Blues Sign Jakub Stancl To Entry-Level Deal

The Blues have been busy in recent days signing some of their prospects, inking Aleksanteri Kaskimaki and Juraj Pekarcik to contracts.  They added to that list today, announcing that they’ve signed forward Jakub Stancl to a three-year, entry-level deal.  Financial terms were not disclosed.

The 19-year-old was a fourth-round pick last June, going 106th overall following a good season in Sweden’s junior system.  This year, Stancl played in 28 games with Vaxjo’s under-20 team, notching seven goals and seven assists.  He also got into seven SHL contests, scoring once.  Stancl was more impactful offensively at the World Juniors, however.  He recorded four goals and two assists in seven games for Czechia.

St. Louis will have some options with Stancl next season.  Since he wasn’t drafted out of the CHL, they can assign him to AHL Springfield if they want to get him acclimated to play in North America.  They could opt to send him to major junior where WHL Kelowna holds his rights.  Alternatively, they can elect to send him back overseas and keep him in Vaxjo’s system for another year.  As long as he doesn’t play in ten NHL games in 2024-25, his contract will actually slide and will still have three years left on it heading into the 2025-26 campaign.

Canadiens Sign Jared Davidson To Entry-Level Deal

The Canadiens have signed center Jared Davidson to a two-year, entry-level deal, per a team release. The Canadian pivot was set to become an unrestricted free agent tomorrow at 4 p.m. CT if not signed to his ELC.

Davidson, 22 in July, is coming off his first professional season for the AHL’s Laval Rocket. He made 38 appearances for the Habs’ top minor-league affiliate, scoring 11 goals and five assists for 16 points with 31 PIMs and a +1 rating.

Initially eligible for selection in the 2020 draft, he was passed over twice before landing with Montreal via the 130th overall pick in 2022. The Edmonton native spent his amateur career with the Seattle Thunderbirds of the Western Hockey League. He was a non-factor offensively in his draft year, limited to 16 points in 59 games, but had a strong run during the COVID-shortened 2020-21 season (19 points in 23 games). That prefaced a major breakout in 2021-22, learning All-Star nods after leading the T-birds in scoring with 89 points (42 goals, 47 assists) in 64 games, thus earning him draft consideration.

Financial terms of his entry-level pact weren’t initially disclosed. The two-year term carries him through the 2025-26 season, and he’ll be a restricted free agent upon expiry if tendered a qualifying offer.

Kings Place Kim Nousiainen On Unconditional Waivers

May 30: Nousiainen passed through waivers unclaimed and can have his deal terminated by the Kings, per CapFriendly.

May 29: Thinning out their contractual commitments for the 2024-25 NHL season, the Los Angeles Kings have placed defenseman Kim Nousiainen on unconditional waivers for contract termination, according to a team announcement. In all likelihood, Nousiainen will test his luck next season overseas in his native Finland.

Originally drafted with the 119th overall pick of the 2019 NHL Draft by the Kings, Nousiainen has only spent the last three years playing for the organization. Nousiainen made the jump to North America after signing his entry-level contract with Los Angeles on Marco 30, 2022.

A moderately capable two-way defenseman in the Finnish Liiga, Nousiainen saw his offense completely crater during his tenure with the Ontario Reign of the American Hockey League. In 97 games spent with the Kings’ highest affiliate, Nousiainen only mustered two goals and 17 points in total, including two points in eight postseason contests.

Now that the remaining year on his entry-level contract is set to be terminated, Nousiainen will likely opt to rejoin KalPa of the Finnish Liiga — an organization he has spent nearly all of his professional career with. Across four years in Finland’s highest professional league, Nousiaien is already a veteran of 146 games, scoring 19 goals and 60 points overall.

Blues Sign Juraj Pekarcik To Entry-Level Contract

Only playing one more season in junior after his draft year, Juraj Pekarcik has signed his entry-level contract with the St. Louis Blues according to a team announcement. Believing he could play professionally last year, the Blues organization thought it was best for Pekarcik’s development to have the young forward play junior hockey for one year in North America.  According to CapFriendly, the deal carries European Assignment Clause, a cap hit of $870K, and an AAV of $950K.

In his draft year, Pekarcik played in 30 games for HK Nitra of the Tipos Extraliga, tallying only three assists in total. However, outside the box score, Pekarcik showed a solid sense of hockey IQ, and a keen ability to play away from the puck.

Liking what they saw, St. Louis selected Pekarcik with the 76th overall pick of the 2023 NHL Draft and quickly loaned the young prospect to the Dubuque Fighting Saints of the United States Hockey League. Becoming one of the premier playmakers in the league, the young Slovakian finished the year with nine goals and 59 points in 43 games, leading his team in assists. Pekarcik continued his production in the 2024 Clark Cup playoffs, scoring three goals and 10 points in 11 games before the Saints were finally eliminated in the Finals by the Fargo Force.

Although the Blues could use some young depth up front, it is more than likely that Pekarcik will start next year on the team’s AHL affiliate, the Springfield Thunderbirds. Since signing on as St. Louis’ highest affiliate before the start of the 2020-21 AHL season, the Thunderbirds have been steadily declining over the last three seasons, having missed the playoffs this past year.

Hurricanes Re-Sign Ryan Suzuki To Two-Way Deal

The Hurricanes have re-signed center Ryan Suzuki to a one-year, two-way contract, the team announced Wednesday. He avoids restricted free agency and will make $775K in the NHL and $70K in the AHL next year with a $90K guarantee.

The younger brother of Canadiens captain Nick Suzuki has been in the Canes organization since they drafted him 28th overall in 2019. He signed his entry-level deal that summer, spending one season in juniors before graduating to professional play in 2020-21.

Suzuki hasn’t put up the offensive numbers worthy of an NHL call-up, though, and he’s remained entirely in the minors throughout his pro career. Unlike some other Hurricanes prospects, his development wasn’t completely derailed by their lack of a full-time AHL affiliate this season. He remained semi-productive while on loan to the Blues’ affiliate, the Springfield Thunderbirds, posting 14 goals and 30 points in 51 games. That nearly mirrored his stat line with AHL Chicago the year prior, which were all career-highs at the time.

At 23 years old, there’s still a little time for Suzuki to shift his development into high gear and earn a roster spot down the line, but it likely needs to happen this season. The lack of game-breaking offense suggests a top-six role in the NHL is out of the question, but he likely still has a ceiling as a center on a depth scoring line thanks to his historically above-average passing ability. He’s unlikely to challenge for a roster spot in Carolina next fall, even with a fair amount of roster turnover expected, but a midseason call-up is an achievable goal.

Suzuki was not eligible for salary arbitration this offseason, but he will be when his new deal expires next summer. He’s still four years away from being eligible for standard unrestricted free agency. However, if he’s played less than 80 NHL games by the 2026 offseason, he’ll be eligible for Group Six UFA status then.

Adam Ruzicka Signs With KHL’s Spartak Moscow

Center Adam Ružička has signed with Spartak Moscow of Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League, the team announced today on X. He joins the club on a one-year deal after having his contract terminated by the Coyotes in February after he posted a video of himself on his Instagram story showing him next to an unidentified white powdered substance, believed to be cocaine.

Ružička, 25, looked like he was on his way to becoming an NHL regular with the Flames after posting 20 points in just 44 games in the 2022-23 season. Unfortunately, the 6’4″, 215-lb pivot couldn’t keep up the momentum this year, limited to three goals and nine points in 39 games before landing on waivers in January. The Coyotes claimed him, but an illness and work visa issues limited him to three appearances, going without a point and averaging just 8:17 per game, before the contract termination.

He wasn’t a highly-touted prospect, going 109th overall to Calgary in 2017, but he did have spectacular showings with the AHL’s Stockton Heat that got him into an extended NHL tryout three years after turning pro. The Slovak pivot put up 32 goals and 36 assists for 68 points in 98 games with Stockton over three campaigns there, including 11 goals and 20 points in just 16 games in his final minor-league stint in 2021-22. There’s a good amount of offensive skill in his game, but a surprising lack of physicality and aggression, given his frame, has limited his effectiveness defensively. This year, he had a 45.4 CF% and 39.5 xGF% at even strength across 42 games with the Coyotes and Flames.

Ružička is set to be a top-six force for Spartak, given his previous offensive effectiveness in minor-league and limited NHL roles. He joins a club with longtime NHLers Alex Kovalev and Alexei Zhamnov on its coaching staff. Their top forward, former Canucks and Sharks winger Nikolay Goldobin, tied for second in the KHL in scoring last season with 37 goals and 78 points in 67 games.

Adam Clendening, Vladimir Tkachev Sign In KHL

China-based Kunlun Red Star of Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League announced today that they’ve signed right-shot defenseman Adam Clendening for the 2024-25 season (X link). He wasn’t the only former NHLer to extend his stay overseas, as the KHL’s Avangard Omsk also re-signed forward Vladimir Tkachev to a five-year deal, per the league. While the agreement extends a lengthy KHL resume for Tkachev, it will be Clendening’s second season overseas and his first in the KHL.

Clendening, 31, was once a decently high-value prospect with the Blackhawks after being taken in the second round of the 2011 draft, but never managed to land a role above a seventh defenseman at the NHL level. He appeared in parts of five seasons from 2014 to 2019, making brief stops with the Blackhawks, Blue Jackets, Canucks, Coyotes, Oilers, Penguins, and Rangers before settling exclusively into a minor-league role shortly before the pandemic. Clendening was long an offensive force at the AHL level and put up decent numbers in his depth NHL minutes, totaling 24 points and a +11 rating in 90 career major-league appearances.

Since his last NHL appearance with Columbus in 2019, Clendening spent the next three seasons on two-way NHL contracts but didn’t receive any call-ups. After settling for an AHL contract in 2022-23, splitting the season between Rockford and Hartford, he opted to take his talents overseas for the first time. The New York-born blue-liner signed a one-year deal with Ilves in the Finnish Liiga, putting up eight goals, 20 assists and 28 points with 41 PIMs and a +9 rating in 40 showings. They opted not to retain him, though, and he now takes his talents to a Red Star team that’s failed to make the playoffs since its inaugural season in 2016-17. The team remains technically based in China but has played most of its games in Mytishchi, a suburb of Moscow, since the pandemic.

As for Tkachev, he’ll be a familiar name for Kings fans. They attempted to bring him over as an undrafted free agent in 2021, but he appeared in only four games, recording two assists, and spent most of the 2021-22 season on assignment to AHL Ontario. After failing to match his KHL production rate in the minors, they opted not to issue him a qualifying offer and let him become an unrestricted free agent, upon which he returned home. The 5’10” winger has since established his status as one of the best players in the league, leading to some spotty speculation that he would attempt an NHL comeback next season, but that won’t be the case. He had a career-high 75 points in 58 games with Omsk last year, serving as an alternate captain and ranking fifth in the league in scoring.

Chicago Blackhawks Sign Zachary Sanford To One-Year Extension

The Chicago Blackhawks have taken another pending unrestricted free agent off the board after already having signed Alex Vlasic, Lukas Reichel, and Brett Seney to contract extensions before the official start of the offseason. Today, the Blackhawks announced the organization has signed forward Zachary Sanford to a one-year, two-way contract extension for the 2024-25 NHL season.

For the second straight year, Sanford will have to settle for a two-way contract after signing a similar deal with the Arizona Coyotes last July. This time, Sanford will take a decrease in pay, earning a salary of $775K at the NHL compared to the $800K he was earning last season.

Even though he started the season with the Coyotes organization, Sanford found his way to Chicago after being claimed on waivers in early January. At the time, the Blackhawks were dealing with numerous injuries to their forward core, giving Sanford access to more playing time at the NHL level.

Strictly a depth piece at this point in his career, Sanford played adequately enough for a rebuilding Blackhawks team, tallying four assists with the team in 18 games. Outside of the NHL, Sanford was able to play a handful of games with Chicago’s AHL affiliate, the Rockford IceHogs, scoring three goals and six points in 13 games. Depending on the state of the Blackhawks’ forward core at the end of training camp next September, Sanford could earn a bottom-line role for opening night.

Blackhawks Agree To Entry-Level Deal With Martin Misiak

The Blackhawks have signed forward Martin Misiak to a three-year entry-level contract, per a team announcement. His deal will count as $878.3K against the cap and keep him in the Hawks’ system through at least 2027.

Misiak, still just 19, was the last of three second-round selections Chicago made in last year’s draft at 55th overall. The stocky Slovak winger spent this season south of the border with the OHL’s Erie Otters, finishing sixth on the team in scoring with 47 points (23 goals, 24 assists) in 60 games with a -14 rating.

He wasn’t drafted out of the OHL, though, meaning the NHL-CHL transfer agreement doesn’t apply to him, and he can be assigned to AHL Rockford full-time next season without issue. He split his draft year between HC Nove Zamky in the Slovak Extraliga and the USHL’s Youngstown Phantoms, leaving his home country midseason to make his North American junior debut.

It was somewhat of a rocky post-draft year for Misiak, who many viewed as a third- or fourth-round pick instead of a second-round selection. He did make his professional debut on a tryout contract with Rockford to end the season, posting a shot on goal in a 3-2 overtime win on April 21. He also represented his country at the 2024 World Juniors, posting three assists and a -4 rating in five games.

The 6’1″ sniper will attempt to fit in as one of the younger players in the Rockford lineup next season, turning 20 during training camp. He becomes the 30th player under contract for Chicago next season and will be a restricted free agent when his deal expires.

Blues Sign Aleksanteri Kaskimaki To Entry-Level Deal

11:49 a.m.: Kaskimäki’s deal carries a cap hit of $870K, PuckPedia reports. It will be paid out via a base salary of $775K, a signing bonus of $95K, a potential games played bonus of $80K, and a minors salary of $82.5K each season.

The Blues announced Tuesday that they’ve signed forward Aleksanteri Kaskimäki to a three-year entry-level contract. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Kaskimäki, 20, was the 73rd overall selection in the 2022 draft by St. Louis and has spent the two years since developing in his native Finland. All of the 6-foot, 192-lb center’s professional experience has come with the Liiga’s HIFK, scoring 14 goals and 26 points in 93 games dating back to his debut in the 2021-22 campaign.

2023-24 was a solid campaign for Kaskimäki, who managed to hit the 10-goal mark in 48 games despite being limited to bottom-six minutes, receiving customarily low usage for developing prospects in European pro leagues. The Espoo native is good at using his speed to carry the puck through the neutral zone and has an accurate shot, something the Blues hope leads to good possession play and decent depth scoring in a bottom-six role down the line.

Kaskimäki was on Finland’s roster for the past two World Junior Championships. He had two goals and two assists in seven games at the 2024 event after going pointless in five games the year prior, although the Finns failed to medal in back-to-back years for the first time since 2017 and 2018.

He’s still likely a ways away from cracking an NHL roster. Since he was under contract with HIFK next season, he could very well spend 2024-25 on loan to his Finnish club. His ELC will run out after the 2026-27 campaign, and he’ll be a restricted free agent upon expiry.

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