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Waivers

Canadiens Place Nikita Scherbak On Waivers

December 1, 2018 at 11:06 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The Canadiens have placed winger Nikita Scherbak on waivers, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports (Twitter link).  Sportsnet’s Eric Engels adds (via Twitter) that Montreal had unsuccessfully tried to trade him before going this route.

The 22-year-old made the team out of training camp but didn’t see any action before being sent to the minors on a conditioning stint at the end of October.  He got into five games with AHL Laval and struggled, picking up just a single goal in that span.  Scherbak also suffered a lower-body injury in the minors and was placed on injured reserve following his recall.  The fact he’s on waivers suggests he’s cleared to return.

Scherbak was a first-round pick of the Canadiens back in 2014 (26th overall) but has yet to have much success at the NHL level.  He played in 26 games with Montreal last season, recording just six points while spending a lot of time in a bottom six role.  As an offensive-oriented player, he’s someone who is best served playing in the top six but he hasn’t had that opportunity on a regular basis just yet.

Given the offensive potential he has shown at the minor league level, his age, and the fact he’s on a cheap contract (he’s in the final year of his entry-level pact with a cap hit of $863K), there’s a good chance that he will be claimed, similar to what happened on Friday with winger Valentin Zykov joining the Oilers.  If he passes through unclaimed, he’ll be sent back to Laval.

Montreal Canadiens| Waivers Nikita Scherbak

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Nikita Soshnikov, Ben Street Placed On Waivers

November 30, 2018 at 11:04 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

Friday: Soshnikov and Street have cleared waivers according to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. The Blues have now sent Soshkinov to the minor leagues, though Street was still present at the Ducks’ morning skate in Carolina.

Thursday: The St. Louis Blues are preparing to make a change up front, as they today placed Nikita Soshnikov on waivers for the purpose of sending him to the minor leagues. Soshnikov has played in just five games for the Blues this season, and is still looking for his first point. With Robert Bortuzzo almost ready to return from injured reserve, the team needed another open roster spot. In addition, CapFriendly reports that Ben Street has also been placed on waivers by the Anaheim Ducks for the second time this season.

There’s no doubting that Soshnikov has enough talent to crack an NHL roster somewhere, but the simple fact is he’s had trouble staying healthy throughout his short career. The 25-year old forward was signed out of the KHL in 2015 by the Toronto Maple Leafs, and quickly made an impact on that team by scoring 18 goals in the minor leagues and adding another five points in 11 NHL contests. He was a regular in the Maple Leafs lineup the next season, but suffered a concussion after colliding with Zdeno Chara in 2017 and would never really find his way back into Toronto’s lineup. Traded to the Blues last season for a fourth-round pick after a deadline had threatened his return to Russia, he suffered several injuries in St. Louis and ended up playing just 12 games for them.

After five games this season, Soshnikov is now available for any team in the league to make a claim. The feisty forward is a versatile bottom-six option, but just hasn’t been reliable enough to really contribute on a consistent basis. His $800K cap hit is relatively inexpensive, but could still scare off enough teams that he slips through and is assigned to the minor leagues once again.

Street meanwhile was already waived and cleared for the Ducks before the season began, but needed to go through the process again given the fact he’s played 18 games this year. The veteran center is a legitimate All-Star talent in the AHL, but hasn’t ever been able to show enough in the NHL to warrant consistent playing time. It’s unlikely he’ll be claimed, but perhaps a team with a desperate need on the fourth line will take a shot.

St. Louis Blues| Waivers Nikita Soshnikov

1 comment

Is There A Market For Karl Alzner?

November 29, 2018 at 8:29 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 7 Comments

It’s been a brutal 17 months for Montreal Canadiens defenseman Karl Alzner. Well, the first few months after Alzner signed a five-year, $23.125MM contract on July 1st, 2017 were probably okay. Once he actually took the ice with the Habs last season though, it was all downhill. Alzner had capitalized on a weak free agent market – one in which even we here at PHR considered him the third best name – which had inflated his value far beyond what it should have been. Alzner was a solid defenseman for many years for the Washington Capitals, consistently healthy and capable of eating significant minutes. However, he lacked much in the way of offense and in retrospect his defensive abilities were amplified by the copious talent around him on the eventual Stanley Cup champions. Transitioning to a weaker roster in Montreal, Alzner was exposed when asked to play a key role on the Habs’ blue line. Carrying the puck more often, Alzer became a turnover machine. Facing tougher assignments, he was far less effective on defense and took a career high in penalties. And per usual, he contributed just twelve points and was a non-factor on offense.

Entering this season, Alzner and Canadiens fans alike hoped that he could turn it around and return to the shutdown player they felt they had signed for top dollar. However, the organization and coaching staff had other plans. Alzner was a healthy scratch in season opener and to date has only played in eight games with a major drop-off in ice time. Alzner was placed on waivers and subsequently cleared earlier this week and it was fair to wonder whether he had played his last game in Montreal just over a season into his five-year deal. That became much more probable yesterday, when the Canadiens gave Alzner and his agent permission to seek a trade.

Yet, permission to seek a trade is not the same as having concrete interest and willing suitors. Although the Habs have little reason not to accept any deal brought to them – barring an unreasonable amount of retained salary requested – that is just one side of a trade which obviously needs multiple teams. But is there even a market for Alzner? Two years ago, there was ample interest in him on the free agent market, but after a year in which he was exposed as having a game dependent on the talent of the players around him, he’s no longer the prize he once was. Then there’s also the matter of his contract, a relative albatross of four more years at $4.65MM. His stock is the lowest it has ever been, while his price is at it’s highest. That’s a tough combination to sell to a team. Alzner went untouched on waivers, meaning any team interested in acquiring him would also expect the Canadiens to retain some salary or otherwise add another piece to the deal.

Clearly, Alzner is not a player that can do much to help a rebuilding team. His cost also makes him a difficult addition for any team close to the salary cap ceiling. This leaves a narrow group of potential suitors who have talented rosters but are in comfortable salary cap shape and have a long-term need for a defensive blue liner. Any come to mind? It’s not a common occurrence, at least not currently. The Toronto Maple Leafs, although dealing with the William Nylander saga and long-term salary cap planning as is, would make some sense. The team is likely to lose Ron Hainsey and Jake Gardiner to free agency this summer and could use a long-term physical presence on the blue line at the right price. Their preference would certainly be to add a right-handed defenseman, but might not be picky if they feel Alzner would excel in their system. Barry Trotz’ new uber-conservative New York Islanders could also be a fit for Alzner, as they could stand to upgrade their blue line depth and have the existing talent to ease Alzner into his natural stay-at-home role. Alzner would seem to be a perfect fit for the Isles’ current system that emphasizes physicality and patient pace. The Columbus Blue Jackets and Minnesota Wild have fallen short of the ultimate goal despite strong recent campaigns and have the cap space to add a luxury piece like Alzner, who would be a bottom-pair defender for either team, albeit a needed depth addition. Finally, there are the Chicago Blackhawks who, despite shedding salary this summer, refrained from using their newfound cap space. Chicago had interest in Alzner when he was a free agent in 2017, considered by many the favorite to land the physical defender. The team could still use more talent and especially more shutdown play on the back end. However, with one of hockey’s worst contracts in Brent Seabrook already on the roster, could they really risk adding a similarly disappointing and overpaid defenseman in Alzner?

Those are just five teams who could potentially have interest in Alzner. There could be more, if some teams feel that Alzner’s play in Montreal has been a misrepresentation of his ability. Yet, there also could easily be less, as Alzner has done nothing in the past year plus to prove that he is anything more than a replacement level checking defenseman. Given his contract status, Alzner may find it difficult to match up with a new team and put together a successful trade out of Montreal. It is certainly a possibility, but the only team Alzner is likely going to be playing for in the near future is the AHL’s Laval Rocket.

AHL| Barry Trotz| Chicago Blackhawks| Columbus Blue Jackets| Free Agency| Minnesota Wild| Montreal Canadiens| New York Islanders| Penalties| Players| Toronto Maple Leafs| Waivers| Washington Capitals Brent Seabrook| Jake Gardiner| Karl Alzner| Salary Cap

7 comments

Calvin Pickard, Jean-Sebastien Dea Claimed Off Waivers

November 29, 2018 at 11:03 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

With the Arizona Coyotes dealing with some health concerns in net, they’ve decided to claim goaltender Calvin Pickard off waivers from the Philadelphia Flyers. The Pittsburgh Penguins meanwhile have reclaimed Jean-Sebastien Dea off waivers from the New Jersey Devils. Dea has been immediately sent to the minor leagues, meaning the Penguins were the only team who put in a claim.

Pickard is off to his fourth team since the end of the 2016-17 season, when he finished the year as the starting goaltender for the Colorado Avalanche. He was then selected in the expansion draft by the Vegas Golden Knights, only to be traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs before ever playing a regular season game for Vegas. In Toronto, he spent nearly the entire 2017-18 season in the minor leagues, winning a Calder Cup as a backup to Garret Sparks, before eventually being waived just prior to the start of this year.

In Philadelphia, his numbers have not been up to the level he showed in Colorado and was obviously not the long-term solution for the Flyers. He’s no more the solution in Arizona though, as he is an obvious short-term solution while Antti Raanta and Darcy Kuemper try to get healthy. Adin Hill will make the next start for Arizona, just his fifth of his career. That forced GM John Chayka to go out and acquire some more experience, something that Pickard brings even if there hasn’t been a lot of success lately.

Pittsburgh meanwhile will get Dea back after watching him score five points in 20 games for the Devils this year. The undrafted forward was a project of the Pittsburgh development system for the last few seasons, and will now re-enter that organization after getting his feet wet at the NHL level. Though it was obviously not planned, this was actually not the worst outcome for the Penguins if they felt they couldn’t afford to give Dea that short opportunity themselves. The 24-year old now has some additional NHL games under his belt, and can attempt to improve his game even further in the minor leagues.

New Jersey Devils| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Utah Mammoth| Waivers Calvin Pickard| Jean-Sebastien Dea

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Carolina Hurricanes Place Scott Darling, Valentin Zykov On Waivers

November 29, 2018 at 10:33 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 7 Comments

With Curtis McElhinney playing well, the Carolina Hurricanes have made a decision on which of their three goaltenders to send to the minor leagues. Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic is reporting that Scott Darling will be placed on waivers today. The goaltender is not at Hurricanes practice today, and will likely be sent to the minor leagues should he clear. The team has also placed Valentin Zykov on waivers, after his conditioning loan ended this week.

Darling, 29, is almost certain to clear given his hefty contract. The former Chicago Blackhawks goaltender signed a four-year, $16.6MM contract with the Hurricanes in 2017, but has basically done nothing to deserve NHL playing time since. In 50 games since inking his big deal, Darling has an .889 save percentage and 3.17 goals against average. His 15-25-8 record is incredibly poor given the team’s overall 48-44-14 mark over the same time frame. Given the fact that McElhinney has taken the net and run with it since being claimed from the Toronto Maple Leafs before the season began, there was little reason to keep Darling on the NHL roster any longer.

If he does clear and reports to the minor leagues, the Hurricanes will save $1.025MM in cap space (prorated) while Darling remains in the AHL, though the team is still on the hook for his entire salary. For a club like Carolina, the cap space doesn’t make much of a difference, meaning this was purely a hockey move to get the best 23-man roster. Darling could potentially find his footing in the minor leagues, or the Hurricanes could try to trade him in order for him to get a fresh start.

Zykov on the other hand is a very interesting waiver addition. The 23-year old forward has just three points in 13 games this season for Carolina, but was a 33-goal man in the AHL just a season ago and was originally selected 37th overall by the Los Angeles Kings. There’s reason to believe that he could still be of use to an NHL club, but his overall body of work with Carolina hasn’t been enough to earn him a full-time role just yet. If someone does take a chance on the young forward, they’d need to keep him and his $675K cap hit in the NHL.

Carolina Hurricanes| Waivers Curtis McElhinney| Scott Darling

7 comments

Eric Martinsson Placed On Unconditional Waivers

November 28, 2018 at 1:00 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Wednesday: Martinsson has cleared waivers and will see his contract terminated.

Tuesday: It’s been an unusually busy season for contract terminations, and the Minnesota Wild are the latest to agree to it with one of their minor league players. The team has placed Eric Martinsson on unconditional waivers for the purpose of a mutual contract termination, which would allow the 26-year old defenseman to return to Sweden and the SHL.

Martinsson was signed in May to a one-year entry-level contract after several successful seasons with the Vaxjo Lakers of the SHL. The mobile defenseman can do a little bit of everything on the ice, and had found early success with the Iowa Wild of the AHL, scoring nine points in 13 games. Unfortunately, that success doesn’t seem to be enough for him especially given the already surfacing reports that several teams in the SHL are chasing him.

Over the last few seasons there has been an increase in the number of contracts handed out to experienced European professionals, as NHL teams try to find overlooked talent without having to trade for or draft it. Martinsson, like the long list of other players who have terminated their deals this year, clearly just haven’t worked out. That strategy is likely going to continue though, as all it costs the NHL organization is a few months or a year of minor league salary while they get a first hand look at the player.

Minnesota Wild| SHL| Waivers

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Calvin Pickard, Jean-Sebastien Dea Placed On Waivers

November 28, 2018 at 11:05 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 10 Comments

Philadelphia Flyers president Paul Holmgren was clear that he would make a change to the team’s goaltending situation if he felt the need even as they continue their search for a new GM, and today did just that. The Flyers have placed Calvin Pickard on waivers, while also sending forward Tyrell Goulbourne back to the minor leagues. According to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet, the New Jersey Devils have also placed Jean-Sebastien Dea on waivers.

Pickard, 26, was claimed off of waivers from the Toronto Maple Leafs just prior to the start of the season and ended up playing 11 games for the Flyers so far. His performance so far hasn’t been good despite a 4-2-2 record, as he has registered an .863 save percentage and is allowing more than four goals per game on average. Part of the problem may be the Flyers defensive structure given Pickard’s career .909 save percentage, but he hasn’t shown much NHL ability at this point.

That’s not to say he doesn’t have some value though, especially to the Maple Leafs who could very likely put in a claim for him. Should they be the only team to do so they would be able to send Pickard directly to the Toronto Marlies, who have had goaltending troubles for much of this season. Pickard won a Calder Cup with the Marlies last season, though he was the backup to Garret Sparks at the time. His contract carries an $800K cap hit, and would be completely buried in the minor leagues if he cleared waivers or ended up with the Marlies.

Dea meanwhile has been playing full-time with the Devils, recording five points in 20 games but became the odd man out when Marcus Johansson returned to practice. The 24-year old Dea has had a lot of success in the minor leagues with the Pittsburgh Penguins since signing out of the QMJHL as an undrafted free agent, but didn’t receive a qualifying offer from that organization in the summer. He then re-signed a one-year two-way deal with the Penguins, before being claimed by the Devils on waivers at the end of September.

New Jersey Devils| Philadelphia Flyers| Waivers Calvin Pickard| Elliotte Friedman| Jean-Sebastien Dea

10 comments

Karl Alzner Placed On Waivers

November 27, 2018 at 11:07 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 4 Comments

Tuesday: Alzner has cleared waivers as expected, and is on his way to the minor leagues.

Monday: The Montreal Canadiens had to make a decision about their defense corps as they prepare to welcome captain Shea Weber back, but it wasn’t going to be easy. Today, they have placed Karl Alzner on waivers with the intent of sending him to the minor leagues. Alzner is not at practice with the Canadiens today, and will almost certainly clear waivers thanks to his hefty contract.

Alzner, 30, is less than two years removed from signing one of the largest contracts of the 2017 offseason, a five-year $23.125MM deal with the intent of him shoring up the Montreal blue line. The former Washington Capitals player was meant to be another physical, veteran presence alongside Weber and allow the team to develop their young defensemen slowly. Unfortunately, Alzner’s game took a quick and decisive downward turn and he started this season in head coach Claude Julien’s dog house. Scratched on opening night and several more since then, Alzner has played just eight games this season despite previously playing all 82 games (or 48 in the case of the lockout-shortened 2012-13 season) in his previous eight years.

Suddenly, not only does Alzner look like he’s headed for the minors but his NHL career could potentially be over. With a $4.625MM cap hit he would have to substantially improve his play to be appealing to any team in the league, and with three more seasons still left on his contract after this year he’ll be 34 before he could be back up with a lower cost. That is, unless the Canadiens buy out his contract at the end of the year.

Unfortunately, that buyout option doesn’t look very appealing at the moment. While the Canadiens would get more than $3.5MM in cap savings for the 2019-20 season, that benefit wouldn’t last because of the structure of Alzner’s deal. In fact, in 2020-21 they’d still have to carry a $4.2MM cap hit because of his low base salary. That’s more than the $3.6MM cap hit he’ll cause by playing in the minor leagues. Alzner also has a seven team no-trade clause, if the Canadiens hope to move him somewhere else for some cap relief.

Remember though, Alzner’s cap is not dead money like a player who has suffered a career-ending injury. With him healthy, the team still owes him his full $6MM salary this season, and though that decreases in the future, a team like Arizona who has been known to take on injured contracts in the past likely wouldn’t have much interest. There’s no insurance paying Alzner’s deal, meaning he’ll be a very expensive minor league asset for Montreal going forward.

Montreal Canadiens| Waivers Karl Alzner

4 comments

Vancouver’s Darren Archibald Placed On Waivers

November 26, 2018 at 11:05 am CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg Leave a Comment

Monday: Archibald has cleared waivers and can be assigned to the minor leagues.

Sunday: As many expected after the Vancouver Canucks activated defenseman Alexander Edler Saturday but didn’t make a corresponding move, the team has now placed Darren Archibald on waivers, according to Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman.

The Canucks designated Archibald as a non-roster player Saturday, according to CapFriendly, to complete the Edler transaction until the forward could be placed on waivers today. Archibald was recalled by the team on Oct. 30 and appeared in nine games, but averaged just 7:38 of ATOI, potting one goal, adding an assist and 12 penalty minutes. However, with an overload in forwards and the impending return of Brock Boeser soon, the team had to send a forward down.

The team did get Edler back finally, who made his return on Saturday after nearly a month after suffering a MCL strain in late October. Edler provides Vancouver with a much needed defensive leader and picked up 16:19 of ice time on his first game back, although he is expected to quickly work his way back to his normal ice time as he averages 21:47 for the season.

Vancouver Canucks| Waivers Alex Edler| Brock Boeser| Darren Archibald| Elliotte Friedman

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Winnipeg Jets Claim Marko Dano Off Waivers

November 23, 2018 at 11:04 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Winnipeg Jets will say hello to an old friend, as they have reclaimed Marko Dano off waivers from the Colorado Avalanche. The Jets have immediately assigned Dano to the minor leagues, meaning they were the only team to put in a claim. Josh Brown meanwhile, who was on waivers with Dano, has cleared and can be assigned to the Springfield Thunderbirds.

Dano, 23, is reaching the end of the line as a top prospect after flaming out of the Columbus Blue Jackets, Chicago Blackhawks and now Avalanche organizations. He’s been given an opportunity at the NHL level with four different franchises now, and has been unable to assert himself with any of them. Still, he’ll return to a Jets organization that is known for its strong development system. His progress may have been slowed the last few seasons by the lack of consistent playing time, something he’ll surely receive in the minor leagues with the Manitoba Moose.

The Moose are now without Kristian Vesalainen for the rest of the season given his recent departure to the KHL, and could use another high-end forward to help them in their pursuit of the Calder Cup. Dano has only actually played in 89 regular season games in the minor leagues since debuting in 2013-14, meaning a full season in the AHL might be exactly what he needs to turn the corner in his career.

Colorado Avalanche| Waivers| Winnipeg Jets Marko Dano

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