by Josh Gold-Smith on (#6PBBA)
Kyle Okposo waited a long time to lift the Stanley Cup, and he had to wait longer than expected to have his full day with it.The veteran forward's day with the trophy was postponed because of a worldwide IT outage that initially made it impossible to fly the Cup from St. Louis to Pagel Arena in Minnetonka, Minnesota, according to The Athletic's Michael Russo."I'm crushed," Okposo told Russo when his original plans had to be canceled. Those in charge of the events attempted to make alternate arrangements so the experienced winger could still enjoy some version of a day with the trophy, and they were ultimately successful.
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Updated | 2024-11-21 13:15 |
by Sean O'Leary on (#6PCFS)
Veteran defenseman Oliver Ekman-Larsson says his instincts guided him to sign with the Toronto Maple Leafs this summer."I am a guy that always tries to go with my gut feeling, and when Toronto showed interest, I got that feeling that this is what I wanted to do and this is what we wanted to do as a family," he told GoPHNX.com's Craig Morgan."I've always liked coming in there as an away team, playing in that building. It's always special," the blue-liner continued. "Obviously, there's a lot of history in the organization and I feel like they have a really good team that has a chance to do something special as well. I think it's a good fit."The Maple Leafs and Ekman-Larsson agreed to a four-year, $14-million contract on July 1, days after the blue-liner helped the Florida Panthers win the Stanley Cup.Ekman-Larsson joined the Cats on a one-year deal ahead of the 2023-24 campaign after his previous contract was bought out by the Vancouver Canucks. He registered 32 points in 80 games before adding two goals and four assists in the playoffs.Toronto also signed Chris Tanev this offseason to bolster its defense under new head coach Craig Berube.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Josh Gold-Smith on (#6PC2V)
The Vancouver Canucks continued to make offseason additions to their roster, inking forward Daniel Sprong to a one-year contract, the club announced Saturday.The deal is worth $975,000, according to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.Sprong was an unrestricted free agent. He's coming off a one-year, $2-million agreement signed with the Detroit Red Wings on July 1, 2023.The 27-year-old collected 18 goals and tied his career-high assist total (25) from two seasons ago while averaging exactly 12 minutes of ice time over 76 games with the Red Wings in 2023-24.Sprong will be suiting up for his sixth team in nine campaigns. He established a personal best at the NHL level with 21 tallies while playing for the Seattle Kraken in 2022-23. Sprong has posted 14 goals in three separate seasons, and 13 in another.He was the highest-scoring forward left in the UFA pool.The Canucks inked Jake DeBrusk (another 27-year-old forward) to a seven-year, $38.5-million contract this past July 1. Vancouver also handed out two-year deals to forwards Danton Heinen and Kiefer Sherwood, as well as defenseman Vincent Desharnais that same day.On Tuesday, the Canucks re-upped restricted free-agent goaltender Artus Silovs on a two-year pact of his own. They retained several other players earlier in the offseason, including Dakota Joshua (four years) and Tyler Myers (three) on June 27.The day before that, Vancouver traded forwards Ilya Mikheyev and Sam Lafferty to the Chicago Blackhawks and re-signed Teddy Blueger for another two seasons. But the biggest deal the Canucks have handed out since their campaign came to a close was the eight-year, $58-million pact they gave top-pairing blue-liner Filip Hronek on June 18.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kyle Cushman on (#6PBGJ)
The Detroit Red Wings signed forward Joe Veleno to a two-year contract with a $2.275-million cap hit to avoid arbitration, the club announced Saturday.Veleno, 24, tallied a career-high 12 goals and 28 points in 80 games last season. He was a restricted free agent and had filed for salary arbitration July 5.The Red Wings drafted Veleno 30th overall in 2018. He's accumulated 30 goals and 64 points in 232 career contests with Detroit.The Red Wings have $17.6 million of cap space after the signing, according to PuckPedia.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Josh Gold-Smith, Kyle Cushman on (#6PBGK)
Carolina Hurricanes general manager Eric Tulsky offered updates Thursday on negotiations with Martin Necas and Seth Jarvis, with one of their futures appearing more certain than the other."We're continuing to talk to (Necas') agent, trying to negotiate a deal," Tulsky said, according to NHL.com's Tom Gulitti. "Obviously, both sides would prefer that to going to a hearing. ... One way or another, it will get settled."Necas is scheduled for salary arbitration on Aug. 4.As for what a contract would look like, Tulsky said Carolina's offers have run the gamut."We have put everything on the table from one year to eight years," Tulsky said. "It's a question of figuring out whether there's something that makes sense for both sides."Necas has been linked to numerous teams in trade rumors since the end of the campaign, including inquiries by the Montreal Canadiens and Philadelphia Flyers.Tulsky said he's continuing to talk to clubs about Necas and that teams typically have less wiggle room than they did earlier in the offseason. The GM added that it's easier to make trades ahead of July 1 because organizations can still replace what they give up by signing other players before their rosters are mostly set following the free-agent frenzy.Necas scored 24 goals and 29 assists in 77 regular-season outings this past campaign, adding four tallies and five helpers in 11 playoff contests. The Czechia native established personal bests with 28 goals and 43 assists while playing all 82 games for the first time in 2022-23.Jarvis' future, meanwhile, seems to be firmly in a Hurricanes jersey."It will get done eventually," Tulsky said about re-signing the 22-year-old. "He wants to be here forever. We want him here forever. We just have to agree on what the right number is."Jarvis enjoyed a breakout campaign in 2023-24, recording 33 goals and 67 points in 81 games to establish new career highs. He added five goals and nine points in 11 postseason contests.Both Necas and Jarvis were drafted in the first round by the Hurricanes and have spent their entire careers in Carolina.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kyle Cushman on (#6PAQ8)
The Toronto Maple Leafs hired Mark Leach as director of amateur scouting, the team announced Thursday.Leach spent the past 11 seasons with the Dallas Stars as an amateur scout. He worked directly with Joe McDonnell, the Stars' director of amateur scouting, to oversee the team's drafts.Dallas has been among the league's best drafting teams in recent years. The Stars snagged Wyatt Johnston 23rd overall and Logan Stankoven 47th overall in 2021, both of whom were key contributors on entry-level contracts in Dallas' run to the conference final.Here are other notable selections in Leach's tenure with the Stars:PlayerDraft positionYearD Thomas Harley18th2019D Miro Heiskanen3rd2017G Jake Oettinger26th2017F Jason Robertson39th2017F Roope Hintz49th2015Leach was an amateur scout with the Detroit Red Wings from 1996-2013 before joining the Stars.The Maple Leafs' previous director of amateur scouting, Wes Clark, departed the organization to join the Pittsburgh Penguins on July 9. Clark had been in the role since 2021.Clark ran three drafts with Toronto. Easton Cowan and Fraser Minten are among the players selected during his tenure.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Sean O'Leary on (#6PAJ0)
Sean Monahan is eager to reunite with former teammate Johnny Gaudreau after signing a five-year contract with the Columbus Blue Jackets this summer."I am really looking forward to being teammates with Johnny again," Monahan said, per NHLPA.com's Chris Lomon. "Johnny is motivated to have a big season and be a huge part of the team, and I'm excited to have the opportunity to reignite the chemistry we had for close to a decade."He is an amazing teammate, person, and friend. I'm looking forward to these next five years."Monahan and Gaudreau played together on the Calgary Flames for nine seasons until Gaudreau signed a seven-year pact with Columbus in 2022.Gaudreau's production has dropped since joining the Blue Jackets. He's managed 74 and 60 points in two campaigns with the club after a career-best 115 in his final season with the Flames.Columbus has finished 31st and 29th in the league standings since Gaudreau shocked the hockey world by inking a mammoth $68.25-million pact with the club.Monahan joined the Blue Jackets after a resurgent 59-point campaign split between the Montreal Canadiens and Winnipeg Jets. The 29-year-old had been severely limited by injuries in recent seasons but played a full schedule for the first time since 2016-17."I am happy to be back to myself and fully healthy," Monahan said.Monahan was drafted sixth overall by the Flames in 2013. He's notched 538 points in 764 career games.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Sean O'Leary on (#6P9GA)
The Carolina Hurricanes placed forward Evgeny Kuznetsov on unconditional waivers for the purpose of mutual contract termination Wednesday.He cleared waivers Thursday.Kuznetsov is forgoing the final year of his contract to return to Russia, according to Daily Faceoff's Frank Seravalli. The 32-year-old had a $7.8-million cap hit split between the Hurricanes and Washington Capitals, who retained 50% of the veteran's salary after trading him to Carolina in March.His cap hit will be fully removed from both team's books this season, according to PuckPedia.The Capitals drafted Kuznetsov 26th overall in 2010, and he spent 11 years with the organization after breaking into the NHL in 2013-14. He recorded 568 points in 723 games in Washington and was one of the league's top playmaking centers in his prime.Kuznetsov's tenure with the Capitals was highlighted by a dominant 2018 postseason in which he led all skaters with 32 points as Washington won its first Stanley Cup.In the years following the championship, Kuznetsov's production tailed off. He was placed on waivers by the Capitals last season and was admitted into the NHL/NHLPA player assistance program in February.Kuznetsov notched seven points in 20 games with the Hurricanes and added six more in the playoffs.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Josh Gold-Smith on (#6PABY)
Jake Guentzel pointed to the Tampa Bay Lightning's status as perennial contenders as the primary factor in his decision to sign with his new club."They all know how to win," Guentzel told NHL.com's Jessi Pierce on Wednesday. "There's just a winning pedigree there. (And I) still feel like we have a chance to win."The Lightning won back-to-back Stanley Cup championships in 2020 and 2021 and reached the final again in 2022. They were eliminated in the first round in both subsequent seasons, but they've made the playoffs in seven consecutive campaigns."There's a lot of high-end players, elite players on the team, and just an unbelievable opportunity for me and my family to go do something else on our own," Guentzel said. "It's going to be fun for us. It's going to be different, it's going to be challenging, but it's going to be something that we're looking forward to."Guentzel won the Cup as a rookie with the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2017, helping his former squad repeat as champions themselves. The potent forward, who'll turn 30 around the time the 2024-25 season begins, produced at a high clip for the Carolina Hurricanes down the stretch of 2023-24 after being traded by the Penguins in March.The American winger notched eight goals and 17 assists over 17 regular-season games with Carolina before adding four tallies and five helpers across 11 playoff contests.He signed a seven-year, $63-million pact with the Lightning on July 1.Tampa Bay lost longtime captain Steven Stamkos to the Nashville Predators in free agency, but the club still boasts the likes of Nikita Kucherov, Victor Hedman, Brayden Point, and Andrei Vasilevskiy."It's a new team, a new division, and a new opportunity," Guentzel said. "Last year was a really different year for me with injury and being traded and what not, but I learned a lot, too. I think heading into this season with Tampa is going to be really exciting just to see what we can manage to do together with all the high-end talent there is."Guentzel was limited to 50 games with the Penguins this past season. However, he posted over a point per game with 22 goals and 30 assists before being dealt. Guentzel is a two-time 40-goal-scorer who buried 36 over 78 games in 2022-23.He played parts of eight campaigns with Pittsburgh, which drafted him 77th overall in 2013.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Sean O'Leary on (#6P9Q9)
The Carolina Hurricanes and restricted free agent forward Jack Drury avoided arbitration by agreeing to a two-year contract with a $1.725-million average annual value, the team announced Wednesday.Drury was one of 14 NHL players to file for arbitration earlier this offseason, alongside teammate Martin Necas.Seth Jarvis is another prominent RFA on Carolina's books this summer, but he isn't arbitration-eligible. The Hurricanes have approximately $13 million in cap space to work with, according to Puckpedia.Drury was a second-round pick in 2018. He set career highs in games (74), goals (eight), and points (27) this past season.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P9D0)
Steven Stamkos' arrival in Nashville undoubtedly raises expectations for the franchise, but the veteran forward believes the Predators are well-equipped to handle the added pressure."You look at elite goaltending, you look at an elite defenseman, you look at elite forwards, they've checked those boxes off. ... The expectation will be to make the playoffs and go on a run," he explained Tuesday. "I think that's a pretty fair assessment of what this group can accomplish."The two-time champion added: "We want to win a Stanley Cup. That's why we play the game. I think some people are sometimes afraid to say that and it heightens expectations but, at the end of the day, I've always been a big believer that you have to believe that you can do it in order to achieve it."Stamkos thinks the Predators proved they had the right "building blocks" last season. They were one of the best teams in the league after mid-February, closing out the season on a 20-5-3 run.That stretch helped Nashville secure a place in the postseason after missing out in 2023, though the squad was eliminated by the Vancouver Canucks in six games during the opening round.One of the Predators' biggest issues this past spring was scoring: They ranked 14th out of the 16 playoff teams in both goals per game (2.00) and shots per game (25.0).General manager Barry Trotz addressed that weakness when free agency opened on July 1, signing Stamkos to a four-year, $32-million deal and bringing in 2023 Conn Smythe Trophy winner Jonathan Marchessault."I've been so fortunate to have won a championship before and know how hard it is to get there and the experience that comes along with that," Stamkos said. "We've added some players that have done that as well and I think that's just a contagious attitude we can have in this dressing room. ... We have a lot to be excited about."The Predators have never won the Stanley Cup, but they made the finals in 2017.Though no one can predict what awaits Nashville at the end of the 2024-25 season, fans likely won't have to wait long for Stamkos' first goal in Music City with his new team.The longtime Tampa Bay Lightning captain still recalls the last goal he scored at Bridgestone Arena, even though it was almost two years ago."That overtime winner, one-timer? Yeah, I remember that," he said with a wry smile. "Good screen by Corey Perry in front."Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P9G9)
Ottawa Senators forward Shane Pinto lifted the lid on his 41-game suspension for violating the NHL's gambling rules."I had my buddies - because I was in Canada - just place bets for me in America," he explained during a recent appearance on the "Empty Netters" podcast. "I wasn't a Canadian citizen so I couldn't really use a Canadian sportsbook. ... That's proxy betting, so that's obviously a big no-no. It was an illegal act so, obviously, it was a pretty big deal."So that's why we didn't want to fight (the suspension) and we just kinda accepted it."The league announced that Pinto would be banned for half the 2023-24 campaign in late October, marking the NHL's first betting-related ban in the world of online wagering. There was no evidence to suggest that Pinto bet on NHL games.Pinto said he leaned on his family and teammates during his time on the sidelines and focused on his training while also staying away from social media.The 23-year-old made his season debut in late January and chipped in with nine goals and 27 points in 41 outings, good for the highest point-per-game rate (0.66) of his career."I just did my best with the hand I got dealt with," Pinto said. "Obviously it was a little bit my fault, so I'm not gonna like, (ask for) pity over it. I thought I did a good job of responding from it."He added: "I'm glad it's over, but I learned a lot from it. Thank god it's all behind me."Pinto was limited to just five games in 2021-22 because of a shoulder injury, which he said was "tough," but acknowledged that his gambling suspension was "brutal.""I let down the boys, that's just what it was," he said. "That was the worst part about it. ... We had a tough start (to the year) - not saying it was a big deal that I wasn't there - but, still, it was a big distraction. ... I never wanted to be like that towards the fellas."Pinto was a restricted free agent this summer and the Senators signed him to a two-year extension with a $3.75-million cap hit in early July. The New York native represented the United States at the 2024 IIHF World Championship, where he totaled nine points in eight games.Ottawa selected him with the first pick of the second round during the 2019 NHL Draft. Pinto has amassed 30 goals and 70 points in 140 career games.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by theScore Staff on (#6NYKR)
With free agency underway, here's a list of the best players still available.Forwards Kavin Mistry / National Hockey League / Getty
by Josh Wegman on (#6P8VJ)
The New York Islanders re-signed restricted free-agent winger Simon Holmstrom to a one-year contract, the team announced Tuesday.The deal carries an $850,000 cap hit, a source told The Athletic's Arthur Staple.Holmstrom is coming off a breakout season in which he tallied 15 goals and 10 assists in 75 games. He was notably a threat on the penalty kill, notching five goals while down a man - one back of the league lead.He recorded nine points over 50 games in his rookie campaign in 2022-23.The Islanders drafted the Swede 23rd overall in 2019.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Sean O'Leary on (#6P8VK)
St. Louis Blues defenseman Torey Krug has been diagnosed with pre-arthritic changes in his left ankle, the team announced Tuesday.Krug will attempt to rehabilitate the injury himself over the next six-to-eight weeks. If he needs surgery, he'll miss the entire 2024-25 season.The injury stemmed from a bone fracture earlier in his career.Krug is entering the fifth season of a seven-year contract he signed with the Blues in 2020. He carries a $6.5-million cap hit, which can be placed entirely on long-term injured reserve if he's unable to play.The 33-year-old posted 39 points in 77 games last season, averaging nearly 22 minutes per night while posting a minus-31 rating - the worst mark of his career.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Sean O'Leary on (#6P8RK)
The Vancouver Canucks signed restricted free-agent goaltender Arturs Silovs to a two-year contract on Tuesday.The deal is worth $850,000 per season, according to Daily Faceoff's Frank Seravalli.Silovs was unexpectedly thrust into a starter's role in this year's playoffs due to injuries ahead of him on the depth chart. The 23-year-old had nine NHL games under his belt when he took over Vancouver's crease in Round 1."Arturs helped us out a lot when called upon last year as he continues to grow and develop as a goalie," said general manager Patrik Allvin. "We expect him to come into training camp and battle for a full-time position with the big club. Our group will continue to work with him to help sharpen his skills and provide him with all the tools necessary to take another step forward in his young career."Thatcher Demko is Vancouver's projected starter for 2024-25. Last season's backup, Casey DeSmith, joined the Dallas Stars this summer as a free agent.Silovs registered a .898 save percentage in 10 playoff appearances and had a .907 clip with AHL Abbotsford in 2023-24. He was a sixth-round draft pick of the Canucks in 2019.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Sean O'Leary on (#6P8MY)
The New York Rangers are unlikely to trade or buy out captain Jacob Trouba this offseason, according to The Athletic's Arthur Staple.Rumors during June's draft suggested the Rangers and Detroit Red Wings were working on a deal built around the rugged defenseman. However, nothing came close to materializing, sources told Staple.The Rangers reportedly asked Trouba for his 15-team no-trade list in June, but that was standard procedure as his full no-move clause switched to a modified one after the season ended. Trouba was reportedly "shocked" to see his name in trade rumors.The blue-liner has two seasons remaining on his contract at a cap hit of $8 million. He signed a seven-year deal with the Rangers in 2019 after asking to be dealt there from the Winnipeg Jets.Trouba was named New York's captain in 2022.The Michigan native chipped in 22 points in 69 games this past season. He also averaged nearly 21 minutes per contest during the Rangers' Eastern Conference Final run.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P8HB)
Joe Pavelski has officially called it a career after 18 NHL campaigns.The veteran forward - who turned 40 on Thursday - appeared in 1,332 regular-season games, split between the San Jose Sharks and Dallas Stars. He tallied 476 goals and 1,068 points, the sixth most among American players in league history.Though Pavelski never lifted the Stanley Cup, he was a prolific playoff producer. His 74 goals in 201 postseason contests are the most by a U.S.-born player (Brett Hull scored 103 and, though he represented America internationally, he was born in Canada). Pavelski advanced to the Stanley Cup Final in 2016 and 2020 and made the conference finals on five more occasions.Pavelski became the oldest player to score four goals in a single playoff game in 2023 at 38 years old. Almost three years earlier, he netted the first postseason hat trick in Stars history since their relocation from Minnesota.The Wisconsin native was leaning toward retirement when the Stars were eliminated in the Western Conference Final during the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs."I didn't want to use the 'R' word, I guess, right away. ... I wanted just a little bit of extra time (after the season) to think about it," Pavelski told SiriusXM's "NHL Morning Skate" on Tuesday, according to NHL.com. He added, "I was pretty comfortable with that plan then so I didn't want to keep people hanging and thinking and talking about certain things, but it's a pretty clear outlook."Over the last month, we've given it some more thought. ... It's just a great time for us as a family, as a career."Pavelski became the 25th player to appear in 200 postseason games this past spring, but he's the only one without a ring.San Jose selected Pavelski in the seventh round of the 2003 NHL Draft. He ranks second in franchise history in goals (355), third in points (761), and fourth in games played (963). He lit the lamp 41 times in 2013-14, becoming the fourth Sharks player to reach the single-season milestone.Pavelski donned the 'C' for the last four years of his tenure in San Jose and signed with the Stars as an unrestricted free agent in 2019.He enjoyed a spectacular second act in Dallas, including a career year in 2021-22 in which he potted 81 points in 82 outings. Pavelski spent most of his five-year stint with the Stars on the top line, forming a fearsome trio with Jason Robertson and Roope Hintz.Internationally, Pavelski won a silver medal with the United States at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Sean O'Leary on (#6P7V9)
Edmonton Oilers captain Connor McDavid is pleased with how the club's front office conducted business this summer."They've had a great offseason so far," McDavid told TSN. "It's been short, it's been hurried, but I think in the small time they've been at it, they've done great things. Keeping this many guys together is a good thing. In the salary-cap era, it's tough to do that."The Oilers and former general manager Ken Holland agreed not to renew his contract shortly after the club lost Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final to the Florida Panthers. Edmonton's CEO of hockey operations, Jeff Jackson, has served as temporary GM since and has been busy.Jackson brought in veteran forwards Jeff Skinner and Viktor Arvidsson in free agency while also retaining key playoff contributors Connor Brown, Adam Henrique, Corey Perry, and Mattias Janmark.After the dust settled in free agency, the Oilers acquired 2022 ninth overall pick Matt Savoie in a trade with the Buffalo Sabres.Zach Hyman also gave his seal of approval on Edmonton's offseason moves."It's also a testament to the team that guys are willing to come back on team-friendly deals and take discounts to try and win," he said. "I think they see how special it is to play in Edmonton, and it's now becoming more of a destination to play, and that's really awesome to see."Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Andrew Dixon on (#6P7Z8)
The Los Angeles Kings are signing forward Quinton Byfield to a five-year extension with an average annual value of $6.25 million, the club announced Monday.The 21-year-old appeared in 80 games last season, recording 20 goals and 35 assists while averaging 16:29 of ice time. All four marks set new career bests.He joins Anze Kopitar and Alex Frolov as the only players in Kings history to post 20 or more goals in a season at 21 years old or younger.Byfield also set new personal benchmarks with six power-play goals, 14 power-play points, and four game-winning goals.Byfield has appeared in 179 games since being selected with the No. 2 pick in the 2020 draft. The 6-foot-5, 220-pounder has tallied 28 goals and 60 assists with a career rating of plus-26.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P7PB)
The Edmonton Oilers traded forwards Xavier Bourgault and Jake Chiasson to the Ottawa Senators in exchange for winger Roby Jarventie and a 2025 fourth-round pick, the teams announced Monday.Ottawa and Edmonton explored the deal at the draft in late June but were unable to get it done until now, according to the Edmonton Journal's Kurt Leavins.Selected by the Oilers with the 22nd overall pick in the 2021 NHL Draft, Bourgault has spent the last two campaigns with the AHL's Bakersfield Condors. The 21-year-old struggled this past season while dealing with a shoulder injury, amassing eight goals and 20 points in 55 outings. It was a step back from his rookie year when he potted 34 points in 62 games.Expectations for Bourgault were high after he wrapped up his junior career with 36 goals and 75 points in 43 games as a member of the QMJHL's Shawinigan Cataractes in 2021-22.Chiasson was a fourth-round pick in the 2021 draft. He appeared in 68 contests for the ECHL's Fort Wayne Komets in 2023-24, totaling nine goals and 20 points. The 21-year-old also slotted in for one AHL contest with the Condors in April.Jarventie, meanwhile, was drafted by the Senators early in the second round in 2020. He made his NHL debut in November and suited up for seven games, chipping in with one assist and five shots. The 21-year-old also played 22 games with the AHL's Belleville Senators, registering nine goals and 20 points before undergoing season-ending knee surgery in February.The Oilers have been a fan of Jarventie for some time, according to commentator Bob Stauffer. The Tampere, Finland, native is listed at 6-foot-3 and 209 pounds.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P7JV)
Though there hasn't been much movement on a potential Patrik Laine trade, new Columbus Blue Jackets general manager Don Waddell remains hopeful that he'll be able to get something done."There really aren't a lot of free agents out there," the executive told The Athletic's Aaron Portzline. "If (teams) have the (salary) cap (space) today, they'll probably still have it tomorrow. I know there are teams that are still interested."Reports emerged in mid-June that the Jackets were working with Laine on a trade. The 26-year-old is under contract for two more seasons with an $8.7-million cap hit. Laine has been in the NHL/NHLPA player assistance program since January.He was limited to 18 contests in 2023-24 after battling multiple injuries, including a broken clavicle. Laine was also a healthy scratch in November, which he said was "the most embarrassing thing" to happen to him in his career at the time.The Finn cited his "mental health and well-being" when he entered the assistance program. The Jackets - under then-GM Jarmo Kekalainen - were apparently willing to listen to offers on Laine before he joined the program.Teams - including Columbus - can't speak directly to Laine while he's in the program, though he can still be traded. It's a unique situation for Waddell, especially considering he just stepped in as the Jackets' GM in May."Teams keep checking in to see if there's anything new," he said. "I tell them, 'You guys have to be comfortable with (Laine), and I can't help you.' I don't know the player personally. I'm not one to try and trick people either, so (we) made him available to chat (when he's cleared)."The Blue Jackets acquired Laine from the Jets in January 2021 as part of the blockbuster trade that sent Pierre-Luc Dubois to Winnipeg.Laine hasn't flourished in Columbus, amassing 64 goals and 138 points in 174 games over the past four years. His best statistical seasons came with the Jets: Laine reached the 30-goal mark three times and recorded a career-high 44 tallies in 2017-18.The Blue Jackets haven't made the playoffs during Laine's tenure.Winnipeg selected Laine with the second overall pick in the 2016 NHL Draft.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P7JW)
The Ottawa Senators re-signed restricted free-agent goaltender Mads Sogaard to a two-year contract, the team announced Monday.The first year of his new pact is two-way, but it will become a one-way deal in 2025-26. Sogaard's contract is worth $775,000 at the NHL level.Sogaard appeared in six games this past season, amassing a 1-3-0 record and .859 save percentage. He spent the bulk of the campaign with the AHL's Belleville Senators, where he registered a .916 save percentage, 2.45 goals against average, and 18 victories in 32 showings.The Denmark native went on to post a .910 clip in six playoff games with Belleville.Ottawa selected Sogaard in the second round of the 2019 NHL Draft.The 23-year-old owns a career .884 save percentage and 10 wins in 27 appearances across three NHL seasons.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Sean O'Leary on (#6P7JX)
Steven Stamkos opened up on his emotional exit from the Tampa Bay Lightning earlier this summer."These past few weeks have been bittersweet," the 34-year-old wrote in The Players' Tribune. "I never thought this day would come. I did everything I felt I could do to make it work, but sometimes things just happen. It didn't work. And I'd be lying if I said it wasn't heartbreaking. But my family and I, we're human, you know? Tampa is home. It's where our three kids were born ... it's where our memories are. It's always going to mean so much to us."Stamkos signed a four-year, $32-million contract with the Nashville Predators July 1, concluding a 16-season tenure with the Lightning. Tampa Bay made a pair of trades to clear cap space in the lead-up to free agency but brought in Jake Guentzel on a long-term deal rather than retaining its captain.General manager Julien BriseBois said he understands Lightning fans are disappointed the team didn't keep Stamkos. After Tampa Bay was eliminated in the first round of the playoffs this past spring, head coach Jon Cooper said Stamkos "feels like a Bolt for life."The Lightning drafted Stamkos first overall in 2008. He captained the club to the Stanley Cup twice and is the franchise's all-time leader in games played (1,082), goals (555), and points (1,137).Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Sean O'Leary on (#6P73P)
Seattle Kraken prospect Shane Wright hasn't met the lofty expectations bestowed on him, but he's confident his time in the AHL will pay off in the long run."Obviously there's outside expectations, the outside pressures," Wright recently told TSN. "But at the end of the day, I have my own expectations on myself, and that's really what I've focused on - just go about my business day to day."It's certainly been a process for me. I've had to learn what it's like to be a pro, to take that next step, to be able to have success and be an impact player at that level."Wright was granted exceptional status to play in the OHL as a 15-year-old and was the consensus top pick for the 2022 draft after a prolific junior career. He fell to the Kraken at fourth overall.Wright has managed seven points in 16 career NHL games. He's posted stronger numbers with the AHL's Coachella Valley Firebirds and has reached back-to-back Calder Cup Finals with Seattle's farm club.It's unclear if Wright will make the Kraken out of camp this fall. Seattle named Dan Bylsma its new head coach this offseason and signed Chandler Stephenson and Brandon Montour to long-term deals.The Kraken missed the playoffs in 2023-24 after qualifying for the first time the season prior.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P6HY)
The New York Rangers signed restricted free-agent defenseman Braden Schneider to a two-year deal, the team announced Saturday.Schneider's pact carries a $2.2-million cap hit, according to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.He can become an RFA with arbitration rights once his new contract expires and will be due a qualifying offer of $2.64 million, per PuckPedia.Schneider appeared in all 82 games for the Rangers this past season, potting five goals and a career-high 19 points while averaging just under 16 minutes of ice time per contest. He also logged two assists in 16 playoff outings during New York's run to the Eastern Conference Final.The 22-year-old spent the bulk of his time on a pair with veteran Erik Gustafsson, who signed with the Detroit Red Wings as a free agent on July 1.When star rearguard Adam Fox missed 10 regular-season games with a knee injury in November, Schneider and Zac Jones formed the third pair with Gustafsson slotting next to Ryan Lindgren. In the postseason, Schneider spent some time in a top-four role next to K'Andre Miller.The Rangers selected Schneider with the 19th overall pick in the 2020 NHL Draft.Schneider has amassed 48 points in 206 career NHL games across three campaigns.New York now has around $5.1 million in cap space. Lindgren needs a new pact as an RFA, and he was one of 14 players to file for a salary arbitration hearing.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Josh Wegman, John Matisz on (#6P50W)
Sweden /Finland
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by Josh Wegman, John Matisz on (#6P6FG)
Sweden /Finland
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by Josh Wegman on (#6P67K)
Nashville Predators general manager Barry Trotz knows his team has an edge over the majority of NHL clubs.Being situated in Tennessee - one of the U.S.' nine states that doesn't levy a state income tax - Predators players are able to keep more of their money.In a league with a hard salary cap where every dollar is crucial, Trotz is fully aware of the advantage the team's geographical location provides."It is an advantage because your dollar goes a little bit farther," Trotz said on TSN's "Overdrive" on Wednesday. "There's no question."The Predators went splurging this offseason, signing Steven Stamkos, Jonathan Marchessault, and Brady Skjei as unrestricted free agents.While the absence of state income tax may have played a part in recruiting the high-profile UFAs, Trotz believes it's not as significant a factor for high-end players."When you talk to Stamkos or Marchessault or players that are serial winners, guys that have gone deep, have had good careers, and made a lot of money, it doesn't go that far," Trotz continued. "But it does help the middle group a little bit. For the elite players, the top players, they're just looking for a place that's serious about winning, wants to win, fits in their window."The Florida Panthers, Tampa Bay Lightning, Vegas Golden Knights, Dallas Stars, and Seattle Kraken all share the same advantage.Several of the NHL's top unrestricted free agents this offseason took their talents to teams without state income tax. In addition to the Predators' spending spree, Sam Reinhart re-signed in Florida, Jake Guentzel went to Tampa Bay, and Brandon Montour signed with Seattle.Four of the last five Stanley Cup Champions play in tax-free states: the Panthers (2024), Golden Knights (2023), and Lightning (2021, 2020).The NHL instituted a hard salary cap before the 2005-06 season. All 32 teams deal with the same cap ceiling, regardless of their state/province's income tax situation.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P628)
Sharks rising star Macklin Celebrini is still 90 days away from making his NHL debut, but he's already had a sizeable impact on San Jose."You mean other than the fact that the song 'Return of the Mack' has been on the radio 10 times more than it was until that point?" Sharks president Jonathan Becher joked during an appearance on the "San Jose Hockey Now Podcast.""Come on, let's start with the obvious part, which is, there's just a lot more buzz."We're seeing more interest from what I would call the casual NorCal hockey fan. ... We're seeing more interest from the national media. ... Frankly, fans in other markets are paying more attention to what's happening here in San Jose than they did a year ago - unless they were paying attention for negative reasons, which they may have."San Jose limped through the 2023-24 campaign, finishing last in the league with a 19-54-9 record. But the Sharks' struggles weren't in vain, as they won the draft lottery in May, allowing them to select Celebrini with the first overall pick in June.Celebrini signed his entry-level deal last Saturday, a financially lucrative day for the player and the organization.Becher said the Sharks enjoyed a "record merchandise sales day for an (offseason) day" since he was hired by the franchise in 2017. He added that around 80% of the sales were Celebrini merchandise.The franchise also had "a spike in individual game sales," with the Sharks' home opener on Oct. 10 and their Halloween clash against phenom Connor Bedard's Chicago Blackhawks drawing most of the interest.The SAP Center can hold a capacity of 17,435 for hockey games. This past season, San Jose recorded an average of 13,559 fans at home contests, trailing only the Winnipeg Jets and Arizona Coyotes (who played in a college-sized arena) for the lowest attendance in the league, according to Sports Business Journal. Thirteen of the Sharks' home games saw attendance dip below 11,000, per The Athletic's Ian Mendes.As a longtime Sharks fan, Becher said the state of the SAP Center was "emotionally tough.""When the Tank is full, when it has the energy, it's one of the toughest buildings to play in. ... On the other hand, you look at the people in the building and go, 'That's your core fan base.' ... It's getting the more casual fan to pay attention, which has happened a lot in the last 30, 40 days."It feels like we're on that upswing."Though Becher conceded that Celebrini is "the center" of the heightened hype, he was wary of putting too much pressure on the youngster. General manager Mike Grier held the same sentiment after his top prospect put pen to paper."I'm not expecting (Celebrini) to go out there and be the MVP of the league or anything like that," Grier said. "There's gonna be bumps ... and we'll help him navigate those things."Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P4XJ)
The Tampa Bay Lightning and restricted free-agent defenseman J.J. Moser avoided arbitration on a two-year pact with a $3.375-million cap hit, the team announced Thursday.The first year of his deal carries a salary of $2.7 million and he'll earn $4.05 million in the second campaign, according to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.Moser was one of 14 players to file for salary arbitration by last Friday's deadline. Hearings are scheduled to take place from July 20 to Aug. 4.The 24-year-old will once again be an RFA with arbitration rights when his new deal expires. He'll be due a qualifying offer worth $4.05 million, according to PuckPedia.Tampa Bay acquired Moser as part of the trade that sent blue-liner Mikhail Sergachev to Utah during Day 2 of the 2024 NHL Draft.The Switzerland native registered five goals and 26 points in 80 games this past season with the Arizona Coyotes while averaging 20:34 minutes per contest. He spent the bulk of his ice time on the top pair with Sean Durzi.Moser is a left-handed shot and will likely get pushed behind Victor Hedman and the recently reacquired Ryan McDonagh if the Lightning play him on that side. Tampa Bay's blue line could shape up like this in 2024-25:LDRDVictor HedmanDarren RaddyshRyan McDonaghErik CernakJ.J. MoserNick PerbixThe Coyotes selected Moser in the second round of the 2021 NHL Draft. He has accumulated 72 points in 205 career games.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P575)
New Florida Panthers defenseman Nate Schmidt knows his place in the lineup isn't set in stone, but he's ready to step his game up as he pursues his first Stanley Cup."When you go with the champs, the first thing you say is, 'I got to win that roster spot,'" Schmidt said, according to NHL.com's Jessi Pierce. "Now, I've got to get back into hardware mode of wanting to get into that grind, and that's what's been my motivation this summer."Schmidt spent the last three seasons with the Winnipeg Jets after being traded by the Vancouver Canucks in July 2021.However, Winnipeg bought out the last season of his six-year, $37.5-million contract (signed with the Vegas Golden Knights in 2018), making him a free agent. Florida then inked Schmidt to a one-year, $800,000 deal.Schmidt made the Stanley Cup Final during the Golden Knights' inaugural season in 2017-18 but ultimately lost to the Washington Capitals. That experience has left the veteran feeling "grateful" for the opportunity in the Sunshine State."You don't realize how bad you want it until you're not close to winning it again," Schmidt said. "I just want to have a chance. That's all you ever ask for as a young kid. A chance to win the Stanley Cup."The 32-year-old got a brief taste of playing under current Panthers head coach Paul Maurice in 2021-22. The bench boss helmed the Jets for 29 games that season before resigning. Though it's a small sample size, Schmidt totaled 17 points in that span while averaging 21:33 of ice time per contest."My biggest ups when I was in Winnipeg was when I was under Paul Maurice," he said. "And honestly, I just felt like he was somebody who understood my game and knows how to unlock the most out of his guys."Schmidt mustered two goals and 14 points in 63 games this past season while averaging just 16:48 of ice time per contest in a third-pairing role. He also sat as an occasional healthy scratch.The Panthers similarly reeled in a veteran reclamation project on the back end last summer, signing Oliver Ekman-Larsson as a free agent after the Vancouver Canucks bought out the last four years of his deal. He responded by adding 32 points in 80 regular-season contests for Florida and also appeared in every playoff game to help secure the franchise's first championship.On top of Schmidt, Florida added Adam Boqvist after losing Brandon Montour and Ekman-Larsson in free agency.Schmidt has amassed 220 points in 661 career NHL games.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P50V)
The Utah Hockey Club signed forward Tij Iginla to a three-year, entry-level deal, the team announced Thursday.His contract carries a cap hit of $975,000 with an additional $1 million in performance bonuses, per PuckPedia.The first pick in Utah's history, Iginla was selected sixth overall at the 2024 NHL Draft in June.Iginla posted 47 goals and 84 points in 64 games as a member of the WHL's Kelowna Rockets this past season.He also starred at the World U18 Championship in the spring, totaling six tallies and six assists while helping Canada capture its first gold medal at the event since 2021.Utah general manager Bill Armstrong is a fan of Iginla's knack for finding the back of the net."I said to him, 'We have a lot of 20-goal scorers. We need a 50-goal scorer,'" the executive recounted, according to NHL.com's Matthew Komma. "He's got a chance to kind of push the pace and score some goals for us. I love his mindset."Iginla spent the 2022-23 campaign with the Seattle Thunderbirds, where he was teammates with current Utah forward Dylan Guenther.The 17-year-old is the son of Hall of Famer Jarome Iginla. Tij was drafted higher than his father, who was selected 11th overall by the Dallas Stars in 1995.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Josh Wegman on (#6P4FP)
Jay Woodcroft and Dean Evason are among the finalists for the Columbus Blue Jackets' head coaching vacancy, reports The Athletic's Aaron Portzline.Both candidates have attended several interviews with president of hockey operations and general manager Don Waddell and other members of Columbus' front office.Woodcroft coached the Edmonton Oilers for parts of three seasons - his only NHL head coaching job - before he was fired after a 3-9-1 start to the 2023-24 campaign. He led the Oilers to the 2022 Western Conference Final. His .643 points percentage is the eighth-best mark all time among coaches with at least 100 games.Evason's only stint as an NHL bench boss came with the Minnesota Wild, whom he guided for parts of five campaigns before he was let go following a 5-10-4 start in 2023-24. He led the Wild to four postseason appearances but never won a round. His .639 points percentage is 12th-best all time among qualified coaches.Former San Jose Sharks and Los Angeles Kings bench boss Todd McLellan was reportedly Waddell's first choice for the job but is no longer in the running after contract negotiations fell apart. Because McLellan still had another year left on his contract before the Kings fired him last season, the two teams need to negotiate how much of his contract Columbus would pay.However, the Blue Jackets could circle back to McLellan, a source told Portzline.Pascal Vincent coached the Blue Jackets to a disappointing 27-43-12 record in 2023-24 before he was fired in June. Columbus hired Vincent late in training camp last year to replace Mike Babcock, who resigned before coaching a single game with the club following allegations of player mistreatment.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Josh Wegman on (#6P4FQ)
The Carolina Hurricanes lost several key players to unrestricted free agency this offseason, including both members of their shutdown defense pair of Brady Skjei and Brett Pesce, prized trade deadline pickup Jake Guentzel, longtime winger Teuvo Teravainen, and depth forward Stefan Noesen.Head coach Rod Brind'Amour admitted the process hasn't been easy."You get attached to the guys, especially when we've had them (for a long time)," Brind'Amour said Wednesday. "It was hard, I'll be honest. It was hard to watch guys walk out of here. I understand it. It's a business. They've got to do what they've got to do. But it's also exciting because you get a whole new group of guys coming in, and maybe some of these young guys will crack the lineup and you get to watch them grow. It's just the evolution of it."The Hurricanes were able to retain a pair of notable UFAs in Jordan Martinook and Jalen Chatfield, though. They also signed Jaccob Slavin to an eight-year extension.But to further the offseason of change, Brind'Amour has a new boss. Don Waddell, Carolina's former president and general manager, resigned from his post this offseason and joined the Columbus Blue Jackets. Eric Tulsky replaced Waddell as the club's GM.There also rumors of a Martin Necas trade, though nothing has materialized yet.The Hurricanes haven't made any major offseason splashes, but they added Shayne Gostisbehere and Sean Walker to help replace Skjei and Pesce on defense, and they brought in Jack Roslovic, William Carrier, Eric Robinson, and Tyson Jost to fill some voids up front."There's a learning curve on any team," Brind'Amour said. "There is familiarity with 'Ghost.' With Walker coming in, he's excited to play the way we play. Most players like the way we play, and they want to do it. We are up-tempo, and it's a fun way to play. At the end of the day, these guys are good hockey players. If they have a willingness to get it, they will get it."Carolina has about $11.6 million left in projected cap space, but it still has multiple unsigned restricted free agents, including Necas, Seth Jarvis, and Jack Drury.Brind'Amour is set to enter his seventh season as the Hurricanes' head coach. The Canes have made the playoffs every year under his watch, and Brind'Amour won the Jack Adams Award in 2021.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Josh Wegman on (#6P4DS)
The St. Louis Blues signed free-agent defenseman Ryan Suter to a one-year pact, the team announced Wednesday.The contract includes a base salary of $775,000, but Suter can earn an additional $2.225 million in performance bonuses.Suter will receive paychecks from three of the Central Division's eight teams this coming season. The Dallas Stars bought out the final year of his contract earlier this offseason, and he'll remain on the Minnesota Wild's books for four more seasons from the 2021 buyout. He's the second player in NHL history to be bought out twice.The 39-year-old recorded two goals and 15 assists in 82 games while averaging 18:56 of ice time in 2023-24. He added four points in 19 postseason appearances.His best ability at this point in his career is arguably his availability. Suter has played 453 straight contests - the second-longest ironman streak among active players - and hasn't missed more than five games in a single campaign since 2010-11.While the offense has mostly deteriorated, Suter still managed to post strong defensive metrics in primarily a third-pairing role with the Stars last season.
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by Kayla Douglas on (#6P40G)
After spending a decade with the Florida Panthers, veteran forward Jonathan Huberdeau has mixed feelings about watching his former team win its first championship in franchise history."It's hard to see the guys lift the Cup," the Calgary Flames winger told La Presse's Guillaume Lefrancois in a French-language interview, as translated by Florida Hockey Now. "You say to yourself, 'I was there for 10 years, during more difficult times.' But that's how you build a team."The Panthers selected Huberdeau with the third overall pick in the 2011 NHL Draft, and he sits second all-time in franchise history in goals (198), assists (415), and points (613), trailing only Aleksander Barkov in all three categories.Florida made the playoffs four times during Huberdeau's tenure, winning just one round against the Washington Capitals in 2022.The Panthers shipped Huberdeau off to Calgary almost exactly two years ago as part of the blockbuster trade that brought Matthew Tkachuk to the Sunshine State, and the franchises have gone in opposite directions ever since. The Flames have missed the playoffs for the past two campaigns, while Florida's clinched back-to-back Stanley Cup Final berths."I'm happy for the guys, they worked hard," Huberdeau said "Barkov, I've been with him for years, he works so hard. Aaron Ekblad, Sam Bennett, too. Tkachuk has arrived, and yes, he is good. But he is well-surrounded. They have talent, you see it. ... And a good coach like Paul Maurice, it seems. I thought they were going to win."Huberdeau is about to enter the second season of the eight-year, $84-million extension he signed with Calgary in August 2022. The Quebec native is currently the 10th-highest-paid forward in the league, but he has yet to play up to his hefty $10.5-million cap hit.He's amassed 107 points in 160 career games with the Flames, including 12 goals and 40 assists this past campaign."It's certain that I'm hard to trade," Huberdeau said. "I knew it when I signed the contract but I didn't know how it was going to happen. I thought I was going to produce points, that it would be good, but the more defensive system of play didn't help. ... It's never fun to be in a rebuild."When you are young, you can learn, gain maturity, you have time. But at 31 years old, you want to win and you want to win now. It's harder to swallow but you have to accept your role, 100%."It seems as though Calgary will be in for another uphill climb in 2024-25. The Flames dealt starting goaltender Jacob Markstrom and forward Andrew Mangiapane in June after parting ways with Elias Lindholm, Noah Hanifin, Chris Tanev, and Nikita Zadorov during the season.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Josh Wegman on (#6P3JC)
It's safe to say Matt Savoie, who grew up about 30 minutes from Rogers Place, can't wait to get going with his hometown Edmonton Oilers."It's every young player's dream to come into an opportunity like this and play with really good players and get good opportunities," Savoie said Monday. "So, I'm just really determined, motivated, and ready to get after it here."The Oilers - who came within one victory of winning the 2024 Stanley Cup - acquired the St. Albert, Alberta, native from the Buffalo Sabres on Friday in exchange for center Ryan McLeod and minor-league winger Tyler Tullio.Savoie, who was picked No. 9 in 2022 by the Sabres, recorded 71 points in 34 games in the WHL last season. He added 10 goals and 14 assists in 19 playoff contests, helping the Moose Jaw Warriors reach the Memorial Cup."I feel like throughout my junior career and every team I've been on, we've had a chance to go all the way and make some really deep runs," he said. "It's a lot of fun. That's when you want to be playing is late in the year and fighting for championships, so there's no better spot I could've gone to compete for a championship."Savoie, a dynamic 5-foot-10 forward, instantly becomes Edmonton's top prospect. He projects to start the season in the AHL but could push for an NHL job at some point in 2024-25.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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by Sean O'Leary on (#6P35N)
The Pittsburgh Penguins hired Wes Clark as vice president of player personnel on Tuesday.Clark will oversee Pittsburgh's amateur, professional, and free agent scouting departments. He previously worked under Kyle Dubas with the Toronto Maple Leafs and OHL's Soo Greyhounds."Having worked with Wes for many years, I have a deep trust in his ability to identify talent, lead staffs, advance our scouting process and methods, learn from mistakes to improve processes and to challenge my own thinking and planning on a near daily basis," Dubas said.Dubas departed the Maple Leafs in 2023 to become Pittsburgh's general manager and president of hockey operations. Ex-Toronto player and executive Jason Spezza also joined the Penguins when Dubas did.Clark worked in Toronto for six years and was a prominent figure in its draft process. He held various roles with the organization during his tenure, most notably director of player personnel and director of amateur scouting.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
by Sean O'Leary on (#6P32B)
The Florida Panthers signed defenseman Adam Boqvist to a one-year contract Tuesday.Terms of the deal weren't officially disclosed, but Cap Friendly indicates the pact is worth $775,000.The Columbus Blue Jackets bought out Boqvist earlier this offseason after he went unclaimed on waivers. He had one year remaining on his previous deal at a $2.6-million cap hit.The soon-to-be 24-year-old was drafted eighth overall by the Chicago Blackhawks in 2018 before being dealt to Columbus in 2021. Boqvist has struggled to stay healthy for much of his career and recorded 10 points in 35 games last season.The Panthers lost Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Brandon Montour from their Cup-winning defensive corps this summer, and Boqvist can provide cheap depth on the blue line.Florida also signed Boqvist's older brother, Jesper, this offseason.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
by Josh Wegman on (#6P2M6)
The Utah Hockey Club re-signed restricted free-agent center Barrett Hayton to a two-year contract carrying an average annual value of $2.65 million, the team announced Monday.Hayton is coming off a down season riddled with injuries, recording just three goals and seven assists in 33 games. He enjoyed a breakout campaign in 2022-23, notching 19 goals and 24 helpers in 82 contests."We are very pleased to sign Barrett to an extension," Utah general manager Bill Armstrong said. "Barrett is a reliable two-way center who is strong in the faceoff circle and is a great complement down the middle to our high-skilled forwards. We look forward to having him back with our organization."Hayton projects to compete for a top-six center role for Utah's inaugural campaign.The Arizona Coyotes drafted Hayton fifth overall in 2018.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
by Jolene Latimer on (#6P1ST)
No one had done it before, and no one has done it since - but for three brief years in the 1980s, one man ascended the hockey hierarchy to climb from linesman to NHL team owner.His name was Harry Ornest, and almost 40 years after he took control of the St. Louis Blues, his story has become a footnote in hockey history.Fans who do remember him for saving the club from a dispersal draft often think of him as a bull in a china shop who ran the Blues, and later the CFL's Toronto Argonauts, with a quirky brand of charisma and austerity.But Ornest's story isn't one of chaos and conflict, although it does include some of that. It's the story of a man who worked 60 years to achieve his childhood dream, one he birthed as a Depression-era son of immigrants growing up on the Canadian prairies. Even having reached an age when many people are tempted to wrap up their life's work and enjoy what they've built, Ornest took the biggest gamble of all, putting his modest but self-made fortune on the line to achieve his lifelong vision of success. It's an ambition he saw to completion, even after the stress it caused led to an early heart attack.For three improbable years, Ornest lived out his childhood dream.The birth of a dreamYoung Harry Ornest was obsessed with sports growing up in Depression-era Edmonton as the son of eastern European Jewish immigrants who ran a local general store."Sports was his milieu as a kid," says Laura Ornest, who describes her dad as a "rink rat" who could always be found watching or playing hockey as a child. His naive childhood fantasies bounced between wanting to write about sports, play sports, or own a team. But for Harry, those daydreams rapidly turned into plans."It comes from wanting to be somebody," he later wrote in his private notes. "Everybody wants to be somebody. Some never get a chance. Some fall short for whatever reason. Some are prescient enough to pick the right parents. I picked the right parents, but we didn't have a dime. My story is not much different from millions of Depression kids of all racial backgrounds."Harry Ornest (far right) playing hockey at an outdoor rink in Edmonton. His brother Leo Ornest is second from the left. SuppliedEventually, his entrepreneurial inclinations took over, and team ownership was increasingly his goal, far-fetched as it might have been. To flex his business sense and support the family through the Depression, Ornest sold programs at the outdoor rink. Back then, Edmontonian Clarence Campbell was making headlines as a prominent NHL referee and figured among the local sports stars of the day."Being so poor growing up, they didn't have much money. Every dollar mattered. He was learning business from a very young age," Laura Ornest says.Harry Ornest (left) at a Yankees tryout camp. Supplied Harry Ornest was a capable athlete; in addition to hockey, he was also a talented baseball player. In 1941, when he was 18 years old, the Seattle Rainiers of the Pacific Coast League invited him to a training camp staged in Southern California. He might have had a longer stint with the team, but an old friend from Edmonton - Harry Black Sr., father of current Colorado Rockies manager Bud Black - was playing hockey for the University of Southern California and invited Ornest to attend a game. When Ornest arrived, he discovered the game was on the verge of cancellation because none of the officials had appeared. Black had Ornest paged over the intercom and pressed him into service as a referee.His baseball career didn't work out - he slept through his alarm the day after his refereeing stint - but he became interested in pursuing a career as a professional referee.It wasn't easy to find a job, though. He offered to work for free in the Western Canada Hockey League to gain experience, but that went nowhere. Eventually, he had a chance to referee junior games for $1 a night around Edmonton. But he disallowed a go-ahead goal in a marquee matchup, and that was enough to turn the tide against him. "Ornest is a bum," coaches said, and the league agreed. He was out of a job again.Harry Ornest as an AHL referee in 1948. SuppliedThat prompted Ornest to journey south of the border where he was hired as a linesman in the United States Hockey League; he also worked some games in the American Hockey League. "He had loads of that stuff they call intestinal fortitude," a newspaper clipping he saved reads. The games were rowdy, but that suited Ornest just fine. In one particularly aggressive matchup, a fan hit Ornest on the head with a bottle, which put him in the hospital for two days. But Ornest was undaunted, and by 1948 he graduated into the NHL as a linesman. They called him "the double-barreled court of justice.""NHL referees and linesmen have the most difficult job in major-league sports, by far," he later wrote in his notes. "Outstanding courage and stamina but faced with a game that has so many borderline judgment decisions."In one game, he famously strong-armed his way into a fight between Gordie Howe and Maurice Richard; in the same game, he also tripped and skidded along the ice on the seat of his pants.Laura Ornest with an undated photo of her father (right) as an official in the United States Hockey League. Jolene LatimerBut the traveling life of a hockey official was not what Ornest envisioned for his future. His goal of team ownership would only become possible if he went into business and raised enough capital. While Ornest was working in the U.S., he discovered an invention that was transforming food sales: vending machines. With assurances from Campbell, who was by then league president, that he could return to officiating if his venture didn't succeed, Ornest took a risk and imported the first vending machines to Western Canada. He then added fountain soda to his offerings, storing the syrupy flavors in his basement before they were distributed to movie theaters and sporting facilities. He began to build a small fortune."His family came first, and he was driven to provide for his family and to succeed in the world," Laura says.Edmonton wasn't big enough for Harry's ambitions. He soon journeyed westward to Vancouver, where there was an opportunity he thought could be life-changing: In 1962, Ornest heard the Vancouver Canucks, then a minor-league team in the Western Hockey League, were to be sold in a blind bid. Anticipating they would soon join the NHL, Ornest placed a bid. However, the team was awarded to former Vancouver mayor Fred Hume. Ornest believed Hume had been tipped off to Ornest's higher bid and was able to increase his offer, but he couldn't prove it."He was angry and it was a huge disappointment," Laura says.The Canucks did join the NHL in 1970, but Harry had already moved on - he packed up the family and went south to Los Angeles."I had to keep trying; you don't give up," Harry later told Laura. He likened his career to a baseball player's batting average: Successfully getting a hit one-third of the time was considered elite. He was playing the long game.That internal wisdom propelled him for nearly two decades as he futilely tried to purchase a team. "He didn't have the money, but he had the vision," Laura says.In a world before search engines, Harry would typically have no fewer than three newspapers delivered to his front steps each morning. He scoured their pages for hints a team might be changing owners, enlisting his four children to snip articles while he packaged annotated clippings before mailing them to decision-makers. If he wasn't doing that, he was on the phone calling business partners, journalists, and friends - trading information and trying against all odds to push his dream into existence.Ornest's business focus expanded to producing teenage fairs in Toronto and Vancouver, but money became tight, and he eventually had to borrow from his brother to stay afloat. He reached a personal low when he applied for a job at the Los Angeles Forum."A true defeat," Laura says. "He had never worked for anyone. He carved his life out as an entrepreneur." Adding insult to injury, he didn't get the job. He later convinced Vancouver businessman Peter Graham to lease out the San Diego Sports Arena, which Harry operated. It was a step in the right direction, but it came with a lot of stress, and Ornest suffered a heart attack at the age of 48.In 1977, his obsessive networking paid off when a call came in from former MLB player and manager Bobby Bragan."Harry, the Pacific Coast League is expanding by two teams. Do you want in?" Bragan asked in his Alabama drawl.Ornest purchased the new Vancouver Triple-A franchise for $25,000 and helped his brother Leo purchase the Portland expansion team. (Leo Ornest would later win a Stanley Cup as vice president of the Calgary Flames.)The major leagues - in any sport - were Harry's ultimate dream, but he was on the ladder now."The Ornest family owns the Canadians 100 percent," he wrote privately. It was a source of pride.He shrewdly named the team the Canadians, using the alternating red and blue lettering from Molson's branding. The beer company paid him $75,000, according to his notes. At the time, it was prohibited for an alcohol company to purchase the naming rights to a team, so Ornest classified the deal as a promotion."Out of the fertile promoter's mind of Harry Ornest," a clipping he saved reads, "a baseball team has sprung into semi-full bloom." He set to work renovating Nat Bailey Stadium - spending $500,000 to modernize what he called "a pigeon's delight," as the facility had fallen into disrepair at the time of purchase. There were disgruntled neighbors and bylaw battles with the city, but within three years, the team was successful enough to attract the notice of Vancouver businessman Nelson Skalbania - the man who later signed a 17-year-old Wayne Gretzky to the Indianapolis Racers of the World Hockey Association. Ornest sold the team to Skalbania for $3 million in 1980.Ruth Ornest (left) and Harry Ornest at Nat Bailey Stadium in Vancouver after purchasing the Vancouver Canadians Triple-A baseball team. Supplied"He really didn't have to do anything more after that and he would have been comfortable," Laura says. "But he was obsessed. He had this dream. He was always looking for more." He finally had enough money to make that happen.The big leaguesHarry returned to California and, as was his custom, continued scouring the newspapers for a team to purchase."There was nobody who read the business section or the sports section of major papers in the U.S. and Canada like Harry," says Jim Devellano, the former Islanders and Red Wings general manager. "He would scribble notes in the margins like, 'This is a bunch of baloney,' or, 'Look at this, Jimmy. This would work.' I've still got the mammoth file. But at the end of the day, it wasn't a hobby for him. It was business."Laura Ornest reads from Harry's clippings collection in his former Beverly Hills home. Jolene LatimerOrnest didn't have to wait long before his strategy was rewarded. It was merely, as he called it, a "little squib" in the Los Angeles Times, but the January 1983 headline immediately raised Ornest's hopes."Hockey is Dead in St. Louis," it read."Suddenly, I got real interested," he later told L.A. Times sports editor Bill Dwyre. The story detailed the sordid state of professional hockey in the Gateway City: The Blues, then owned by local pet food company Ralston Purina, were to be sold to a group of investors in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.Ornest expressed his incredulity with a phrase that people familiar with his story love to repeat: "We used to call Saskatoon 'Saskabush!'" He had a firm conviction that NHL hockey could not survive in Saskatoon. At the time, its population was only about 150,000, roughly a third the size of St. Louis.The Blues were no strangers to life-or-death circumstances; they'd flirted with disaster six years earlier. "At that time, they were the model franchise and got a lot of teams upset with them because of how much money they sunk into players," says Andy Mohler, senior sports producer at KSDK, the NBC affiliate in St. Louis. Then, the Blues were owned by insurance tycoon Sid Salomon and his son. "They treated the players to deals with a local car dealership - they all got personalized (Plymouth) Barracudas. They owned a boutique hotel that they would bring the players and families to, all expenses paid. They deferred contracts. It all came back to bite them."The Salomons were desperate to part with the team, but no one in St. Louis made an offer. That's when Ralston Purina, out of a sense of civic duty, purchased the Blues in 1977.The pet food company didn't have better luck running the team; the Blues' pre-tax losses averaged about $3 million a year from 1977 to 1983. Hockey as a whole was a tough business to be in at the time - 14 of the 21 NHL teams were not profitable. By 1983, Ralston Purina was just as desperate as the Salomons to rid themselves of the Blues. "They decided that civic responsibility was not their priority anymore," Mohler says.That's when the investment group from Saskatoon, led by Bill Hunter, stepped forward with a $11.5-million cash offer to move the Blues to the so-called Paris of the Prairies."Of course, the city went into a sort of panic," Mohler says. The NHL blocked the sale and Purina served the league with a $60-million lawsuit while terminating over half of the team's employees."They basically threatened that, if this doesn't get taken care of, or you're not allowing us to sell to Bill Hunter, then we're just going to basically dry-dock the franchise, leave it at your doorstep, and be done with it."There were only three or four people still left in the building, one of which was longtime defenseman Bob Plager - who told me that he and a couple of assistants and the trainer would spend each day sitting in the bowels of the arena telling old stories and hoping that something was going to get resolved," Mohler says.Making good on their word, the Blues refused to attend the 1983 NHL entry draft. "I sat at that draft at the head of the table with Detroit," Devellano says. "There was an empty table with the insignia of the St. Louis Blues."The Blues were on the brink of extinction and the NHL had already created plans for a dispersal draft of their players, which included the likes of Bernie Federko, Garry Unger, and Brian Sutter.Enter Harry Ornest."He was a really tough negotiator," Devellano says. That skill was necessary for Ornest to put the finishing touches on a deal that would culminate in the achievement of his life's greatest dream. Just hours before the NHL's deadline, Ornest reached an agreement, purchasing the team and earning himself a place in the big leagues for the first time in his life at the age of 60.The Blues sold for $3 million in cash and $9 million in unsecured notes, which didn't require interest payments until the Blues reached a certain level of profitability. Local investors put up an additional $3 million in operating capital. Ornest got 64% ownership of the team and 100% of the 17,650-seat arena he once officiated in."How can I describe it? It was a dream," Laura Ornest says. "This wasn't a wealthy man who was able to pursue it to make it his hobby. There was so much uncertainty, and it was stressful. But for us as a family - it was a dream come true."The Ornest eraHarry Ornest had achieved his dream. Maintaining it was the next challenge."At that point, Harry was the white knight riding into town. He was a hero because there was no entity from St. Louis that was willing to take the Blues on. They had fallen on hard times," Mohler says.Forty years later, it remains undeniable that Ornest kept the Blues from oblivion. "He was truly viewed initially as the savior of the team," former longtime Blues PR executive Susie Mathieu says. And his charisma and larger-than-life personality put hockey on the map. "He made it a lively atmosphere wherever you went, and quite honestly at that time, hockey in the United States wasn't what it has been elevated to. He could surely garner attention, press, and fan interest," she says.Harry Ornest in his St. Louis office. Supplied"Face to face, he was a very nice man," Mohler says. "If a Girl Scout troop would call him up and ask him to come speak to them, he would. He would even miss part of a game if they wanted him to speak on a game night."And Ornest could sell himself. "He literally would call any writer, any sportscaster, and state his opinions, and then he would send them clips," Mathieu says. "It was actually funny."Ornest in St. Louis after purchasing the Blues. Supplied Ornest leveraged his Depression-era business sense to shift the team's financial fortunes. "If you start losing a couple of million a year on a hockey team, you get drained pretty quickly," Devellano says. "He told me, 'Jimmy, I have to be careful with St. Louis.' To his credit, he didn't get drained. He made it work. Whatever it cost him to run the Blues, he made sure that amount of revenue came in."Ornest moved three of his adult children and his wife to St. Louis to run the team together - a family enterprise had always been central to his dream. He abruptly cut the $4.5-million payroll by $1 million and raised the average ticket price 10% to $11, dropping the Blues' break-even to 13,500 tickets sold per game. He also focused on building luxury suites, increasing TV revenue, and making the arena profitable by filling its calendar with events.He also made some deft hockey moves, recruiting a relatively unknown Jacques Demers to coach and bringing in Montreal Canadiens legend Ron Caron as his general manager and Jack Quinn as team president.Coach Jacques Demers was one of Ornest's first hires in St. Louis and became a crucial member of the staff. Bruce Bennett / Getty Images "The romantic side of this story is how first, he saved the team. The league was gonna scrap it. They don't even (attend) the draft. Then he gets these two terrific guys - Caron, a savvy GM, and Jacques Demers as a coach, and they stay competitive," hockey historian Stan Fischler says. Indeed, by 1985-86, the Blues had turned around their on-ice fortunes. Their postseason was a memorable affair - they came within one goal of reaching the Stanley Cup Final. A stunning third-period comeback from a 5-2 deficit in Game 6 of the conference final against Calgary was dubbed the "Monday Night Miracle." But Calgary won Game 7 at home to advance to play Montreal for the Cup.And St. Louis' honeymoon period didn't last. Ornest's personality had a dark side, and St. Louis was about to get a blast of it. "There were a lot of positives to Harry," Mathieu says. "There were also a lot of negatives on the other end of it. Chaotic is probably a good word."As smart and charming as Ornest could be, he was also hotheaded, stubborn, and, at times, severe."I didn't see much of that dark side because he and I were buddies," Fischler says. "That is, until it came to the crisis over the book." Many years after the St. Louis saga, Ornest hired Fischler to write his autobiography. The project was killed after a dispute about the opening chapter, which featured a well-documented scuffle between Ornest and actor John Forsythe that occurred during a Hollywood Park Racetrack board meeting."He didn't become abusive, but something close to it," Fischler says. "It would have been a hell of a book."That tempestuous nature - verging on insulting at times - was also part of Ornest's approach to the league, his staff, the city, and even the construction contractors upgrading the arena."I would be in these league meetings, and he'd be giving people shit," Devellano says. "Including the president of the league. He didn't make friends. He'd derail league meetings talking about the kind of money the NHL was wasting. He was a pariah in that regard. He was not popular. He couldn't afford to play with the big boys, and he knew that, so he would confront other owners and go, 'Why are you paying all of this money to this coach? Why do you pay the players all that money?' Then he'd be mad at the commissioner of the league: 'Why do you have such a big staff? I operate the St. Louis Blues with five people! Why do you have 25 people running the league?' None of the other owners talked that way."Among the 20 other owners at the time, Ornest might have only had one true ally. "Harry's biggest pal was John McMullen, the owner of the Devils," Fischler says. "They were the two black sheep owners in the league. They weren't afraid to speak out. They didn't take any shit."There were other missteps, too. Ornest's dream had been for the family to run the team together, but fans weren't always thrilled about their contributions. In particular, Ornest's wife, Ruth, redesigned their jerseys, a move that rankled the fan base. Harry was also maligned for trading fan favorite Joe Mullen to Calgary at the 1986 trade deadline. He insisted it was a hockey decision, but he was branded a cheapskate for not wanting to shell out the contract increase Mullen sought.Harry Ornest addresses fans during a pregame presentation in St. Louis. SuppliedThen there is the oft-repeated story of the nonexistent team charter airplane. The true details of the event are lost to time. As the anecdote goes, after losing the conference final to Calgary, the team's charter back to St. Louis was canceled. "I don't know whether the charter was canceled because Harry was too cheap or if it was an issue with the airlines. It remains one of those mysteries that's never answered correctly," Mathieu says.What is true is that Mathieu purchased commercial flights for the team's return trip to St. Louis. "I stayed up all night and was working to get everyone back commercially," she says. "I maxed out my credit card, and I went to Bernie Federko and Brian Sutter, who were the leaders of the team, and they let me use theirs." Everyone was eventually reimbursed for the flights.Ruth and Harry Ornest watch a Blues game from their suite. SuppliedRumors about Ornest swirled. At some point, he had bragged about having the best coach in the league at the cheapest price. That might have been true - but it exposed a weakness ripe for exploitation. Making matters worse for Ornest, Demers didn't have a written contract extension in place, merely a handshake agreement.That's when Devellano swooped in. "I stole Jacques Demers from St. Louis," he says. "I actually got caught tampering." His punishment from the NHL amounted to a slap on the wrist.Ornest's reputation began to alienate key figures in St. Louis - most importantly Mayor Vincent Schoemehl. After a dispute over the city's amusement tax, which Ornest alleged was unfairly levied against the Blues and not the Cardinals, the city claimed eminent domain over the arena in 1986, professing that it needed the land for a municipal infrastructure project. The arena had been the main source of revenue for Ornest, offsetting the cost of the team. After a back-and-forth battle, Ornest conceded, agreeing to sell the team to an investment group headed by local businessman Mike Shanahan for $19 million and the arena to the city of St. Louis for $15 million. The city ultimately backed away from its plans to demolish the arena, and the Blues remained there until the team's current arena opened in 1994."It was sad," Laura Ornest says. "He loved owning that team. Loved it."While Harry Ornest was romantic about sports, he was also a pragmatist. "He didn't have the financial wherewithal to compete at that level," Devellano says. "Harry was far from stupid. He wasn't going to risk the family's savings putting it all into a hockey team and going broke.""I liked to tell people in St. Louis, after I bought the team, that I was a child of the Depression," Ornest once said to Dwyre. "I also liked to tell them that I had never really known poverty until I bought the Blues."Harry Ornest purchased the Argonauts in 1988. Doug Griffin / Toronto Star / Getty Images After selling the team, Ornest moved his family back to Los Angeles, but soon he was scouring the papers again for another shot at his dream. In 1988, he purchased the Toronto Argonauts, selling them in 1991 to Bruce McNall, John Candy, and Gretzky. He later purchased shares in Hollywood Park Racetrack with the aim of building a stadium on its property. Ornest died in 1998 at the age of 75, but that's the site where SoFi Stadium now stands."I considered him one of these fascinating curmudgeons in sports," Fischler says.Ornest might have been an outsider who did things on a shoestring budget and let his passion get the best of him, but he did accomplish his lifelong goal. "He was an ordinary guy from Edmonton, Alberta, who wanted to live the American sports dream," Devellano says. "And God bless him, he made it."Jolene Latimer is a features writer at theScore.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
by Sean O'Leary on (#6P29H)
The Washington Capitals named Chris Patrick their general manager Monday and announced that Brian MacLellan, who held the title last season, will remain the team's president of hockey operations.Patrick joined the Capitals in 2008-09 in a player development role and was promoted to associate general manager last August."We are thrilled to announce Chris' promotion to general manager," owner Ted Leonsis said in a statement. "Chris is a dedicated and hard-working executive who is fully prepared for this next step in his career. His vision, extensive experience, hockey acumen, and player evaluation make him the perfect leader to drive our team forward. We are confident that he will thrive in this new role."MacLellan became Washington's general manager in 2014 and added president of hockey operations to his title last season. He's been with the franchise in various roles for over 20 years.The Capitals won a Stanley Cup and the Presidents' Trophy twice during MacLellan's tenure. Washington reached the playoffs in 2023-24 but got swept by the New York Rangers in the first round. The club has been one of the league's most active teams early this summer, acquiring Pierre-Luc Dubois, Jakob Chychrun, and Andrew Mangiapane in separate trades, while signing Matt Roy to a big-ticket contract in free agency.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
by Sean O'Leary on (#6P27D)
The Pittsburgh Penguins and captain Sidney Crosby are closing in on a contract extension, sources told The Athletic's Rob Rossi.The deal's terms aren't known. Crosby has one season remaining on his existing contract, which has paid him $8.7 million annually since 2013-14.Penguins general manager Kyle Dubas said earlier this offseason that he owes it to Crosby to keep negotiations as "quiet as possible."Crosby, who turns 37 in August, just finished his 19th campaign with Pittsburgh since being drafted first overall in 2005. He led the Penguins with 94 points in 82 games in 2023-24 and moved into 10th spot on the NHL's all-time scoring list.However, Pittsburgh fell short of qualifying for the playoffs for the second consecutive season, prompting speculation that Crosby may want to end his Hall of Fame career on a more competitive team.The Penguins weren't overly active in free agency earlier in July and have approximately $3.5 million in cap space to seek improvements, according to Cap Friendly.Without factoring in Crosby's new cap hit, Pittsburgh projects to have over $30 million in cap space in 2025-26 but only has 11 players signed.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
by Sean O'Leary on (#6P1RC)
The Philadelphia Flyers signed restricted free-agent defenseman Egor Zamula to a two-year contract worth $1.7 million annually, the team announced Sunday.Zamula earned $775,000 on a one-year deal last season. He'll be an arbitration-eligible RFA when his new pact expires in 2026.The 25-year-old set career highs in games (66) and points (21) in 2023-24 and averaged over 16 minutes per contest.Zamula was the Flyers' last player without a contract for next season.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
by Sean O'Leary on (#6P1PZ)
Mikhail Sergachev didn't see his trade from the Tampa Bay Lightning coming, but he's embracing a chance at a bigger role with Utah Hockey Club."At first, I was in shock. I didn't expect it," Sergachev told NHL.com's Matthew Komma.Sergachev, who played the first season of an eight-year extension with Tampa Bay in 2023-24, was dealt to Utah during draft weekend for J.J. Moser, Conor Geekie, and two draft picks.After the initial shock wore off, Sergachev began to embrace the next chapter of his career."Talking to my agent, talking to some players, and talking to (Utah forward Clayton) Keller, everybody said great things about Utah and the new franchise," he said. "It's pretty amazing, honestly. The whole setup, the city. I'm very excited. It's a big opportunity for me to prove myself, being a leader. I'm looking forward to it."Sergachev noted he didn't play a big leadership role on a Lightning squad that featured veterans Steven Stamkos, Victor Hedman, and Nikita Kucherov.Sergachev will likely be deployed on Utah's first defensive pairing while also being used on the power play and penalty kill. The 26-year-old was limited to only 34 games last year due to injury, but he's only one season removed from a career-best 64-point campaign.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
by Sean O'Leary on (#6P1N9)
The 2024 pool of unrestricted free agents dried up in a flash, and with hardly anything left to look forward to this offseason, it's time to start thinking about next year's crop of players. Spoiler: it's stacked.Extensions between now and next July 1 will likely take most off these names off the board, but it's fun to dream of a free-agent frenzy with some of the league's biggest stars on the market.Players listed in each position group by 2023-24 point totalsForwardsLeon Draisaitl: The Oilers will do everything in their power to keep Draisaitl, but it will be a delicate process for whoever takes over Edmonton's GM chair. While Draisaitl deserves to be one of the league's richest players, Connor McDavid's negotiations are around the corner, too.Mikko Rantanen: It's difficult to imagine the Avalanche letting their second-best forward walk. Nathan MacKinnon's $12.6-million cap hit likely represents Colorado's maximum offer, but if Rantanen wants to stay in Denver, a deal between the two sides should be easily accomplished.Sidney Crosby: Sid the Kid hasn't penned a new deal since 2012, and he's still pushing 100-point seasons at 36 years old. As exciting as the Crosby sweepstakes would be, keeping the band together in Pittsburgh has been his strategy all along, and it would be stunning to see him in another sweater.Mitch Marner: A trade from Toronto seems unlikely at this point, but another playoff failure could make Marner's future with the Maple Leafs untenable. There will be a long list of teams vying for the star winger's services next summer if he leaves his hometown club for nothing. Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyBrock Boeser: Boeser's fresh off a resurgent 40-goal season and may need to produce similarly in 2024-25 to earn an extension with the Canucks. Another cap spike could help Vancouver out, but the club already has several long-term commitments.Carter Verhaeghe: Verhaeghe was a massive part of Florida's back-to-back playoff runs and would be an attractive add for 31 teams. However, after seeing the team-friendly deals Bill Zito was able to swing for Sam Reinhart and Anton Lundell, retaining Verhaeghe on the cheap could be a walk in the park for the Panthers.Travis Konecny: Konecny seems to perfectly fit the mold of John Tortorella's identity for the Flyers, and Philadelphia needs veterans to help steer the rebuild. He's a goal-scoring pest who plays all situations and will cash in no matter where he signs.Brad Marchand: Bruins captains always seem to re-sign for pennies. Zdeno Chara passed the tradition down to Patrice Bergeron, and it'd be a shock if the trend didn't continue with Marchand. Claus Andersen / Getty Images Sport / GettyJohn Tavares: Tavares' time as an $11-million player is set to come to an end soon, and it will be interesting to see if he stays in Toronto. The Maple Leafs are short on center depth, and their captain's decline in production would become more palatable at a lesser cost.Claude Giroux: Giroux will be 37 next summer but has produced seasons of 79 and 64 points since joining the Senators. Will he look to join a contender to chase the first Stanley Cup of his long career, or stay in Ottawa to help the club return to the playoffs?Nikolaj Ehlers: The Jets may trade Ehlers this summer, but he'll be an intriguing option on the open market if he makes it there. The 28-year-old can skate like the wind and has elite offensive instincts.Other notables: Jamie Benn, Gustav Nyquist, Brock Nelson, Patrick Kane, Sam BennettDefenseBrent Burns: Burns refuses to age. He notched 43 points while averaging more than 20 minutes per contest for the 10th consecutive season. It's unclear if the 2017 Norris Trophy winner wants to keep playing beyond 2025, but he still has game. G Fiume / Getty Images Sport / GettyShea Theodore: Theodore will be the cream of the crop among blue-liners if he becomes available, which is a real possibility due to Vegas' perennial cap crunch. The soon-to-be 29-year-old is a bona fide top-pair defenseman with Stanley Cup pedigree.Jakub Chychrun: One wouldn't blame Chychrun for trying to find some long-term security next summer after being traded again. Perhaps he finds a fit he likes in Washington, but he'd be highly coveted in free agency. Chychrun is only 26 and is a premier defender when healthy.Neal Pionk: Right-handed defensemen always draw plenty of attention, and Pionk will be no exception if he doesn't re-up with the Winnipeg Jets. He's been a minute-muncher his entire career and can be consistently relied upon to produce 30-to-40 points.Ivan Provorov: Provorov's stock has fallen in recent years, but he'll only be 28 next summer. He could be a worthwhile reclamation project in the right environment.Other notables: Jake McCabe, Esa Lindell, Dmitry Orlov, Vladislav Gavrikov, Adam LarssonGoalies Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyIgor Shesterkin: The Rangers would be crazy to let their backbone test the market, but we'd be remiss to exclude Shesterkin from our list. He's far and away the best goalie "available" and may come close to doubling his current $5.66-million cap hit on his next pact.Linus Ullmark: Ullmark will be put to the test in Ottawa this season, as the Senators' playoff hopes rely squarely on improved goaltending. The 2023 Vezina winner's new club doesn't defend like the Bruins - at least not yet - so he'll need to prove his worth in a massive platform year.Adin Hill: Injuries derailed Hill's first year as Vegas' No. 1, and time is quickly running out on the two-year prove-it deal he signed after winning the Stanley Cup. The Golden Knights are never afraid of bold decisions, but unless Hill completely falls off in 2024-25, it's hard to see Vegas letting him go.Alexandar Georgiev: Georgiev has consistently been able to rack up wins behind Colorado but has posted a sub-.900 save percentage in two of his last three seasons. He'll need to find some consistency to earn trust from the Avalanche - or any other team - next summer.Frederik Andersen: Andersen will soon be 35 and might be getting phased out of Carolina's crease by Pyotr Kochetkov. It's unlikely Andersen gets another long-term deal at this stage of his career, but he could be an attractive depth option if he chooses to continue playing after his current contract expires.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
by Kayla Douglas on (#6P1CV)
The 2024 first overall pick is turning pro.The San Jose Sharks signed forward Macklin Celebrini to a three-year, entry-level contract Saturday.His pact carries a cap hit of $975,000 plus an additional $3.5 million in performance bonuses, according to PuckPedia."Macklin is not only a special player on the ice, but he is a poised, confident, and intelligent young man off of it," general manager Mike Grier said in a statement. "His combination of skills and hockey sense is rare, and we are extremely confident that he is ready to make the transition to being a full-time NHL player."We could not be more excited to have Macklin locked in to formally join the Sharks organization for the 2024-25 season."The 18-year-old ranked second in the NCAA with 32 goals as a freshman with Boston University this past season and third with 64 points in 38 contests. Celebrini became the youngest recipient of the Hobey Baker Award, which honors the top player in men's college hockey.He logged 46 goals and 86 points in 50 games as a member of the USHL's Chicago Steel in 2022-23.The North Vancouver native also has some international experience under his belt. Celebrini represented Canada at the World U18 Championships in 2023 and helped the team win bronze after netting 15 points in seven games. He also led his country with eight points in five outings at the 2024 world juniors, though Canada finished the event in fifth place.Celebrini is familiar with the Bay Area and played a season with the San Jose Jr. Sharks at the Under-14 level. His father, Rick, has worked for the Golden State Warriors in the NBA since 2018.Grier said the Sharks' offseason moves thus far helped Celebrini put pen to paper, according to The Mercury News' Curtis Pashelka.After finishing in last place in the league with a 19-54-9 record, Grier added the likes of Tyler Toffoli, Alex Wennberg, and Barclay Goodrow to kick off his summer.The Sharks also signed fellow top prospect and 2023 fourth overall pick Will Smith to his entry-level pact in late May. Smith was a freshman with Boston College this past season.Grier made it clear that he didn't want to put too much on the two youngsters' plates next season."I think that's been kind of the goal here, to kind of try and insulate (Celebrini) and (Smith) so they don't feel like they've got the weight on their shoulders and that they've gotta go out and produce every single night," he explained, per NBC Sports California."I'm not expecting (Celebrini) to go out there and be the MVP of the league or anything like that," Grier added. "There's gonna be bumps, there's gonna be ups and downs, and I'm sure he'll navigate that and we'll help him navigate those things."Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
by Kayla Douglas on (#6P1DZ)
The Chicago Blackhawks inked 2024 second overall pick Artyom Levshunov to a three-year, entry-level pact Saturday.His contract carries a cap hit of $975,000 plus an additional $3.25 million in performance bonuses, per PuckPedia."Signing Artyom gives us the opportunity to continue his development in house and take the next step into professional hockey," general manager Kyle Davidson said in a statement. "He's a strong two-way defenseman that has all the tools to be a high-end player in the NHL and we're excited to continue his growth at the pro level."Levshunov will likely spend the bulk of the 2024-25 campaign with the AHL's Rockford IceHogs.He impressed as a freshman in the NCAA with Michigan State this past season, registering nine goals and 35 points - good for the second most among all first-year defensemen - in 38 outings.The 18-year-old rearguard is the highest-drafted Belarusian player in NHL history.Levshunov boasts a right-handed shot and is listed at 6-foot-2, 208 pounds.The Blackhawks had to lean on a handful of rookie defensemen this past season, including Kevin Korchinski (76 games), Isaak Phillips (33 games), Wyatt Kaiser (32 games), and Louis Crevier (24 games).Alex Vlasic wasn't classified as a rookie in 2023-24, but he held a major role in his first full NHL campaign, ranking second on the Blackhawks in average ice time (21:29) while appearing in 76 contests.Copyright (C) 2024 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.