Canucks Reassign Arshdeep Bains

The Canucks have sent winger Arshdeep Bains to AHL Abbotsford, GM Patrik Allvin announced Thursday. His spot in the lineup will go to one of Phillip Di GiuseppeElias Lindholm (undisclosed, day-to-day) or Pius Suter, all of whom were scratched for yesterday’s 2-1 win over the Coyotes.

Bains, 23, signed an entry-level deal with the club two years ago and earned his first NHL recall in February amid a breakout season in Abbotsford. He was returned to the minors on March 1 but was given another chance with a second recall last week. He’s played eight games across his two stints on the roster, struggling with a -5 rating, 6 PIMs and only four shots on goal while averaging 11:48 per game.

Evidently not ready for major league action, the Surrey, British Columbia native will likely remain in Abbotsford for the rest of the season. He’s excelled there this season, posting 14 goals, 35 assists, 49 points, and a +15 rating in 53 games. Regardless of his lack of NHL impact thus far, he’s proven to be a smart undrafted free-agent pickup by Allvin and is one of the organization’s better forwards under the age of 25. He led the WHL in scoring two seasons ago with Red Deer, putting himself on NHL teams’ radars after a tumultuous major junior tenure up to that point. Bains has one season remaining on his ELC, which carries a cap hit of $817K.

Senators Activate, Reassign Rourke Chartier

The Senators have activated forward Rourke Chartier from injured reserve and subsequently assigned him to AHL Belleville, per a team announcement. He’d missed 12 games with an upper-body injury.

Chartier, 28 yesterday, was summoned from Belleville under emergency conditions on March 8 but only played once, logging 11:23 against the Sharks before exiting the lineup. He was placed on IR later in the month to open a roster spot.

It was the second lengthy absence of the campaign for Chartier, who also missed 12 games with a concussion in December and January. That hasn’t stopped the Saskatoon native from making a career-high 37 appearances this season, scoring twice and adding an assist while averaging 10:46 per game. The minor-league mainstay is in his third season with the Senators organization and his second on an NHL contract in Ottawa after spending 2021-22 on a minor-league contract with Belleville.

A Sharks 2014 fifth-round pick, the former WHL All-Star played only 13 games with San Jose, all in the 2018-19 season. The following summer, after completing his entry-level contract, he was not awarded a qualifying offer and became an unrestricted free agent, but concussion symptoms prevented him from being cleared to play, and he sat out the 2019-20 campaign as a result. He returned to play in 2020 on a minor-league contract with the Maple Leafs before linking up with the Sens in 2021.

While he may not have much of an NHL future after showing little promise in his fourth-line minutes, Chartier has resumed his strong level of play in the minors and should continue to earn contracts from major league clubs. The pending UFA has been strong in limited action with the B-Sens this year, posting seven goals and 10 points in 12 games. Last season, he scored 20 goals in only 40 games.

Chartier will likely spend the rest of the season in the minors and will be eligible for Calder Cup Playoffs action with Belleville if they sneak in. They’re last place in the North Division but are only two points back of Laval for the fifth and final playoff berth with two games in hand. However, if injuries take a forward out of the mix, he could find his way back up to Ottawa for a game or two.

Panthers Recall Uvis Balinskis

The Panthers have recalled left-shot defenseman Uvis Balinskis from AHL Charlotte, according to a team statement. The move comes under emergency conditions (per CapFriendly) after blue-liner Aaron Ekblad left yesterday’s loss to the Canadiens after the first period with an undisclosed injury and did not return.

Balinskis could slot in tomorrow against the Senators if Ekblad is out, although Tobias Björnfot and Josh Mahura are also available to play. It was a short-lived return to the lineup for Ekblad, who only played four games after a lower-body injury kept him out for most of March. It’s unclear how long Florida expects their 2014 first-overall pick to be unavailable, but it’s not an ideal finish to the season for Ekblad or his club, which is at risk of losing home-ice advantage in a potential first-round clash against the Maple Leafs after going 2-7-1 in their last 10 games.

This is Balinskis’ first NHL season after spending his professional career to date in Russia and Czechia. He’s made 22 appearances for the Panthers on his one-year, entry-level contract, notching a goal and two assists with an even rating while averaging 14:09 per game. The Latvian blue-liner was only recently assigned to Charlotte after Ekblad made his return last week and inked a two-year, $1.7MM extension with the Cats back in January.

Balinskis made the opening night roster with Ekblad and Brandon Montour beginning the campaign on the shelf after undergoing offseason shoulder surgeries but was assigned to Charlotte in December once the team was at full health on the back end. He’s been recalled three times since, including today.

Avalanche Sign Chris Wagner To One-Year Extension

The Avalanche have signed veteran forward Chris Wagner to a one-year contract extension, the team announced. Financial terms were not disclosed but CapFriendly reports that it’s a two-way deal worth $775K in the NHL and $400K in the minors. Considering his current deal carries a $425K guarantee, it’s actually a small step back in terms of guaranteed pay. He’ll remain in the running for a fourth-line role next fall.

Wagner, 32, has played in parts of 10 NHL seasons but hasn’t been a full-timer since 2020-21 with the Bruins (two goals, three assists, five points in 41 games). Boston, who had him locked in for two more seasons at a $1.35MM cap hit at the time, placed him on waivers to begin the following season and assigned him to AHL Providence, where he spent the overwhelming majority of the remainder of his contract. He played just once for the Bruins in each of the 2021-22 and 2022-23 campaigns and was not re-signed when his contract expired last summer.

The Avs signed Wagner to a two-way deal once free agency opened, but he ruptured his Achilles tendon shortly after training camp began and began the season on IR. He was activated, waived, and promptly assigned to AHL Colorado in mid-January, and he’s since split the season between levels. Through 10 NHL games, he’s contributed a goal and an assist while logging a minuscule 7:39 per game. His poor possession metrics (48.6 CF% at even strength, -6.6 CF% rel, 40.7 xGF%) haven’t given head coach Jared Bednar much motivation to play him more. He’s seen more action in the minors, where he has four goals and four assists for eight points in 17 games with the Eagles.

Major turnover is coming to Colorado’s bottom six, with Andrew Cogliano, Brandon Duhaime, Joel KivirantaZach Parise, and Yakov Trenin all on expiring deals. Extending Wagner now is a good indication the Avs expect him to take on some of those minutes next season, even in a limited 13th/14th forward role. He’ll also compete for minutes with youngsters looking to break into full-time roles next season, like Jean-Luc Foudy and Nikolai Kovalenko. In 370 career games with the Avs, Bruins, Ducks, and Islanders, the 2010 fifth-round pick has 38 goals and 27 assists for 65 points with a -24 rating and 202 PIMs.

Ducks Sign Coulson Pitre, Yegor Sidorov To Entry-Level Deals

The Ducks have signed right-wing prospects Coulson Pitre and Yegor Sidorov to three-year, entry-level deals beginning next season, per a team release. PuckPedia reports Sidorov’s contract carries a cap hit of $865K and pays him a $775K base salary, a $90K signing bonus, a $35K games played bonus, and an $82.5K minors salary each season. Pitre’s deal is slightly lower-value, carrying a cap hit of $858K. It carries the same base and minor salary as Sidorov’s but has no games played bonus and reduced signing bonuses – $85K in year 1 and $82.5K in years 2 and 3. Both players are represented by Dan Milstein’s Gold Star Hockey agency.

Anaheim selected both players in the third round of last year’s draft, 20 picks apart. They selected Pitre with their 65th overall pick and later selected Sidorov with the 85th overall pick, acquired from the Wild in a March 2022 trade for enforcer Nicolas Deslauriers.

Pitre, 19, has put up relatively consistent point totals across three seasons with OHL Flint. The Newmarket, Ontario, native lost out on what would have been his first OHL season in Windsor when the league suspended operations due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021. He was traded to Flint just prior to the 2021-22 campaign, where he put together a strong rookie season with 23 goals and 44 points in 52 games.

That showing earned him OHL All-Rookie Team honors, making it clear he was on the path toward NHL selection the following offseason. He just cracked the point-per-game mark in his draft year, logging 25 goals and 60 points in 59 games, before dropping to 55 points in 55 games this season.

It was far from a breakthrough season, but Pitre doesn’t project as a top-six scoring winger. Still, he’s a rather well-rounded talent and combined a bang-and-crash game with an accurate release, carrying appeal to NHL clubs as a third-line checking winger who can contribute 10-20 goals a season. He, along with Sidorov, failed to crack The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler’s ranking of Anaheim’s top 15 prospects, but that’s more a testament to their top-five depth than anything else.

Sidorov, also 19, was an overage selection, initially eligible but passed over in 2022. A breakout season with WHL Saskatoon last season changed teams’ minds on the Belarusian winger, though, and his team-leading 40 goals in 53 games earned him top-100 love after being a fringe player on most draft boards the year prior. The gifted sniper turned things up a notch this season, cracking the 50-goal mark and adding 38 assists for 88 points in 66 games. Internationally, he was part of Belarus’ contingent at the 2022 D1A World Juniors that won a gold medal and earned promotion to the top-level tournament, although they’ve since been barred from participating due to safety concerns and the country’s involvement in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

He’ll be 20 in June, so unlike Pitre, he’s ineligible for an entry-level slide. Sidorov’s ELC will begin next season regardless of where he plays, while Pitre’s could defer to 2025-26 if he plays fewer than 10 NHL games. Pitre and Sidorov join Blackhawks prospect Nick Lardis as 2023 third-round picks to ink ELCs today.

Blackhawks Sign Nick Lardis To Entry-Level Deal

The Blackhawks signed left-wing prospect Nick Lardis to a three-year, entry-level contract Wednesday, per a team announcement. The deal carries a cap hit of $897K.

Lardis, 18, was picked up by Chicago last summer, heading to them with the 67th overall pick in the 2023 draft. The Ontario-born winger has been a much-improved talent this season with OHL Brantford, notching 29 goals and 50 points in an injury-plagued campaign that limited him to 37 games.

The speedy sniper is a top-10 talent in a top-10 prospect pool. In The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler’s 2024 rankings, he was the ninth-ranked prospect in the organization. His skating is his biggest threat, both in terms of his straight-line speed and edgework, but he has quite a capable shot as well. He lacks over-the-top size at 5’11” and 165 lbs, somewhat limiting his appeal on draft day last year, but was a solid value selection at the time. Early returns look very promising. Since beginning his major junior career in 2021, he’s amassed 84 goals and 152 points in 169 games for Peterborough and Brantford/Hamilton.

Lardis will likely return to Brantford next season, as he still needs a bit more development time. Making Chicago’s roster out of camp appears unlikely, and he’s too young for assignment to AHL Rockford per the NHL/CHL transfer agreement. If he plays fewer than 10 NHL games next season, his ELC will defer to 2025-26. Given his age, he’s only eligible for a slide once, not twice. In that very likely event, he’d become an RFA upon expiry in 2028.

Kraken Sign Victor Ostman To Entry-Level Deal

The Kraken have signed goaltender Victor Östman to a two-year, entry-level contract, per a team announcement Wednesday. It’s the maximum allowable ELC with a cap hit of $950K.

Östman, 23, was one of the top goaltenders on the college free-agent market. Undrafted out of the Swedish junior circuit in 2019, Östman came over to North America for his age-19 season and suited up in major junior play for the USHL’s Chicago Steel behind a stacked roster that included multiple current NHLers, namely Sabres defenseman Owen Power, Flames winger Matthew Coronato, and Golden Knights forward Brendan Brisson. He jumped to the collegiate ranks during the COVID pandemic, locking down the starters’ net during a shortened season at the University of Maine and never looking back. He’s been their go-to option in the crease ever since, posting a .905 SV%, 2.82 GAA, five shutouts, and a 35-38-7 record in 86 appearances.

Curiously, while the team in front of Östman vastly improved this season, his senior campaign was the worst of his collegiate tenure. Maine made the NCAA tournament for the first time in 12 years on the backs of brothers Bradly Nadeau (a Hurricanes first-round pick) and Josh Nadeau, but Östman struggled to the tune of a .892 SV%, his first season under .900 at any level in five years. He essentially split starts this season with countryman and freshman Albin Boija, who vastly outperformed him with a .916 SV%, 2.01 GAA, and two shutouts in 18 appearances.

The Swedish big man (6’4″, 205 lbs) will begin next season under contract with Seattle but could finish out 2023-24 on an ATO with AHL Coachella Valley. Both Kraken-contracted netminders in minors, Chris Driedger and Ales Stezka, are pending UFAs, while 2022 second-round pick Niklas Kokko is under contract and could come to North America after an exceptional campaign in the Finnish Liiga split between Kärpät and Pelicans. Östman’s step back this season suggests full-time AHL work may be a bit too much to ask out of the gate, and he could begin the season on assignment to ECHL Kansas City if one of Driedger or Stezka is brought back and Kokko is brought over from Finland.

Östman will be an RFA when his ELC expires in 2026.

Capitals Reassign Matthew Phillips

The Capitals have loaned right-winger Matthew Phillips to AHL Hershey, GM Brian MacLellan announced today. His roster spot goes to Tom Wilson, who is eligible to return tomorrow against the Penguins after serving a six-game suspension for high-sticking Maple Leafs forward Noah Gregor.

Phillips, 25, has actually been recalled multiple times over the past two weeks, appearing on Washington’s roster on three separate emergency loans since Wilson’s suspension. He only entered the lineup in the first game of Wilson’s absence, skating just over four minutes in a 7-6 shootout win over the Hurricanes on March 22. Barring further injuries or suspensions, this transaction is likely Phillips’ last of the regular season.

It’s been a tumultuous campaign for the top minor-league producer, who landed his first one-way contract in free agency with the Caps last summer. However, he hasn’t spent the entire season in the Washington organization – he was claimed off waivers by Pittsburgh when the Capitals attempted to assign him to the minors in mid-Februrary. After a three-game stint in the ‘Burgh, he landed on waivers again in early March, upon which Washington reclaimed him and sent him directly to Hershey.

Unfortunately for the 5’8″ winger, his strong recent history at the AHL level hasn’t translated to the majors. He’s been rendered ineffective in 31 NHL games with the Caps and Pens this season, limited to one goal and four assists with poor possession impacts. It’s quickly becoming clear the 2016 sixth-round pick is best suited for the minor-league level, where he has a goal and two assists in limited action (five games) with league-leading Hershey.

He should play a key role in Washington’s affiliate’s quest to win back-to-back Calder Cup championships. The Alberta native was electric over his previous two seasons in the Flames organization, scoring 67 goals and 144 points in 131 regular-season games for AHL Stockton/Calgary. Upon expiry of his one-year, $775K contract, he’s set to remain under team control this summer as an RFA.

The Caps managed a 3-2-1 record in their last six contests without Wilson, keeping pace in the Eastern Conference wild-card race. They hold the second wild-card spot ahead of Wednesday’s action with 82 points, one back of the Flyers, who occupy third place in the Metropolitan Division, although they’ve played two fewer games. Events are transpiring toward a three-team coin flip for the final two spots, with odds slowly evening out between Philadelphia (61.9%), Washington (54.8%) and Detroit (42.8%), per MoneyPuck. A crucial overtime win over the Flyers earlier this week has the Islanders back in the playoff conversation too, although they can likely only afford one loss in their seven remaining games with only a 22.7% chance at postseason play.

Pittsburgh Penguins Reassign Joel Blomqvist, Samuel Poulin

April 3rd, 8:59 am: The Penguins have re-assigned goaltender Joel Blomqvist to the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins of the AHL after he served as the backup last night against the Devils.

April 2nd: Before the team’s game tonight against the New Jersey Devils, the Pittsburgh Penguins have made a move between the crease, recalling goaltender Joel Blomqvist to the active roster. In a corresponding roster move, the team has returned forward Samuel Poulin to their AHL affiliate, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins.

Given that Alex Nedeljkovic will retain the starting reins for a consecutive game, the Penguins needed to find a replacement for Tristan Jarry as he remains out with an illness. Blomqvist was previously recalled via an emergency loan in early November of this season while Jarry was out, but was unable to play any minutes.

In his first full season in North America, Blomqvist has been more than solid for the WBS Penguins this year. With 40 games played up to this point in the season, Blomqvist has produced a 22-10-6 record, coupled with a .919 save percentage and a 2.15 goals against average.

Rising up the ranks as the top goalie prospect in the Penguins’ farm system, Blomqvist could feature into Pittsburgh’s lineup more regularly next season. With two goaltenders within the system headed for unrestricted free agency this summer, the Penguins may look to fill in the holes on the roster internally.

On the opposite side of the transaction, Poulin has been sparingly used at the NHL level once again this season. Registering only 36 games for the WBS Penguins this year, Poulin has scored 13 goals and 27 points overall.

Blue Jackets Recall David Jiricek, Send Down Jake Christiansen

For the fifth time this season, the Columbus Blue Jackets have recalled top prospect David Jiricek; this time by way of an emergency loan. In a corresponding roster move earlier in the day, the team has loaned defenseman Jake Christiansen to their AHL affiliate, the Cleveland Monsters.

It will be the second time in the last few weeks that Columbus has recalled Jiricek on an emergency loan, with the last coming on March 22nd. Infamously, Jiricek was called up too late for the Blue Jackets away game against the Colorado Avalanche on the 22nd, causing him to miss that game. The next day, Columbus returned Jiricek too late to the Monsters, causing him to miss an entire weekend’s worth of games for no apparent reason.

Nevertheless, Jiricek was still able to suit up in 36 games for the Blue Jackets earlier in the year, scoring one goal and nine points overall. At the AHL level, Jiricek has registered 27 games for Cleveland, scoring seven goals and 17 points.

In his lengthy stretch in Columbus this year, the team used him mostly as a bottom-pairing option, as he averaged under 15 minutes of ice time per night. Even though his production in the NHL has not been up to par compared to his AHL production, there is still every reason to believe that Jiricek has the makings of a legit top-pairing defenseman with enough opportunity.

Christiansen, on the other hand, has been far more productive for the Monsters this season in an established role. In 54 games, Christiansen has scored a solid 13 goals from the blue while also tallying 27 assists, as well.

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