53MM deal he inked with Edmonton in 2022 expired. The Oilers buried Niemeläinen, a 2016 third-round pick, with the AHL’s Bakersfield Condors for all of last season despite his deal carrying a one-way structure.

A stay-at-home defender, the 6’6″, 190-lb Niemeläinen struggled to make much of an impact after arriving in North America in 2021. He did get an extended look in the NHL, making 43 appearances for the Oilers across the 2021-22 and 2022-23 campaigns, but he recorded just one assist with a -2 rating, 28 shots on goal, and 143 hits while averaging 11:30 per game.

While he was involved physically, it didn’t translate into a positive defensive impact. The Oilers controlled 48.1% of shot attempts and 47.7% of expected goals with Niemeläinen on the ice at even strength in his NHL minutes, subpar numbers given his average-difficulty usage on an otherwise strong possession team.

Niemeläinen also made 120 appearances for Bakersfield in parts of four seasons stateside in the Edmonton organization, where he had seven goals and 16 assists for 19 points in 26 games with a +10 rating. The Finnish defender now lands in Germany for the first time. He does have somewhat of a résumé in the European pros, winning a Liiga championship with HPK in 2019.

Islanders Sign Matt Martin To PTO

The Islanders are bringing back a familiar face, according to general manager Lou Lamoriello, who told reporters today that they’ll have veteran enforcer Matt Martin in training camp on a PTO (via Ethan Sears of the New York Post).

It’s an unsurprising move for both sides at first glance. Martin, 35, has spent 13 of his 15 NHL seasons on Long Island, racking up 823 appearances since they drafted him in the fifth round in 2008. Aside from a brief detour in Toronto from 2016 to 2018, the heavy hitter has only signed contracts with the Islanders, including his most recent one – a four-year, $6MM pact that expired this summer.

But this is a bit of a course reversal from Lamoriello, who said last month he was unlikely to bring back Martin or longtime linemate Cal Clutterbuck. He’ll hold true to the latter half of that statement, though, confirming today Clutterbuck was not offered a PTO (per Newsday’s Andrew Gross). Martin said a couple of weeks ago that he was intent on returning to the Isles with a chance at playing his 1,000th career regular season game in 2024-25.

Martin posted four goals and four assists in 57 games last season, pacing just slightly south of his career offensive averages while averaging 9:19 per game. He finished second on the team in PIMs (43) and fifth in hits (151). He has 1,158 career PIMs in 955 games.

If Martin manages to land a deal, it’ll likely be a league-minimum pact and could result in him being waived for the first time in his career. The Islanders do have an open roster spot but are completely capped out with $0 in projected space, per PuckPedia. If he’s sent to the minors, it would be his first time suiting up for AHL Bridgeport since the 2010-11 season.

Taro Hirose Signs With German Team

Former Red Wings left winger Taro Hirose has signed with EHC Munich of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga, according to a team announcement.

Hirose, 28, spent last season playing out the back half of a two-year, two-way extension signed with Detroit in 2022. For the first time since turning pro in 2019, however, he was buried entirely in the minors with the AHL’s Grand Rapids Griffins, where the 5’10”, 170-lb playmaker had 27 assists and 36 points in 54 games. The Red Wings didn’t bring him back after reaching unrestricted free agency in July.

Hirose has appeared in 60 NHL regular season games, all with Detroit – most recently, a three-game call-up in March and April 2023. An undrafted free agent signing out of Michigan State, the Winnipeg native has been an AHL fixture, only logging a career-high 26 NHL appearances with the Wings in 2019-20.

Overall, the 2019 NCAA scoring champion posted four goals, 16 assists, 20 points, and a -17 rating in 60 games with Detroit in parts of five seasons. He joins a Munich roster highlighted by a few other former NHLers, namely Adam BrooksTobias Rieder, and Ben Smith.

Flames Sign Jakob Pelletier

The Calgary Flames have signed prospect Jakob Pelletier to a one-year, two-way contract shares Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman. The deal will pay him $800K at the NHL level. Pelletier was one of six remaining restricted free agents in Calgary, including defenseman Ilya Solovyov.

Pelletier suffered a pre-season upper-body injury last season, delaying the start of his season to January 26th. He impressed when he finally returned, earning an NHL call-up after netting three points in his first four games back. Pelletier appeared in 13 games in the Calgary lineup, recording three points, one penalty, and a +1 in fourth-line minutes. He was much more productive in the minors, totaling 12 points in 18 games – maintaining the near point-per-game production he recorded in 66 AHL games in 2021-22, and 35 games last year.

Pelletier is one of many top Flames prospects who should benefit from the team’s closet cleaning this summer. With this deal in place, he’ll step into competition with players like Matthew Coronato, Sam Morton, and William Stromgren for a winger role in Calgary’s bottom six. Pelletier has the most NHL experience of the bunch, with 10 points in 37 career games narrowly beating out Coronato’s nine points in 35 games.

Meanwhile, Calgary still boasts nearly $20MM in projected cap space entering the season, per PuckPedia. They’ll have five more RFAs to negotiate with – but could still afford to spend lavishly on high-upside try-outs. They’ve already tapped into that market a bit, signing Tyson Barrie to a PTO that’s expected to turn into a one-year contract.

Islanders Sign Keith Kinkaid To PTO

The Islanders will have free agent goaltender Keith Kinkaid in training camp on a professional tryout contract, relays Stefen Rosner of The Hockey News.

Kinkaid, 35, is on the UFA market for the fifth time in the past six years. He spent last season on a two-way deal with the Devils, where he spent six of his 10 NHL seasons, but didn’t play in the organization. He was instead loaned out to the AHL’s Chicago Wolves, the minor league’s lone non-affiliated franchise last season, where he had a 3.54 GAA, .880 SV%, and an 8-14-2 record in 24 appearances.

An undrafted free agent signing by New Jersey back in 2011, Kinkaid was a solid backup/1B option during his peak in the Garden State but hasn’t been an NHL regular since being traded to the Blue Jackets at the 2019 trade deadline. He’s made 14 NHL starts and four relief appearances over the past five seasons and didn’t see NHL ice in 2023-24.

The Long Island native will now aid his hometown team in camp. Inexplicably, the veteran of 13 professional seasons and 169 NHL games is on the Isles’ rookie camp roster, where he’ll be providing insurance for 21-year-old prospect Tristan Lennox, who’s reportedly a bit banged up and might not be fully ready to go in the run-up to veterans reporting to training camp next Wednesday.

In those 169 career appearances, Kinkaid has a 70-58-21 record, eight shutouts, a 2.91 GAA, and a .905 SV%. 151 of those games came in a Devils uniform, although he’s also logged time between the pipes for the Canadiens, Rangers, Bruins, and Avalanche in the past few years.

The Islanders already have six goaltenders signed, so the likelihood of Kinkaid landing a contract from this PTO appears slim. The team already acquired a veteran presence for their AHL affiliate, the Bridgeport Islanders, bringing in former Senator Marcus Högberg on a two-year deal. Lennox and a pair of other contracted prospects in their early 20s (Jakub SkarekHenrik Tikkanen) will also compete for reps in Bridgeport.

Anaheim Ducks To Sign Three Players To PTOs

Frank Seravalli of Daily Faceoff reports the Anaheim Ducks are bringing in Mark Pysyk, Boris Katchouk, and Gustav Lindstrom on professional tryout agreements. The Ducks will surely rely more on their youth this season but all three players could serve as reasonable depth if some prospects aren’t adjusting well.

Katchouk is only a few years removed from being a top prospect in his own right with the Tampa Bay Lightning. Katchouk scored 11 goals and 34 points in 29 games with the AHL’s Syracuse Crunch during the 2020-21 season which caused many to believe he may become a middle-six fixture in Tampa for years to come. Unfortunately, his inconsistent ice time led to inconsistent play and the Lightning moved Katchouk to the Chicago Blackhawks in a package for Brandon Hagel.

He played much better with Chicago when more playing time came his way with five goals and 16 points in 58 games during the 2022-23 season but poor play last year ran out the clock with the Blackhawks. The team waived Katchouk near the trade deadline last year and he was eventually claimed by the Ottawa Senators where he scored two goals and four points in 21 games down the stretch.

The Ducks will also bring in a pair of right-handed shot defensemen one of which has spent a decent amount of time with the team already. Anaheim claimed Lindstrom in mid-January of last season away from the Montreal Canadiens and he played rather well for the team down the stretch. He only tallied six assists in 32 games but limited his turnovers and achieved a +12 rating by season’s end placing him second on the team, respectively.

Pysyk is arguably the most interesting addition due to having played in an NHL contest since the 2021-22 season. He signed a one-year deal with the Detroit Red Wings before the 2022-23 NHL season but a tear of his Achilles tendon cost him the year. He went unsigned from his PTO with the Pittsburgh Penguins last year but eventually landed with the team’s AHL affiliate, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins. He went scoreless in eight games for the AHL Penguins but eventually found a more consistent home with the AHL’s Calgary Wranglers on a two-way contract with the Calgary Flames.

None of the three players are guaranteed contracts heading into the 2024-25 season but it seems like a prudent move for the Ducks to get a look at some talent for the AHL level. The team is in a position to graduate several prospects this year and could use some more depth in case they can’t find consistency in the early stages of their NHL careers.

Panthers To Sign Matt Luff To PTO

The Florida Panthers have entered the market for PTOs as they try to rebuild their forward depth from a season ago. David Dwork of The Hockey News is reporting that the Panthers have agreed to a professional tryout agreement with forward Matt Luff and he will be with the team next week.

Luff began his career with the Los Angeles Kings organization in 2016 after the team signed him out of the Ontario Hockey League. He was coming off a season with the Hamilton Bulldogs where he scored 25 goals and 49 points in 45 games. One of the major questions at the time of his signing was the limited usage of his larger frame. He was physically one of the bigger players in the OHL at the time but rarely played to his size which made him an interesting addition for a hard-nosed Kings playstyle at the time.

Most of his tenure in the Kings organization had him with the team’s AHL affiliate, the Ontario Reign. He nevertheless managed to skate in 64 games for Los Angeles from 2018-21 where he added 10 goals and 17 points overall. After a one-year stint with the Nashville Predators organization in 2021-22 Luff eventually signed on with the Detroit Red Wings where he has been ever since.

His two separate one-year deals with the Red Wings have allowed for 19 appearances at the NHL level with two goals and four points. His real fruitfulness with the Red Wings organization has been his time with the team’s AHL affiliate, the Grand Rapids Griffins, although he’s been mired by injuries. He’s appeared in 54 games for the Griffins over the last two years while posting 18 goals and 43 points.

It will be challenging for Luff to crack a re-worked Panthers’ bottom-six but his recent success at the AHL level has at least garnered him an opportunity. Florida does not have a deep crop of forwards at the AHL level as they struggled to score last year in Charlotte. Luff will have to assume a next-man-up mentality heading into the season but at least it will be in pursuit of joining the roster of the defending Stanley Cup Champions.

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