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Updated 2024-11-25 11:15
Capitals move up to draft Hendrix Lapierre 22nd overall
The Washington Capitals drafted forward Hendrix Lapierre with the 22nd overall pick in the 2020 NHL draft.The Capitals sent the Calgary Flames - who previously traded down with the New York Rangers - the 24th and and 80th selections to make their pick.Hendrix LapierrePosition: Center
Rangers trade up to draft Braden Schneider 19th overall
The New York Rangers made a trade with the Calgary Flames and took defenseman Braden Schneider with the 19th overall pick in the 2020 NHL Draft.New York dealt the 22nd and 72nd overall picks for the opportunity to take Schneider.Braden SchneiderPosition: Defense
Canadiens select Kaiden Guhle 16th overall
The Montreal Canadiens used the 16th overall pick in the 2020 draft to select defenseman Kaiden Guhle.Kaiden GuhlePosition: Defense
Oilers take Dylan Holloway with No. 14 pick
The Edmonton Oilers selected Dylan Holloway with the 14th overall pick in the 2020 NHL Draft.Dylan HollowayPosition: Center/Left wing
Predators select goalie Yaroslav Askarov with 11th overall pick
The Nashville Predators bolstered their future between the pipes by drafting goaltender Yaroslav Askarov with the 11th overall pick of the 2020 NHL Draft.Yaroslav AskarovPosition: G
Jets select Cole Perfetti 10th overall
The Winnipeg Jets selected forward Cole Perfetti with the 10th overall pick in the 2020 NHL Draft.Cole PerfettiPosition: Center/Left wing
Senators draft Jake Sanderson 5th overall
The Ottawa Senators took defenseman Jake Sanderson with the fifth overall pick in the 2020 NHL Draft.Jake Sanderson Position: Defense
Red Wings select Swedish winger Lucas Raymond 4th overall
The Detroit Red Wings selected forward Lucas Raymond with the No. 4 pick in the 2020 NHL Draft.Lucas RaymondPosition: Left Wing
Rangers select top prospect Alexis Lafreniere with No. 1 pick
The New York Rangers drafted dynamic phenom Alexis Lafreniere with the first overall selection in the 2020 NHL Draft.Alexis LafrenierePosition: Left wing
Senators take German phenom Tim Stuetzle 3rd overall
The Ottawa Senators selected Tim Stuetzle with the third overall pick in the 2020 NHL Draft.Tim StuetzlePosition: Center/Left wing
NHL's target date for next season pushed to New Year's Day
The NHL and NHLPA are planning for a new target date of Jan. 1 to begin the 2021 season, commissioner Gary Bettman said Tuesday.The new target doesn't guarantee the season will begin on New Year's Day, but it replaces the league's initial date of Dec. 1.Bettman said during the Stanley Cup Final that predicting next season's start date will be "nothing more than speculation," though he added he prefers the season doesn't carry into next summer.Deputy commissioner Bill Daly has also said numerous times that the league intends to play a full 82-game schedule next season.The first round of the 2020 NHL Draft is scheduled for Tuesday night, with free agency set to begin Oct. 9.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Capitals' Kempny to miss 6-8 months after Achilles surgery
Washington Capitals blue-liner Michal Kempny is expected to be out six-to-eight months following surgery to repair his Achilles tendon, the team announced Tuesday.Kempny was projected to be a key member of Washington's defense next season. The 30-year-old averaged 18:38 per game last year while recording 18 points in 58 contests.The Capitals have limited cap space, but can now create more by placing Kempny (who carries a $2.5-million cap hit for the next two seasons) on long-term injured reserve.It what was seemingly a corresponding move, the Caps re-signed fellow left-handed defenseman Brenden Dillon to a four-year deal carrying a $3.9-million cap hit. He joins John Carlson, Dmitry Orlov, and Nick Jensen as the only other Washington D-men signed for next season. Radko Gudas (UFA) and Jonas Siegenthaler (RFA) remain unsigned.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Capitals re-sign Dillon to 4-year, $15.6M deal
The Washington Capitals re-signed defenseman Brenden Dillon to a four-year contract that carries an average annual value of $3.9 million, the team announced Tuesday.The Capitals acquired Dillon at the trade deadline last season. He appeared in just 10 games with Washington, recording zero points. He played in 59 contests with the San Jose Sharks this past campaign, notching one goal and 13 assists.During his 10 games with the Capitals, the 29-year-old ranked third on the team in time on ice per game (20:02), and he played a key role as a penalty killer. Prior to leaving the Sharks, he led the club in hits (178) and was fourth in blocked shots (67).Over his career, Dillon has appeared in 598 games while amassing 22 goals and 92 assists. Since his rookie season in 2012-13, he ranks fifth among all defensemen in hits (1,376).Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Report: Toffoli likely headed to open market
Vancouver Canucks forward Tyler Toffoli is likely headed to unrestricted free agency, sources told The Athletic's Craig Custance.Toffoli said in September that his top priority this offseason is to re-sign with Vancouver, but as of now, the club's financial situation appears too tight for the two sides to work out a new deal.The Canucks have approximately $13.4 million in available cap space this offseason, according to CapFriendly, but they only have five defensemen under contract for next season and need to re-sign star goaltender Jacob Markstrom.Toffoli joined the Canucks from the Los Angeles Kings prior to February's trade deadline. The 28-year-old winger was an immediate fit in Vancouver's top six, notching 10 points in 10 games prior to the pause and adding four points in seven postseason contests.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Canadiens trade Max Domi to Blue Jackets for Josh Anderson
The Montreal Canadiens traded forward Max Domi and a 2020 third-round pick to the Columbus Blue Jackets for forward Josh Anderson, the team announced Tuesday.Both players are currently restricted free agents.The 25-year-old Domi spent the last two seasons with the Canadiens. He set career highs in goals (28), assists (44), and points (72) in 2018-19, and managed 17 goals and 27 assists in 71 games last season.Anderson, 26, appeared in just 26 contests in 2019-20 due to injury, recording one goal and three assists. He also set career highs in goals (27), assists (20), and points (47) in 2018-19.While Anderson missed the majority of the 2019-20 season and the entirety of the playoffs, Blue Jackets general manager Jarmo Kekalainen recently said the forward is fully healed and would have played if Columbus advanced in the postseason, according to The Athletic's Aaron Portzline.Anderson will join a group on the right wing in Montreal that includes Brendan Gallagher and Joel Armia.Domi, who expressed his desire to play center during his time in Montreal, figures to slot down the middle in Columbus."Strengthening our center ice position has been a priority for our club and we are extremely excited to add a player of Max Domi's talent and character to the Columbus Blue Jackets," Kekalainen said. "He is a skilled playmaker that also brings grit and competitiveness, and we think he will be a great addition to our team."Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Report: Trading Fleury is Golden Knights' No. 1 focus
The Vegas Golden Knights are exhausting "all efforts and opportunities" to trade veteran netminder Marc-Andre Fleury, TSN's Frank Seravalli reported on Tuesday's edition of "Insider Trading," making it their No. 1 focus.The Golden Knights are apparently willing to offer a second-round pick for a club to take on up to half of Fleury's remaining salary. The 35-year-old has two years remaining on his deal, which carries an annual cap hit of $7 million.Vegas has engaged with a number of teams, including the Carolina Hurricanes, but would likely need to include upwards of a first- and second-round pick for teams to be willing to take on that much salary, Seravalli reports.Fleury owned a 2.77 goals-against average and a .905 save percentage over 48 starts in 2019-20.The Golden Knights locked up 29-year-old puck-stopper Robin Lehner to a five-year, $25-million pact Saturday.With the salary cap remaining flat at $81.5 million in 2020-21, Vegas is currently $60,000 over the limit, per CapFriendly.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Red Wings plan to buy out Abdelkader
The Detroit Red Wings placed forward Justin Abdelkader on unconditional waivers Monday for the purpose of buying out his contract, the team announced.The veteran forward has three years remaining on his current contract carrying an average annual value of $4.25 million.Abdelkader's cap hit will now be as follows: $1.8 million in 2020-21, $2.3 million in 2021-22 and 2022-23, and then $1.05 million in 2023-24 through the end of the 2025-26 season, according to CapFriendly.The 33-year-old has struggled the last few seasons since inking the seven-year, $29.75 million extension in 2015. Over the past two seasons, he's scored six goals and added 16 assists in 120 games.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Ekman-Larsson sets Friday deadline for potential trade to Bruins or Canucks
Oliver Ekman-Larsson's agent informed the teams involved that the defenseman will stick with the Arizona Coyotes if a trade to the Boston Bruins or Vancouver Canucks doesn't materialize by the start of free agency Friday, according to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.Ekman-Larsson has seven years remaining on his contract that carries an $8.25-million annual cap hit and includes a full no-movement clause. After the Coyotes expressed their desire to move him, the 29-year-old approved Boston and Vancouver as destinations he'd waive his no-movement clause for.The Coyotes captain had the worst offensive season of his career in 2019-20, tallying nine goals and 21 assists in 66 games. He averaged 17 goals and 45 points a season from 2013-14 until 2018-19.The Bruins and Canucks have no first-round picks in the upcoming draft. Boston has a projected cap space of $14.4 million with Torey Krug, Zdeno Chara, and Jake DeBrusk as pending free agents. The Canucks have a projected cap space of $14.3 million but have Tyler Toffoli, Jacob Markstrom, Chris Tanev, and Josh Leivo set to hit the market.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Report: Stamkos not among Lightning's untouchable players
The Tampa Bay Lightning have ruled out dealing four players this offseason, but captain Steven Stamkos isn't one of them, according to TSN's Bob McKenzie.The Lightning told other teams that forwards Nikita Kucherov and Brayden Point, along with defenseman Victor Hedman and netminder Andrei Vasilevskiy, are considered untouchables, McKenzie adds.General manager Julien BriseBois is looking to offload contracts this offseason as Tampa faces a serious cap crunch. The club has just $5.33 million in projected cap space for 2020-21 with key restricted free-agent forward Anthony Cirelli, and defensemen Mikhail Sergachev and Erik Cernak up for new deals.Stamkos, 30, has four years remaining on his current contract, which carries the team's third-highest annual cap hit at $8.5 million. He also has a full no-move clause in his deal.The 6-foot-1 sniper ranked second on the Lightning in goals (29) and points (66) through 57 games this season. Stamkos was sidelined with an injury for most of the club's Stanley Cup run and contributed one goal in just 2:47 of ice time in the playoffs.Lightning forward Tyler Johnson, who is on the books for $5 million in each of the next four seasons, has reportedly agreed to help the club find a potential trade.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Report: Strong possibility Capitals land Lundqvist
The King of New York could soon be heading to the nation's capital.There's a "strong possibility" the Washington Capitals will land goaltender Henrik Lundqvist, reports TSN's Pierre LeBrun on Tuesday's edition of "Insider Trading."The 38-year-old netminder was bought out of the final year of his contract by the New York Rangers last week. Lundqvist indicated his desire to continue playing shortly afterward, saying he "still wants to win."The Capitals are expected to part ways with longtime goaltender and pending free agent Braden Holtby this offseason, which would open up a spot in the crease alongside 23-year-old Ilya Samsonov.Lundqvist endured the worst statistical season of his career last year after appearing in 30 games and posting a .901 save percentage with a 3.52 goals-against average.Washington currently has $8.9 million in projected cap space for next season.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Canadiens place Alzner on waivers for purpose of buyout
The Montreal Canadiens have placed veteran defenseman Karl Alzner on unconditional waivers for the purpose of buying out his contract, the team announced Tuesday.Alzner, 32, has two years remaining on his deal, which carries an annual cap hit of $4.62 million.
Report: Leafs interested in signing Simmonds
The Toronto Maple Leafs are interested in adding unrestricted free-agent forward Wayne Simmonds "at the right price," according to TSN's Pierre LeBrun.The Buffalo Sabres granted the 32-year-old permission to begin speaking with other teams prior to the beginning of free agency on Oct. 9, according to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.Simmonds signed a one-year, $5-million deal with the New Jersey Devils last offseason and was traded to the Sabres at the February deadline. He recorded eight goals and 25 points in 68 games with the two clubs.Maple Leafs general manager Kyle Dubas said Monday he's looking to make his club more difficult to play against. The 6-foot-2 Simmonds recorded 145 hits in 2019-20 - a department in which Toronto ranked 29th.The possible signing would mark a homecoming for Simmonds, who played minor hockey in Scarborough, Ontario.Dubas has already begun shoring up his forward depth, signing each of Denis Malgin and Jason Spezza to a one-year, $700,000 deal.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Report: Johnson willing to work with Lightning on potential trade
The Tampa Bay Lightning are looking to move longtime forward Tyler Johnson in an effort to weather their salary cap crunch this offseason.Johnson, 30, has given the Lightning several teams to work with for a potential trade, TSN's Darren Dreger reported Tuesday.The 5-foot-8 pivot has four years remaining on his current deal, which carries an annual cap hit of $5 million.The Lightning are one of several teams that have been significantly impacted by the flat salary cap in 2020-21. Tampa Bay has $5.3 million in projected cap space with several key restricted free agents - including forward Anthony Cirelli and defensemen Mikhail Sergachev and Erik Cernak - in line for new deals.Johnson tallied 14 goals and 31 points through 65 games this season and added seven points in 25 playoff contests en route to the Stanley Cup.He's spent all eight of his NHL seasons with the Lightning after signing with the club as an undrafted free agent in 2011.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Leon and the kids: Inside Germany's desire to join hockey's elite
This story was originally published on Aug. 10.Moritz Seider can pinpoint precisely when and where he fell in love with hockey. It was a Monday some 14 winters ago in the small town of Zell in western Germany. He and his kindergarten pals, all new to the sport, had been invited to the local arena for a private skate with the best adult players in the area."I can remember walking in with my mom and all the pros were waiting to skate with us, these little kids," Seider said in a recent phone interview. "I had no words in that moment. Since then, there's no other sport hitting me that hard in my life."Moritz Seider Kevin Light / Getty ImagesSeider, now 19 years old and listed at 6-foot-4 and 207 pounds, has developed into one of the top prospects on the planet. If not for COVID-19, the No. 6 pick in the 2019 NHL Draft likely would have made his debut on the Detroit Red Wings' blue line late in the season after getting his first taste of North American hockey with 49 games in the AHL. Back in 2006, though, nobody in Seider's extended family had played competitive hockey."When I first told my parents I wanted to be a hockey player, they imagined me fighting every game. They were not really happy, so they decided to buy a hockey book for dummies, like a hockey ABC," Seider said with a short laugh. "Now, they're my biggest fans and they really love the sport. They love the intensity, how fast it is."In 2020, the perception and profile of hockey across Germany are markedly different than they were a decade ago. The nation of 83 million people has never had a bigger presence in the NHL or on the international stage. In the 24-team restart, seven Germans - including Edmonton Oilers superstar center Leon Draisaitl and Colorado Avalanche goalie Philipp Grubauer - cracked playoff rosters.Homegrown teen Tim Stuetzle is projected to go as high as second overall in Tuesday's draft. Two other German prospects, John-Jason Peterka and Lukas Reichel, are potential top-50 picks. Plus, let's not forget, Germany claimed silver at the 2018 Olympics."The silver medal is going to be special for my whole life," Buffalo Sabres forward Dominik Kahun said of the unexpected result. "When we came back from PyeongChang, it was unbelievable how many people were waiting for us at the airport. It was a little bit like when the soccer team comes back from the World Cup.""But," Kahun added, "after a few weeks it was like everybody forgot about it."That's the predicament that the German hockey community faces: Is this recent progress a fleeting jolt of success and interest in the sport? Or, is it something more permanent, a sign of things to come for a country that has slowly but surely ascended to an impressive seventh on the IIHF World Ranking? Major stakeholders are trying their best to assure it's the latter.––––––––––Marco Sturm Jean Catuffe / Getty ImagesBefore Draisaitl, Grubauer, Seider, and Stuetzle, there was Marco Sturm.Sturm, Germany's all-time leading NHL scorer, appeared in 938 games from 1997 to 2012 for six franchises, most notably the San Jose Sharks and Boston Bruins. Sturm, now 41, is an assistant coach for the Los Angeles Kings as well as a vital contributor to the German Ice Hockey Federation. It was Sturm, with barely any coaching experience, who guided Germany to silver in PyeongChang.The result was shocking despite the absence of NHLers creating a more level Olympic playing field. The German federation hadn't expected to compete for medals at major events like the Olympics and World Championship until at least 2026. "We want to play in the medal round (consistently). That was the goal of Power Play 26," Sturm said. "And then the silver medal happened, and we were laughing."Sturm officially joined the federation in 2015, shortly after the unveiling of Power Play 26, a comprehensive plan for short-, medium-, and long-term growth. Spearheaded by federation president Franz Reindl amid a "crossroads" for German hockey, Power Play 26 prioritizes a modern approach to developing youth players. For instance, it demands kids' coaches focus on skills training rather than team tactics. The plan is aimed squarely at establishing sustainable success instead of opportunistic, one-off triumphs."It was a surprising 14 days in PyeongChang," said Reindl, a former forward who won an Olympic bronze in 1976. "The weather was nice, and everything was great. But this is not normal. We're being realistic. Our goal is to be competitive in the future, which means we need more high-quality players, top players. It feels like we're on a good way, but there's still a lot of work to do."For years, six nations - Canada, Finland, Sweden, Russia, the United States, and the Czech Republic - have formed the elite echelon in international hockey. The second tier has been traditionally populated by Slovakia, Germany, Switzerland, Denmark, Latvia, and Norway."Our goal," Sturm said, "is to always be in the top eight in the world rankings. In order to do that, we've got to start with youth hockey."Franz Reindl Getty ImagesThere are roughly 24,000 registered hockey players in Germany, Reindl said, which is only 3,000 fewer than rival and neighbor Switzerland, according to the IIHF's website. These German players are spread out across 15 regional branches that oversee 65 local organizations. The federation ships coaches and administrators to these local hubs on a regular basis - 350 total visits a year, according to Reindl - to reinforce best practices and ensure instruction and culture is consistent in all regions."We're not waiting for the talent to come to us. We're not being selective," is how Reindl frames the hands-on approach. The hope is that consistency produces a certain type and quality of player."We have a close eye on our technique, on basic skills, on stickhandling skills, on skating skills, and as soon as we see we have a good development in those areas, we'll build upon it through our philosophy," said Stefan Schaidnagel, the federation's general manager."What's the definition of German hockey players? Is he tall? Is he a good defending player? Is he fast, a quick skater? Does he have clear structure? On top of our skills, we want to reach a real German hockey philosophy. That way everybody knows that when you play against Germany, you're playing against a team which is fast, which is solid on defense, which creates ideas in the offensive zone, which uses the neutral zone for good structure and good transition."The federation receives €1.5 million in government funding each year, Schaidnagel said, a "little boost" from the amount it received prior to winning silver. The Olympic buzz also triggered an uptick in corporate sponsorship for the national body.This government stipend, earmarked mostly for growing youth and women's hockey, seems to be having its desired effect. Registration at the youth level has increased between 8% and 10% annually, according to Reindl. It would probably be higher if hockey wasn't such an expensive sport in relation to basketball, handball, and tennis. Hockey's money problem is not unique to Germany. But it is compounded by the fact that its sporting culture is so closely tied to soccer. (Asked for a pecking order of sports in Germany, Sturm said, "There's soccer. Then there's nothing. Then there's the rest.")"Imagine you only have to pay for two pairs of soccer boots a year, and then you need new skates, which would cost nowadays up to $1,000 or whatever, a stick, which is probably $250 nowadays," Seider said. "It's a pretty expensive sport and not a lot of families are financially ready to do that every single season. I was pretty lucky. My parents probably could have gone on way nicer vacations, but instead they sponsored a lot of tournaments for me, and I appreciate it a lot."Mannheim's SAP Center Getty imagesThe federation rolled out the Five-Star Program as part of Power Play 26, wherein local clubs are judged and funded based on the professionalism of their operation. The national body distributes stars based on a rubric that grades quality of arenas, locker rooms, and other facilities. Access to goalie coaches, video rooms, and physiotherapy staff are big pluses, too. Organizations' code of conduct is also audited."One star could be five or six different topics. And one topic has another five or six different points under it," Sturm said of the program's depth.This incentive system is in place to help develop players throughout Germany and not just in the traditional hockey hotbeds of Mannheim, Berlin, and Cologne. The master plan is centered around spreading the wealth between Germany's three professional leagues, not just the top flight Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL)."To get to the second star, you have to get through the first star," Sturm said. "It builds up and builds up, and then if you're at five, that's great. There's some teams who are not in the DEL - maybe in the third division - who get five stars. They make 40, 50, 60 thousand euros, and that's huge. For that, they can hire a new coach."Distributing the wealth across each league is also key to the program's success as the federation attempts to raise standards across the country. Naturally, there's been resistance from well-run DEL teams who have deep-pocketed owners and a particular way of operating. "We don't really care about the Five-Star Program here," said Pavel Gross, head coach of powerhouse Adler Mannheim. "The program here in Mannheim is a six-star program and has been for years."Dominik Kahun Sara Schmidle / Getty ImagesAnother bone of contention in the German hockey community is playing time for teenagers in the DEL. The surefire NHL-bound prospects - such as Seider, Stuetzle, Peterka, Reichel - have no gripes, but there aren't many other teens receiving ample ice time. Teams tend to favor veterans who are often imported from elsewhere over developing homegrown youngsters."That's probably the most important thing that we are discussing every year here in the DEL," said Kahun, who spent four seasons with Munich EHC. "Last year, they made a rule that you must have two guys of a certain age that have to be on the team and in the lineup. But there are certain coaches who will put them in the lineup but keep them on the bench for all 60 minutes. That's even worse. They should play in the second league and get ice time.""Our goal has to be to show the (DEL) that (young German players) behind Stuetzle, Peterka, and Reichel are easily able to play in the league also," Schaidnagel said. He believes there are 10-to-15 teens capable of playing in the DEL but aren't because teams are focused solely on winning.Kahun, who like Draisaitl, Seider, and Stuetzle moved to Mannheim early in his teens to play with and against better hockey players, found his big break in the DEL. He originally had tried to get noticed by NHL scouts in Canada as an import player on the OHL's Sudbury Wolves, but a move back home proved beneficial for the 25-year-old born in the Czech Republic and raised in Germany."Back in the day, if you were a talented guy, you probably went to the (Canadian Hockey League) and hoped to be a high pick in the CHL import draft and then walk your way through that," Seider said. "Now you can actually play in the best German league and stay in your home country. You can be on the power play, be on the PK, be a leader, and compete against men. That's a big one, a big advantage over people who are coming from, I don't know, the U.S. program or the CHL. You're competing against men."Seider's whole family moved to Mannheim after he outgrew competition in Erfurt, the town where he grew up. "If you want to get to a better team, you have to move on," Seider said. "Or, if you want to develop a little bit more, you have to move on. I had the opportunity to play for Mannheim, and I was really happy that my family took that step."NHL teams were heavily scouting the DEL to watch the likes of Stuetzle (Mannheim), Peterka (Munich), and Reichel (Berlin) before sports around the world were shut down earlier this year. Gross calls the 2002-born trio "something special" but not necessarily a reflection of the state of the entire German development system. "I don't think we'll see some similar players next year or in two years," he said.Stuetzle, who considered playing in North America in his NHL draft year, ended up alongside Canadian center Ben Smith and Finnish winger Tommi Huhtala on Mannheim's top line. The shifty 6-foot-1, 187-pound left-winger skated for 16-17 minutes a game, including plenty of time on the club's No. 1 power-play unit, Gross said. He produced at an eye-popping rate - 34 points in 41 games - for someone who turned 18 in January and was matched up against men every single shift."You don't need to know much about hockey to realize how good of a player he is," Kahun said. "He was outstanding (in 2019-20) as a young kid in the DEL."Stuetzle was a fantastic soccer player growing up, showing signs of pro potential. He made a commitment to hockey around age 9, though. "My strengths are my playmaking ability and skating," Stuetzle said when asked for a personal scouting report. "My hockey IQ and my work ethic I would describe (as good, too). I think I can still work on everything since I'm very young, especially staying on my feet and winning more battles; gaining more weight, more muscle is probably the biggest thing I need to work on."Tobias Reider Andy Devlin / Getty ImagesSixty-eight NHL draft picks were born in Germany, according to Elite Prospects. Draisaitl (No. 3 in 2014) is the highest selection in the expansion era. Seider is the only other top-10 pick, while Dominik Bokk (25th in 2018), Marcel Goc (20th in 2001), and Sturm (21st in 1996) round out the country's first-rounders. Goaltender Olaf Kolzig (19th in 1989) grew up in Canada but used his German citizenship to represent the country in various international competitions.In the NHL's round of 16 - which starts Tuesday - there's Grubauer on the Avalanche, forward Tom Kuhnhackl and goalie Thomas Greiss on the Islanders, and forward Tobias Rieder on the Flames. Draisaitl and the Minnesota Wild's Nico Sturm were eliminated in the qualifying round. This group of playoff warriors, mixed with other German NHLers and the top prospects, could provide a solid roster for the 2022 Beijing Games.The current generation of youngsters adores Draisaitl, and the NHL scoring champion and MVP finalist reciprocates the love through mentorship."He was reaching out during the year at least once a week to check with me, to make sure I'm doing good, that everything's going well," Seider said. "He knows how hard it is in the AHL. He went through it, and he even got sent down to juniors again. So he helped me a lot, and I'm very, very thankful for that."Said Draisaitl, "I would love to help these kids as much as I can, if they ever need anything or have any questions. I'm always there for them and I'd love to help them, but I think these kids nowadays are so advanced, so good, their confidence is so high, that I think they'll make the right decisions and they'll be great players in their own right."Leon Draisaitl Getty ImagesSturm likes to compare Draisaitl's popularity in Germany now to that of Dirk Nowitzki when he was at his peak as an NBA superstar."There was no bigger guy than Nowitzki, athlete-wise," Sturm said. "But, when you live there, it's hard. You rarely see something on TV. You don't see too many highlights. ... You get lost a little bit in the shuffle and you lose track, and you start wondering what Leon is doing."Exposing Germans to one of the best hockey players in the world - one of their own - is part of the equation that Reindl, Schaidnagel, and all involved in Power Play 26 are attempting to solve. A mountain of progress has been made over the past five years, but Germany can't get complacent."We are on the right track," Schaidnagel said. "But now it's coming to the time where we need to re-evaluate every day, every month, every year, and ask ourselves, 'Are we still on the right track?'"Sturm's Kings own 11 picks in the 2020 draft. They have an opportunity to draft Stuetzle at No. 2, as well as five more chances in the second and third rounds to possibly land Peterka or Reichel. What a capper that would be for Sturm, the country, and the kids."I'm very proud to be a German," Sturm said, "and they should be proud too."John Matisz is theScore's national hockey writer.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Comprehensive guide to the 2020 NHL Draft
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McDavid tests positive for COVID-19
Edmonton Oilers captain Connor McDavid underwent a COVID-19 test Monday that produced a positive result, the club announced.McDavid has been in quarantine at his home since his positive test. He'll continue to be monitored while adhering to all the proper protocols.The 23-year-old superstar is "feeling well," and his symptoms are mild, according to the team.McDavid is expected to be fine, reports TSN's Darren Dreger.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Sabres GM reiterates 'there's no intention' of trading Eichel
Kevyn Adams wants to make sure it's understood the Buffalo Sabres aren't interested in dealing Jack Eichel."I have zero concern on Jack wanting to be here," the general manager said Monday, according to The Athletic's John Vogl. He added: "There's no intention of moving Jack Eichel. I can make that very clear."Adams was repeating his Sept. 29 response to a report that multiple teams had checked in on the superstar forward's availability. Despite interest from other clubs, the Sabres weren't interested in trading him then, either."People call and make phone calls and ask about players every day," Adams said at the time. "My job is to listen, and we have no intention of shopping Jack Eichel. People call and you have conversations. That's it."Eichel's agent, Peter Fish, has also said his client doesn't want to leave Buffalo despite Eichel's frustration with the franchise's struggles.Adams replaced the fired Jason Botterill in June; Eichel said in late May it's been "a tough past five years" with the Sabres.The dynamic scorer, who turns 24 on Oct. 24, posted a career-high 36 goals to go along with 42 assists in just 68 games in 2019-20.Eichel signed an eight-year, $80-million extension with the Sabres in October 2017. He's been the club's captain since the start of the 2018-19 season. Buffalo drafted him second overall in 2015.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Wild trade Dubnyk to Sharks for 5th-round pick
The Minnesota Wild dealt goaltender Devan Dubnyk and a 2022 seventh-round pick to the San Jose Sharks for a fifth-round selection in the same year, the clubs confirmed Monday.Minnesota will retain 50% of Dubnyk's contract, with the netminder remaining on the books through next season at a cap hit of $4.33 million.Dubnyk spent nearly six seasons with the Wild and posted a career-best .918 save percentage over that span. However, he produced a paltry .890 mark and minus-16.23 goals saved above average across 30 games in 2019-20.The 34-year-old rejuvenated his career with Minnesota and blossomed into a true No. 1 goalie after the Coyotes traded him to the Wild in January 2015.Dubnyk leads all NHL puck-stoppers in minutes played since his Wild debut. He earned All-Star nods in 2016, 2017, and 2019.Minnesota also shipped forward Ryan Donato to San Jose for a 2021 third-round pick earlier Monday.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Report: Coyotes shopping negotiating rights for Hall
The Arizona Coyotes are shopping the negotiating rights for pending free agent Taylor Hall, reports TSN's Darren Dreger.Hall is projected to be the top free-agent forward this offseason.The Coyotes previously expressed interest in re-signing the forward. General manager Bill Armstrong, who was hired in August, recently said the team will have to be "very creative" to retain Hall.The 28-year-old recorded 16 goals and 36 assists in 65 games with the Coyotes and the New Jersey Devils last season. He previously won the Hart Trophy with the Devils in 2018.Hall has recorded 218 goals and 345 assists in 627 career games.The team that owns Hall's negotiating rights is able to exclusively discuss a new contract with him prior to the opening of the free-agency period. Once it opens on Friday, Oct. 9, any team in the league will be able to make its pitch to Hall.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Flyers' Niskanen retires at age 33
Defenseman Matt Niskanen informed the Philadelphia Flyers on Monday that he's retiring from hockey at 33 years old, general manager Chuck Fletcher confirmed, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer's Sam Carchidi."Thank you to the Flyers organization for the opportunity to play in Philly last season," Niskanen said in a statement, according to Carchidi. "I'd also like to thank the fans for their support and lastly, I wish my teammates the best of luck."There's one season remaining on Niskanen's contract with a cap hit of $5.75 million. Once his retirement is made official, he'll forfeit the money owed to him, and his cap hit will also come off the books, according to CapFriendly.He appeared in 68 games last season, scoring eight goals while adding 25 assists. The veteran also played in 15 postseason games.The Dallas Stars selected Niskanen 28th overall in 2005. He spent four seasons with the Stars, four with the Pittsburgh Penguins, five with the Washington Capitals, and one with the Flyers. He won the Stanley Cup with the Capitals in 2018.Niskanen has appeared in 949 career games, racking up 72 goals and 284 assists.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Buyer beware: 5 UFAs who could be overpaid this offseason
The NHL's signing season is fast approaching. With a flat salary cap hindering teams across the league, it's imperative general managers don't overspend and create further financial complications for their respective clubs.If executives are looking to escape the frenzy without forking over contracts they'll regret down the road, they'd be wise to avoid these five pending unrestricted free agents:1. Chris Tanev Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyPosition: D
Wild extend Soucy with 3-year, $8.25M deal
The Minnesota Wild signed defenseman Carson Soucy to a three-year extension with an average annual value of $2.75 million, the team announced Monday.Soucy appeared in 55 games with the Wild during the 2019-20 season, his first full campaign in the NHL. He totalled seven goals and seven assists, including 69 hits and a plus-16 rating.The 26-year-old spent four seasons at the University of Minnesota-Duluth and served as an assistant captain while compiling 47 points in 147 games.Minnesota selected Soucy in the fifth round of the 2013 NHL Draft.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Flyers re-sign Justin Braun to 2-year, $3.6M deal
The Philadelphia Flyers have re-signed Justin Braun to a two-year contract carrying an average annual value of $1.8 million, the team announced Monday.Braun recently completed his first season with the Flyers after the team acquired him from the San Jose Sharks last summer. He amassed three goals and 16 assists in 62 games.The 33-year-old averaged 17:16 minutes of ice time and finished tied for second on the team with 84 blocked shots.The Flyers' blue line took a hit on Monday after defenseman Matt Niskanen reportedly informed the team of his plans to retire. With the absence of Niskanen, Philadelphia now has five defensemen signed for the 2020-21 season.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Dubas: Leafs need to become a harder team to play against
The Toronto Maple Leafs are looking to spice up their lineup this offseason.General manager Kyle Dubas said on Monday his "priority" this offseason is to become a harder team to play against, according to TSN's Kristen Shilton."There's no doubt that it is something that we would like to address through free agency or through trades that come up," Dubas added.Toronto ranked 29th in the league during the 2019-20 regular season in hits (1,188) and allowed the seventh-most goals against (222). Their offense wasn't an issue, as they scored the second-most goals in the league (237). Despite the flurry of offense, Toronto still finished with the eighth-best record in the Eastern Conference.The Leafs evidently have talent throughout their lineup, but teams were often able to attack them with ease throughout the season, including when they were eliminated by the Columbus Blue Jackets in the qualifying round.The free-agency period is set to kick off on Friday, Oct. 9. Kyle Clifford, who led the team in hits per 60 with 16.88, is heading to free agency, according to his agent.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Report: Wild trading Donato to Sharks
The Minnesota Wild are trading forward Ryan Donato to the San Jose Sharks for a 2021 third-round draft pick, reports TSN's Pierre LeBrun.Donato has played well since the Wild acquired him during the 2018-19 season. He led the team in even-strength goals (14) this past campaign despite being largely reduced to a bottom-six role for the majority of the year, averaging just 10:38 of ice time per game.The 24-year-old has one season remaining on his contract with a cap hit of $1.9 million.In 130 career games, Donato has amassed 29 goals and 28 assists. The Boston Bruins selected him in the second round of the 2014 NHL Draft.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Senators sign Josh Brown to 2-year, $2.4M contract
The Ottawa Senators signed defenseman Josh Brown to a two-year contract that carries an average annual value of $1.2 million, the team announced Monday.The Senators acquired Brown, who was a pending restricted free agent, from the Florida Panthers last week in exchange for a fourth-round pick.The 26-year-old recorded three goals and five assists in 56 games with the Panthers last season while averaging 13:25 of ice time per contest.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Leafs bring back Spezza on 1-year deal
The Toronto Maple Leafs re-signed veteran Jason Spezza to a one-year deal with a value of $700,000, the team announced on Monday.The contract marks the second straight one-year, league-minimum deal for the 37-year-old, who signed with Toronto last season for the same amount.The Mississauga, Ontario native filled a bottom-six role with Toronto, recording nine goals and 16 assists in 58 games while averaging 10:50 of ice time last season.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Polarizing Poirier improving with some help from a draft-eligible friend
Over the years, there have been some fascinating debates in the lead-up to the NHL draft. Taylor Hall versus Tyler Seguin in 2010. Auston Matthews against Patrik Laine in 2016. Heck, even this year's No. 2 discussion - Quinton Byfield versus Tim Stuetzle - is heated.Though the greater hockey world might not realize it, similar debates often play out at lower levels. In early 2018, for instance, executives, coaches, scouts, and fans of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League were heatedly debating the merits of Jeremie Poirier versus William Villeneuve, two of the top defensemen available for the league's entry draft. As dominant players from different areas of southern Quebec, they carved out an on-ice rivalry while going head to head in a hard-fought midget AAA provincial semifinal series. Villeneuve's team, the Magog Cantonniers, defeated Poirier's Chateauguay Grenadiers in seven games, with both starring for their respective squads."Everybody was talking about it, taking sides," Saint John Sea Dogs general manager Trevor Georgie said. "Our staff was totally split, basically 50/50, heading into the draft."Jeremie Poirier. Michael Hawkins / Saint John Sea DogsThis dynamic made for an awkward moment when the rebuilding Sea Dogs selected Villeneuve second overall and Poirier six picks later at No. 8. The QMJHL draft is typically held in person, so the oft compared rivals were forced to acquaint themselves in the club's suite."It was kind of weird at the beginning because we didn't expect to be drafted onto the same team," Poirier said of the pair's brief draft-day interactions. "But we were also so happy. We knew it'd be good to have two high prospects in Saint John.""We were rivals," Villeneuve recalled, "but we always had the respect for each other."Despite the subdued meeting, Georgie and the coaching staff worried about how "explosive" the upcoming training camp might be. With playing time and clout within the organization hanging in the balance, there was a decent chance Poirier or Villeneuve - or perhaps both - would put up a fuss or refuse to cooperate. Instead, the two hit it off."You wondered how they were going to manage it," Sea Dogs assistant coach Jeff Cowan said. "From Day 1, though, there was no big competition, no big egos or unhealthy competitiveness, nothing like that."Roughly two years later, after anchoring Saint John's blue line through a rebuild, the still-green Poirier and Villeneuve are once again up for a draft, this time with NHL teams making the selections. Plenty of junior teams will see several players picked during the 2020 NHL Draft, which is being held virtually on Tuesday and Wednesday, but the Sea Dogs are one club to keep a close eye on because they have three draft-eligible defensemen. (The third is Charlie DesRoches, also scooped up in the 2018 QMJHL draft.) The crown jewel, Poirier, might be the most polarizing player in the entire class.Jeremie Poirier Vaughn Ridley / Getty ImagesOn one hand, Poirier is a tantalizing offensive weapon, a one-man wrecking crew from the back end who can stickhandle through an entire team before creating a scoring chance for himself or a teammate. On the other hand, he's been, as one NHL scout framed it recently, a "train wreck defensively." The Montreal-area product is projected to go late in the first round. However, since he's the type of player teams either love or hate, he could slide into Day 2.Georgie offered a sports-car analogy to simplify Poirier's strengths and weaknesses at this point in his career. "Whoever drafts Jeremie," he said, "is purchasing the Ferrari knowing that the transmission needs some work. Everyone knows the transmission needs some work, but it's a Ferrari."Poirier racked up an impressive 53 points in 64 games last season. He led all QMJHL defensemen with 20 goals despite being just 17 years old. The Ferrari-like attributes are easy to identify. Poirier operates with supreme confidence when he's on the attack, dancing in and out of zones. He can regroup, dish a nifty pass, or unleash his trademark shot, which is hard and accurate."He's got a shot that gets through to the net. It's not getting blocked and turning into two-on-ones the other way," Dan Marr, longtime NHL Central Scouting director, said of the 6-foot-1, 196-pounder whom the agency ranked 18th among all draft-eligible North American skaters. "He sees the ice well enough and he's got a quick release where he really steps into it.""He's so good at making plays in tight, making little dekes and plays under guys' sticks," said Cowan, who played eight NHL seasons. "For me, having coached here in Saint John for seven years, I haven't seen a defenseman or maybe a forward who has that skill with the puck. He's so confident with it in the plays he makes. Those are his pluses. His skill level is crazy."Poirier elicits oppositely extreme views for his play without the puck. His slow pivots from skating forward to backward are a concern. Scouts question his dedication to defense, in general, because of his poor body language and lackadaisical approach to battling. He also turns the puck over far too often.Georgie, Cowan, and Poirier himself all accept this to be true. There's no question his risk-reward ratio must be recalibrated, and his attention to detail, or lack thereof, in certain areas of the game needs an adjustment. That said, the GM, coach, and player report a change in approach over the offseason and into the start of the 2020-21 season. To them, these deficiencies can be fixed."When I was coming back into the defensive zone, I was thinking about offense, trying to gain the puck back, go on offense, and go, go, go," Poirier said of his first two years of junior, which featured an ugly minus-66 rating. "Now, I'm trying to be more aware of what's going on in my zone. Stop the play, get the puck back first, and then change my focus.""Jeremie is committed. He wants to be dominant. He wants to be an elite-level player," Georgie added. "The feedback I'm getting, unprovoked from teammates, is that this is a different Jeremie Poirier."Poirier looked up to superstar Blackhawks winger Patrick Kane as a kid and played forward until his peewee coach suggested he switch to defenseman so he could expand his view of the ice and, most importantly, get more ice time. Asked if any teams in pre-draft interviews broached the subject of reverting back, Poirier had a good laugh."I make sure everybody knows I'm a defenseman," he said. "It's good to have this really big offensive upside because I can bring it every night. There's not a lot of defensemen in this draft year and around the world who can play offense like I do. If I keep improving my defense and keep getting better, overall, it'll help me be one of the top defensemen."One thing that isn't up for debate is how abundantly aware Poirier is of his shortcomings. His own coaches have let him know. NHL scouts too. And, of course, the internet, with Poirier trying his best to avoid the criticism but nevertheless stumbling upon some negativity while cruising social media."At the end of the day, it can be frustrating if you're reading all of those comments," Poirier said of what he's read on Instagram and elsewhere. "But I'm just here to improve and get better. Sometimes I take those criticisms as motivation. I can go out there and improve."William Villeneuve. Dan Culberson / Saint John Sea DogsThat brings us back to Villeneuve, who's not only one of Poirier's best friends now but was also his defense partner for the 2019-20 season. (The pair has been split up to start 2020-21, which began with back-to-back losses over the weekend. Poirier recorded a goal and three assists.) In Villeneuve, Poirier has found someone to lean on for brotherly support on and off the ice."Some people are bugging him about his defensive game, but they don't really know how hard he's worked over the past two years," Villeneuve said defiantly."I like to say that we went through the same things," he continued. "Being 16 years old in the (QMJHL) is not easy. Also, coming into a rebuilding team (the Sea Dogs have won just 43 of 134 games since the duo's arrival), we've had some good but also tough moments, playing a lot of hard minutes. To have a player like Jeremie and a person like Jeremie by my side to go through everything, it's been great. Since we put our feet in Saint John, we've been hanging out a lot together. We push each other to get better every day."Villeneuve, a 6-foot-1 righty, was the top point-getter among QMJHL defensemen last year with 58 in 64 games. He's not as flashy as Poirier, but he does earn high marks in the vision and poise categories. He's expected to go off the board relatively early on Day 2, perhaps in the second round not long after Poirier."He doesn’t have the high-end skills of a Poirier, but he’s a notch above him in terms of defending and hockey sense," reads a report on Villeneuve in HockeyProspect.com's draft bible. "We are hoping that as he continues to physically mature, some of those skills will continue to improve, such as skating and shooting. He has some two-way upside, but his lack of athleticism and high-end skills might hurt his chances of one day playing in the NHL."Once rivals, Poirier and Villeneuve are close to inseparable in Saint John. They were classmates at a French-speaking high school prior to finishing Grade 12, they play the NBA2K video game together, and they've been known to frequent Tim Hortons and a local mall as a pair. In a strange, pandemic-shortened draft year filled with criticism, it's been nice to have each other."I think JP's improved a lot defensively and he's still working on it. We both need to," Villeneuve said. "People are really hard on him, but I'm not worried about him. He's going to prove them wrong really soon."John Matisz is theScore's national hockey writer.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Lundqvist indicates desire to continue playing: 'I still want to win'
It appears as though future Hall of Fame netminder Henrik Lundqvist is hungry to return for another season.The pending unrestricted free agent took to Twitter on Sunday to express his desire to continue playing.
Blackhawks trade Maatta to Kings
The Chicago Blackhawks have traded defenseman Olli Maatta to the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for forward Brad Morrison, the Kings announced Sunday."Olli is a well-rounded player who will fit well with our group of defensemen," Kings general manager Rob Blake said. "He is a young player that already has a lot of valuable NHL experience, including a pair of Stanley Cups, and we look forward to having him join our organization."Chicago is retaining roughly $750,000 of Maatta's $4.08-million salary for each of the next two seasons, according to Sportsnet's Chris Johnston.The move appears to be a salary dump for the Blackhawks, as Morrison spent his 2019-20 season with the ECHL's Fort Wayne Comets, registering 19 points in 17 games. Selected by the New York Rangers in the fourth round of the 2015 draft, the 23-year-old hasn't played an NHL game to date.Maatta, 26, joined the Blackhawks in a trade from the Pittsburgh Penguins last summer. The 2012 first-round pick has notched 124 points in 427 career games and won two Stanley Cups with Pittsburgh.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Stars re-sign Sekera on 2-year deal with $1.5M AAV
The Dallas Stars have re-signed Andrej Sekera to a two-year deal carrying an average annual value of $1.5 million, the team announced Sunday.The 34-year-old was a reliable third-pairing option for the Stars during their run to the 2020 Stanley Cup Final. The veteran only tallied one assist in 24 playoff games, but his 2.04 expected goals against per 60 minutes at five-on-five ranked third among Stars defensemen, according to Natural Stat Trick."Andrej did an outstanding job coming in and immediately making a difference on our back end last season," Dallas general manager Jim Nill said. "With his intelligence and experience, we look forward to Andrej continuing to play an impactful role in our defense corps."Sekera was Dallas' only impending free agent on the blue line.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
5 free agents who could become steals
The offseason has officially begun, and the free-agent frenzy is right around the corner. With the salary cap remaining flat at $81.5 million for next season, general managers will be more desperate than ever to find low-cost impact players on the market while pinching their pennies.We all saw what talents like Corey Perry and Pat Maroon were able to contribute to their clubs after inking team-friendly deals last offseason. The following players will likely be available at an appealing cost, and they could outplay their contracts in 2020-21.Jason Spezza - C/RW Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyGPGAPATOICap hit589162510:50$700KSpezza has made it clear he'd love to stay with his hometown Toronto Maple Leafs if he plays in 2020-21, but it's uncertain the cap-strapped team can keep the veteran in its plans going forward. If the Leafs move on, lots of clubs could benefit from using Spezza in a depth role.The 37-year-old put together a solid 2019-20 campaign while proving he can still contribute in several areas. Spezza produced more points per game last season (0.43) than he did in 2018-19 (0.35) despite logging considerably less ice time. He also showed off his versatility, playing center and wing throughout the season and winning 54.4% of his faceoffs.Spezza's off-ice value also can't be overlooked. The 17-year pro adds plenty of experience, his teammates love him, and he's on a mission to end his career with a Stanley Cup win.Mikael Granlund - LW/RW Dave Sandford / National Hockey League / GettyGPGAPATOICap hit6317133017:48$5.75MHow quickly things can change. Nashville Predators general manager David Poile appeared to have fleeced the Minnesota Wild when he acquired Granlund for Kevin Fiala just over 18 months ago, but the latter has become the far more productive player ever since.The aftermath of that trade could impact how much a team is willing to invest in Granlund. We're not suggesting the 28-year-old pivot will end up signing for low-end money, but his recent decline will likely prove costly. However, his offensive potential could lead to Granlund outperforming his next contract, making him a bargain candidate.The 5-foot-10 Finn has registered a pair of 60-plus point seasons, and he's capable of playing throughout the lineup. Granlund has also been a strong possession player for most of his career, and the Predators boasted an impressive 62.42% of expected goals when he was on the ice at five-on-five in 2019-20.Henrik Lundqvist - G Jared Silber / National Hockey League / GettyGPGAASV%GSAACap hit303.16.905-4.16$8.5MDespite Lundqvist's bona fides, it's unlikely a team will overpay for a No. 2 goalie, so he should be available for a reasonable price if the veteran continues his career. It's tough to picture King Henrik in another jersey, but taking a chance on him wouldn't be the worst idea for a contender looking to shore up its crease.The 2012 Vezina Trophy winner has declined statistically in recent years, but he didn't receive much help from a Rangers team that's been one of the worst defensively over the past several seasons. Fulfilling a lighter role for a stronger club could help give Lundqvist a second wind. At the very least, his presence and experience would be invaluable to a Stanley Cup contender.Tyler Ennis - LW/RW Andy Devlin / National Hockey League / GettyGPGAPATOICap hit7016213714:43$800KEnnis was on our 2019 edition of potential free-agent steals, and for good reason. The veteran winger's production in 2019-20 far outweighed his six-figure contract. Although he's due for a slight raise, Ennis should still be a low-cost option who can provide plenty of value.The 30-year-old paced all players making under $1 million who were not on entry-level deals last season in both goals and points. He outscored multi-million dollar pending free-agent forwards such as Granlund, Vladislav Namestnikov, and Craig Smith despite logging less ice time per game than the former two.Ennis also plays a lot larger than his 5-foot-9 frame suggests, as evidenced by his career-high 96 hits last season. His mix of grit and skill makes him a versatile talent who can play up and down a club's lineup.Wayne Simmonds - RW Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyGPGAPATOICap hit688172514:55$5MDespite his body of work, it became clear that Simmonds' value had dropped after he managed just a one-year contract last offseason. The 6-foot-2 winger failed to meet expectations in 2019-20, so he'll likely be securing a far less lucrative salary now.However, Simmonds spent 2019-20 playing for a pair of struggling teams in the New Jersey Devils and Buffalo Sabres. His ice time dropped noticeably with Buffalo, and he wasn't able to find his game before the season was cut short in March.Simmonds' days as a top-six option are clearly behind him, but the 32-year-old power forward can still bolster a club's depth. He recorded 145 hits last season while also showing he can still contribute on the power play, recording five of his eight tallies with the man advantage.(Analytics source: Natural Stat Trick)Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
2020 NHL Mock Draft: Big decision at 2nd overall, intrigue high at No. 5
With the 2020 NHL Draft just a few days away, theScore's John Matisz and Josh Wegman project the first round of selections.1. Rangers - Alexis Lafreniere, LW, Rimouski (QMJHL)Lafreniere is the no-brainer No. 1 pick of the 2020 draft. He tore up the 'Q' last season with 112 points in 52 games while earning MVP honors at the world juniors. Lafreniere, who turns 19 on Oct. 11, receives rave reviews for his skill and hockey IQ, yet it's his compete-level and physical play giving him a high floor and should help make him an impact player at the NHL level almost immediately. The Rangers have an influx of young, talented wingers and could use a center, but drafting for need here would be foolish.2. Kings - Quinton Byfield, C, Sudbury (OHL)Lafreniere is the top talent in the class at this moment. However, a significant portion of the scouting community believes Byfield, one of the youngest draft eligibles, will eventually blossom into a more impactful NHL player. Drawing comparisons to Evgeni Malkin, the 6-foot-4, 220-pounder has an enviable skill set headlined by breakaway skating and high-end puck skills. He's a tremendous consolation prize for the Kings, who have likely considered Tim Stuetzle in their scouting meetings. At the end of the day, you don't pass on a player like Byfield at the No. 2 spot.3. Senators (via SJ) - Tim Stuetzle, C/LW, Mannheim (DEL)Several draft analysts have Stuetzle ranked ahead of Byfield, so snatching the German phenom is an easy decision for the Senators with their first of three first-round picks after L.A. took the Sudbury Wolves product. It's unclear whether Stuetzle will play center or wing, but the Sens have an organizational need in the former and he'd likely start down the middle. A fabulous skater, Stuetzle possesses an elite skill set that allowed him to rack up 34 points in 41 games last season playing against men as a 17-year-old.4. Red Wings - Cole Perfetti, C/LW, Saginaw (OHL)Detroit went off the board at last year's draft by selecting defenseman Moritz Seider sixth overall. Don't expect another shocker in 2020, with the highly coveted Perfetti available in the No. 4 spot. The Red Wings are in desperate need of dynamic forwards, and Perfetti fits the bill perfectly. The Whitby, Ontario native is a crafty two-way playmaker whose hockey sense is off the charts. There shouldn't be any problems commanding his attention, with Perfetti's obsessive habits leading some scouts to label him a hockey savant. He racked up 37 goals and 74 assists in 61 OHL games in 2019-20.5. Senators - Jamie Drysdale, D, Erie (OHL) Chris Tanouye / Getty Images Sport / GettyThis is where the draft gets really interesting. The Senators have plenty of options with this pick, including stud goalie Yaroslav Askarov. After taking a potential franchise center at No. 3, Ottawa adds a potential cornerstone defenseman two choices later. The Sens have used a pair of first-rounders on right-handed blue-liners over the last two years in Lassi Thomson and Jacob Bernard-Docker. Drysdale's on another level, though. He's one of the best skaters in the entire draft and played well for Canada at the 2020 world juniors as a 17-year-old. Along with Thomas Chabot, Erik Brannstrom, and others, the future of Ottawa's blue line looks bright with Drysdale in the fold.6. Ducks - Marco Rossi, C, Ottawa (OHL)The Ducks will be thrilled Rossi hasn't been picked through five selections. He's a complete player who skates in all situations, possesses elite skill, and has a motor that doesn't stop. Rossi, an Austrian who has played two years in North America, put up an eye-popping 120 points in 56 games last season to lead all OHLers. Any concerns about his height (5-foot-9) are negated by a Martin St. Louis-esque lower body (Rossi weighs 185 pounds). Some believe the 19-year-old can play in the NHL ASAP. He's that polished.7. Devils - Lucas Raymond, LW, Frolunda (SHL)Defenseman Jake Sanderson is tempting here for the Devils. However, Raymond has a sky-high ceiling. Many pundits believe Raymond could go in the top five because there's a possibility he becomes a true game-breaking winger. The Devils are set down the middle with youngsters Nico Hischier and Jack Hughes, so adding Raymond will give one of them a running mate. Raymond's Swedish league stats don't jump off the page (10 points in 33 games in 2019-20), but he played a limited role with Frolunda.8. Sabres - Jake Sanderson, D, USA U-18 (USHL)Sanderson would be a fantastic get for new Sabres general manager Kevyn Adams. Rasmus Dahlin, 20, and Henri Jokiharju, 21, are the present and future of Buffalo's blue line, but they don't have a ton of support. Sanderson, the son of ex-NHLer Geoff Sanderson, is a smooth-skating, three-zone defenseman with first-pairing potential. While the jury is still out on the left-handed rearguard's offensive capabilities at the pro level, Sanderson's a lay-up here since he 1) fills a need and 2) is arguably the best player available.9. Wild - Alexander Holtz, RW, Djurgardens (SHL)Of any team in the top 10, the Wild seem the most likely to trade up to fill a gaping organizational need at center. It would probably be a reach to draft a center at this point, so trading down is also a possibility for GM Bill Guerin. However, Holtz would be a fine selection if they stick with the pick. He's the best player available, and he checks off some boxes. He has an elite shot, a big plus for a team that consistently has trouble scoring. His right-handedness is another bonus for lefty-heavy Minnesota.10. Jets - Jack Quinn, RW, Ottawa (OHL) Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyWith little separating players in the back half of the top 10, the Jets happily select Quinn, a winger cut from the same cloth as J.T. Miller. He has a bullet of a shot, can dangle the other team's best defenders, and is an above-average tipper, all of which showed up in his 2019-20 OHL stats: 52 goals in 62 games. Quinn can also dish the puck well and is no slouch defensively. He's a bit slight at 6-feet and 176 pounds, though greater strength will come.11. Predators - Seth Jarvis, C/RW, Portland (WHL)Perhaps nobody in the WHL was more disappointed in the league's COVID-19 shutdown in March than Jarvis. After beginning the campaign with a respectable 35 points in 32 games, the Winnipeg native exploded down the stretch, tallying 63 points in his final 26 contests. He certainly could've increased his draft value with a strong postseason. Jarvis could be a boost to a Nashville lineup needing an offensive spark within the next few years.12. Panthers - Anton Lundell, C, HIFK (SM Liiga)Florida should be looking for hungry, reliable pros under new GM Bill Zito. Lundell is precisely that. The Finnish league center registered 28 points in 44 games last year by playing a simple, intelligent game. He's good in the faceoff circle, he can kill penalties, and he's already in a leadership role with HIFK as an alternate captain despite being a teenager (he turns 19 on Saturday). Sure, there are flashier options, but there's a lot to like about Lundell.13. Hurricanes (via TOR) - Yaroslav Askarov, G, St. Petersburg (VHL)Hurricanes owner Tom Dundon is on record saying he doesn't plan on drafting a defenseman in the first round because he wants more offense. That would seem to potentially rule out goalies as well - who are far from sure things - but Askarov is too tantalizing to pass up. The Russian possesses rare athleticism and is considered one of the better goalie prospects in recent memory. Goaltending is also an organizational need in Carolina.14. Oilers - Dylan Holloway, C, Wisconsin (NCAA)The chances of Edmonton drafting a defenseman in the opening round for the third straight year is slim, given the glut of possibilities in the No. 14 slot. That leaves the door open for Holloway. A strong skater who is difficult to knock off the puck, he's probably the surest bet among available forwards. At best, Holloway projects to be a top-six NHL forward who puts up 50-60 points a season. At worst, he's a third-liner who enjoys a long, meaningful career.15. Maple Leafs (via PIT) - Connor Zary, C, Kamloops (WHL) Marissa Baecker / Getty Images Sport / GettyDon't be surprised to see the Maple Leafs trade down if the top 14 picks fall in a similar fashion. There's plenty of skilled forwards they could land in the 20s while gaining a later selection or two. That being said, Leafs fans may be clamoring for the team to select a defenseman with Kaiden Guhle and Braden Schneider still on the board if Toronto keeps the pick, but Zary has "Kyle Dubas kind of guy" written all over him. He's not the biggest player at 6-feet and 178 pounds, but he's incredibly skilled, very smart, and highly competitive. Zary's skating is not a strength right now, but the Leafs have world-class skating consultant Barb Underhill who could work closely with him.16. Canadiens - Dawson Mercer, C/RW, Chicoutimi (QMJHL)Mercer drops to Montreal by no fault of his own. He is the best player available and a tap-in for the Canadiens, assuming they don't reach for a blue-liner. Mercer, a slippery, all-situations forward, boasts high hockey IQ and is a clever stick-handler and passer. The Newfoundlander put up 60 points in 42 QMJHL games last season, split between Chicoutimi and Drummondville.17. Blackhawks - Kaiden Guhle, D, Prince Albert (WHL)Guhle, the younger brother of Ducks defenseman Brendan Guhle, is an excellent addition to the Blackhawks defense pipeline. Right-handed offensive blue-liners Adam Boqvist and Ian Mitchell are expected to lead the team from the back end in the future, but Guhle, a left-handed rearguard who projects to play a shutdown role in the NHL, would be a nice complement. He's an excellent skater at 6-foot-3 and plays a physical brand of hockey.18. Devils (via ARI) - Braden Schneider, D, Brandon (WHL)After Chicago snaps up Guhle, New Jersey turns to a slightly inferior Western League defenseman. In Schneider, the Devils get a 6-foot-2, 209-pounder who transitions the puck well and plays what scouts typically call a "quieter" game. At the NHL level, Schneider projects to be a top-four guy who can kill penalties and, perhaps, find a spot on the second power-play unit.19. Flames - Rodion Amirov, LW, Ufa (KHL)The Flames could certainly use a game-breaking talent up front, and Amirov has the potential to be exactly that. Don't be fooled by the Salavat, Russia native's pedestrian stats in the KHL last season (two assists in 21 games) because he's already compiled five points in eight games in 2020-21. Amirov has serious high-end skill that projects him as a future top-six winger.20. Devils (via VAN) - Jacob Perreault, RW, Sarnia (OHL) Dennis Pajot / Getty Images Sport / GettyThis is where the Devils can get creative. New Jersey already chose Raymond at seventh and Schneider at 18th, two relatively safe picks. Perreault is closer to a swing-for-the-fences selection at 20th overall. The son of ex-NHLer Yanic Perreault is a natural sniper (69 goals in 120 career OHL games) armed with an unreal shot. Think Brock Boeser. Why is he around at 20? Some scouts have mild concerns about his wheels and play without the puck.21. Blue Jackets - Lukas Reichel, LW, Berlin (DEL)Reichel is the nephew of 11-year NHL veteran and two-time 40-goal scorer Robert Reichel. He performed well as a teenager in the top German pro league (24 points in 42 games) and shined at the 2020 world juniors (five points in seven games). Reichel has plenty of speed and soft hands, a combination allowing him to beat defenders one-on-one regularly. Columbus severely lacks game-breakers up front, and though Reichel is considered a bit of a home-run pick, it's worth the risk for the Blue Jackets.22. Rangers (via CAR) - John-Jason Peterka, LW, Munich (DEL)The third German to go off the board, Peterka is a hard-shooting, speedy winger Rangers GM Jeff Gorton would be pleased to add to the organization's stable of promising forward prospects. Peterka didn't see much ice time for Munich last year, which limited his exposure to the greater hockey world, but he managed to prove he has NHL potential by recording 11 points in 42 DEL games. Scouts fawn over the 5-foot-11, 192-pounder's relentlessness.23. Flyers - Noel Gunler, RW, Lulea (SHL)The Flyers lack elite snipers, and Gunler is a pure goal scorer. He potted 27 goals in 31 games in the Swedish junior league during the 2018-19 season. His transition to the SHL last year wasn't as smooth (four goals in 49 games), but he still impresses with his release and goal-scoring instincts. His game away from the puck needs work, but keep an eye on him in the 20s.24. Capitals - Justin Barron, D, Halifax (QMJHL)NHL front offices generally covet a mobile, right-handed defenseman with size like Barron (6-foot-2, 198 pounds). However, Barron falls down the board because of some health issues that may scare teams. He missed significant time last season due to a blood clot, and he's currently sidelined after undergoing a corrective procedure on his shoulder. The Capitals could use someone to slot in behind John Carlson on the depth chart, so they take Barron, who tallied 19 points in 34 QMJHL games last year.25. Avalanche - Hendrix Lapierre, C, Chicoutimi (QMJHL) Mathieu Belanger / Getty Images Sport / GettyAside from Askarov, Lapierre may be the biggest wild card on Day 1. If the draft was based solely on talent and potential, he might go in the top 10. But there's widespread concern over recent head injuries, which could lead to Lapierre sliding into the 20-31 range. The question is, will he be healthy enough long term to reach his ceiling? The Avs, a club brimming with young talent in the NHL and at lower levels, can afford to venture off the beaten path a bit here and select the smart and skilled pivot.26. Blues - Ridly Greig, C, Brandon (WHL)Greig - who a few pundits have compared to Nazem Kadri for his mix of skill, smarts, and snarl - is a Blues kind of player. He brings a lot to the table from offensive and defensive perspectives, but there are questions about his skating. Greig recorded 60 points and 83 penalty minutes in 56 WHL games last year. Having just turned 18, he's one of the younger draft eligibles.27. Ducks (via BOS) - Jeremie Poirier, D, Saint John (QMJHL)Poirier is the definition of a high-risk, high-reward pick - which is fitting because he's also a high-risk, high-reward player. He's incredibly gifted offensively. He has great hands, superb vision, and is excellent at walking the line and getting pucks through a crowd and on net. His defensive flaws are glaring, though, which will certainly scare teams away. Poirier may not sound like a player GM Bob Murray would covet, but the Ducks are fully in their right to gamble with their second pick of the first round.28. Senators (via NYI) - Mavrik Bourque, C, Shawinigan (QMJHL)To cap off a day in which they selected Stuetzle and Drysdale in the top five, the Senators take a flyer on the supremely skilled Bourque. He's a deceptive 5-foot-10 center with high-end vision and elite passing ability. The Plessisville, Quebec native collected 29 goals and 42 assists in 49 games in 2019-20 and ranked ninth in points per game in the 'Q.'29. Golden Knights - Brendan Brisson, C, Chicago (USHL)Brisson, the son of NHL player agent Pat Brisson, doesn't stand out with his size (6-feet, 185 pounds) or speed. However, he has a very impressive toolbox that will tempt some teams. He's an excellent short-area player with great intelligence, noteworthy vision, and a dangerous shot. Brisson would be a nice fit for a puck possession-heavy team like the Golden Knights.30. Stars - Tyson Foerster, RW, Barrie (OHL) Chris Tanouye / Getty Images Sport / GettyDallas is fresh off losing in the Stanley Cup Final to Brayden Point, who, like Foerster, heard a lot about how poor his skating was as a prospect. Perhaps Stars GM Jim Nill leans into some recency bias to select Foerster. The kid has an absolute bomb of a shot, is considered very coachable, and has a solid frame. There's a lot to like about the player and pick - given the slotting.31. Sharks (via TB) - Sam Colangelo, RW, Chicago (USHL)Colangelo was a teammate of Brisson's with the USHL's Chicago Steel where the two players finished third and second in league scoring, respectively. Swedish defenseman William Wallinder and London Knights forward Luke Evangelista are among two of the many options the Sharks could consider at this point. Still, Colangelo gets the nod thanks to his hefty offensive upside.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. 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Coyotes waive Grabner to buy him out
The Arizona Coyotes placed forward Michael Grabner on waivers for the purpose of a buyout, general manager Bill Armstrong confirmed Saturday.Here's how it breaks down:
Golden Knights sign Lehner to 5-year, $25M extension
The Vegas Golden Knights inked goaltender Robin Lehner to a five-year contract extension with an average annual value of $5 million, the club announced Saturday.Golden Knights general manager Kelly McCrimmon said the deal includes a modified no-trade clause, according to The Associated Press' Stephen Whyno.Lehner was a pending unrestricted free agent who would have been one of the top players available had he tested the UFA market on Oct. 9.The 29-year-old earned Vegas' starting job in the postseason and excelled after the Golden Knights landed him in a trade with the Chicago Blackhawks at the deadline.Lehner went 9-7 with a .917 save percentage in 16 playoff games with Vegas. He played three regular-season contests with the Golden Knights down the stretch after the trade.The Swedish netminder posted a 16-10-5 record to go along with a .918 save percentage and 10.17 goals saved above average in 33 games with the Blackhawks in 2019-20 prior to the deal.Lehner signed a one-year, $5-million pact with Chicago in July 2019.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Canadiens make qualifying offers to 5 players including Domi, Mete
Max Domi and Victor Mete are among five Montreal Canadiens players who received qualifying offers from the club.The Canadiens also submitted offers to forward Charles Hudon as well as defensemen Noah Juulsen and Xavier Ouellet.All five players are pending restricted free agents.Domi ranked third on the team in both goals and points in 2019-20. He notched 17 and 44, respectively, over 71 games.Mete averaged 16 minutes of ice time this past season while collecting 11 points in 51 contests.NHL clubs have until Wednesday at 5 p.m. ET to extend qualifying offers to their RFAs. The offers can be signed when free agency opens Friday at noon ET.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Penguins re-sign Jarry to 3-year deal with $3.5M AAV
The Pittsburgh Penguins and goaltender Tristan Jarry agreed to a three-year contract carrying an average annual value of $3.5 million, the team announced Saturday.Jarry was a pending restricted free agent.The 25-year-old had a career year this season while splitting the crease with Matt Murray. Jarry went 20-12-1 with a .921 save percentage and 11.07 goals saved above average in 33 games - 31 of which were starts - in 2019-20.Jarry started only one of Pittsburgh's four playoff games but earned his first All-Star nod in January as an injury replacement.Pittsburgh drafted him 44th overall in 2013.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Flyers bring Elliott back on 1-year extension
The Philadelphia Flyers signed goaltender Brian Elliott to a one-year, $1.5-million contract extension, the club announced Saturday.Elliott went 16-7-4 with a .899 save percentage and minus-8.02 goals saved above average across 31 games - 27 of which were starts - in 2019-20. He primarily served as phenom Carter Hart's backup.The 35-year-old spent the last three seasons with the Flyers. He's played for five teams in his 13-year career.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
'It's all there': Like Kopitar and Malkin, Quinton Byfield is the full package
On the surface, the Jan. 30 meeting between the Sudbury Wolves and Barrie Colts was just another game in the 2019-20 OHL season, the 37th contest of a 63-game year shortened by COVID-19.The way MacAuley Carson sees it, though, the Wolves' 3-2 victory was more than just another game. It was the game in which he witnessed superstar teammate Quinton Byfield call his shot with Sudbury down 2-1 early in the third period.Byfield, as Carson tells it, told a yapping Colts player to buzz off and then gave him a warning: Not only did Byfield plan to tie the game 2-2, but he would do so in spectacular fashion by rifling the puck top corner on a breakaway. You can probably guess what happened the next time his skates hit the ice.In-game chirping is rampant in junior, Carson notes, but this was different. Byfield put his money where his mouth was and hushed the Colts faithful mid-celebration. "It was probably the first time I ever saw a guy say he was going to do something, and then actually do it the next shift," Carson said earlier this week, still amazed eight months later.For good measure, Byfield later scored the overtime winner, burying his sixth shot of the night to cap the Wolves' late-game comeback. "That was the moment where I'm like, 'OK, this kid's pretty good,'" Carson said with a laugh. He likened the 6-foot-4 center's performance to an NBA player taking over in crunch time.Byfield will again command attention Tuesday when the NHL gathers virtually for the first round of the 2020 draft. The New York Rangers are expected to select Canadian forward and consensus top prospect Alexis Lafreniere first overall. The Los Angeles Kings pick second and are projected to take either Byfield or German phenom Tim Stuetzle, with the Ottawa Senators taking the other at No. 3.Truthfully, there is no wrong choice for the Kings. But if it were up to TSN's Craig Button, Byfield would be bound for California."My opinion on the selection at No. 2 is simple. We all know what Anze Kopitar means to the LA Kings. When I look at an Anze Kopitar-type player like Quinton Byfield, who better to learn from than the player you might be very similar to?" said Button, a former NHL general manager and scout. Vaughn Ridley / Getty ImagesIt's rare for a prospect to be compared to Kopitar, one of hockey's most unique two-way forwards. But Byfield, who only turned 18 on Aug. 19, actually qualifies. He boasts formidable size, explosive skating, high-end skill, and advanced vision. Byfield isn't currently in Kopitar's ballpark when it comes to his play away from the puck - the latter is a former Selke Trophy winner - yet Button believes he has the desire, attitude, and tools to eventually "make an impact on every square inch of ice" at the NHL level."I see him as a real, real bright prospect," Button said. "The athletic ability, the hockey ability, the determination, the competitive spirit - it's all there, it's all there. It's about continuing to grow and develop."Unlike Kopitar, the lone Slovenian to star in the NHL, Byfield hails from a hockey hotbed. Though his father is from Jamaica and didn't grow up around the game, Byfield was born and raised in the Toronto suburb of Newmarket, becoming addicted to the sport at an early age. By his mid-teens, he'd established himself as a blue-chip prospect, drawing crowds of scouts before the Wolves eventually selected him first overall in the 2018 OHL draft. He delivered immediately, posting 61 points in 64 games to earn rookie of the year honors."He came in and played both roles, offensive and defensive. He would be out there late in games with goalies pulled," Wolves head coach Cory Stillman said. "If we pulled our goalie, everything ran through him. If their goalie was pulled, we had him on the ice because we knew he was going to get the puck out."He's smart, he can read plays, and he has a great stick. We knew from Day 1 that having him on the ice late in games was an advantage for us."Commitments with Team Canada's world junior squad, a mid-season wrist injury, and the coronavirus pandemic truncated Byfield's sophomore OHL season, yet he still managed to bag 32 goals and add 50 assists to lead the Wolves with 82 points in 45 games. Scouts were impressed once again, this time by his constant improvements in blending the various aspects of his game."He has a power element, but it's combined with speed," explained Dan Marr, the director of NHL Central Scouting. "He's got nice, soft hands for a big guy, and he's got very good hockey IQ. This is an all-situational player." Chris Tanouye / Getty ImagesLike most scouts, Marr would rather not compare prospects to NHL stars. But he can't help himself with Byfield. Evgeni Malkin of the Pittsburgh Penguins, a popular comparable across the industry, comes to mind thanks to similarities in skating ability, stature, and puck skills. He also sees Byfield as a "clone" of 18-year-old Leon Draisaitl, who became the No. 3 pick in the 2014 NHL Draft and is now the reigning winner of the Art Ross and Hart trophies at 24. Interestingly, Marr's favorite comparable is a major throwback: Jean Beliveau of Montreal Canadiens lore."The way I like to describe him is that he plays the game the correct way. He has all the tools and the talent to flourish," Marr said of Byfield. "When I watched him initially, the way he handled himself, carried himself on the ice and off the ice, I'm sitting there and telling the other guys, 'Hey, this is like a Jean Beliveau-type player,' in terms of his impact on and off the ice."Eric Lindros, you'll notice, is left out of the comparable conversation. Byfield isn't cut from the same cloth as Lindros, a bulldozer of a power forward in his heyday. At 220 pounds, Byfield is leaner, cleaner, and craftier. As Marr put it, the left-handed shooter is "a big guy who can show up on the highlight reel doing things that normally you only anticipate with smaller guys."Erie Otters defenseman Jamie Drysdale, another top-10 talent in the 2020 draft, was asked last week for a scouting report on Byfield, his OHL opponent and international teammate."He's got the size, the speed, the hands, and pretty much all the tools you need to be a high-end forward," Drysdale said. He added: "The second that guy gets a step on you, you're kind of toast."Drysdale and Byfield both made Canada's world junior team as underagers. They each appeared in seven games, but Byfield's impact on the squad's gold-medal run was minimal. He didn't see the ice often, and when he did, the dominant player seen in OHL rinks was nowhere to be found. This so-so showing, not uncommon for a 17-year-old suiting up in a best-on-best under-20 tournament, continues to follow Byfield. On a video call with reporters last week, he said adjusting to the lack of ice time was a "learning curve."The OHL has yet to approve the opening of training camps due to COVID-19, so Byfield is in limbo until at least November. During this extended offseason, he's been training off the ice with fitness guru and ex-NHLer Gary Roberts, and competing on the ice against Connor McDavid and other Toronto-area pros such as Josh Anderson and Chris Tierney. Like all top prospects, his goal is to make the NHL next season. Is he truly ready, though?From Button's vantage point, Byfield could play in the NHL immediately, but he doesn't project to be a key contributor right away. "I think it would be a massive mistake for the team who drafts Quinton Byfield to have him in the NHL next year," Button said. "Massive mistake."Button would rather Byfield dominate every single night in the OHL and crush the 2021 world juniors, which are scheduled to take place around the winter holidays in a bubble environment in Edmonton. Remember, Button warns, Byfield is young, 10 months younger than Lafreniere and, despite his resume and makeup, still quite raw."I say this in the most complimentary way," Button said. "I honestly believe Quinton is still in the process of finding how good he can be."Carson, for his part, has aged out of the OHL and is now playing for the University of New Brunswick men's hockey team. The former Wolves forward leans on a quote plastered on the walls of UNB's facilities to describe the road ahead for Byfield, a potential franchise-changing center who's just getting started."Your talent is your floor," he said. "And then your work ethic is your ceiling."John Matisz is theScore's national hockey writer.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. 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Report: Sharks in talks to acquire Dubnyk from Wild
The San Jose Sharks are discussing a potential trade with the Minnesota Wild to acquire veteran goaltender Devan Dubnyk, according to TSN's Darren Dreger.Dubnyk has one year left on his current deal, carrying a cap hit of $4.33 million. He becomes an unrestricted free agent following the 2020-21 season.The 34-year-old had a difficult campaign after he missed 15 games early in the season to be with his wife, who fell ill in November. The 6-foot-6 puck-stopper never quite found his rhythm and ended up with a 3.35 goals against average and .890 save percentage in just 28 starts - his lowest mark since his rookie season.The Sharks ranked 30th in team save percentage (.895) in 2019-20 and failed to qualify for the postseason for just the third time in the last two decades.Sharks netminder Martin Jones remains under contract through 2023-24, and the 30-year-old would likely share the crease with Dubnyk in a platoon system.San Jose has also shown interest in Wild forward Ryan Donato, according to The Athletic's Michael Russo.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
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