SPORT-SCAN DAILY BRIEF NHL 6/30/2013 Anaheim Ducks

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SPORT-SCAN DAILY BRIEF
NHL 6/30/2013
Anaheim Ducks
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Boston Bruins
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Bruins’ Nathan Horton to test free agency
Seth Jones hopes to make his own history in NHL
Nathan Horton going to free agency
Trade talk active as Bruins prepare for draft
B’s lose Nathan Horton
Stephen Harris’ postseason Bruins report card
Nathan Horton won’t return to Bruins; Tyler Seguin cited in
trade chatter
Horton won't be back with Bruins; Trade talk buzzing at draft;
Seguin's name coming up
Buffalo Sabres
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NHL prospect Bailey has a pro pedigree
Miller, Vanek expected to stay with Sabres through draft
Cup winner Fucale catches Sabres’ eye
Regier expects Miller, Vanek to remain with Sabres through
draft weekend
Sabres' Gilbert honored, humbled to join USA Hockey staff
for Sochi Olympics
Seth Jones won't be offended if Avalanche draft a forward
instead of him at No. 1
A goalie at No. 16? Sabres have some interest in Halifax's
Fucale
Road to the NHL Draft: Sean Malone
Calgary Flames
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Nieminen — still playing, still laughing
Sportsnet analyst says Calgary Flames could open season
in Saskatoon
SIX players the Calgary Flames could pick at No. 6
Carolina Hurricanes
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Time has come for Hurricanes to put plan into action
Canes’ high NHL draft pick: High stakes, big investment
Chicago Blackhawks
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Columbus Blue Jackets
Ducks not looking to move up in NHL draft
Ducks were hatched 20 years ago
NHL: Kings, Ducks still find value in draft
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Dallas Stars
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Draft Preview: Darnell Nurse
Draft Preview: Sean Monahan
Heika: Stars' pursuit of Vincent Lecavalier shows team is
ready to rejoin the big boys
NHL mock draft roundup: Defenseman a popular pick for
Stars, but a pair of centers also offer intrigue
Stars have meeting with free agent center Vincent Lecavalier
in New York
Dallas Stars meet with free agent Vincent Lecavalier, make
interest 'clear'
Detroit Red Wings
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Helene St. James: Sizing up the NHL draft with Detroit Red
Wings' Joe McDonnell
Detroit Red Wings to meet with Vincent Lecavalier on
Sunday, give Jakub Kindl 4-year deal
Red Wings plan to meet with free agent Vince Lecavalier on
Sunday
Nathan MacKinnon could go No. 1 to Avalanche; Wings draft
18th
Wings re-sign Jakub Kindl for four years, $9.6 million
Free-agent forward Vincent Lecavalier schedules meeting
with Detroit Red Wings
Detroit Red Wings announce forward Drew Miller has signed
three-year contract extension
Teams appear to have more trade options this year; Detroit
Red Wings 'motivated' to make a move
Red Wings are going to pick best available player
Edmonton Oilers
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Hawks believe deep draft will benefit them
Hawks' Saad lands spot on All-Rookie Team
In concert: the Stanley Cup
Blackhawks: 17 seconds to immortality
NHL draft: Homegrown talents fueled Blackhawks’ Stanley
Cup run
Blackhawks fans, Corey Crawford go ‘nuts’ at rally
Blackhawks’ one goal: a city united
Blackhawks go down in history for best reasons
No overhaul this time for Hawks roster
Why hockey’s a big hit in Chicago
It's all happening again on CSN
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Colorado Avalanche
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Quentin Shore hoping for better luck in second shot at NHL
draft
Advice for Colorado Avalanche: Keep the top pick in
Sunday's NHL draft
For Nathan MacKinnon, hockey success was always in the
card
Sakic gets another big shot for Avalanche
St. Patrick is back and ready to win
Michael Arace commentary: Blue Jackets had best act
swiftly with Bobrovsky
Blue Jackets notebook: Richards rewarded with one-year
contract extension
NHL draft prognosis
Blue Jackets: Even GM unsure how draft might play out
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Darnell Nurse not short of suitors ahead of NHL draft
Could the Edmonton Oilers move both of their second round
picks in trade for players at the 2013 NHL Draft?
NHL draft prospect Darnell Nurse not afraid to fight, but
willing to be a role model, too
Edmonton Oilers - drafting their way through misery, and
out?
Edmonton Oilers head coach Dallas Eakins doesn't
handicap the field … Seth Jones still excited … Sean
Monohan
Florida Panthers
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Florida Panthers expect game-changing talent with No. 2
pick in NHL Draft
Florida Panthers interested in ex-Lightning star Vinny
Lecavalier
David J. Neal: It’s simple – Florida Panthers should draft
Seth Jones
DRAFT DAY DECISIONS FOR PANTHERS: Florida Holds
Second Pick on Sunday
PANTHERS DRAFT NOTEBOOK: Huberdeau All-Rookie;
Weiss Talks Continue; Jovo Feeling Good
LECAVALIER A PANTHER? Florida Wants to Look Into
Adding Former Lightning Captain
Los Angeles Kings
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NHL: Kings, Ducks still find value in draft
Draft history under Lombardi, rounds 4-7
Not that it’s a surprise, but…
Minnesota Wild
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Wild's GM in a dealing mood for draft day
Wild's Parise, Suter earn high praise from U.S. Olympic GM
Chart: Wild GM Chuck Fletcher and draft-day moves
Jonas Brodin makes All-Rookie Team; More on Cal
Clutterbuck's future
Team USA hockey: Olympic head coach, management
announced
Minnesota Wild eyeing a deep draft and looking for more
picks
Montreal Canadiens
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Habs GM Bergevin stays mum on plans to pursue Lecavalier
Habs GM focused but not on Lecavalier
Goalie sent message to team at U-18 tourney
Habs’ first draft pick will be up in air
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New Jersey Devils
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For the No. 1 Pick, the Avalanche May Set Aside Sentiment
Hockey: NJ hopefuls in line to be selected at 2013 NHL Draft
Politi: Seth Jones, top NHL Draft prospect, is an inspiration
to Newark's young hockey players
Devils owner Jeff Vanderbeek may sell team
Devils have qualified Adam Henrique, Harri Pesonen among
restricted free agents
Report: NJ Devils may be sold to attorney Andrew Barroway
Devils goalie Martin Brodeur will be on EA Sports NHL 14
cover
NHL Draft 2013: Lou Lamoriello cares about the pick, not the
place
NHL Draft: Ranking the Top 10 prospects
Picking in top 10 rare for Devils, but they are ready to get
help
Bylsma Takes Dream Job as U.S. Men’s Hockey Coach
Seth Jones and Nathan MacKinnon vie for first overall pick in
NHL Draft
Deep NHL draft draws comparisons to stellar 2003 haul
Now and then: A closer look at the 2003 NHL draft
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Senators players to Murray: Feel free to go on a shopping
spree
Pittsburgh Penguins hope to find a way to hold on to Kris
Letang
Ottawa Senators GM Bryan Murray continues to try to move
up from No. 17 at NHL entry draft in New Jersey
Ottawa Senators goaltender Craig Anderson will get
consideration to be Team USA netminder at Olympics
Even with a new lease deal, there will be no closure for
Phoenix Coyotes fans with this mess
Phoenix Coyotes will target forwards in Sunday’s NHL draft
Pittsburgh Penguins
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2 years after being drafted, local hockey players making
name for themselves
Penguins’ Shero gives Letang talks one more shot
Penguins notebook: Waiting game will play out early in draft
Team USA setup comforts Penguins coach Bylsma
Potential aplenty in 2013 NHL draft
NHL draft top 10 prospects
Decision on Kris Letang has no deadline
San Jose Sharks
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NHL draft: San Jose Sharks hold four picks in the top 58
St Louis Blues
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Floor’s the limit for thrifty Isles
Islanders in rare air: Middle of first round at NHL draft
Rangers Have Needs but Not High Picks
Draft-day transaction unlikely for Rangers
Northjersey.com : Sports
Devoid of top two picks, Rangers seek falling star in draft
Cap crunch has Rangers looking deep into draft
Flyers looking to draft big-shooting defenseman
Inside the Flyers: Long-term deal with Giroux should make
Flyers wary
Source: Flyers eye Lecavalier
Our mock NHL draft: Flyers select Ristolainen
Lessons to be learned from Bryzgalov mistake
Flyers draft: Will Flyers sit at No. 11, or move up?
Flyers top picks last 10 years
NHL Draft: Flyers' Paul Holmgren and Co. already
negotiating
Here's who might be available to the Flyers if they keep their
draft pick
With so much uncertain, might as well mock the draft
Darnell Nurse isn’t picky, just wants to play in NHL
Sources: Finding goalie still Flyers' primary focus
Winning gold at Sochi 'an expectation' for USA
Draft prospect Nurse models game after Pronger
The definitive 2013 NHL mock draft
NHL draft has come a long way
Phoenix Coyotes
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Ottawa Senators
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Nashville Predators GM David Poile says Olympic job won't
overtax him
Nashville Predators try to pick their next star
NHL
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New York Rangers
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Nashville Predators
New York Islanders
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Philadelphia Flyers
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Blues see prospects in NHL draft
Strauss: Stillman insists club ‘not sitting idle’
Next wave of Blues prospects shows bright promise
Blues know success in the NHL draft combines hard work
and a little bit of luck
Tampa Bay Lightning
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Top-five draft picks in Lightning history
Impact player on the way for Lightning
Lecavalier meeting with several teams
No bad options in draft for Lightning at No. 3
As rumors swirl ahead of draft Lightning said to have interest
in Bruins' Tyler Seguin
Toronto Maple Leafs
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NHL draft: Maple Leafs have plenty of possible picks at No.
21
NHL draft: Tyler Seguin, Cory Schneider in trade buzz
NHL draft: ‘It’s all guesswork,’ professor says
n one season.
Leafs have sit-down with Lecavalier
Two weeks to fix a franchise: Toronto Maple Leafs
Vancouver Canucks
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Lack of prospects heightens’ Canucks draft needs
Luongo Watch: Canucks considering Schneider trade card
Canucks Draft Day: Trading a goalie overshadows need for
left wing depth
Luongo Watch: Canucks reportedly considering playing
Schneider trade card
Washington Capitals
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Capitals’ practice facility to host 2014 U.S. Olympic men’s
team camp
Websites
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ESPN / Bylsma eager to test international waters
ESPN / As U.S. GM, David Poile in tuneup mode
ESPN / Horton out; B's willing to listen on Seguin
NBCSports.com / NHL to Glendale: July 2 deadline is no
bluff
USA TODAY / U.S. hockey team might have different look at
Sochi
USA TODAY / Who are the top Americans at the draft?
Winnipeg Jets
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Manitoba's big shooter
Jets' Enstrom victimized in robbery, beating
Time for Jets' scouts to relax
Chevy looking to move up
Cheveldayoff focused on priorities as buzz builds at NHL
Draft
Jets' Enstrom robbed, assaulted in Sweden
Jets gear up for future
Jets ready to pick up ‘building blocks’ in 2013 NHL Entry
Draft
Winnipeg Jets' Toby Enstrom robbed, assaulted
SPORT-SCAN, INC. 941-284-4129
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Anaheim Ducks
Ducks not looking to move up in NHL draft
Anaheim will select 26th in the first round Sunday. The Kings don't have a
first-round pick.
By Lisa Dillman
5:13 PM PDT, June 29, 2013
A future most valuable player was sitting there when it came time for the
Ducks to make their pick, at No. 28, in the 2003 draft.
Now, in the name of Corey Perry, can lightning strike twice?
In two words: Very doubtful.
"That draft was off the charts," said Ducks General Manager Bob Murray,
chuckling.
"It usually takes something early to happen in the draft to make things
happen," said Murray, who was a scout with Vancouver in 2003. "For us to
get Cam Fowler, it's because [Ryan] Johansen went fourth. Things have to
happen to get lucky."
Murray and the Ducks were able to select the young defenseman when
Fowler dropped to No. 12 in the 2010 entry draft at Los Angeles, events set
in motion when the Columbus Blue Jackets opted to grab Johansen at No.
4.
Barring late movement, the Ducks and the Kings won't be in the limelight at
Sunday's entry draft at Newark, N.J. Colorado owns the top pick and
Avalanche officials are indicating they will take forward Nathan MacKinnon.
Until recently, conventional wisdom had the Avalanche targeting
defenseman Seth Jones. Jones, the son of former NBA player Popeye
Jones, played junior hockey for the Portland Winter Hawks.
The Ducks have a first-round pick (No. 26 overall) and the Kings do not, a
byproduct of last year's Jeff Carter trade. Columbus has three first-round
picks, 14th, 19th and 27th. The latter is from the Kings.
The Kings have 10 picks, including three in the fourth round. They don't
select until No. 57, in the second round.
"Given our history, it's safe to say we will try to move up," Kings GM Dean
Lombardi said of making a deal to get into the first round. "Whether we will
or not, you can't assess it until you are at the table. Again, at least going
into this draft, we have a lot of chips to play, if we want 'em.
"We'll probably try, but I'm not too optimistic. We'll probably do most of our
juggling in the middle rounds."
Murray said the Ducks probably would not try to move up from No. 26.
"We're comfortable where we are at," he said. "The top of the draft is very
good. You get to eight or nine and it's very good. …You could do just as
well at 36 as you could at 16.
"You never know. We've done OK with the later picks. We can't complain."
LA Times: LOADED: 06.30.2013
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Anaheim Ducks
Ducks were hatched 20 years ago
"I was there for two periods," Ferreira said. "And I looked at Pierre and said
'Let's get the hell out of here. I don't want anyone to think I like this guy.'"
Upon being drafted, Kariya told reporters he didn't want to jeopardize his
NCAA eligibility by saying he was going to Disneyland.
Team has reached two Stanley Cup Finals, winning one, but at the time, the
NHL expansion club owned by Disney seemed mighty strange.
But the best quote about Disney that day came from the Ducks' secondround pick, Nikolai Tsulygin, via an interpreter. The defenseman would
appear in only 22 games with the Ducks in a brief NHL career.
By Lisa Dillman
"He knows it's a new team formed just this year," the interpreter told The
Times. "He believes this is a company that mostly deals with cartoons but
now is starting in hockey as well."
1:40 PM PDT, June 29, 2013
History was made when Donald Duck, Mickey and Pluto ceded ground to
share Disney's corporate landscape with Guy, Paul and a noted brawler
with the ominous nickname, the "Grim Reaper."
Twenty years ago, the expansion Mighty Ducks of Anaheim took shape in
Quebec City through an expansion draft June 24, a mini-draft the next day
and the NHL entry draft June 26.
"It does make me feel a little old. I went from 26 to 46 … how did that
happen?" said goaltender Guy Hebert, who became the organization's first
player when Anaheim took him with its first selection in the expansion draft.
The snapshots of those building-block days in Quebec were numerous and
indelible.
There was a fresh-faced, 18-year-old Paul Kariya as their No. 1 selection
(fourth overall) in the entry draft. There was then-Disney chairman Michael
Eisner looking like a proud father at the draft table, wearing a Mighty Ducks
baseball cap and Mickey Mouse tie. And then there was the architect,
General Manager Jack Ferreira, whose painful skin condition flared up and
kept him hotel-bound, except for the drafts.
The birth of the Ducks and the other expansion team, the Florida Panthers,
was almost quaint, especially compared to the current days of texting and
Twitter. Players could, in fact, get away from it all and stay away.
Hebert, then with the Blues, had been told by St. Louis that he would get
picked by the Panthers or the Mighty Ducks. On the day of the expansion
draft, he escaped to his favorite trout stream near his family's home in Troy,
N.Y.
"I lost track of time and ended up coming home," said Hebert, who played
eight seasons with the Ducks. "And my younger brother came running out
of the house, 'Where have you been? You're a Duck!'"
Goaltender Glenn Healy was a Duck for a day, only he didn't know it until
after the fact. In two days, Healy went from the New York Islanders to
Anaheim to Tampa Bay and finally to the New York Rangers.
Talk about a long way to get from New York … to New York.
Anaheim took Healy in the expansion draft, the Lightning selected him in
the mini-draft the next day and the Rangers acquired him via trade later in
the day.
The headline in the Los Angeles Times: "Goalie Healy Quickly Becomes the
First Duck to Leave Nest."
All this happened when Healy was with some of his Islanders' teammates,
vacationing in Ireland. He learned of the wild series of moves only when
forward Pat Flatley decided to call home to talk to his mother.
"She told him, 'Glenn's been traded to the Rangers,'" said Healy, now a
commentator for Hockey Night in Canada. "He said, 'Go get the newspaper
and read it to me.' We were at one of the oldest pubs in Ireland and I can
still see him coming across the bar, 'You're not going to believe this. You're
on the Rangers now.'"
Kariya's life with the organization was considerably longer. He played nine
seasons for the Ducks and eventually would wrap up his NHL career with
989 points in 989 games. He led the Ducks in their run to the Stanley Cup
Final in 2003, with the Game 7 loss against the New Jersey Devils his last
game with the Ducks. He then played for Colorado, Nashville and St. Louis.
Ferreira, who is now a special assistant to Kings General Manager Dean
Lombardi, didn't need to see much of the prized prospect. He watched
Kariya play in the NCAA tournament when Kariya was a freshman at the
University of Maine. He told his assistant, Pierre Gauthier, that they weren't
staying for three periods.
The only thing cartoonish about the new team was the uniform. The Ducks
dropped "Mighty" from their name before the start of the 2006-07 season. In
other words, just before they won the Stanley Cup.
Hebert noted that it was probably more difficult for enforcers Todd Ewen
and Stu "Grim Reaper" Grimson to pull on the sweater, at first. Ewen and
Grimson, like Hebert, were taken by Anaheim in the expansion draft.
"It was little different — being the eggplant and teal," Hebert said. "With the
San Jose Sharks, no pun intended, they had dipped their toe in the water
with something that wasn't traditional.
"That led the way to the colors that Disney had put together for the team.
You think about the Original Six teams with history and whatever, then
you're like: 'Is this really the name and really the logo of the team that we're
going to represent?'
"I was an art major in college, so I have a bit of a creative side. I didn't mind
it. I'm a goalie, so quirky is in my blood."
LA Times: LOADED: 06.30.2013
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Anaheim Ducks
NHL: Kings, Ducks still find value in draft
History suggests both teams will find good talent after first round.
By Elliott Teaford @ElliottTeaford on Twitter
Posted: 06/29/2013 10:29:45 PM PDT
Updated: 06/29/2013 10:32:25 PM PDT
The Kings have 10 selections in today's NHL draft, but none in the first
round.
The Ducks have five picks, but their first-round selection isn't until No. 26
overall.
It might seem as if the draft is no big deal for the Kings and Ducks, but the
reality is nothing could be further from the truth. Today is the day all 30
teams in the NHL, even the successful ones like the Kings and Ducks, restock their prospect lists and hope for better days.
In 2003, for example, the Ducks were coming off their first trip to the
Stanley Cup Final. They lost in seven grueling games to the deeper and
more polished New Jersey Devils, and there were plenty of reasons to
believe their days as a struggling expansion franchise were history.
In fact, their future was about to get a whole lot brighter.
Ten years ago this month, the Ducks took center Ryan Getzlaf of the
Calgary Hitman of the Western Hockey League with the 19th overall
selection and then picked right wing Corey Perry of the London Knights of
the Ontario Hockey League at No. 28.
At the time, they were two names on a long list of 18-year-old prospects
from around the hockey-playing world. Soon enough, they became Stanley
Cup champions, Olympic champions and pillars of a franchise that had the
third-best regular-season record in the NHL
in 2012-13.
Each player signed an eight-year contract extension with the Ducks last
season.
Even if the Kings' roster appears all but set for the next few seasons after
consecutive trips to the Western Conference finals and the franchise's first
Stanley Cup title in 2012, today is critical to the club's future success. After
all, if you're not getting better, you're getting worse.
Or so the theory goes.
It's the same for the Ducks, whose foundation appears to be as strong as
the Kings. Both teams have improved over the years through trades and
free-agent signings, and their rosters have been built from the ground up,
with draft picks serving as cornerstones in each case.
For the Ducks, it's Getzlaf and Perry in '03 and left wing Bobby Ryan (first
round, '05), who make up their top line. There's also defenseman Cam
Fowler and right wing Emerson Etem (first round, '10) and outstanding
goaltending prospect John Gibson (second round, '11).
For the Kings, it's even more pronounced, with left wing Dustin Brown (first
round, '03), center Anze Kopitar (first round, '05), goalie Jonathan Quick
(third round, '05), defenseman Drew Doughty (first round, '08) and
defenseman Slava Voynov (second round, '08) playing key roles.
There's more to the draft than simply first-round picks, too.
Quick stands out as an example of the Kings' ability to unearth a gem
beyond the first round. After all, he was the 2012 Conn Smythe Trophy
winner as MVP of the playoffs after leading the Kings' unexpected march to
the Stanley Cup championship.
The Ducks have had success in the later rounds, too. Left wing Matt
Beleskey was a fourth-round selection in 2006. Going back a decade earlier
Matt Cullen, a center who played last season with the Minnesota Wild, was
a second-round pick in 1996.
So, bottom line, there is no such thing as a meaningless draft.
LA Daily News: LOADED: 06.30.2013
682945
Boston Bruins
Bruins’ Nathan Horton to test free agency
By Fluto Shinzawa
| Globe Staff
June 30, 2013
JERSEY CITY — Peter Chiarelli once considered Milan Lucic, David Krejci,
and Nathan Horton the best line in hockey.
On Saturday, the Bruins general manager learned it will not remain intact in
2013-14.
simple math, there’s going to be players available. I think what happens is
you may have more trouble with demand and supply. I think there’s going to
be players that want to play for less. That’s where, if we have to mix and
match a little bit, I think we’ll be pretty good. Because we still have a very
strong, contending team. I think there will be players that will want to play
for us, if we get to that point. I don’t think we’ll get to that point, but if we
have to . . . ”
The Bruins could receive assets by trading Andrew Ference’s negotiating
rights. Several teams have inquired. Chiarelli has allowed Kurt Overhardt,
Ference’s agent, to talk with clubs about acquiring the defenseman’s rights.
Ference will become unrestricted on Friday. Ference and his wife have two
young daughters, and he said their education is first and foremost when
deciding on his destination.
“I’m not going to stand in his way,” Chiarelli said. “Andy’s been a warrior for
us. I want to help him as much as I can.”
Nathan Horton’s camp informed the Bruins he will not re-sign with the club
prior to Friday, when free agency opens. The first-line right wing will be one
of the prime targets on the open market. This will be Horton’s first
opportunity to become an unrestricted free agent.
The Bruins are also trying to acquire a first-round pick in Sunday’s draft.
They ceded a conditional 2013 second-round pick to Dallas as part of the
Jagr trade. The second-rounder became a first-round pick once the Bruins
beat the Rangers and advanced to the Eastern Conference finals. If the
Bruins don’t get back into the first round, their first pick will be 60th overall.
“Pursuant to his rights under the CBA, Nathan has informed the Bruins that
he is going to explore his options as an unrestricted free agent,” Paul
Krepelka, Horton’s agent, wrote in an e-mail.
“I think any GM who went into the draft without a first-rounder would have to
do that,” Chiarelli said of trying to get back into Round 1. “So, of course, I
would.”
Horton is coming off a six-year, $24 million contract, and could command a
$6 million annual payday from another club. The Bruins, facing a cap
crunch, would have been hard-pressed to offer Horton a similar salary.
Buffalo and Toronto are two Eastern Conference teams that could be
interested in the 28-year-old power forward. This could be Horton’s final
shot at a bonanza. He will require surgery on his dislocated left shoulder.
Before this year, Horton had his two most recent seasons cut short because
of concussions. Horton’s rugged style puts him at greater risk of injury than
finesse forwards.
On the restricted side, the Bruins have given qualifying offers to Tuukka
Rask and Jordan Caron. They have yet to qualify Kaspars Daugavins and
goaltending prospect Michael Hutchinson. Chiarelli said they still might
tender offers to both players.
The Bruins considered re-signing Horton among their first orders of
business prior to Friday. Horton appeared in 169 regular-season games for
the Bruins over the last three years. He had 56 goals and 51 assists.
In the playoffs, Horton had 15 goals and 21 assists in 43 games. Lucic,
Krejci, and Horton combined for 23 goals and 41 assists during the 2013
postseason.
“I love the guys,” Horton said Wednesday, when asked if he wanted to
return to the Bruins. “The team’s great. It’s a fun place to play. Other than
that, I don’t know what’s going to happen. I couldn’t tell you throughout the
year what was going to happen. I don’t know. That’s all I know. We’ll see
what happens.”
The Bruins acquired Horton and Gregory Campbell from Florida on June
22, 2010, for Dennis Wideman, a 2010 first-round pick, and a 2011 thirdrounder.
The Bruins are now down their top two right wings, as Jaromir Jagr will not
be re-signed.
Tyler Seguin, Rich Peverley, and Shawn Thornton are the remaining right
wings. Carl Soderberg could also play on the right side, although he’s
primarily a center and left wing.
There was chatter on Saturday about teams inquiring about Seguin’s
availability. The Bruins would have had an even bigger hole at right wing
had they moved the 21-year-old. But Horton’s declaration and the team’s
lack of depth at the position may have prompted the Bruins to douse any
rivals’ excitement about acquiring the third-year pro.
“Not so fast on Seguin,” a team source said.
Horton’s decision may also impact Peverley’s future. Peverley was a trade
candidate to clear cap space for Horton. Peverley draws a $3.25 million
average annual salary.
With Horton out of the picture, the Bruins will have to look elsewhere for a
top-two right wing. Because the cap is shrinking from $70.2 million to $64.3
million in 2013-14, Chiarelli expected rival teams to place players on the
trade market. The Bruins could also fill in the holes via free agency starting
Friday.
“What I see is there’s going to be a lot of players available,” Chiarelli said.
“There may not be right now. But with the cap going down, just out of doing
Boston Globe LOADED: 06.30.2013
682946
Boston Bruins
Seth Jones hopes to make his own history in NHL
Realizes responsibility that comeswith beingNHLminority
By Baxter Holmes
| Globe Staff
June 30, 2013
Possible homecoming
Colorado holds the first pick in the draft, and if the Avalanche select Jones,
they’ll be bringing him home, in a way, to the place where he fell in love with
hockey.
At 5 years old, he first slipped on a pair of skates, rentals, on New Year’s
Eve as 1999 turned to 2000 and the world was supposed to end because of
Y2K and all that.
But when Jones first stepped onto the ice on a pond in Beaver Creek,
Colo., where his parents took him and his two brothers, Caleb and Justin,
he appeared, his father said, like a “natural.”
He didn’t slip, or slide. No, he only glided, pausing to skate backward or
stop.
There are a few minutes before living, breathing history walks into the hotel
conference room and shakes Seth Jones’s hand with a grip strong enough
to break it.
Eighteen months later, Jones sat center ice, pounding on the glass during
Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final between Colorado and New Jersey, which
the Avalanche won.
Jones is sitting on the end of the long wooden table, in a dark gray suit with
a striped blue tie. He is 18 and a very talented hockey player who Sunday
will be one of the top picks in the NHL draft. His hands are crossed in his
lap. His back is to the doorway.
The intensity, the speed, the physical play, the determination on the
players’ faces to take that one game and win it all — Jones had never seen
anything like it before.
Then, history walks in. He is wearing khaki slacks and a black polo shirt
with the Boston
Bruins logo — the spoked-B — over its heart. He is barrel-chested with
forearms thick as logs. He is balding on top. He’s 77 years old. Jones rises,
turns, and is humbled.
They had never met until just now, but Jones knows full well what Willie
O’Ree did for hockey — and, by extension, for Jones — when O’Ree
became the first black man to play it
professionally. Which O’Ree did with the Bruins in 1958 against Montreal.
They sit. For the next 15 minutes, O’Ree talks about the old days, which
weren’t always so good.
“There was a period and a time when it slowed down,” O’Ree says, “but I
knew in my head it was still there. I knew when I stepped on the ice during
some part of the game, there would be some racial slur or some racial
remark directed toward me.”
“Once I saw that game, I knew I wanted to be a hockey player,” he said. “I
knew one day I wanted to lift the Stanley Cup.”
There was a point when his father, Popeye Jones, the former NBA forward
for several teams including the Celtics, met Avalanche legend Joe Sakic at
the Pepsi Center in Denver.
Popeye told Sakic that his son was becoming interested in hockey.
Sakic, who is now the Avalanche’s executive vice president of hockey
operations, eyed Popeye’s large frame — 6 feet 8 inches, about 250
pounds.
“Well, from the look of you, your kids are going to be huge,” Sakic said.
“Just make sure they know how to skate.”
From there, Seth Jones started taking figure skating lessons.
If there was a moment when Popeye became convinced that his son had
special talent, it came when Seth was 14 and they were living in Dallas.
Jones doesn’t speak. He leans forward on his chair situated a few feet from
O’Ree, and Jones listens. At times he shakes his head in disbelief.
On the other end of the phone was Dallas Stars defenseman Trevor Daley,
a family friend who had seen Jones play, and, Popeye said, “He was
raving.”
Later, Jones will say that not once has the idea of race crossed his mind as
he’s played hockey — and he’s played it almost all over the world for much
of his life.
“You could tell he was going to be a special hockey player,” said Trevor
Hanas, who coached Jones on a youth team in Dallas and is also a scout
for the Portland Winterhawks of the Western Hockey League.
Jones will say that he’s never heard one slur, one racial remark. Not one.
“His smarts for the game is probably what separates him from a lot of other
defensemen,” Hanas said. “He’s just really intelligent — with and without
the puck. When you combine that with great skating skills and great size,
now you’ve got the full package.”
And there, in the few feet that separate them in the hotel conference room
in Copley Square, lies the chasm of disconnect between O’Ree and Jones,
between what it meant to be black and to play hockey professionally back
then versus now.
It matters to Jones, in no small part because he’s told at nearly every turn
that he’s the next role model for blacks and other minority races in the
white-dominant sport, where last season there were 44 non-white players
among the 720 on NHL rosters — just 6.1 percent.
“He has as much or more potential to change the face of the game probably
since Willie O’Ree,” said Bryant McBride, an entrepreneur and investor who
is black and was formerly the NHL’s vice president of business
development.
Change the face of the game.
There might come a day when Jones can only think of hockey. But that day
isn’t today. There’s progress to be made. He wants to help. He wants to
grow the sport in inner cities.
“I’m trying to be a role model and do whatever I can,” he said.
Yes, only so much progress has been made, and there are still marks —
insignificant though they may seem — to be made that are tied only to the
color of someone’s skin.
Jones could make that history Sunday, when he might become the first
black player to be selected first overall in the NHL draft.
By 15, Jones was playing for USA Hockey’s U-17 and U-18 national teams.
Then, he graduated high school early and joined the Winterhawks, where
the 6-4, 205-pound Jones became the WHL’s rookie of the year after
scoring 14 goals and 46 assists in 61 games.
Winterhawks coach and general manager Mike Johnston praised Jones’s
IQ, even-keeled personality, smoothness on the ice, evasiveness for a
player his size — and more.
“He’s very mature,” Johnston said. “When you talk to him, you would think
he’s probably 21. He does have that presence. He’s quiet, but he leads
through example.”
Early lessons learned
Jones’s mother, Amy, is white. His father, Popeye, is black. They’re
divorced now.
But as they raised their children, they taught them that they are black and
white.
“You understand slavery and the struggles that black people went through,
but you also understand the culture of white people,” Popeye preached.
Those lessons, Amy said, were a way for their children to avoid viewing life
through the prism of race, which she said was never really discussed
anyway.
But, she said, it has come to light more in the past few years as Jones has
risen through the hockey ranks of a sport in which there simply isn’t much
diversity.
“He understands the magnitude of it,” she said. “He does understand he
can do a lot for the sport, if he does it the right way.”
And so we go back into that hotel conference room, where O’Ree is talking
and Jones is listening.
There’s a point when O’Ree reminisces about fighting all the time on the
ice, not because of racism but because he was speared and head-butted
and cross-checked all the time and he had no helmet or shield because you
just didn’t wear that stuff back then.
“I can’t even imagine,” Jones says, shaking his head once more.
But after telling Jones to conduct himself accordingly on and off the ice,
O’Ree starts to talk about image.
“We’re three individuals inside ourselves,” he begins.
“We’re the person we think we are. We’re the person who other people
think we are. And we’re the person that we really are. So just look inside
yourself and say, ‘This is the person that I am, this is what I want to do,’ and
go out and stay focused.”
Jones nods.
Years ago, when O’Ree broke into the league, he was asked if he could
envision not just more black players but more players of all races playing
hockey one day. He said yes. He meant it, too.
Years later, in this hotel conference room, O’Ree, with the Bruins’ spoked-B
over his heart, stands and shakes the hand of a player he believes can be a
role model just as he was.
And perhaps one day, when enough progress has been made and all that
matters is the game, Jones can pass down stories to another future role
model, to show how far their game has come.
Boston Globe LOADED: 06.30.2013
682947
Boston Bruins
Nathan Horton going to free agency
Posted by Fluto Shinzawa, Globe Staff June 29, 2013 01:55 PM
Nathan Horton will not re-sign with the Bruins prior to next Friday. Instead,
Horton will become an unrestricted free agent and test the open market. It
is highly unlikely Horton will re-sign with the Bruins after next Friday.
The Bruins were informed of Horton’s decision today.
“Pursuant to his rights under the CBA, Nathan has informed the Bruins that
he is going to explore his options as an unrestricted free agent,” Paul
Krepelka, Horton’s agent, said in a statement.
Horton appeared in 169 regular-season games for the Bruins over the last
three years. Horton scored 56 goals and 51 assists.
In the playoffs, Horton scored 15 goals and 21 assists in 43 games. Horton
was the right wing alongside Milan Lucic and David Krejci. GM Peter
Chiarelli classified the threesome as the best line in the NHL.
Horton should command a bigger contract on the market than had he
remained in Boston. The 28-year-old has a concussion history and will
require surgery on his left shoulder. But Horton has raised his performance
during his two active postseasons.
It’s possible the Bruins could trade Horton’s negotiating rights. However,
given Horton’s desire to hit the open market, the Bruins might not be able to
demand much in return.
The Bruins are now down their top two right wings. Jaromir Jagr will not be
re-signed.
Boston Globe LOADED: 06.30.2013
682948
Boston Bruins
Trade talk active as Bruins prepare for draft
Posted by Fluto Shinzawa, Globe Staff June 29, 2013 12:35 PM
JERSEY CITY, N.J. – The 2013 NHL Draft is just over 24 hours away from
starting. But the Bruins’ six picks are not atop the team’s priority list.
The Bruins must re-sign Nathan Horton prior to next Friday, when he will
become an unrestricted free agent. To do so, the Bruins will have to shed
salary via trade.
“It’s actually pretty active,” GM Peter Chiarelli said during a press
conference this morning. “When [Vincent] Lecavalier got bought out, it’s
kind of thrown some teams for a loop. There’s a trickledown effect. It gives
everybody pause for thought. It’s been fairly active.”
Rich Peverley is the leading candidate to be traded. Peverley carries a
$3.25 million average annual cap hit.
* The Bruins will not re-sign Andrew Ference. But they may receive an
asset for the UFA-to-be. Several clubs have inquired about acquiring
Ference’s negotiating rights. Chiarelli has given Kurt Overhardt, Ference’s
agent, permission to ask around. “I’m not going to stand in his way,”
Chiarelli said. “Andy’s been a warrior for us. I want to help him as much as I
can.”
* The Bruins have qualified Tuukka Rask and Jordan Caron. They have yet
to qualify Kaspars Daugavins and Michael Hutchinson. They may still do so,
said Chiarelli.
Boston Globe LOADED: 06.30.2013
682949
Boston Bruins
B’s lose Nathan Horton
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Author(s):
Steve Conroy
JERSEY CITY, N.J. — In the first of what could be several big personnel
changes for the Bruins this draft weekend, Nathan Horton informed the
Bruins yesterday that he will not be re-signing with the Stanley Cup finalists,
according to his agent.
Paul Krepelka said it’s Horton’s personal choice to test the free agent
waters — and it was not a decision made for financial reasons.
“There weren’t any back-and-forth negotiations or anything like that,”
Krepelka said. “Nathan just wanted a new start.”
The Horton camp and the B’s were working on a trade for the right to
negotiate with the right winger exclusively before the opening of the free
agent market on July 5.
What Horton’s reasons are for moving on Krepelka wasn’t saying, but it’s a
big loss for the Bruins. Horton combined with left winger Milan Lucic and
center David Krejci to make a formidable, physical top line.
Despite some regular-season inconsistencies, Horton proved to be a
money player in the playoffs. Before getting knocked out of the Cup finals
with a concussion in 2011, he had eight goals — including three huge
game-winners — and nine assists. This year, he had 7-12-19 totals in 43
regular-season games and was a league-leading plus-20 in the playoffs.
His production tailed off in the finals against the Chicago Blackhawks after
he suffered a dislocated shoulder, but he played through the injury while
wearing a brace and is expected to have offseason surgery.
With some big-name players becoming unexpectedly available via buyouts,
most notably the Tampa Bay Lightning parting ways with Vincent
Lecavalier, and Horton on the move, this draft weekend is shaping up as a
big news-maker. With the Bruins looking to both dump salary in order to
free up money for a deal with goalie Tuukka Rask and expected to jump
into the bidding war for Lecavalier, it’s a good bet they will be involved in
the horse-trading.
At his media availability yesterday morning before the Horton news broke,
B’s general manager Peter Chiarelli said the trade talk was picking up.
“It’s actually pretty active. I think when Lecavalier got bought out, it’s thrown
some teams for a loop and there’s a trickle down effect,” Chiarelli said. “It
gives everyone pause for thought. But it’s been fairly active. I think a lot of
teams are trying to figure out who they may buy out, so they’ve got time
before July 5, and they’ve got assets that are available tomorrow in the
draft, so it’s picking up steam.”
To sign both Rask and a Horton replacement, the B’s would clearly have to
move some salary. The most likely candidate would be forward Rich
Peverley and his $3.25 million. But there’s been a lot of rumblings here that
the name of Tyler Seguin, whose maturation process on and off the ice has
been slower than anticipated, is being bandied about. Seguin carries a cap
hit of $5.75 million for the next six years, a hefty price for a forward who
scored once in four playoff rounds.
Chiarelli didn’t mention any of his players by name in trade discussions, but
he did say he was looking to get a first-round pick, which he lost in the
Jaromir Jagr deal in March, in today’s draft being hosted by the New Jersey
Devils at the Prudential Center in Newark. The GM estimated there would
be five or six players available in the draft who could play in the NHL right
away. Any deal involving Seguin would surely start with a first-round pick,
and a high one at that.
While the salary cap is going down to $64.3 million for the upcoming
season, there’s wide speculation it will go right back up the following year.
With that in mind, Chiarelli doesn’t want to proceed rashly.
“Acting rashly may be replacing something in a rash manner, or I get rid of
something in a rash manner,” he said. “So I have to be careful.”
Despite the current situation with teams needing to shed players to become
cap compliant, Chiarelli doesn’t believe he’ll have to accept a paltry return
just to move salary. But if worse comes to worst, the B’s could dip into the
growing free agent market.
“Based on my discussions, I don’t think that will happen. But you never say
never,” Chiarelli said. “We could have trouble with the expanded supply, but
I think there’ll be players who want to play for less. If we have to mix and
match a little, I think we’ll be able to do it because we still have a strong
contending team and there are going to be players who’ll want to play for
us. If we get to that point, but I don’t think we will.”
Chiarelli reported being contacted by teams who want to obtain the
negotiating rights to defenseman Andrew Ference, whom the B’s will not be
able to afford under the new cap.
“I’ve had a couple of teams call on Andy,” Chiarelli said. “I’m not going to
stand in his way. He’s been a warrior for us and I want to help him as much
as I can.”
Bruins notes
The B’s could take Rask to arbitration, and vice versa.
“I don’t want to go to arbitration with him. I’ve talked to his agent (Bill Zito),
and we’re trying to work something out,” Chiarelli said. . . .
Chiarelli gave qualifying offers to forward Jordan Caron and Rask, which
simply keep restricted free agents under the B’s control. The GM has not
made a decision on whether or not to qualify forward Kaspars Daugavins
and/or goalie Michael Hutchinson. . . .
Assistant director of amateur scouting Scott Fitzgerald is on the mend from
a March car accident and unable to attend the draft, but he had input in the
process.
“We had our amateur meetings at the Spaulding Rehab, they were great,”
Chiarelli said. “Fitzy was in a bed and participated, and he’s home now. So
he’s doing well.”
Boston Herald LOADED: 06.30.2013
682950
Boston Bruins
Stephen Harris’ postseason Bruins report card
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Author(s):
Stephen Harris
No one in their right mind, after watching the Bruins struggle individually
and collectively through a mediocre regular season, could have imagined
the team would come within two wins of hoisting the Stanley Cup.
Bruins general manager Peter Chiarelli characterized it as a “difficult regular
season.”
“We were the fourth seed and everything,” he said. “But just the way that
we played, it was a challenge.”
league-high 29:31 — including 45:05 in the triple-overtime Game 1 of the
finals.
Torey Krug A
The unsung youngster was a game-changer for the B’s, arriving for the start
of the second round (after playing just three previous NHL games) and
scoring a goal in four of his first five games. He had 4-2-6 totals and a plus5, played fine defensively and figures to be a key Bruin going forward.
Adam McQuaid B+
The lanky 26-year-old quietly played his sound and physical game, with 59
hits and 37 blocked shots. Posted totals of 2-2-4 and a plus-9, which led B’s
blueliners. He scored one of the most satisfying goals of the playoffs in
beating the Penguins, 1-0, to sweep that series.
Dennis Seidenberg B
Like Chara, he struggled in the finals (minus-5), outplayed by the top
Chicago line centered by Jonathan Toews. He totaled just one assist in 18
games, but played very strong, shutdown D in the first three rounds.
Andrew Ference B
The Bruins opened the postseason May 1 with a 4-1 win against the
Toronto Maple Leafs. It spoke volumes about the season that this game,
after 48 regular-season matches, was regarded by many as the first truly
strong, complete game the B’s had played.
He suffered a broken foot early in the playoffs and missed seven games,
but returned and played well beside Boychuk. Now a salary cap victim, his
agility, puck-moving, smarts, toughness and off-ice leadership will be
missed — and valued highly by his next employer.
It turned out to be a valid indicator that the team had indeed been able to
“flip the switch” and start playing the right way when it mattered most. Yes,
there were some severe relapses to mediocrity during that first-round
series, and the B’s had the Hockey Gods on their side when they pulled off
the miracle comeback late in Game 7.
Matt Bartkowski B
Having survived that looming calamity — and avoided all the repercussions
that might have ensued — the Bruins made it look remarkably easy against
the New York Rangers and then, astoundingly, the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Chiarelli said he, “was amazed, actually — not surprised, but amazed at our
push in the playoffs.”
It wasn’t surprising, because anyone who watched the B’s capture the 2011
Stanley Cup knew what this team was capable of. But it was amazing to
see it after such a sub-par regular season.
So many incredible things happened to the Bruins over the past seven
weeks. So many individuals played to the peak of their talents. The team
executed the Claude Julien game plan well. And with a better bounce of the
puck here or there, we might well have seen a Duck Boat parade down
Boylston Street this weekend.
So as painful as it was to see the Chicago Blackhawks passing around the
Cup at the Garden Monday, nobody interested in the Bruins should feel
anything but elation and pride over what this team accomplished in these
playoffs.
With that we hand out our postseason grades:
GOALIE
Tuukka Rask A
Another youngster prepared well by AHL time at Providence, he played two
games vs. Toronto and all five vs. New York. Had 1-1-2 totals and minus-1.
He played with confidence and skated the puck up ice very effectively. B’s
fans should be very happy this guy wasn’t dealt for Jarome Iginla.
Wade Redden B
The veteran played five of the first six playoff games and scored the B’s first
goal in Game 1 vs. Leafs. The unrestricted free agent is still a useful Dman, maybe here.
Dougie Hamilton BA healthy scratch six of last nine regular-season games, the 19-year-old
played seven games vs. the Leafs and Rangers and did well, averaging
15:47, with 0-3-3 totals and an even plus/minus. The B’s need this kid to
become a Rob Blake-type star and have good reason to believe he will.
FORWARDS
Patrice Bergeron A+
If there was a higher grade, he’d get it. The incredible courage Bergeron
displayed in playing Game 6 vs. Chicago with multiple, severe injuries is
now part of NHL lore. The entire postseason was filled with his hockey
heroics: He had the game-tying goal at 19:09 of the third period in Game 7
vs. Toronto, and then the OT winner; he set up a Game 1 overtime goal vs.
New York; he had a second-OT goal in Game 3 vs. Pittsburgh. He posted
totals of 9-6-15, plus-2 and led NHL with 61.5 faceoff rate. He played
smothering defense vs. superstar opponents. Is there a better all-round
forward in the game?
Not many observers outside of Boston would have ranked Rask on the
short list of elite goalies two months ago. That has changed, after the 26year-old delivered a sensational postseason — featuring a 1.88 goalsagainst average, .940 save percentage and three shutouts, despite the fact
he faced 87 more shots than Chicago’s Corey Crawford, in one fewer
game. Rask can easily demand a $6 million-plus (average) new deal.
David Krejci A
DEFENSEMEN
Milan Lucic A
Johnny Boychuk A
After scoring one goal in 44 regular-season games, the hard-shooting Dman potted six in the playoffs. Matched against some very strong second
lines, he was plus-4. He led the league by blocking 62 shots — many of
them very painfully — and had 74 hits.
Zdeno Chara AYes, Chara struggled in the final — maybe because of a painful hip ailment.
The Blackhawks eventually stopped trying to avoid him and instead directly
attacked him, and he was on the ice for nine of their last 10 goals. Still, he
had an excellent postseason, with 3-12-15 totals and plus-7, averaging a
As in 2011, he led the playoffs in scoring (9-17-26 in 22 games), seven
points more than runner-up Patrick Kane got in 23 games, and was plus-13.
Totaled 0-5-5 and minus-1 in finals. Dominated the Toronto series with 5-813 totals.
His great leadership qualities were obvious — and so was the fear he put
into opposing defensemen as he thundered in on the forecheck. Totaled 712-19 and a plus-12 in the postseason, 4-2-6 in the finals. His 102 hits led
the league, 17 more than the next guy. He even went 18-16 on faceoffs.
Nathan Horton A
Re-dislocated his shoulder in Game 1 of finals yet kept playing. With arm
motion limited, he totaled just 0-2-2 in the six games. Overall, though, he
logged 7-12-19 and plus-20 — one of the best playoff plus/minuses ever —
and had two game-winning goals. A UFA-to-be, he earned $5.5 million (prorated) this season, and will be a tough re-sign for cap-pressed B’s, but a
guy you’d hate to see walk away.
Gregory Campbell A
# GOALIE GPI GS MIN GAA W L OT SO SA GA SV% G A PIM
The courage he showed in playing for nearly a minute on a broken legin
Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals will never be forgotten, but he
also performed quite well in 15 playoff games. He totaled 3-4-7 and a plus-7
and scored twice in Game 5 vs. New York. Would a healthy Campbell have
meant the Cup? Maybe.
40 Tuukka Rask 22 22 1466 1.88 14 8 3 3 761 46 .940 0 0 0
Daniel Paille AThe erstwhile fourth-liner took on far larger role and posted 4-5-9 totals and
plus-4. Netted three game-winners, two in finals: Game 2 (OT) and Game
3.
Brad Marchand BThe fast, pesky winger had three strong rounds (16 games; 4-9-13, plus-7),
but then accomplished little in final — going scoreless and minus-3, with
just 10 shots-on-goal. He had the overtime goal in Game 1 against the
Rangers.
Jaromir Jagr C
Much-maligned for scoring zero playoff goals despite 58 shots, he did
contribute 10 assists. As slow as he was, Jagr’s ability to hang on to the
puck did draw and occupy defenders. Final analysis? A curious sideshow.
# POS PLAYER GP G A P +/- PIM PP SH GW S S%
55 D Johnny Boychuk 22 6 1 7 4 10 0 0 1 63 9.5
47 D Torey Krug 15 4 2 6 5 0 3 0 0 34 11.8
33 D Zdeno Chara 22 3 12 15 7 20 0 0 0 55 5.5
54 D Adam McQuaid 22 2 2 4 9 10 0 0 1 11 18.2
6 D Wade Redden 5 1 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 9 11.1
43 D Matt Bartkowski 7 1 1 2 -1 4 0 0 0 12 8.3
27 D Dougie Hamilton 7 0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 11 0.0
21 D Andrew Ference 14 0 2 2 2 4 0 0 0 19 0.0
44 D Dennis Seidenberg 18 0 1 1 1 4 0 0 0 30 0.0
# POS PLAYER GP G A P +/- PIM PP SH GW S S%
46 C David Krejci 22 9 17 26 13 14 1 0 2 56 16.1
37 C Patrice Bergeron 22 9 6 15 2 13 4 0 2 71 12.7
Chris Kelly C
Just couldn’t find an offensive touch, with 2-1-3 totals in 22 games,
including the first goal on Game 6 of the title series. Was a minus-7. A key
guy on pretty strong penalty-kill unit (88.7 percent).
Shawn Thornton C
Did his gritty job fairly well in limited ice time (7:20 per game), totaled 0-4-4
and a plus-3, and was often trusted by coach Claude Julien with shifts late
in tight games.
11 C Gregory Campbell 15 3 4 7 7 11 0 0 1 20 15.0
23 C Chris Kelly 22 2 1 3 -7 19 0 0 0 26 7.7
49 C Rich Peverley 21 2 0 2 -8 12 1 0 0 35 5.7
19 C Tyler Seguin 22 1 7 8 -2 4 0 0 0 70 1.4
34 C Carl Soderberg 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0.0
17 L Milan Lucic 22 7 12 19 12 14 0 0 0 42 16.7
Rich Peverley C-
63 L Brad Marchand 22 4 9 13 4 21 0 0 1 57 7.0
Another cog in a B’s third line that was so good in 2011, yet so
disappointing this year. The speedy forward had just 2-0-2 totals and
minus-8 in 21 games.
20 L Daniel Paille 22 4 5 9 4 0 0 1 3 27 14.8
Kaspars Daugavins D
16 L Kaspars Daugavins 6 0 0 0 -1 2 0 0 0 9 0.0
He had little to offer in limited duty, going scoreless in six games.
18 R Nathan Horton 22 7 12 19 20 14 2 0 3 38 18.4
Tyler Seguin D-
68 R Jaromir Jagr 22 0 10 10 -1 8 0 0 0 58 0.0
This probably ought to be an F, but 21-year-old did display an improved
compete-level and grit at times. However, for a No. 2-overall pick handed a
six-year, $34.5 million contract extension, one goal in 22 playoff games —
despite 70 shots-on-goal, plus a few posts — is a career low-point. Was an
injury involved? No one’s ever confirmed that.
Carl Soderberg Inc.
Tossed into the fire in Game 5 vs. Chicago, he did some good things. But
looks a bit slow for this level.
COACHING
Claude Julien & Co. A
Julien’s chief assistant, Geoff Ward, doesn’t get nearly the credit he
deserves. Indeed, his whole staff — Doug Houda, Doug Jarvis and Bob
Essensa — does a terrific job. The Bruins didn’t play their system well in the
regular season, but snapped back into it in the postseason. Julien & Co.
actually opened up more offensively, with very aggressive and effective
pinching by D-men. The coaches did a great job on matchups, and in
juggling the personnel when numerous players were limited by injuries.
FRONT OFFICE
Peter Chiarelli B
Chiarelli’s acquistion of Jagr was kind of a success, although pricey (this
year’s first-round pick, plus two minor-league prospects). Watching Iginla
play so lazily on the backcheck, Bruins fans should be delighted that the B’s
deal for him (Bartkowski, Alex Khokhlachev) fell through. Redden proved to
be useful pickup. And last year’s NCAA free agent signee, Krug, goes down
as a great move. Now, Chiarelli has his work cut out for him, trying to build
his ’13-14 roster under a squeezed salary cap — so that the B’s have a
happier ending next year.
22 L Shawn Thornton 22 0 4 4 3 18 0 0 0 26 0.0
Boston Herald LOADED: 06.30.2013
682951
Boston Bruins
Nathan Horton won’t return to Bruins; Tyler Seguin cited in trade chatter
going to stand in his way. He’s been a warrior for us and I want to help him
as much as I can.”
It’s a good bet he’ll now get a couple of calls on Horton’s rights as well.
Boston Herald LOADED: 06.30.2013
Saturday, June 29, 2013
Author(s):
Steve Conroy
JERSEY CITY, N.J. — Nathan Horton informed team management today
that he will not be re-signing with the Bruins, according to his agent Paul
Krepelka, who stated that it’s Horton’s personal choice to test the free agent
waters. Krepelka said there were no back-and-forth negotiations.
It’s a big loss for the Bruins. Not only did Horton combine with Milan Lucic
and David Krejci to make a formidable, physical top line, he was a big part
in the B’s two runs to the Stanley Cup finals in the last three years.
That news, which broke in early afternoon, added a wrinkle to an already
very interesting weekend for the Bruins, and the league in general. With
some big name players becoming unexpectedly available via buyouts -—
most notably Vincent Lecavalier and now Horton — draft weekend is
shaping up to be a newsmaker.
And with the Bruins looking to both off-load salary to sign goalie Tuukka
Rask and possibly jump in the bidding war for Lecavalier now that Horton
won’t be back, it’s a good bet the B’s will be involved in the horse-trading.
And Tyler Seguin’s name has surfaced.
At his media availability this morning, general manager Peter Chiarelli said
the trade talk is picking up.
“It’s actually pretty active. I think when Lecavalier got bought out, it’s thrown
some teams for a loop and there’s a trickle down effect,” said Chiarelli, who
could kick the tires on Lecavalier himself. “It gives everyone pause for
thought. But it’s been fairly active. I think a lot of teams are trying to figure
out who they may buy out, so they’ve got time before July 5, and they’ve
got assets that are available tomorrow in the draft, so it’s picking up steam.”
To sign both Rask and a Horton replacement, the B’s would clearly have to
some salary and the most obvious casualty would be Rich Peverley and his
$3.25 million. But there have been a lot rumblings here that Seguin, whose
maturation process on and off the ice has been slower than anticipated, has
been put on the trade block. Seguin has a cap hit of $5.75 million for the
next six years, a hefty price for a player who scored once in four playoff
rounds.
Chiarelli didn’t mention any of his players by name in trade discussions, but
he did say he was looking to recoup a first-round pick, which he lost in the
Jaromir Jagr deal. He estimated that this draft pool includes five or six
players who could play in the NHL next year. Any deal involving Seguin
would surely start with a first-round pick, and high one at that.
But while the salary cap is going down to $64.3 million for the 2013-14
season, there’s wide speculation that it will go right back up the following
year. With that in mind, Chiarelli doesn’t want to proceed rashly.
“Acting rashly may be replacing something in a rash manner, or I get rid of
something in a rash manner. So I have to be careful,” he said.
Despite the current situation with teams needing to shed players to become
cap compliant, Chiarelli doesn’t believe he’ll have to accept a paltry return
just to move salary. But if worse comes to worst, the B’s could dip into the
growing free agent market.
“Based on my discussions, I don’t think that will happen. But you never say
never,” said Chiarelli. “We could have trouble with the expanded supply, but
I think there will be players who want to play for less. If we have to mix and
match a little, I think we’ll be able to do it because we still have a strong
contending team and there are going to be players who’ll want to play for
us. If we get to that point, but I don’t think we will.”
Chiarelli said that he’s gotten calls from teams who want to obtain the
negotiating rights to Andrew Ference, whom the B’s will not be able to
afford under the new cap.
“I’ve had a couple of teams call on Andy,” said Chiarelli. “I’ve spoken with
Andy’s agent and I’ve actually given Andy’s agent ton talk to teams. I’m not
682952
Boston Bruins
Horton won't be back with Bruins; Trade talk buzzing at draft; Seguin's
name coming up
Saturday, June 29, 2013 -- Steve Conroy
JERSEY CITY—Nathan Horton has informed the Bruins today that he will
not be re-signing in Boston, according to his agent Paul Krepelka. Krepelka
said it's Horton's personal choice to test the free agent waters and that
there were no back-and-forth negotiations.
It's a big loss for the B's. Not only did Horton combine with Milan Lucic and
David Krejci to make a formidable, physical top line, he was a big part in the
B's two runs to the Stanley Cup Finals in the last three years.
That news, which broke just minutes ago, added a wrinkle to an already
very interesting weekened for the Bruins and the league in general. With
some big name players becoming unexpectedly available via buyouts –
most notably Vincent Lecavalier and now Horton – this draft weekend is
shaping up to be a news-maker.
And with the Bruins looking to both offload salary to sign goalie Tuukka
Rask and possible jump in the bidding war for Lecavalier now that Horton
won't be back, it's a good bet the B's will be involved in the horse-trading.
At his media availability earlier today, GM Peter Chiarelli said the trade talk
is picking up.
“It's actually pretty active. I think when Lecavalier got bought out, it's thrown
some teams for a loop and there's a trickle down effect,” said Chiarelli, who
could kic the tires on Lecavalier himself. “It gives everyone pause for
thought. But it's been fairly active. I think a lot of teams are trying to figure
out who they may buy out, so they've got time before July 5, and they've got
assets that are available tomorrow in the draft, so it's picking up steam.”
To sign both Rask and a Horton replacement, the B's would clearly have to
some salary and the most obvious casualty would be Rich Peverley and his
$3.25 million. But there's been a lot rumblings here that the name of Tyler
Seguin, whose maturation process on and off the ice has been slower than
anticipated, is being bandied about. Seguin has a cap hit of $5.75 million for
the next six years, a hefty price for a player who scred once in four playoff
rounds.
Chiarelli didn't mention any of his players by name in trade discussions, but
he did say he was looking to get a first round pick, which he lost in the
Jaromir Jagr deal. He estimated there would be five or six players available
who could play in the NHL next year. Any deal involving Seguin would
surely start with a first round pick, and high one at that.
But while the salary cap is going down to $64.3 million for the upcoming,
there's wide speculation that it will go right back up the following year. With
that in mind, Chiarelli doesn't want to proceed rashly.
“Acting rashly may be replacing something in a rash manner, or I get rid of
something in a rash manner. So I have to be careful,” he said.
Despite the current situation with teams needing to shed players to become
cap compliant, Chiarelli doesn't believe he'll have to accept a paltry return
just to move salary. But if worse comes to worst, the B's could dip into the
growing free agent market.
“Based on my discussions, I don't think that will happen. But you never say
never,” said Chiarelli. “We could have trouble with the expanded supply, but
I think there'll be players who want to play for less. If we have to mix and
match a little, I think we'll be able to do it because we still have a strong
contending team and there are going to be players who'll want to play for
us. If we get to that point, but I don't think we will.”
Chiarelli said that he's gotten calls from teams who want to obtain the
negotiating rights to Andrew Ference, whom the B's will not be able to
afford under the new cap.
“I've had a couple of teams call on Andy,” said Chiarelli. “I've spoken with
Andy's agent and I've actually given Andy's agent ton talk to teams. I'm not
going to stand in his way. He's been a warrior for us and I want to help him
as much as I can.”
It's a good bet he'll now get a couple of calls on Horton's rights as well.
Boston Herald LOADED: 06.30.2013
682953
Buffalo Sabres
NHL prospect Bailey has a pro pedigree
By John Vogl | News Sports Reporter | @BuffNewsVogl
on June 29, 2013 - 11:03 PM, updated June 29, 2013 at 11:15 PM
NEW YORK — Justin Bailey has been touched by hockey since Matthew
Barnaby held him as a baby. As a preschooler, Bailey mimicked Rick
Jeanneret while imagining victories for the Buffalo Sabres. He lived with Pat
LaFontaine.
Bailey’s lifelong fantasy has been to join those role models in the NHL
fraternity. Thanks to enviable size, stellar skating and a glass-shattering
shot, his moment has arrived.
The Williamsville native will hear his name called today at the entry draft in
New Jersey, probably in the first two rounds. The 18-year-old winger will
then praise his family, friends and God for helping him achieve the dream.
“Hockey’s always been my passion,” Bailey said. “I’m happy it’s brought me
this far.”
As on most successful journeys, Bailey needed to overcome obstacles,
benefit from correct decisions and receive help. He’ll share in the success
with his mother/confidante in the Prudential Center, teammates scattered
from Buffalo to Ontario to Long Island, and a little-known father in North
Carolina who is well-known to Bills fans.
“I’m proud of him because I don’t think I’ve ever had a clear dream like he’s
had,” said Bailey’s mother, Karen Buscaglia. “It was just a fun thing to
watch him do.”
The road to the draft started early. Bailey, who plays for Kitchener of the
Ontario Hockey League, gravitated toward hockey as a toddler. He lived in
the same Williamsville apartment complex as Barnaby, Rob Ray and
Michael Peca, three of the most popular Sabres at the time.
“My mom and aunt grew a little bit of a relationship with them,” said Bailey,
born July 1, 1995. “Watching them and being able to see them on a
personal level, I just wanted to be like them. I got into hockey and loved it
ever since.”
Barnaby remains a mentor and has been skating with Bailey for 11 hours
per week.
“Besides Eric Lindros, Justin Bailey probably has the best first couple
strides for a big man that I’ve ever seen,” Barnaby said of the 6-foot-3, 186pounder. “He probably has top-five hardest shots I’ve ever seen come off
the stick. He’s really coming into his own. He’s still got a lot to learn, but the
sky’s the limit for this kid.”
Impartial scouts agree. Bailey is rated as the 38th-best skater in North
America by NHL Central Scouting, and teams are intrigued by his potential.
“He’s a high riser,” said Kevin Devine, the Sabres’ director of amateur
scouting. “Most teams have him going somewhere in the second round.
He’s a big kid that works very hard, needs to fill out his frame, get adjusted
to the Canadian game a little more, get a little bit more physical. He’s got
lots of potential.”
Bailey’s status as a prospect has grown exponentially during the past two
years. It started with a decision to move into LaFontaine’s home on Long
Island.
The Indiana Ice of the United States Hockey League picked Bailey 11th
overall in their 2011 draft, and he made the team. Buscaglia thought the 15year-old was still too much of a kid to move halfway across the country. Ken
Martin, an NHL diversity executive and mutual friend of Buscaglia and
LaFontaine, put the sides in touch with a different plan.
Soon, Bailey was living in LaFontaine’s home and playing for a team
coached by the Hockey Hall of Famer and fellow NHL alum Steve Webb.
“He welcomed me with open arms into his home and onto his team,” Bailey
said. “The way that he handled everything, I give him a lot of thanks for that.
“There were a lot of things on the mental side of the game, getting to know
myself more as a player. Just the way we would watch hockey and the way
he would break down the games was something special.”
LaFontaine taught Bailey about nutrition and off-ice preparation. Webb
taught him how to control his emotions on the ice so he wouldn’t burn out
during the first period. Together, they showed Bailey how to be a
responsible teen.
“He came out of Long Island learning so much more than just hockey,”
Buscaglia said.
The Long Island squad won the under-16 national championship, and
Bailey caught the eye of Kitchener coach Steve Spott. Though Bailey had
already committed to attend Michigan State, Spott convinced him to make a
drive to Kitchener and check things out.
Bailey was hooked on the organization and the thought of developing in
junior hockey. He recorded 17 goals and 36 points in 57 games this season
while getting accustomed to the huge jump from travel hockey to Canada’s
top circuit.
“I saw the development right from the start of the career to where he was in
the playoffs,” Barnaby said. “Because it was such a veteran-laden team,
there wasn’t much pressure put on him. They were able to groom him the
right way. Sometimes you aren’t put in a position to succeed, and he
certainly was put in that by his coach up there.”
Spott and men such as LaFontaine, Barnaby and especially Buscaglia’s
stepfather, Bob Tronolone, fill a special place in Bailey’s world – one that
lacks an active father.
His dad is Carlton Bailey, who played linebacker for the Bills from 1988 to
’92. Justin was born while the football player was transitioning from the New
York Giants to the Carolina Panthers. Carlton began a life in Charlotte while
Buscaglia decided on Western New York.
“I grew up on my mom’s side of the family, so I don’t have a ton of contact
with my dad,” Justin said. “It’s more during birthdays or holidays, but when
we do talk, he does try to get his two cents in. They usually are pretty
lengthy when he tries to get in those lessons that maybe he didn’t give to
me as a kid.”
They recently had a discussion about what it takes to be a professional
athlete.
“It’s great to be able to see that his goals and dreams have been able to
come true,” Carlton Bailey said by phone from North Carolina. “Many
people spend the large majority of their lives and never really have the
chance to achieve the dreams that they do have.
“The most important thing is to be able to continue to work hard, to be
disciplined, to be able to really play the game with passion like he did years
ago when he was playing in the snow playing for the Sabres.”
Carlton is listed in Justin’s hockey bios, which usually leads to questions for
the son about his dad. Justin handles the inquiries well despite the sensitive
situation.
“Our relationship, everybody goes through different things, and when I’m
called upon, I’m always going to be here,” Carlton said. “I love him no
matter what. I think sometimes as men we may not understand how to
express that. It’s not always the most masculine thing to be able to do. All of
us choose different ways to be able to express our love, but the bottom line
is that the love is always going to be there.”
Justin Bailey’s affection for his mom and God is always on display. He
praises her for sacrifices such as 5 a.m. rides to practice and using tax
refunds to pay for ice time.
“She’s everything to me, and I know I’m everything to her,” Bailey said. “The
hard work that she put in really paid off. Whenever things get tough, I think
of my family and back to God, as well, to keep me going and to keep me
strong.”
Buscaglia bought her only child a bracelet to wear when he was trying out
for Indiana. It read, “When in doubt: Pray.” He still wears an identical one
every day.
Today, there should be no doubts. Prayers will be answered. His dream of
joining an NHL team will come true.
“It’s amazing to look back,” Bailey said.
“Each transition just seemed to click,” Buscaglia added. “It was like puzzle
pieces fitting together. I look at him and see such maturity both in his game
and as a person. I couldn’t be more thankful.”
Buffalo News LOADED: 06.30.2013
682954
Buffalo Sabres
Miller, Vanek expected to stay with Sabres through draft
By John Vogl | News Sports Reporter | @BuffNewsVogl
on June 29, 2013 - 11:01 PM, updated June 29, 2013 at 11:02 PM
NEW YORK — There’s plenty of tire kicking left to be done, and engines
are known to rev once all the general managers gather on the NHL draft
floor. Still, it appears Ryan Miller and Thomas Vanek won’t be hitting the
road this weekend.
Sabres GM Darcy Regier said an abundance of names are being tossed
around for trades, and he’s gauging the marketplace for Buffalo’s top
players. Based on what he’s heard, he expects Miller and Vanek to remain
in Buffalo through the end of the draft today.
“Right now, I do, yes,” Regier told The Buffalo News on Saturday afternoon.
Miller’s agent, Mike Liut, concurred in regard to his client.
“I am not expecting anything to happen,” he said via email.
The draft, which starts at 3 p.m. in the New Jersey Devils’ arena, is one of
the prime transaction dates on the hockey calendar. Despite all the names
being mentioned — including Boston center Tyler Seguin and Vancouver
goalies Cory Schneider and Roberto Luongo — Regier says there’s no
guarantee anyone will move.
“As you add names and the supply gets greater, I don’t know what that will
do with the asking prices and whether teams will be able to get the asking
price or whether there will be any kind of adjustment in the marketplace for
players or for the acquisition of players,” Regier said. “It’s really still a bit of
a moving target that hasn’t settled yet.”
Miller and Vanek are the top names on the Sabres’ shopping list because
they are set to enter the final year of their contracts. Buffalo is not expected
to contend for the Stanley Cup and there is no assurance the players will
re-sign, so Regier cannot let them exit the organization next summer
without getting assets in return.
“I entered this weekend recognizing that they both are in the last year of
their contracts, and I have a responsibility to see what that means both with
those players and also within the marketplace,” Regier said. “Unless you’re
a highly competitive team, it’s very difficult to have players on your roster
whose contracts are going to expire if you either choose not to or don’t have
the ability to re-up them.
“Just to lose those assets, you try to get a sense of what the marketplace is
like, and that’s a process that’s ongoing. I expect it will continue to move
through the draft into maybe free agency and maybe beyond that. We’re
actively keeping our finger on the pulse of what’s going on in the league,
and we’ll have to just make our decision.”
The lack of trade activity extends to the draft. The Sabres are set to pick
eighth and 16th overall in the first round.
“Right now, I expect that we will pick where we’re picking, and I say that
only because there’s nothing that’s imminent or concrete,” Regier said. “But
like I said, there are a lot of conversations, and they will continue right until
the draft starts and even beyond that.”
Regier said recently that most trade talk centered around lesser-known
players, but that took a dramatic shift Saturday. Several reports had Boston
willing to move Seguin, the second overall pick in the 2010 draft. Vancouver
GM Mike Gillis admitted to listening to offers for Schneider, his young
goaltender who supplanted Luongo to create an unsustainable tandem.
“We’re listening to proposals,” Gillis said. “I’m not sure how it’s going to turn
out, but we’re certainly listening.”
...
The Sabres have 10 picks in today’s draft, tied with Nashville, Winnipeg and
Los Angeles for the most. In addition to the two first-round selections, they
have a pair in the second (Nos. 38 and 52), three picks in the fifth round
(129, 130 and 143) and one pick each in rounds three (69), six (159) and
seven (189). They do not have a fourth-round pick.
...
Mike Gilbert remembers being lucky enough to watch Team USA’s triumph
over Russia in the 1980 Olympics live on Canadian television. He’s going to
be even more fortunate next year. He’ll be watching the 2014 Games live in
Russia, and he’ll be part of them.
USA Hockey has named Gilbert as its media relations liaison for the
Olympics in Sochi. The Sabres’ longtime vice president of public and
community relations is the only person selected to join Dave Fischer, USA
Hockey’s senior director of communications.
“It was a little humbling,” Gilbert said. “I was surprised and I was honored at
the same time to be recognized that way.”
Buffalo News LOADED: 06.30.2013
682955
Buffalo Sabres
Cup winner Fucale catches Sabres’ eye
And about Fucale’s claim that practice was impossible at times?
“I think he’s exaggerating a little bit,” said MacKinnon. “It was very tough to
score on him. Jon and I have to do shootouts after every drill. He was
always very good on that.”
Buffalo News LOADED: 06.30.2013
By Mike Harrington | News Sports Reporter | @BNHarrington
on June 29, 2013 - 11:00 PM, updated June 29, 2013 at 11:01 PM
NEW YORK – The Buffalo Sabres just signed Jhonas Enroth to a two-year
deal, acquired Matt Hackett from Minnesota in the Jason Pominville trade,
watched Andrey Makarov star for Saskatoon and play well in the Memorial
Cup, and have drafted Nathan Lieuwen and Linus Ullmark in the sixth round
the last two years.
So what about another goaltender today in the NHL Entry Draft? And in the
first round, no less?
At first glance, it may seem unlikely whether the Sabres trade Ryan Miller or
keep him past today. But the team is known to be very interested in
Halifax’s Zach Fucale, the top-rated goaltender in the draft by NHL Central
Scouting.
Kevin Devine, the Sabres’ director of amateur scouting, said last week one
of the team’s draft picks today will be a netminder. But he surprised media
assembled for the draft preview news conference when he said “maybe
even a goaltender comes into it” when talking about the No. 16 overall pick,
the Sabres’ second in the first round.
That can only mean Fucale, the 18-year-old who backstopped Halifax to the
Memorial Cup. How curious are the Sabres about Fucale? He told The
News at Friday’s draft prospects luncheon in Weehawken, N.J., that the
only two teams that brought him in for private combine workouts were the
Sabres and Montreal Canadiens. The Sabres haven’t spent a first-rounder
on a goalie since taking Mika Norenen in 1997.
“I don’t have to look very hard,” Fucale said when asked if he’s pondered
Buffalo’s fluid situation in goal. “With all the information we’re exposed to
these days, it’s not too complicated. Especially for goalies. We know the
teams that might need one but so many things can change on draft day that
you have to just wait.”
Fucale is a 6-foot-1, 181-pound butterfly specialist. He went 45-5-3 with a
2.35 goals-against average and .909 save percentage for Halifax. In the
postseason, he was 16-1, 2.02, .918. The only loss came to Saskatoon and
Makarov.
“Fucale is just grace under fire, under pressure,” said Dan Marr, the NHL’s
Central Scouting director. “I’ve never seen him be on an emotional roller
coaster in a game. He’s got real quick instincts and quick recovery on the
play and his reflexes are outstanding. It’s just that composure that he has,
that mental toughness that’s so important for a goaltender.”
“He’s a big goalie, pretty skinny off the ice but not many holes on it,” said
Halifax teammate Jonathan Drouin, who will get selected in the top four
today. “He’s not rushing or stressing about anything. I never saw him lose
focus. He’s always in his bubble and he’s a really calm goalie.”
Fucale said he tries to stay quiet in the crease and simplify the game with
his puck-tracking skills so he’s in position to make saves.
“Your task is stopping the puck. You focus on that task,” he said. “You don’t
make it complicated as a goalie. You go day by day and let your skills
develop.”
Teams ahead of the Sabres who figure to have some interest in Fucale as
well include New Jersey at No. 9 (looking to have a prospect behind Martin
Brodeur), Philadelphia at No. 11 and the New York Islanders at No. 15.
Fucale said practice was as important to him as games, given the fact he
was going against Drouin and Nathan MacKinnon, the likely No. 1 pick
today by Colorado, during every workout.
“For me, there were some days where it was kind of boring because it was
basically impossible to stop them,” he said. “Then there were some days it
would be really challenging and a lot of fun.”
“He acts like a 30-year-old man in the net,” said MacKinnon. “Definitely a
very mature guy. He’s aware of what kind of goalie he is. He wants
composure to be a strength of his game.”
682956
Buffalo Sabres
Regier expects Miller, Vanek to remain with Sabres through draft weekend
June 29, 2013 - 2:37 PM
By John Vogl
NEW YORK – Darcy Regier entered draft weekend ready to gauge the
marketplace for Ryan Miller and Thomas Vanek. As of now, he expects to
exit draft weekend with them as members of the Sabres.
“Right now, I do, yes,” Regier said this afternoon.
Miller’s agent, Mike Liut, concurs in regard to his client.
“I am not expecting anything to happen,” he said via email.
The trade market has had a number of names added to it this weekend, but
Regier says that doesn’t mean transactions will occur.
“As you add names and the supply gets greater, I don’t know what that will
do with the asking prices and whether teams will be able to get the asking
price or whether there will be any kind of adjustment in the marketplace for
players or for the acquisition of players,” Regier said. “It’s really still a bit of
a moving target that hasn’t settled yet.”
Miller and Vanek are the top names on the Sabres’ shopping list because
they are set to enter the final year of their contracts. Buffalo is not expected
to contend for the Stanley Cup and there is no guarantee the players will resign, so Regier cannot let them exit the organization next summer without
getting assets in return.
“I entered this weekend recognizing that they both are in the last year of
their contracts, and I have a responsibility to see what that means both with
those players and also within the marketplace,” Regier said. “Unless you’re
a highly competitive team, it’s very difficult to have players on your roster
whose contracts are going to expire if you either choose not to or don’t have
the ability to re-up them.
“Just to lose those assets, you try to get a sense of what the marketplace is
like, and that’s a process that’s ongoing. I expect it will continue to move
through the draft into maybe free agency and maybe beyond that. We’re
actively keeping our finger on the pulse of what’s going on in the league,
and we’ll have to just make our decision.”
The lack of trade activity extends to the draft, which will be held Sunday in
New Jersey. The Sabres are set to pick eighth and 16th overall.
“Right now I expect that we will pick where we’re picking, and I say that only
because there’s nothing that’s imminent or concrete,” Regier said. “But like I
said, there are a lot of conversations, and they will continue right until the
draft starts and even beyond that.”
Buffalo News LOADED: 06.30.2013
682957
Buffalo Sabres
Sabres' Gilbert honored, humbled to join USA Hockey staff for Sochi
Olympics
June 29, 2013 - 1:08 PM
By John Vogl
NEW YORK -- Mike Gilbert remembers being lucky enough to watch Team
USA's triumph over Russia in the 1980 Olympics live on Canadian
television. He's going to be even more fortunate next year. He'll be
watching the 2014 Games live in Russia, and he'll be part of it.
USA Hockey today named Gilbert to its public relations staff for the
Olympics in Sochi. The Sabres' longtime vice president of public and
community relations is the only one selected to join Dave Fischer, USA
Hockey's senior director of communications.
"It was a little humbling," Gilbert said. "I was surprised and I was honored at
the same time to be recognized that way."
Gilbert was part of USA Hockey's news conference today in which it named
Pittsburgh's Dan Bylsma as coach and Nashville's David Poile as general
manager. Pittsburgh's Ray Shero will be the associate GM and Brian Burke
will be director of player personnel. The national team advisory group will
include Stan Bowman (Chicago), Paul Holmgren (Philadelphia), Dean
Lombardi (Los Angeles) and Dale Tallon (Florida).
"It really didn’t sink in a lot until today," Gilbert said. "You see all the GMs.
Stan Bowman, who won the Stanley Cup a week ago, was right there. Dave
Poile and Ray Shero, all these different people, and it started hitting home
that, ‘Wow, these guys are the best in the United States,' and to be part of
that in a small way was neat."
Buffalo News LOADED: 06.30.2013
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Buffalo Sabres
Seth Jones won't be offended if Avalanche draft a forward instead of him at
No. 1
June 29, 2013 - 12:28 PM
By John Vogl
NEW YORK -- Seth Jones has been ranked No. 1 by NHL Central Scouting
all year. When the Colorado Avalanche won the draft lottery, it seemed
liked a no-brainer that they'd stick with the rankings and take the former
Denver resident and Avs fan with the first pick.
But the Avs have indicated they're leaning toward center Nathan
MacKinnon, with Jonathan Drouin also a possibility. Jones understands the
logic and Colorado's outspokenness.
"That’s the first time in a long time that anyone’s came out like that, but I
don’t blame them," Jones said. "I’m not taking it personally. It’s professional
sports. It would have been a nice story, but at the same time they’ve got to
make a decision. It’s definitely a tough one this year. Nathan’s a great
player, along with Jonathan."
Jones then displayed his knowledge of draft history.
"I mean, one’s very special, but Chris Pronger’s been No. 2, Drew Doughty
has been No. 2, so there’s been a lot of good defensemen and players in
general that have gone on to have great careers," he said.
Buffalo News LOADED: 06.30.2013
682959
Buffalo Sabres
A goalie at No. 16? Sabres have some interest in Halifax's Fucale
By Mike Harrington
NEW YORK -- When the Sabres held their draft preview press conference
last week, amateur scouting director Kevin Devine made it clear one of their
10 picks Sunday in the Prudential Center would be a goalie. Then Devine
raised the antenna of those assembled when he said "maybe even a
goaltender comes into it" when talking about the No. 16 overall pick, the
Sabres' second in the first round.
That could mean only one player: Halifax 18-year-old Zach Fucale, the
netminder who played behind draft superstuds Nathan MacKinnon and
Jonathan Drouin to lead the Mooseheads over Seth Jones-led Portland in
the Memorial Cup championship game.
Fucale attended the annual Prospects Luncheon Friday afternoon in
Weehawken, N.J., on the shores of the Hudson and the Quebec native
dropped a mini bombshell when I asked him what teams brought him in for
their own combines. The answer? Montreal and Buffalo.
Teams ahead of the Sabres who figure to have some interest in Fucale as
well include the Devils at No. 9 (they need to develop a propsect behind
Martin Brodeur at some point, right?), the Flyers at No. 11 and the Islanders
at No. 15. But if the Sabres keep the No. 16 pick -- and that's a big if -Fucale seems to be a legitimate option.
"I don't have to look very hard," Fucale said when asked if he's pondered
Buffalo's fluid situation in goal. "With all the information we're exposed to
these days, it's not too complicated. Especially for goalies. We know the
teams that might need one but so many things can change on draft day that
you have to just wait."
But would the outlook change if the Sabres were to deal Ryan Miller
between now and, say, 4 p.m. Sunday?
"I guess it would," Fucale said with a laugh. "I don't really know what to say
to that. Sunday is when I imagine this is all going to play out and when
you're in my situation, you're just excited to be a part of this whole thing."
The Sabres, of course, just signed Jhonas Enroth to a two-year deal and
have Matt Hackett, acquired from Minnesota in the Jason Pominville deal,
likely to back him up. They have other goalies in the system as well, notably
Andrey Makarov, their undrafted free agent signee from last season who
went on to star for Saskatoon and even beat Halifax in the Memorial Cup.
Their sixth-rounder the last two years has also been a goalie (Nathan
Lieuwen and Linus Ullmark). But do any of them project down the road as
an elite, top-of-the-line goalie? Hmmm.
Be sure to read my story on Fucale, including the thoughts of MacKinnon
and Drouin on their goalie, in Sunday's editions of The Buffalo News.
Apologies for no audio from Fucale here, but his 12-minute session with the
media hopscotched between French and English and more of it was in
French.
Buffalo News LOADED: 06.30.2013
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Buffalo Sabres
Road to the NHL Draft: Sean Malone
June 29, 2013 - 10:00 AM
By John Vogl
Sean Malone
Position: Center
Junior team: U.S. Under-18 (USHL)
Born: Buffalo
Measurables: 5-foot-11, 183 pounds
2012-13 stats: 44 games, 13 goals, 14 assists, 27 points
Central Scouting rank: No. 62 (North America)
Lowdown: Malone has toured the world since leaving Nichols School last
year. He’s played home games in Michigan and pulled the USA crest over
his head in Sweden and Russia. He’ll play in Boston next season as a
forward for Harvard University. He’ll also get a future stop on his resume
when an NHL team drafts him.
Malone’s hustle and skating should pique the interest of teams starting in
the middle rounds. He has international experience after playing in the
under-18 world junior tournament and the Ivan Hlinka tourney. The
exposure helped him make a 38-spot jump in the eyes of NHL Central
Scouting, which had him at No. 98 in the midterm rankings.
The 18-year-old struggled at times during the under-18 world juniors. He
had just one assist in the seven games and was minus-2 while averaging
13:14 of ice time per game.
He said it: "You see all these guys here, all the same age, all working for
the same thing. You want to make sure you’re working hard because you’ve
got other competitors here. If you put in the work in the offseason, you can
maybe get a step above some of these guys.” – Malone after attending the
NHL Scouting Combine.
The Buffalo News is profiling 30 prospects in 30 days leading up to the NHL
draft June 30.
Buffalo News LOADED: 06.30.2013
682961
Calgary Flames
Nieminen — still playing, still laughing
June 29, 2013. 1:08
Posted by:
Scott Cruickshank
* “We got outworked, we got outmuscled, we got outplayed, we got
whatever-out. We got all kinds of outs. And now we are out of Tampa.”
* “What do you think would happen if I turned all the water sprinklers on in
the Saddledome? Just turned them all on. Do you think there’s a chance I’d
maybe get a penalty?”
* “Actually, with me and teachers, it was a love-hate relationship. They
hated me until they got to know me. Then they loved me. I wouldn’t take
Swedish class. Refused. You know about the rivalry between the Finns and
Swedes? Well, I’d get halfway to the classroom and stop. Stop dead. I
couldn’t physically go in that room.”
He also cackles. Stifles a snort.
* “In grade school, I thought I’d be a chef. If you need potatoes peeled, I’m
your man. But, sorry, I don’t do any peeling for parties of under 300 people.
That ambition, to cook food for a living, passed, though. Can you see me
carving the roast beef wearing my shoulder pads underneath my white
chef’s outfit?”
Then finally guffaws.
And on and on and on. From only a few months of material.
A cult hero in Calgary, Nieminen has been asked to single out his favourite
one-liner from his (too brief) time with the Flames, a run that included the
2004 playoffs.
GM Darryl Sutter had acquired Nieminen from the Chicago Blackhawks in
exchange for Jason Morgan. The trade forced Lynn Loyns to the press box,
and Nieminen soon proved his worth — and not just in interviews.
As stellar as he had been in the post-season, Nieminen became known for
his sense of humour, for his give and take with reporters, for his array of offthe wall cornball jokes.
He went on to register eight points in 19 regular-season appearances, eight
points (and two suspensions) in 24 post-season dates — and to upset
countless members of the opposition.
His whacky take on, well, everything was a joy.
“I was at my best as a hockey player at that time,” says Nieminen. “The
(2004-05) lockout came for me at the wrong time. And I think it came at the
wrong time for the Calgary Flames.”
First, Ville Nieminen grins, one of those wide-mouthed displays of pearly
whites.
Former NHL player Ville Nieminen (L) answers questions about his
teammate Aleksander Barkov of Finland during media availability on June
28, 2013 in Weehawken, New Jersey. The NHL will be holding its player
draft on June 30 at the Prudential Center in Newark.
Former NHL player Ville Nieminen (L) answers questions about his
teammate Aleksander Barkov on June 28, 2013 in Weehawken, New
Jersey.
Not surprisingly, he has fond memories of his Calgary days.
“We had the best team — maybe not the best players — but the best team,”
says Nieminen. “We played the best team defence. And we had a very,
very tough team. Team toughness. That team was very humble because
every player wanted to get better . . . and wanted to take that next step.”
“I remember all that stuff and I keep laughing,” says Nieminen, 36,
attending this weekend’s NHL draft with his protege Aleksander Barkov,
with whom he played this past season. “But nowadays English is a hard
language for me — I can’t even remember when I last talked English.
Probably someone else better remembers all my one-liners than I do.”
Nieminen, this weekend, is never far from Barkov, who figures to be a topfour pick in the draft.
Happy to oblige.
Nieminen hasn’t played in the NHL since 2006-07 — with the St. Louis
Blues. Because of that, he insists he hadn’t spent much time thinking about
North America. But being here in New Jersey changes all of that.
After a prance through the archives, here, from Nieminen’s term with the
Flames, is a sampling of his greatest quips:
* “I’m all Swedish, no Finnish.”
* “Give me the puck. I’m hot — in the steam room.”
* “I told the guys before that I had good hands — but it was in the casino.”
* “If your goalie’s not there? It’s like trying to build a house on soft land.”
* “Just from school.” (After being asked if he’d even been suspended.)
* “I got out of the ship. I jumped out and swam back to land.” (After being
traded from Chicago to playoff-bound Calgary.)
* “For us, it was office hockey, whatever you call it, You know, when you
play from the office — no emotion, a flat effort.”
* “On the road, we play hospital hockey — lots of patience.”
* “We are trying to find the body parts we left out there.” (Nodding towards
the ice during the playoff break.)
* “OK, the Here, There, Everywhere Line. The second stupid name was the
More Speed And Heart Than Skill Line. Or, the More Everything Else Than
Skill Line.” (After being asked to come up with a name for his line with
Shean Donovan and Marcus Nilson.)
* “I think starting in Game 3, we had one bus and 20 drivers . . . and 20
steering wheels.”
* “Well, you start with a clean table. But it won’t take long before it’s a dirty
table.” (After being asked about the upcoming series against Tampa.)
* “One thing — I will be well-rested and almost arrested.” (After serving a
one-game suspension for blindsiding Vincent Lecavalier.)
Nieminen had been his linemate this past winter for Tappare Tampere. He’s
trained with Barkov since the kid was 12. And, once upon a time, he skated
alongside Barkov’s father.
“I’ve started to think about my NHL career more,” he says. “This NHL draft
is a second chance to live it again.”
Calgary Herald: LOADED: 06.30.2013
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Calgary Flames
Sportsnet analyst says Calgary Flames could open season in Saskatoon
--— Calgary Sun Staff
First posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 11:31 PM MDT
Since the extent of the damage to the Saddledome was revealed earlier this
week, questions have lingered about where the Calgary Flames will play
their home games if the arena’s not fixed by the time the first puck drops on
the 2013-14 NHL season.
Well … how does a couple trips to Saskatoon sound for ya, Flames fans?
On Saturday, Sportsnet’s John Shannon tweeted that the Saskatchewan
city is being looked at to house the Flames if the Dome’s not ready.
“Flames home-opener slated for October 6th ... been told that if
Saddledome isn’t ready, League and Team are looking at Saskatoon,”
Shannon tweeted.
The most likely venue for Flames tilts in Toon Town would be the Credit
Union Centre, the home of the Saskatoon Blades with capacity for 15,190
fans.
Calgary Sun: LOADED: 06.30.2013
682963
Calgary Flames
SIX players the Calgary Flames could pick at No. 6
standout, but he does possess enough game at both ends of the ice to be a
potential top-pairing blueliner. The Flames could count on finding a top-line
forward down the road if they believe Nurse and T.J. Brodie are their top
pair of the future.
4
By RANDY SPORTAK
,Calgary Sun
First posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 10:35 PM MDT | Updated: Saturday,
June 29, 2013 11:14 PM MDT
C Sean Monahan (Ottawa, OHL)
6-foot-2, 186 lb.
58 GP 31 G 47 A 78 Pts.
Central Scouting Ranking: No. 5 North American Skaters
The Calgary Flames — barring a trade — will complete the first six-pack of
players chosen in Sunday’s NHL Draft.
Just who will fill the final spot in that collection of talent remains to be seen.
As much as the Flames have a wish-list of who they want most with the first
of their three first-round picks, they are at the whim of the five clubs that
draft before them.
It’s impossible to imagine Nathan MacKinnon or Seth Jones will be around
when Calgary GM Jay Feaster and the rest of the braintrust step to the
lectern at the draft in New Jersey and make their first selection.
Odds are Jonathan Drouin and Aleksander Barkov will also be long gone in
the top four, but it’s not a slam dunk with the likes of Darnell Nurse, Valeri
Nichushkin, Elias Lindholm and Sean Monahan in the mix.
Still, we’ll assume MacKinnon, Jones, Drouin and Barkov will be the top
four picks when dissecting who could be available for the Flames to choose
from when they step to the podium.
Here’s a six pack of players who could be in the mix when the Flames make
their pick and why they should be thrilled to get him:
A two-way centre who is more of a playmaker than shooter in the offensive
zone, the Ottawa 67’s captain was the team’s leading scorer during what
was a awful season for the club. His skating is a bit of a question, but his
competitive nature helps the cause. Known for his smarts, he’s also very
good on faceoffs, another area the Flames are dreadful.
5
C/LW Hunter Shinkaruk (Medicine Hat, WHL)
5-foot-11, 175 lb.
64 GP 37 G 49 A 86 Pts
Central Scouting Ranking: No. 6 North American Skaters
An exciting player in the offensive zone, the Calgary product has the ability
to both score and set up goals. He seems more like a winger than a centre,
and he does need to add size to be ready for the NHL grind. It’s hard to
imagine he’ll be able to jump to the big leagues immediately, but over time,
he will develop his game.
6
1
D Rasmus Ristolainen (TPS, Finland)
LW Valeri Nichushkin (Chelyabinsk, KHL)
6-foot 3, 201 lb.
6-foot-4, 196 lb.
52 GP 3 G 12 A 15 Pts
41 GP 15 G 8 A 23 Pts.
Central Scouting Ranking: No. 4 European Skaters
Central Scouting Ranking:
With mobility to go with his size, the big blueliner is a good puck-mover and
willing to play a physical game. It would be going somewhat off the board
for the Flames to take him sixth overall, especially if the more heralded
Darnell Nurse is available and a defenceman is the priority.
No. 2 European Skaters
The Flames need a first-line centre and a top defenceman more than a topline winger, but the big Russian might sway them. He’s big, has scoring
ability and is willing to drive to the net. There is definitely a risk-reward
element to drafting Nichushkin — he could be a top-line winger or the next
Nikolai Zherdev.
2
C Elias Lindholm (Brynas, Sweden)
6-foot, 181 lb.
48 GP 11 G 19 A 30 Pts.
Central Scouting Ranking:
No. 3 European Skaters
A strong, two-way player who led all junior-aged players in the Swedish
Elite League this past season, Lindholm was also the rookie of the year. His
scoring abilities include being a strong passer, making him a potential toptwo centre the Flames desperately need. He may not have the size you
want in a cornerstone centre but is very competitive on the ice.
3
D Darnell Nurse
(Sault Ste. Marie, OHL)
6-foot-4, 189 lb.
68 GP 12 G 29 A 41 Pts
Central Scouting Ranking: No. 4 North American Skaters
The nephew of former NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb, Nurse is more
likely to be known more for his defensive game than as an offensive
Calgary Sun: LOADED: 06.30.2013
682964
Carolina Hurricanes
Time has come for Hurricanes to put plan into action
Published: June 29, 2013
By Luke DeCock - staff columnist
The NHL Draft is as much about older players as it is the league’s newest
generation of players. You can’t put that many general managers in one
place without a few trades happening by accident. This summer, with
several teams scrambling to get under the declining salary cap, there may
never have been more players available.
That’s good news for the Carolina Hurricanes, who need to upgrade their
roster in several areas, have some cap space available and maybe even a
little money to spend for a change.
Even if the Hurricanes don’t make a deal this weekend in New Jersey,
they’ll certainly know who’s available – or is likely to be available once the
initial days of free agency sort themselves out, starting Friday.
This is a big weekend for the Hurricanes, and it has nothing to do with who
they draft fifth overall Sunday. (The smart play, in what may be the deepest
draft in a decade, would be to either trade up for one of the three elite
players in the draft – Nathan MacKinnon, Seth Jones and Jonathan Drouin
– or down for additional first-round picks.)
There will be opportunities, if not now, then soon. It’s absolutely imperative
the Hurricanes act on them.
There are three areas that probably need the most strengthening: defense,
third-line center and depth forwards who can kill penalties and win a faceoff
or two.
The blue line is in obvious need of a talent injection, and there are free
agents like Ron Hainsey and Andrew Ference available, while the Toronto
Maple Leafs are rumored to be shopping Dion Phaneuf.
Meanwhile, Marc Staal is a year away from free agency and the New York
Rangers just made a coaching change. With concerns over his eye injury
and contract status, could the Hurricanes pry a Staal brother loose for the
second straight summer?
Neither Phaneuf nor Staal would come cheap. Neither, for that matter, will
Hainsey nor Ference or anyone else on the open market. But if the
Hurricanes are serious about fixing a defense that was painfully exposed as
inadequate after Cam Ward was injured last season, they’re going to have
to pay for it. That means spending money, and it may mean giving up either
the No. 5 pick or a player like Jeff Skinner.
(The possibility of trading Skinner, as noted at the end of the season, is
something the Hurricanes should consider – if, and only if, the return
justifies his departure.)
There are probably 28 other teams looking for upgrades on defense, which
is almost always the case, so it’s never easy nor cheap – which is one
reason why the Hurricanes have procrastinated for years, since the core of
the 2002 and 2006 teams aged out of the league. They’ve tried to do it on
the cheap (remember Josef Melichar?) and they’ve tried to buy low on
players who have underachieved elsewhere, like Joni Pitkanen, without
success.
As for the additions forward, it sounds like an easier task, but it rarely is.
Some of the names floating around are certainly attractive, but not without
their negatives.
A guy like Rich Peverley is the kind of multi-role player the Hurricanes need
at forward, and the Boston Bruins are likely going to have to trade him for
cap reasons, but he’s making more than $3 million. That would make him
the Hurricanes’ sixth-highest paid forward, too much for his role as the
roster is currently constructed.
Then again, teams that play for the Stanley Cup two out of the past three
years are willing to pay that kind of money to that kind of player.
The Hurricanes have talked a good game about increasing their payroll,
fixing the defense and getting a better mix of forwards. The time has come
to get to work. The time has come to back those words with action.
News Observer LOADED: 06.30.2013
682965
Carolina Hurricanes
Canes’ high NHL draft pick: High stakes, big investment
Published: June 29, 2013 Updated 6 hours ago
By Chip Alexander — calexander@newsobserver.com
If all goes as planned, the Carolina Hurricanes will have the No. 5 pick
Sunday in the NHL Entry Draft, looking to choose a player who can jump
into the lineup, produce immediately, excite their fans and get the Canes
back in the Stanley Cup playoffs.
Whether they take a Russian winger such as Valeri Nichushkin, a Swedish
center such as Elias Lindholm or a Canadian defenseman such as Darnell
Nurse, the Hurricanes will have spent thousands of dollars scouting players
in which they will invest millions. And millions more in revenue – in
merchandise sales, gate receipts, playoff payoffs, you name it – could be at
stake.
In 2010, with the seventh overall pick, the Hurricanes took Jeff Skinner. The
forward would score 31 goals, win the Calder Trophy as NHL rookie of the
year and become highly marketable.
Skinner’s draft choice was deemed a “home run” by management. Having
missed the playoffs the past four seasons, the Canes now need to hit
another one.
“The pressure is tremendous, and you feel it with every pick at the top,” said
Dan Marr, the NHL’s director of Central Scouting and a former NHL scout.
“You want to be right with that first-rounder. They can be the staples of the
franchise as you move forward, so there is that pressure.”
In 2003, the Hurricanes took center Eric Staal with the No. 2 pick after the
Pittsburgh Penguins made goalie Marc-Andre Fleury the first overall
selection. Three years later, Staal was lifting the Stanley Cup. He’s the
Canes’ team captain, the face of the franchise.
Rutherford said this week. “Do we move down in the first round, with a
trade, and pick up a player? Do we keep the No. 5 pick?
“When you have an off-year you earn the right to pick fifth. We know the
reason why we’re there. Obviously we have a lot of work to do. We’ll keep
an open mind right up until the time comes to pick.”
The player selection comes after much in-game scouting – the “eyeball test”
– and hundreds of video reviews. It comes after scouts trek to the such
events as the World Junior Championship in Russia and the 5-Nations
Tournament in Sweden.
MacDonald is in his sixth year as director of amateur scouting. Former
Canes forward Robert Kron heads up Carolina’s European scouting, and
Rutherford said the team now “has a better handle than ever before” on the
European prospects.
“It’s a big-time commitment,” said ESPN.com draft analyst Grant Sonier, a
former NHL scout. “You go to games, you meet the kids one-on-one, you
go to the NHL combine, the scouts get together and meet . It’s quite a
process. But when you can possibly get a franchise player in the five-hole
at the draft, you have to get it right.”
The combine
The NHL prospects combine was held in Toronto in late-May. MacDonald
was there. So was Pete Friesen, the Canes’ head athletic trainer, who
tracks all the measurables – wing span, grip strength, long jump, etc. –
while trying to project a player’s body shape at, say, 24 or 25.
Friesen, for example, doesn’t remember the Russian’s name – possibly
defenseman Nikita Zadorov – but he remembered the look. He was 6-foot-4
and 230 pounds, Friesen said, with low body fat and an impressive vertical
jump.
“He looked like that Russian boxer in the ‘Rocky’ movie,” Friesen said.
That would be “Rocky IV” and the Ivan Drago role played by Dolph
Lundgren.
“The maturity level for some is much higher than others,” said Friesen, who
files in-depth reports on the prospects to Rutherford..
Then there was 2005. Picking third, the Hurricanes took defenseman Jack
Johnson. He played college hockey at Michigan, rebuffed the Canes’
requests to start his professional career and eventually was traded to the
Los Angeles Kings, never putting on a Carolina sweater.
Friesen believes vertical jump is a good indicator of how strong a player will
be on the puck, noting Eric Staal had an impressive vertical jump. Most
good centers, he said, have wing spans that measure more than their
height.
“There is more pressure the higher the pick, no doubt,” Canes general
manager Jim Rutherford said. “There’s more focus on it.”
Seth Jones, a defenseman with the Portland Winterhawks of the Western
Hockey League, had the longest wing span this year at 81 inches. Tops
among the forwards was Michael McCarron (79.5).
In the Canes’ case, the focus also is on Tony MacDonald, the team’s
director of amateur scouting.
The eventual first-round choice is made generally by committee, after
meetings in the team’s offices at PNC Arena and more discussions in the
days before the draft. But MacDonald is the front man, for good or bad, and
senses the urgency of being right.
“The trend (in the NHL) now is these guys need to come in and make your
team,” MacDonald said of the high-end draft picks. “We think we will pick a
player at five who is able to come in and make our team.
“You’d like him to make a big impact on the lineup, but that’s asking a lot of
someone who’s 18 years old. Jeff Skinner made a pretty solid impression in
his rookie year. That doesn’t always happen. If we pick someone this year
who can score 31 goals we’d be pretty pleased.”
Following an abbreviated season, the NHL will hold an abbreviated draft
Sunday. Normally a two-day affair, the league will pack all seven rounds
into one day at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J.
The ‘eyeball test’
A year ago, MacDonald and the scouting staff were prepared for the No. 8
overall pick in the draft in Pittsburgh but never used it. The Hurricanes
upstaged the first day of the draft, packaging their first-round pick in the
trade for the Penguins’ Jordan Staal.
That could happen again Sunday. The Canes are seeking a top-four
defenseman, their offseason priority, and Rutherford said the search could
continue Sunday on the draft floor.
“It’s always important to make the right pick but what’s really important for
us is the overall picture of what we need to do in the next 30 days,”
Friesen said he and others were disappointed Jones and two other top
prospects, forwards Nathan MacKinnon and Jonathan Drouin of the Halifax
Mooseheads, were at the combine but elected not to go through the fitness
testing. All cited long Memorial Cup playoff runs and fatigue.
“If they don’t do it, you can’t judge the others based on their benchmarks,”
Friesen said.
The interviews
Marr, of NHL Central Scouting, called it an anomaly. He noted former
Windsor Spitfires star Taylor Hall sat out testing in 2010 – and later was the
No. 1 pick in the draft by Edmonton – and added, “I don’t see it being a
trend.”
MacDonald interviews players at the combine. He said 60 interviews,
mostly 10 to 15 minutes in length, were held this year, which he said was
more than normal.
The Canes had 11 pre-draft interviews scheduled this week at their
Manhattan hotel, Rutherford said. They again are using video sessions as a
way of gauging a player’s instincts and hockey acumen, as they did in
Pittsburgh last year.
“We’re just trying to get inside a player’s thought process and create
scenarios from real game situations,” MacDonald said. “There are no right
or wrong answers. We just want to get a feel for what a player might do in
game situations.”
Ron Francis, the team’s vice president of hockey operations, heads the
video sessions, which were well received by prospects last year. Forward
Filip Forsberg, who would be drafted in the first round by the Washington
Capitals and later traded to the Nashville Predators, noted, “It was like they
asked you questions to test your hockey sense.”
Marr said the final interviews give the general managers a chance to sit
face-to-face with the prospects. The scouts have done their work and all the
background information is in, but a prospect can make a final impression
with management.
“It’s a chance to eliminate any mystery about a player,” Marr said.
Finally, it’s on to the arena. It’s draft day. The prospects sit anxiously in the
stands with their parents and siblings.
“Waiting for your name to be called in the draft, that’s what every kid who
grows up playing hockey dreams of,” Skinner said.
Skinner’s big moment came in 2010 in Los Angeles at the Staples Center.
He slipped into a Carolina sweater and cap, looking impossibly young but
very soon to be an impact player.
On Sunday, the Hurricanes will be after another.
News Observer LOADED: 06.30.2013
682966
Chicago Blackhawks
Blackhawks' selections
Round 1: No. 30
Hawks believe deep draft will benefit them
Round 4: No. 121
With No. 30 pick overall, then none to 4th round, they're prepared for many
contingencies
Round 5: No. 151
Round 6: No. 181
Round 7: No. 211
By Chris Kuc, Chicago Tribune reporter
June 30, 2013
Even as the confetti swirled during the Blackhawks' Stanley Cup victory
parade, the team was preparing for the future.
The Hawks currently own five picks in Sunday's 2013 NHL draft in Newark,
N.J., and they want to stockpile talent in their effort to keep the organization
at a high level for years.
"We've built this team, for the most part, from the draft and adding a few
pieces outside it," general manager Stan Bowman said. "We'd like to
continue that process."
Because of the Hawks' magical run in the regular season when they
finished atop the NHL standings and captured the Presidents' Trophy with
the league's best record, they will have the final selection in the first round
at No. 30. They also entered draft weekend without second- and third-picks,
having traded them to the Jets in 2012 for defenseman Johnny Oduya.
Still, Director of Amateur Scouting Mark Kelley, who missed Friday's parade
and rally because he was already preparing at draft headquarters in New
York , believes the Hawks can secure talent along the likes of Brandon
Saad, who was drafted No. 43 overall in '11 and Saturday was named to
the 2012-13 NHL All-Rookie team.
"It's a good draft," Kelley said. "It has a very good top end in the first round.
There are probably five or six players who are going to have a strong
impact. Then there are probably another eight players who are on the verge
of becoming those types of players.
"Really, it goes right through the first round into the second. It's a deep
draft."
There is also the possibility Bowman will add more picks or even move up
in the draft through trades.
Kelley said he asks Bowman to acquire additional selections "all the time,
all the time. He keeps telling me, 'We're going to try.'
"We'll get a good player because the draft is that deep. (But) we try to know
the top end of the draft and we're prepared in case anything happens. …
We don't try to look at it with the picks we have and try to target players
there yet. You're trying to put value on players so when we get to the draft
we can make the move whether they go forward or if the players we like
might slide back."
Kelley, who traveled as far as Sochi, Russia, for the Under-18
Championships to scout, said the team has 70 to 75 players on its draft
board and then has a region list of other players. As usual, the main focus
will be in the middle and back end.
"You like defensemen and you like centers but we're not being held to it,"
Kelley said.
"In other years we've looked, if all things were equal, to fill out our depth
chart. This year, we think our depth chart right down through (AHL)
Rockford and unsigned draft picks is varied."
• A source said progress is being made in talks on a new contract for
unrestricted free-agent winger Bryan Bickell.
ckuc@tribune.com
Twitter @ChrisKuc
2013 NHL Draft
Sunday at Prudential Center in Newark, N.J.
All seven rounds beginning at 2 p.m.
TV: NBC Sports Network, 2-7 p.m.; NHL Network, 7 p.m.-completion.
Note: Traded second- and third-round picks for defenseman Johnny Oduya.
Chicago Tribune LOADED: 06.30.2013
682967
Chicago Blackhawks
Hawks' Saad lands spot on All-Rookie Team
Tribune report
12:14 PM CDT, June 29, 2013
Given that he was a finalist for the Calder Memorial Trophy, it's no surprise
that Chicago Blackhawks forward Brandon Saad was named Saturday to
the 2012-13 NHL All-Rookie Team.
Saad, 20,was joined by fellow forwards Brendan Gallagher of the Montreal
Canadiens and Calder winner Jonathan Huberdeau of the Florida Panthers,
goaltender Jake Allen of the St. Louis Blues and defensemen Jonas Brodin
of the Minnesota Wild and Justin Schultz of the Edmonton Oilers.
Saad led all rookies with a +17 rating, including a +12 rating on the road,
and was fifth among rookies in each of the three major scoring categories:
goals (10), assists (17) and points (27).
Chicago Tribune LOADED: 06.30.2013
682968
Chicago Blackhawks
In concert: the Stanley Cup
Tribune report
11:56 AM CDT, June 29, 2013
The Stanley Cup will be busy in the hands of the Chicago Blackhawks this
summer, and the venerable NHL chalice apparently can count on concerts
being a staple of its social calendar.
Fresh off its front-and-center appearance at the Hawks' victory rally in Grant
Park, the Cup made its way to Tinley Park via winger Daniel Carcillo for the
Rush concert at the First Midwest Bank Amphitheatre on Friday night.
Carcillo took the stage during a break in the show and hoisted the Cup
while surrounded by band members, drawing a roar from the crowd.
On Saturday night, the Cup could be in for some changes in latitudes and
attitudes: During his appearance on "The Late Show with David Letterman,"
winger Patrick Kane hinted that he and the Cup would make an appearance
at the Jimmy Buffett concert at the Charter One Pavilion at Chicago's
Northerly Island.
Kane and the Cup attended a Buffett concert after the 2010 championship,
to the delight of Parrot Heads everywhere.
Chicago Tribune LOADED: 06.30.2013
682969
Chicago Blackhawks
Blackhawks: 17 seconds to immortality
With bang-bang precision as precious seconds ticked away, Bickell and
Bolland bring Cup back to Chicago
By Steve Rosenbloom, Chicago Tribune reporter
10:12 PM CDT, June 29, 2013
Get to overtime.
That's why Dave Bolland was on the ice. The Blackhawks' fiercest checking
center, along with fellow pests Marcus Kruger and Michael Frolik, backed
by shot-blocking defensemen Niklas Hjalmarsson and Johnny Oduya, led a
unit tasked with checking the Bruins' big line of David Krejci, Milan Lucic
and Nathan Horton.
Their job: Keep things where they were.
Where things were in the final chaotic minutes of Game 6 of the Stanley
Cup Final was, most improbably, tied 2-2.
The Hawks stars had done their thing with 76 seconds remaining, keeping
alive the chance to win the Cup on Monday night in Boston. The Hawks
entered Game 6 leading three games to two. They had a Game 7 in the
United Center to fall back on — and sure, home teams had won at nearly a
70 percent clip in these playoffs — but who wants to rely on what's often a
coin flip's chance in a game as random as hockey?
So, the Hawks had tied it and they had momentum. Now they had checkers
on the ice to check. All Bolland and his group had to do was make sure the
game got to overtime.
Instead, Bolland would make history, 17 seconds later.
The Hawks would become champions, 58.3 seconds later.
"It's the kind of thing you dream about as a kid growing up in Canada,"
Bolland said after it was over.
The shock and awe will endure forever.
pushed the puck up to the hash mark where Duncan Keith had pinched in
to bookend the play.
Keith had played phenomenally in this potential clinching game, up until he
lost the puck behind his net to create the Bruins' go-ahead goal with less
than eight minutes remaining. Now would be a good time to make up for it.
Keith saucered a nifty pass to Toews, who had peeled off the play toward
the goal line on Rask's right.
Understand, Kane-to-Keith-to-Toews took less time than it took for you to
read this sentence. Backhand, forehand, tape-to-tape, all in a tight area, all
in the tightest of situations the way only world class players can.
By now, Michal Handzus had darted to the top of the crease. Hawks coach
Joel Quenneville tapped Handzus as the extra attacker despite a fractured
wrist and torn MCL, not that it would slow him taking the Cup from the
captain after the game.
Also by now, Bryan Bickell had gone to his familiar spot at the far side of
the net, the spot where toothless grins are shared with the world.
(Keeping up? Got six skaters here folks, including Brent Seabrook. OK,
back to it.)
As Toews blew toward the net, Handzus occupied Zdeno Chara, the Bruins
defenseman who had so scared the Hawks earlier in the series. Now,
though, there was no sympathy for the devil.
"In the first couple of games we were giving him a little bit too much respect
by trying to keep the puck away from him," Toews had said of Chara. "He's
not a guy we should be afraid of."
Toews kept his head up — the head that Bruins defenseman Johnny
Boychuk nearly decapitated and cost the Hawks center the third period of
Game 5 — and gingerly flicked the puck to Bickell, who stood open,
inexplicably unchecked by the wide and powerful Lucic.
The vexing Rask anticipated a pass from Toews and began to butterfly in
hopes of covering the back side and everything low.
Nice try. But sorry. Rask isn't that good, which is where we came in with this
guy. Rask was about to be stung for as many goals in 17 seconds as he
was in four games the previous series.
Bickell began the final without one leg. That's a problem for a skater. Bickell
had sprained an MCL (or, as the NHL prefers, lower body ligament) so
badly that the Hawks weren't sure they would get one shift out of him in the
biggest series of the postseason.
Desperate measure
Corey Crawford was on the bench.
The goalie who had been the Hawks' best player throughout this alternately
exhilarating and excruciating postseason could help his team only by
leaving the ice.
Down 2-1 in the dying minutes, the Hawks replaced Crawford with an extra
skater in a desperate attempt to get even. It is a standard move for the
trailing team. Abandon the net to create a 6-on-5 power play, even if the
Hawks' power play in the Stanley Cup Final was something like 1-formommy-make-it-stop to that point.
As Crawford skated to the bench with about 90 seconds to go, Patrick Kane
weaved through center, splitting the indecisive pair of Lucic and Horton.
Crossing the blue line, Kane faced troubled Bruins defenseman Dennis
Seidenberg in the left circle and, despite a hook from backchecking center
Krejci, Kane unleashed a shot goalie Tuukka Rask directed to the left
corner.
Seidenberg moved to backhand the puck up the boards and out of the
Bruins' zone, but Kane — the All-Star winger who had been anonymous for
the first three games of the finals while enduring some criticism that he
lacked the will to go into traffic in tough areas to make plays — stood strong
along the wall and slowed the attempted clear.
Krejci, whose line had done considerable damage to the Hawks in the
series, homed in on the puck and went to bank it out.
But no.
Jonathan Toews — the captain who just a period earlier had pulled
Excalibur out of the Bruins' dominant start to score the tying goal — joined
the fight for the puck. Toews deftly lifted Krejci's stick. The puck chipped
back to Kane, who, before getting crosschecked by Seidenberg, calmly
No matter. This is hockey. You breathe, you play. And so, Bickell swung his
solid frame to the right and planted his left-handed blade on the ice into
perfect one-timing position.
Five-hole. Two-all. One minute, 16 seconds to overtime.
Bickell, the free-agent winger who will be paid a most handsome price for
his services, had hit paydirt again, his ninth goal in the playoffs, as many as
he had through the regular season.
"Whoever is shooting the puck, we feel as a team that we have the
confidence that it's going to go in at some point," Toews said. "So we'll keep
shooting the puck."
A call never made
Claude Julien should have called timeout.
His valiant team dominated most of a must-win game. The Bruins fought on
their home ice like the former champions they were to earn a Game 7 on
the road, like they had done just two years earlier when they captured
hockey's holy grail.
But that was against Vancouver.
The Hawks are not the Canucks.
Julien had to know that. He should have called his timeout.
Julien was dealing with a tired team that just had added frustration to a list
of ailments that included a fractured rib, a punctured lung, a separated
shoulder and torn cartilage — and that was just Patrice Bergeron.
Most notably, that was precisely Bergeron.
The Bruins center, who finished second to Toews in the Selke Trophy
balloting for the NHL's top defensive forward, loomed as the top faceoff
man in the series. The Bruins needed Bergeron because they needed the
puck because they needed to get to overtime because they needed to get
over what Bickell had just done to them.
"We can go in to overtime, but definitely a tough goal late in the game like
that," Bergeron said after the game. "I guess, regroup and go back in to
overtime and get it. But that second goal definitely hurt us a bit and maybe
took away our focus at the wrong time."
Bergeron, who had gone to an emergency room in Chicago during Game 5
and would check into a Boston hospital again after Game 6, was
unavailable. The fatigued Krejci line — the one that just had blown
defensive assignments and surrendered the tying goal — would be pressed
back into service.
Yes, Julien desperately needed to take his timeout.
He wouldn't do it.
'What an ending'
Hjalmarsson is fearless. He will use any part of his body to block a shot and
probably has.
This time, though, the Swedish defenseman — the one the Hawks chose to
pay instead of Cup-winning goalie Antti Niemi after the 2010 season —
showed some soft hands.
The puck skittered along the right boards in the neutral zone. Seventy
seconds remained.
The ice in Boston isn't much better than the ice in Chicago, especially in
June when all the hockey equipment is supposed to be put away for the
summer. Kane would tell David Letterman on national television it was
maybe the worse ice he has played on. Ever.
But as Frolik said before Game 6, after giving it a go at the morning skate:
"The ice wasn't great, but it's the same for both teams. Hopefully it gets a
little better tonight."
It hadn't, not on a day when the high in Boston was 95 degrees. But that's
what happens when you start the playoffs late after a lockout delays the
start of a truncated, 48-game sprint to salvage a season.
The safe play might have been to ring it around the boards. Oduya would
have avoided a potential blocked shot that could carom to center ice and
begin a rush against Crawford, who also had struggled against the Coyotes
in his first playoffs as the Hawks unquestioned starter. Not that the criticism
had reached him.
"I didn't listen to anybody," Crawford said. "What mattered was the guys in
the room. Everyone was behind each other."
Crawford had their backs. He had earned their confidence that he would
make stops when they took chances at the other end. Oduya saw he had a
lane. He one-timed Kruger's pass on net with a smart, low shot.
By now, Frolik had come to the slot, and it's funny how things work out:
After excelling in the thankless role as the league's best penalty killers,
Kruger and Frolik were ready for their close-ups.
Stick down, facing the left point, Frolik deflected Oduya's shot just enough
to beat Rask.
The puck clanged off the post.
It clanged off the post perfectly.
Instead of bouncing wildly, the way many shots off the post do, this one
came straight out, knuckling softly in the crease.
As Oduya wound up, Bolland had jumped from behind the net to the left
post, sneaking inside a Bruins defenseman. Bolland still might have missed
a glorious chance if a scrambling Rask had connected while flailing at the
puck with his stick. But Rask missed.
And there it was.
Tantalizingly, the puck refused to leave the crease.
And there was Bolland, stick down, banging it into forever just ahead of a
Bruins defenseman bearhugging him.
"The puck went back to the 'D,' and (Oduya) shot it," Bolland said. "All I
knew was it was sitting in front of me, so I had to tap it in."
Staggeringly, it was 3-2, Hawks, just 17 seconds after it stunningly had
become 2-2.
But Frolik and his linemates hadn't taken a shift for five or six minutes. Even
on bad ice, they had good legs.
Bolland tried to celebrate the latest goal in regulation to clinch the Stanley
Cup. He tried to throw his arms and stick up.
And so now the puck is bouncing along the boards after Ference chipped it
out of his zone.
They were wrapped by that Bruins defenseman. Finally, Bolland loosed his
hands. Gloves flew. The stick went. Hugs and helmet taps all around. All of
Boston bent in agony.
Hjalmarsson made a stop at the Hawks' blue line and delivered a nifty
backhand pass to Bolland at center ice near the Bruins' Hub-inspired
spoked B.
Bolland, who had played on every line this season in trying to find his game
through injuries, darted across the Bruins blue line. As Ference backskated
into position between Bolland and Rask, Bolland slipped the puck to Frolik
on the right side.
By now, Boychuk had gotten back to cover the slot. Horton had come from
halfway across the ice to check Frolik. Instead of making a safe play in the
corner the way a defensive forward might, Frolik let a shot go that Rask
blocked to the left boards.
The risky shot might have started the Bruins out of their zone with speed,
but Kruger read the play from center and immediately went hard to the left
half-boards. The quick Swedish forward reached the puck ahead of the
tiring Krejci, who himself had come from halfway across the ice and who,
like Horton, was working his second straight shift without benefit of a
timeout.
An obvious play would have been to slide the puck deep into the corner and
around behind the net, where Bolland was waiting.
In another life, Kruger was a center. In fact, as recently as the third period
of Game 5, Kruger centered Kane and Bickell in Toews' absence. He has
the talent. He also has the instincts, which told him to nudge the puck back
to Oduya at the left point.
That Bruins defenseman? Boychuk.
Of course. The man who avoided a suspension for viciously driving his fists
into Toews' head a game earlier. It was a hit that had kept Toews out for the
entire third period of Game 5.
"(Toews) got his bell rung last game," Quenneville said after the clincher.
"He was good to go here tonight. Played a monster game."
Boychuk was too late to do anything with those hands now.
Hockey karma. You know how it can be.
"It's a bad feeling. Bad, like an awful feeling," Boychuk said. "You can't
really describe it. As a player it's probably one of the worst feelings you can
get when you are up by one goal with a minute and 20 left and somehow
you lose the game."
The Hawks killed off the remaining 58.3 seconds. But you know that. What
you never want to forget are those amazing, shocking, magnificent 17
seconds that won a Stanley Cup.
"Forever. I mean, you are going to remember forever," Boychuk said.
"What a game, what an ending, what a season," Quenneville said.
Seventeen seconds, enough for a lifetime.
Chicago Tribune LOADED: 06.30.2013
Consider Oduya. He had been a trade deadline acquisition a season earlier
and performed extremely well in the Hawks' top four. But he struggled in the
first-round playoff loss to the Coyotes.
What's more, the Krejci line had victimized Oduya and Hjalmarsson early in
the series. They were all back on the ice. This would require nerve.
682970
Chicago Blackhawks
NHL draft: Homegrown talents fueled Blackhawks’ Stanley Cup run
BY MARK LAZERUS mlazerus@suntimes.com June 29, 2013 1:18AM
Updated: June 30, 2013 2:41AM
Dave Bolland scored the Stanley Cup-winning goal for the Blackhawks, but
the team’s second championship in four years can trace its origins back
well beyond the 17 seconds of Game 6 that forever will live in franchise
lore.
Think back to 2002, when the Hawks drafted a little-known defenseman out
of Michigan State named Duncan Keith. Or 2003, when they used their first
two picks on Brent Seabrook and Corey Crawford. Bolland and Bryan
Bickell were taken in 2004, and Niklas Hjalmarsson came in 2005.
Then came the two picks that changed the franchise — Jonathan Toews
with the third overall pick in 2006, and Patrick Kane with the first overall pick
in 2007.
Throw in 2011 picks Brandon Saad and Andrew Shaw, and 2008 sixthrounder Ben Smith, and 11 of the 21 Hawks who saw action in the Stanley
Cup Final were home-grown talents.
“We’ve built this team for the most part from the ground up, adding a few
pieces from the outside,” Hawks general manager Stan Bowman said.
“Really, the core from this group came from drafting. We’d like to continue
this process.”
Most picks never make it to the NHL. For every Kane and Toews, there’s a
Jack Skille and Kyle Beach. For every late-round gem such as Shaw and
Hjalmarsson, there are countless players who have never and will never
sniff the NHL. So at this year’s draft on Sunday in Newark, N.J., the Hawks
will have to be particularly efficient. Thanks to the trade for Johnny Oduya
trade, the Hawks don’t have a second- or third-round pick. And they dealt
one of their two fourth-rounders to the San Jose Sharks in the Michal
Handzus trade.
Not that anyone’s complaining, given the payoff of those deals. But the
Hawks will pick last in the first round — 30th — and then not again until the
121st pick. In all, they only have five selections.
The lack of picks plus a surplus of salary could yield some draft-day deals.
With the Hawks trying to re-sign Bickell — who said Thursday that he’d be
willing to give the Hawks a hometown discount to stay with the team that
drafted him — there have been rumblings that Bolland and his $3.375
million salary could be on the trading block. The Hawks are taking about $6
million off the books by buying out the contracts of defenseman Steve
Montador and forward Rostislav Olesz, but they still need to free up some
cash to sign everyone they want to sign.
Plus, Bowman would like to add a few picks so he and director of amateur
scouting Mark Kelley can try to pluck the next big piece of the puzzle out of
obscurity.
“The draft’s an important part,” Bowman said. “So if you can acquire picks,
that’s good.”
The draft tends to be a hotbed of wheeling and dealing, if for no other
reason than all the GMs are in the same place. Bowman expected plenty of
action. During the Hawks’ salary purge in the summer of 2010, they traded
Dustin Byfuglien, Ben Eager and Brent Sopel to the Atlan-ta Thrashers the
day before the draft. In 2011, the Hawks dealt Brian Campbell to the Florida
Panthers (for Olesz) and Troy Brouwer to the Washington Capitals for a
first-round draft pick that became Phillip Danualt, now a highly -regarded
prospect in the Hawks system.
“It’s just the way it’s always ­happened,” Bowman said. “There’s an event,
the draft, and once that passes, the urgency to do a deal isn’t really there.
There’s nothing that tends to bring people together. … There’s always a lot
of talk around then, and if it makes sense, we’ll look into it.”
NOTE: Blackhawks winger Brandon Saad was named to the NHL’s AllRookie team Saturday based on voting by the Professional Hockey Writers’
Association. Saad, who had 10 goals and 17 assists in 46 games, was a
finalist for the Calder Trophy, which goes to the league’s top rookie.
Chicago Sun Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
682971
Chicago Blackhawks
Blackhawks fans, Corey Crawford go ‘nuts’ at rally
BY MARK LAZERUS mlazerus@suntimes.com June 28, 2013 3:28PM
Updated: June 29, 2013 5:13PM
Corey Crawford ambled to the front of the stage and surveyed the
thousands upon thousands who packed 12 softball diamonds worth of
Hutchinson Field and then some. The quiet, unassuming Crawford smiled
broadly, clutching the championship belt playoff MVP Patrick Kane had just
handed him for being ‘‘the best player in the playoffs.’’
After a year of clichés and coachspeak, and a rally full of well-meaning but
uninspiring platitudes, Crawford leaned into the microphone and finally said
what everyone else in the city was thinking.
‘‘[Expletive] right, Chicago!’’ he bellowed. ‘‘Woo! Biggest bunch of beauties
in the league, [expletive] worked their nuts off for this trophy! Woo! No one
will ever take this away from us! We’re the champs!’’
Ah, yes. Raspy voices, slurred speech and a few F-bombs for good
measure. Truly a hockey celebration.
Four days of lugging the Stanley Cup from bar to bar around Chicago
culminated in a summer bash at Grant Park on Friday. First came a parade
that choked downtown streets. Then came a raucous rally on the same field
on which Barack Obama gave his 2008 election night speech.
Hawks fans lined Adams Street behind the United Center six or seven deep
hours before the parade even began, then greeted the double-decker buses
topped with the Hawks and their families along Washington Street, dozens
deep at some points. Fans waved Swedish flags, Canadian flags, American
flags and Chicago flags. They sat on each other’s shoulders and screamed
through the whole parade as if it were a Jim Cornelison national anthem.
Once the procession made it to the waiting throngs at Grant Park,
Cornelison kicked off the party with a rousing anthem and emcee Pat Foley
introduced the front office, the coaching staff, and finally the players.
Former Hawks icons Pierre Pilote, Tony Esposito, Denis Savard and Bobby
Hull were on the stage, too.
The fans watched highlight videos of the playoffs — cheering loudest for the
clips of Crawford’s headlock on the Kings’ Kyle Clifford after Clifford went
after Jonathan Toews in the Western Conference final, and, of course, for
Dave Bolland’s Cup-clinching goal in Game 6 against the Boston Bruins.
They sang ‘‘Happy Birthday’’ to general manager Stan Bowman, who
turned 40 on Friday, chanted ‘‘De-Troit Sucks!’’ one more time for good
measure and booed Gov. Pat Quinn, who proclaimed it ‘‘Stanley Cup
Champion Chicago Blackhawks Day.’’
Hawks coach Joel Quenneville toted the President’s Trophy up to the stage
and told the crowd, ‘‘We’re all very fortunate to play in a place as special as
Chicago.’’
Toews spoke last — his voice hoarse from the weeklong party — but kept it
short and sweet, simply thanking the fans for outdoing themselves since
2010.
‘‘Tough to follow that speech by Corey Crawford,’’ he said.
Television analyst Eddie Olczyk drew a big cheer when he said the Hawks
were now ‘‘at the top of the sports totem pole here in Chicago.’’ The Bears
might have something to say about that, but after two massive
championship celebrations in four seasons, the Hawks — a glorified minorleague team in the eyes of the city for so many years before the 2010
reawakening — have been making quite a case.
‘‘In 2010, you guys waited 49 years to do this,’’ Patrick Sharp told the
crowd. ‘‘This year, we waited three. What do you say we get back here and
do it again next year?’’
Chicago Sun Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
682972
Chicago Blackhawks
Blackhawks’ one goal: a city united
By Bob Verdi
June 28, 2013, shall be remembered in Chicago annals as a day when the
city that works, didn't. Hundreds of thousands and thousands of hundreds
flocked downtown to create yet another standing-room-only crowd for the
Blackhawks, Stanley Cup champions again.
Admirers of the best team in hockey packed sidewalks along streets on the
extended parade route, took pictures from residences, peered from offices
where absolutely nothing was being accomplished, and gathered in
Hutchinson Park, the final staging area of this remarkable celebration.
Once upon a time, 16,666 represented not only capacity for the Stadium on
game nights; it was the ceiling number, hypothesized by skeptics, of
Blackhawks supporters in the entire region. Friday's mass of smiling
humanity seemed closer to or even beyond the 2 million estimate for 2010's
coronation. In any case, a guardian of the Cup volunteered that this
ceremony made other galas during his experience seem like focus groups.
With four choppers above, double decker bus No. 24 was the last of the
caravan to depart the United Center. It carried Patrick Kane, Brandon Saad
and Corey Crawford, the goalie who was the backbone for two months of
grueling playoffs. No sooner had his vehicle turned onto Adams Street
when he heard the chants.
COR-EY!! COR-EY!! COR-EY!!"
Crawford's shades were on, and the mask was off, affording a view of his
pale face and discernible grin. After Monday night's clincher in Boston,
management and labor rejoiced until everybody looked like they'd been
through a car wash. For Friday, they cleaned up nicely, beards mostly
sheared, players in shorts. But sunscreen was required, because 23-plus
high-octane postseason assignments leaves no time for the beach.
"How hard these guys work," marveled Trevor, Crawford's dad, who sat
with wife Sylvia, family and friends in from Canada. No individual on this
winning roster worked harder than Corey, but now he loosened up, waving
to the multitudes, pumping them up with the stick hand, then the glove
hand. Red lights were ubiquitous, but Corey paid them no mind. He won't
have to stop another puck until September. Besides, this cavalcade had a
police escort.
An impromptu band gathered near the Loop, pounding out "Chelsea
Dagger." Kane leaned out to cup his ears for screams of "MVP! MVP!"
Sirens and horns formed a steady soundtrack, accompanied by whistles
from CTA trains. I saw a man, he danced with his wife, and I am not making
this up — at least, I think it was his wife. Joel Quenneville, the most
interesting coach in the world, was on the bus just ahead. He emoted with
hand gestures, but not as if to question a referee. And he couldn't change
lines. His guys are on their own for a summer vacation well deserved.
At Hutchinson Park, an updated video on the giant screen featured Bryan
Bickell and Dave Bolland: "We stand for two goals in 17 seconds." On the
stage, Bickell stood with a knee brace. Jim Cornelison sang "The StarSpangled Banner" as only he can. Chairman Rocky Wirtz and
President/CEO John McDonough, first responders to perform CPR in 2007
on a sickly franchise, were greeted with ovations. Wirtz spoke briefly,
perhaps with a pause to gather himself. His people did not struggle
returning thanks.
"ROC-KY!! ROC-KY!! ROC-KY!!"
When this enlightened regime took hold, the mantra was One Goal, but not
specifically One Cup. Bold action validated promising words, and that
explains why Chicago hockey fans have multiplied exponentially. The new
ones are hooked on the product, and the old ones who felt unrequited love
have united in trusting the organization. That was their one goal. The young
guys in sweaters are terrific, and the sport played the way they play it is
breathtaking. But it is the totality of commitment, from the executive branch
to center ice faceoff dot, that solidifies this connection, this bond.
Stan Bowman, the architect vice president/general manager, was
serenaded with "Happy Birthday to You." He will have his cake, then fly to
today's National Hockey League draft. Pat Foley, for three decades the
popular voice of the Blackhawks, introduced every player who brought
home this Cup and a couple who will be commissioned to secure the next
one, Ben Smith and Ryan Stanton. The scouts, trainers, equipment and
medical staff had their moment in the sun after endless hours in the
trenches.
Kane appeared with his Conn Smythe Trophy for being voted most valuable
player in the playoffs. But Kane didn't vote. He volunteered in Boston that it
could have gone elsewhere, and now he unfurled The Belt that teammates
award to each hero of the night. Kane bestowed it on Crawford, "the best
player in the playoffs." The goalie accepted, tossing in a couple words that
were as blue as the sky. But what's a no-no among myriad friends?
Crawford's goals against average throughout the grind was a spectacular
1.84. That's in stone. His remarks can be edited.
Jonathan Toews, the great captain, brought out the Stanley Cup, gave it not
his first smooch, then saluted the sea of red. He was hoarse. In his shortest
shift since January, Duncan Keith finished off by reminding all that it is
better to live one day as a lion than 1,000 years as a lamb. He spoke in a
dialect — Scottish? — that was not normal for him, but these are not normal
times. Two Stanley Cups in four years with the wherewithal, and the
proclivity to accumulate more? In the era of a hard salary cap? Parity? No,
priceless.
Kane departed with the Stanley Cup, a definite people magnet. He's a
young icon in Chicago, but a couple mates insisted that fans shadowing
Kane were just using him to get introduced to the Cup. Back on the bus,
Crawford took a seat near his parents, clutching The Belt. The boys of
winter were pointed toward a private party, soon to scatter for a couple
months like the confetti shower accorded champions.
"That," said the goalie, "was awesome."
Daily Herald Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
682973
Chicago Blackhawks
Blackhawks go down in history for best reasons
By Barry Rozner
No team wins the Stanley Cup without first suffering the tribulations of a
marathon playoff run, without overcoming two months' worth of trials.
And no team has ever done it with more drama and heart than the 2013
Chicago Blackhawks.
Let that be the reason — their admirable audacity — that we remember
these Stanley Cup champions.
Memories fade over time, but history will record the triumphs of a team that
stared constant calamity in the face and refused to submit.
It is without question the overwhelming characteristic of this title run, the
courage and integrity of a team that would not — and simply could not —
accept defeat.
By now you know all that they survived to reach the top, the steps to the
summit littered with hidden crevices and gaping chasms, each one
threatening to send them to their doom.
Every time, the Hawks had an answer. Every time, they had a solution.
Every time, they had each other.
A beaming symbol of the depth Stan Bowman created out of the salary cap
nightmare he inherited was how the fourth line scored the winning goal to
capture the Stanley Cup, backed by the defensive pairing of Niklas
Hjalmarsson and Johnny Oduya.
Even after Dave Bolland scored the go-ahead goal, the fourth line remained
on the ice to start the final minute, and until a few seconds remained —
when Marian Hossa replaced Michael Frolik, and Brent Seabrook replaced
Hjalmarsson — charged with protecting the lead along with Jonathan
Toews were Hjalmarsson, Oduya, Frolik, Michal Handzus and Corey
Crawford, all players that few believed in beyond Bowman and his staff.
"There was definitely a lot of depth and that was probably our greatest
asset," said Patrick Sharp. "I think back to 2010, you had some guys who
were probably unknown names that made names for themselves
throughout that year and in the playoffs, and you saw it again this year."
Depth of talent and irrepressible spirit throughout the roster, two factors that
carried the Hawks to their best response at their worst deficit.
"The resiliency of this group is really something special," Bowman said. "If
you didn't see what they've been able to do, you probably wouldn't believe
it. There are so many guys on this team who won't give up. They just won't
give up no matter what."
Of course, it can't be done without superstars, but in the salary cap era, the
GM that wins is the GM who can draft, develop and discover the spare
parts that allow a team to win when the top lines are being smothered.
"The depth of our four lines made it such a great season and a fun team to
coach," said Joel Quenneville, who right to the very end managed to push
the correct buttons. "The back end had depth, too, and Corey was just
brilliant for us in goal."
As the Hawks celebrated on the ice late Monday night, every jersey had at
least a smattering of blood on it, courtesy of Andrew Shaw's face. Every
time he hugged a player, each got a reminder of Shaw's unyielding energy
— and yet another teammate who refused to quit.
About 19 hours after the horn sounded on the Stanley Cup Final — and
gloves, sticks and helmets were strewed about TD Garden — I visited with
colleagues Dan Bernstein and Laurence Holmes Tuesday afternoon on the
Score.
They asked what it was like to be on the ice with the Hawks as they
celebrated, and what was most memorable, but I didn't have a great
answer. It was simply too soon.
Now, with a little distance, I know the answer.
It wasn't the beaming Crawford, who found validation in victory. It wasn't
Scotty Bowman, the proud father. It wasn't Rocky Wirtz, who had to stay
away from his beloved team until it was his team to run. And it wasn't
seeing veterans in tears, players such as Handzus, Jamal Mayers, Michal
Rozsival and Ray Emery, guys who had waited their entire lives for that
moment.
All amazing pictures of the mind that will remain secure for an eternity, but
not the one that sticks out.
It was Quenneville recalling the effort of his injured players, choking up and
unable to speak while trying to explain that he didn't think Bryan Bickell
would even play in the series, that Shaw and Handzus probably shouldn't
have dressed, that Oduya, Toews, Hossa, Sharp and Bolland had kept it
together with chewing gum and spit.
He mentioned Patrice Bergeron, who, as it turns out, played Game 6 with
broken ribs, torn cartilage, a separated shoulder and — just for yucks — a
small hole in his lung.
This is a man in Quenneville, keep in mind, who played 800 games in this
league and has coached another 1,200. More than 2,000 games and
Quenneville had trouble verbalizing what he had seen.
"I'm just in awe of what these guys have done," Quenneville said, sniffing
back the tears. "I think you have to commend the effort of both teams. The
series was something very special. Just something very special. Special
men, special players."
That is the indelible moment, a coach stunned by sudden victory, still
shocked by what modern, millionaire players will do for each other, for their
uniform and for a chance to win the Stanley Cup.
And in the end, for reasons even Quenneville knew were too esoteric or
arbitrary to explain, it went the Hawks' way.
"It was one of those seasons," Quenneville said. "It was a fairy tale ending
and an amazing season."
An amazing season, a series for the ages and a champion that will live in
the hearts of Chicagoans forever.
As long as there are sports and as long as there is ice, these Blackhawks
will be remembered.
They have earned at least that much.
Daily Herald Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
682974
Chicago Blackhawks
No overhaul this time for Hawks roster
Looking back on 25 players who brought the Cup back to Chicago
By Tim Sassone
Stan Bowman has some good news for Blackhawks fans.
While the NHL salary cap is going down to $64.3 million from $70.2 million,
the Blackhawks general manager says there won't be dramatic changes to
the roster like there was in 2010 after the first Stanley Cup win.
"We are going to make a few changes, but it's not going to be like before,"
Bowman said. "There's a lot of work to be done here in a short amount of
time with the schedule so tight and the draft approaching (Sunday). We
don't have it all sorted out yet, but we have an idea of what we want to do. It
just takes some time."
Dave Bolland — He'll always be remembered as the guy who scored the
goal to win the second Stanley Cup with less than a minute to play in Game
6 against Boston, but did it come in his last game with the Hawks? Trading
Bolland would be risky, especially since the Hawks are so thin at center.
Michal Handzus — He said he wants to return, but at age 36 he might not
get that chance. He was invaluable in the playoffs, however, and is quite
popular with his teammates if that means anything. He will be an
unrestricted free agent on Friday.
Marcus Kruger — Turned into a premier penalty killer with Michael Frolik,
and Kruger is a must to get re-signed as a restricted free agent if for no
other reason than that. He assisted on Bolland's game-winner with less
than a minute to play in Game 6.
Jonathan Toews — There are no words left to describe the kind of season
he had and what he means to the team. He's a true leader of men.
Winger:
Bryan Bickell — His 9 goals in the playoffs were second only to Patrick
Sharp's 10, one more important than the last. He couldn't have picked a
better time to have the playoff of his life, but he's been a good soldier and
deserves whatever he can get as an unrestricted free agent.
First order of business for Bowman is getting left wing Bryan Bickell resigned before he becomes an unrestricted free agent on Friday.
Brandon Bollig — Stepped into the Finals and gave the Hawks two strong
games physically while filling in for the benched Viktor Stalberg.
"I'm proud of the way (Bickell) has progressed as a player and I'm happy for
him," Bowman said. "We have a long history together going back to when
we drafted him. I've spent a lot of time over the years trying to keep him
encouraged and he spent three or four years in the minor leagues and
sometimes those guys get disgruntled.
Daniel Carcillo — Will finally get a ring after missing out in 2010 when he
was with the Flyers.
"But he stuck with it and he just improved along the way, so if anything
we're excited for him and we certainly want to keep him here. It's a puzzle
to put together and try to work it out, but I think he wants to be here. I know
he's said that publicly and we certainly want him back, so we're going to do
everything we can to make that happen."
Bickell said on Thursday he would consider a hometown discount to stay.
Getting restricted free agents Nick Leddy and Marcus Kruger re-signed
comes next for Bowman.
With the franchise's fifth Stanley Cup title in grasp (and the second in four
seasons), here's a roster breakdown of what each player contributed in the
record-setting season and what kind of a future might be ahead for them.
Defense:
Sheldon Brookbank — Provided depth on the blue line and he figures to do
it again next season since he has one year remaining on his contract.
Niklas Hjalmarsson — One of the team's most underrated players, he's a
top shot blocker and a dependable defenseman. He's going into the final
year of his contract as a two-time Stanley Cup winner so getting him resigned could be tricky.
Duncan Keith — What's left to say about this guy? He had 13 points in the
playoffs and averaged well over 30 minutes of ice time a game in the
Finals. He is signed through 2023, so get used to seeing No. 2 around.
Nick Leddy — He had a good regular season, but played less and less as
the playoffs progressed. The Hawks still love his upside and want to keep
the 22-year-old defenseman. Bowman said he is not worried about Leddy
getting an offer sheet.
Johnny Oduya — He was plus-12 with 10 points in the playoffs. That says it
all about Oduya's value when it mattered most.
Michal Rozsival — One of Bowman's toughest decisions will be whether to
offer the 34-year-old unrestricted free agent another contract. He certainly
deserves it based on his play in the playoffs, but how much more than the
$2 million he made this season would it take? It might be time for the
Hawks to go with Adam Clendening to run the power play, if nothing else.
Brent Seabrook — He scored 2 of the biggest goals of the postseason for
the Hawks, both in overtime, against Detroit in Game 7 of that series and in
Game 4 at Boston. He added a physical edge the Hawks couldn't have
done without against the Bruins and really stepped up as a leader in a
couple situations when Jonathan Toews either wasn't scoring taking
penalties against the Detroit Red Wings.
Center:
Michael Frolik — Nobody on the Hawks played harder than Frolik from the
first game of the season through Game 6 of the Finals. Accepted his role on
the fourth line and turned into one of the game's top penalty killers.
Marian Hossa — Played on pure guts the last three games of the Finals
with a back so bad he might need surgery. He had 7 goals and 16 points in
the playoffs to remind everyone that he is probably the Hawks' second-best
all-around player behind Toews.
Patrick Kane — A big-game player by every definition of the word. His hat
trick against Los Angeles in the finale of the Western Conference finals
looked like small potatoes compared to his clutch 2-goal game in Game 5 of
the Finals. He has earned the right to act as crazy as he wants this offseason.
Jamal Mayers — A pro's pro who is likely to retire a champion. And it's well
deserved.
Brandon Saad — The man-child from Pittsburgh became a hero with his
consistent play, which earned him a spot on the NHL's all-rookie team on
Saturday.
Patrick Sharp — He led the team in playoff goals in both Cup years, which
is a true testament to his ability to come up big when it matters the most.
Sharp doesn't get as much attention as Toews or Kane, but he should.
Andrew Shaw — The guts of the team, Shaw played with a broken rib for
the last two series and took a puck to the face in Game 6 against Boston
and still returned to play. Sometimes good things come out of nowhere,
which was the case with Shaw, a fifth-round draft pick.
Ben Smith — He will get his name on the Cup for having played a game in
the Finals when Hossa couldn't go in Game 3. He definitely should figure
into the team's plans for next year.
Viktor Stalberg — Unfortunately for Stalberg, his last game with the Hawks
was probably the most memorable for him. As an unrestricted free agent
and not one of coach Joel Quenneville's favorites, he will undoubtedly sign
elsewhere but as a Stanley Cup champion.
Goaltender:
Corey Crawford — As Stan Bowman said, Crawford took the long way to
becoming a Stanley Cup champion. He played in the minors for five years
before finally getting his chance to start in 2011. There have been bumps
along the way, but that hardly matters now.
Ray Emery — Another unrestricted free agent who may or may not return.
There could be a team out there ready to throw big money at him and the
opportunity to start, but Emery said last week there's something fun about
winning so his return to back up Crawford for another season is a
possibility.
Daily Herald Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
682975
Chicago Blackhawks
Shorties.
The Bowmans younger and older.
Why hockey’s a big hit in Chicago
Frolik and Kruger killing time.
Morning skates.
By Mike Imrem
Puck possession.
Hawks' home games on TV.
Why are hockey, the Blackhawks and the NHL such a big hit in Chicago?
"Let's go, Hawks! … Let's go, Hawks! … Let's go, Hawks!"
Well, the big hits themselves do have something to do with it. But they
represent only one of myriad elements that comprise the unique rhythms,
traditions and language of the sport.
The old Chicago Stadium.
Here are some other reasons, past and present, from Mush March to
Elbows Nesterenko to Captain Serious, for the game's popularity around
here:
Don't forget Dale Tallon.
For starters, of course, Lord Stanley's Cup.
Winning it, hoisting it, hugging it, kissing it, drinking from it, enjoying one full
day to do what a champion wants to do with it.
16,666.
The Sutters, give or take a half dozen of them.
Agitators, belligerents and pests.
Speed and skill vs. size and strength.
The statues today … and the real thing back in the day.
Playoff intensity, playoff overtime and playoff beards.
Line changes.
Playoff hockey, period.
Winners and losers in the handshake line after a playoff series.
The greatest 17 seconds in memory.
Slap shots, wrist shots and one-timers.
Any goaltender that stands on his head.
The "C."
Charlie Gardiner, Glenn Hall, Tony Esposito, Eddie Belfour and now Corey
Crawford.
The room.
My personal favorite, Al Rollins.
"B-a-a-a-a-a-a-nerman!
Rough-tough, rock 'em-sock 'em, end-to-end mayhem that requires
penalties to be whistled for transgressions like slashing, spearing, roughing,
cross-checking, charging, boarding, hooking, elbowing and fighting.
Sorry but the NHL's appeal has to include goons, five-minute majors, thugs
and game misconducts.
But also included has to be Lady Byng.
Players being paid like the 1 percent but working like the 99 percent.
Pat Foley and Eddie Olczyk.
Doc Emrick and Eddie Olczyk.
The organ-I-zation.
"Here come the Hawks" … "Cold Steel on Ice … "One Goal."
Lloyd Pettit.
The Indian head, as politically incorrect as it might be.
Opponents like Gordie Howe, Bobby Orr, Wayne Gretzky, Mario Lemieux
and Sidney Crosby.
Eh.
Lord Stanley's Cup … again.
The parties, parades and rallies.
Those are just some of the reasons hockey is such a big hit in Chicago.
Eddie Olczyk.
Maybe the question should be why it isn't as big in so many places across
the rest of the United States.
Moose Jaw, Medicine Hat and the Madhouse on Madison.
Daily Herald Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
"The Star-Spangled Banner" by Jim Cornelison, and before him Wayne
Messmer.
"Oh, Canada."
"Chelsea Dagger."
The goal light.
The horn.
The siren.
Forechecks, backchecks and unsung Czechs like Michal Rozsival.
Oh yeah, and fat checks signed by Rocky Wirtz.
John McDonough and Jay Blunk.
RIP: Keith Magnuson, Reggie Fleming and too many other Hawks from my
youth.
A Zamboni, any Zamboni.
Savvy plus Spin-o-ramas plus Savoir Faire equals Denis Savard.
Penalty shots.
Power plays.
682976
Chicago Blackhawks
It's all happening again on CSN
June 29, 2013, 12:00 pm
Nina Falcone
A giant celebration erupted after Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final. An even
bigger one emerged yesterday throughout the streets of Chicago as the
Blackhawks celebrated their victory with millions of fans.
Don't you just wish that excitement could continue forever?
Well now you can keep those memories with you as Comcast SportsNet reairs the Blackhawks parade and rally tonight on 7:00. So set your DVRs,
folks, because this is your chance to keep all of this recorded on your
television. Forever.
It's time to party like it's Friday again, when everyone in the world (well, at
least it seemed that way) packed the streets to celebrate the Blackhawks'
season. In case you don't recall, Corey Crawford did this. Oh, and Duncan
Keith had a moment of his own. And now you can keep those memories in
your own personal collection for the low cost of... nothing.
So throw your jersey back on and keep the celebration going. Because it's
(Chicago's) Cup.
Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 06.30.2013
682977
Colorado Avalanche
Former Colorado Thunderbird
No. 1 North American skater
Quentin Shore hoping for better luck in second shot at NHL draft
Gustav Olofsson, incoming Colorado College freshman
Former Colorado Thunderbird
By Caitlin Swieca
No. 51 North American skater
The Denver Post
Will Butcher, incoming DU freshman
Posted: 06/30/2013 12:01:00 AM MDT
Defenseman from Sun Prarie, Wis.
No. 87 North American skater
A year ago, everything seemed to be lining up in Quentin Shore's favor.
Quentin Shore, DU sophomore
He was just finishing his time with the U.S. national team development
program for elite hockey prospects. He had five points in six games during
the 2012 men's under-18 world championship, helping Team USA capture
the gold medal.
Denver native
Heading into the 2012 NHL draft, he was ranked 80th among North
American skaters by Central Scouting.
Forward from Thousand Oaks, Calif.
But when draft day arrived, Shore wasn't selected.
"I had really high expectations going into it, so it was kind of a
disappointment not getting drafted," Shore said. "My year this year showed
teams that I should be."
Shore, a rising sophomore on the University of Denver hockey team, is
eligible for Sunday's draft. He's not listed among this year's Central
Scouting top 200 skaters, but he hopes his productive freshman season
with the Pioneers caught the attention of NHL scouts.
Shore had 10 goals and nine assists in 39 games with the Pioneers and
was the Western Collegiate Hockey Association rookie of the week twice.
The Denver native describes himself as a two-way center, but showed his
versatility last season by spending time at wing and playing on the
Pioneers' power play and penalty kill.
Although he had an opportunity to play with some of the top prospects in
the country with the national team, playing at DU proved Shore can
compete with older players.
"He's able to play against bigger, stronger, faster players," said DU
associate head coach Steve Miller. "He's made huge strides this year and
gained a lot of confidence in all types of situations he was put in."
Shore credited DU strength coach Matt Shaw for helping him improve
weaker areas of his game, notably speed. Shore said he "lived under the
squat rack" last season, working on his explosiveness.
"He had a lot of experience with taking care of his body and having that kind
of self-responsibility and focus in what he
Quentin Shore (Denver Post file)
does," Shaw said. "It just came down to ensuring that we took him to that
next level."
Shore, a member of "Colorado's first family of hockey," would follow his
brothers — former DU players Drew and Nick — into the pros if he's
drafted. Drew is a center with the Florida Panthers. Nick signed with the Los
Angeles Kings in April after finishing his junior season at DU.
Shore said Drew described life in the NHL as "everything we dreamed of." If
he's drafted Sunday, Shore will be one step closer to joining him there.
"I'm really looking forward to it," Shore said. "Hopefully I can be as excited
after it as I am now."
Caitlin Swieca: 303-954-1297, cswieca@denverpost.com
Local players to watch
All north american players from ages 18-20 are eligible to be picked in
sunday's nhl draft.
When an nhl team drafts a college player, the team retains his signing
rights until the player finishes college and can sign the player at any time.
Rankings from nhl's central scouting list:
Seth Jones, Portland Winterhawks
Former Colorado Thunderbird
Trevor Moore, incoming DU freshman
No. 192 North American skater
Brad Hawkinson, incoming DU freshman
Forward from Aurora
Former Colorado Thunderbird
Caitlin Swieca, The Denver Post
Denver Post: LOADED: 06.30.2013
682978
Colorado Avalanche
Advice for Colorado Avalanche: Keep the top pick in Sunday's NHL draft
By Adrian Dater
The Denver Post
Posted: 06/30/2013 12:01:00 AM MDT
Updated: 06/30/2013 12:26:05 AM MDT
NEW YORK — Should the Avalanche trade the first pick in Sunday's NHL
draft? That was the question facing Avs management Saturday.
Joe Sakic, Patrick Roy, Greg Sherman, Craig Billington and the team's
scouting staff were in meetings together much of the day, mulling final
options heading into draft day at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J.
While the new era of Avs management has been more open to the media
than the old one, none of the above was saying anything Saturday about
what will happen. Sakic did say earlier in the week he had gotten a few
inquiries as to what it might take to pry the No. 1 pick from the Avs, but
overall he characterized things as pretty quiet.
There were murmurs Saturday that things got a bit more active, but the
Avalanche wouldn't confirm that. What likely will play out until 1 p.m. MDT
on Sunday is this: The Avs will continue to listen to offers for the top pick,
just because it's the smart thing to do. But the offer would have to be
extraordinarily attractive for them to part with that pick.
My two cents: The Avs can't blow this. Which is why, if I were Sakic, I'd
keep the pick, draft Nathan MacKinnon and go back to Denver secure in the
knowledge that I got the player deemed the best available on the latest list
of most NHL scouts.
I still like defenseman Seth Jones if I were picking first, but since the Avs
said they won't take him, I've focused on the top forward available and that
seems to be MacKinnon. Jonathan Drouin has a ton of skill — probably the
most of any player available Sunday — but his size worries me if I'm in
charge. It wouldn't worry me if I had the No. 3 or No. 4 pick and he was
available, but in the No. 1 slot? I don't know. All those fancy moves of his
that worked so easily in junior hockey aren't going to work as well playing in
the NHL.
Aleksander Barkov? I'm not sure the Finnish League is the best place to
develop for the NHL, and he seems a tad slow. Again, we're talking about
him in the perspective of a No. 1 pick.
If the Avs trade the top pick for a roster player or two and no lower than the
No. 4 pick in return, they had better make sure they get quality. No "big
name but past their prime" expensive guys such as, say, Ryan Miller from
Buffalo. No "project" guys, either — guys who may have a lot of potential
but haven't really proven it. The Avs have made too many of those trades
(Erik Johnson, Derek Morris, Semyon Varlamov).
If they trade the first pick, the Avs can't come away with anything short of a
bona fide roster player or two, plus nothing lower than the No. 3 pick.
Yes, this is a deep draft, one that's said to compare favorably to the 2003
draft, considered one of the best in NHL history. But if the Avs deal the top
pick, they essentially will tell the world: "We didn't get the best player
available in the draft. We decided to take someone we had pegged a notch
or two below MacKinnon and a player or two deemed expendable from
another team."
That doesn't sell too well. The optics would be bad. If the Avs are on record
as saying MacKinnon is the best player available in the draft, they should
take him. He's been compared by some to Sidney Crosby. He's been a
winner everywhere he's played. And his wish as a kid was to be drafted by
the Avs.
Sometimes the best trade is no trade. That, in this case, applies to the
Avalanche.
Denver Post: LOADED: 06.30.2013
682979
Colorado Avalanche
MacKinnon hasn't been all about hockey, according to his 19-year-old
sister, Sarah.
For Nathan MacKinnon, hockey success was always in the card
"We had some fierce Scrabble games growing up," she said. "He wanted to
win at that as much as anything else ever. Whatever it is, Nate just wants to
win and be the best."
The Denver Post
Her brother even has good taste in music, she said.
Posted: 06/30/2013 12:01:00 AM MDT
"Anything from Elton John to country, to R&B and rap, I'm always stealing
his iTunes," Sarah said.
Updated: 06/30/2013 12:22:36 AM MDT
NEW YORK — Graham MacKinnon still has the hockey card to prove the
story is true.
When his son, Nathan, was 7 or 8 years old, he got a personalized hockey
card made for Nathan. The front showed him in hockey gear posing for the
camera, while the back had blank space to fill in personal information. What
did young Nathan write?
"He said 'I want to play for the Halifax Mooseheads, then I want to get
drafted by Colorado and play with Joe Sakic,' " Graham said.
While he never got the opportunity to play with Sakic, Nathan Mac-Kinnon
could be the No. 1 pick by Sakic and the Avalanche in the NHL draft
Sunday in Newark, N.J.
What are the odds? It's never been about luck for the 17-year-old from Cole
Harbour, Nova Scotia.
"It almost scared me. At age 2, he took right away to skating," said
MacKinnon's father, who played junior C hockey as a goaltender. "I had
trouble keeping up with him, no joke. We never pushed hockey on him at
all. He just took to it right away, fell in love with it and hasn't stopped. When
he was 9 or 10, I'd sometimes say to him, 'You know, not everyone makes it
in hockey,' and he'd just get mad. He'd say, 'I'm playing hockey, I'm playing
hockey. I don't have a Plan B, I just have a Plan A.' He'd say, 'Plan B is just
a distraction from Plan A,' and he was so serious about it."
MacKinnon and his parents — Graham and Kathy — traveled to weekend
tournaments when he was a kid. While others might be up late on Saturday
nights in whatever town they were in, young Nathan always was in bed
early.
"A lot of his best games in those tournaments were on Sundays because
the other kids would be tired from staying up late and he'd be well rested,"
Graham said.
After a dominant Memorial Cup tournament in which he posted 13 points
(seven goals) in four games for the champion Mooseheads, MacKinnon
jumped to the top of many scouts' lists as the best player available in this
year's draft.
Sakic, now the Avalanche's executive director of hockey operations, has
said the team is leaning toward making MacKinnon the first pick overall.
If that happens, MacKinnon's hockey card wishes will come true. But until
they do, the blond center isn't going to jinx anything by assuming Sakic and
new Avs coach Patrick Roy have a similar dream.
"It's been pretty cool to hear that they might want me, especially from two
Hall of Famers like Joe and Patrick. It would definitely be a great
opportunity to go there, but I don't want to get my hopes up too much. A lot
can change," MacKinnon said.
MacKinnon, like most top draft prospects, has spent the weekend attending
NHL and media functions. It's natural to assume there is a chilling rivalry
between him and highly rated defenseman Seth Jones, whose team he
beat in the Memorial Cup title game. The opposite is true. They sat together
for much of a media luncheon Friday next to the Hudson River, laughing
and joking.
"He's a great guy," Jones said of MacKinnon. "He's turned into a good
buddy of mine. I'll be happy for him if he goes No. 1, and I think he'd feel
the same for me. Of course, I wish he hadn't scored so many goals on us in
the Memorial Cup, but that's just how good he is."
MacKinnon is quick to return any and all compliments.
"Seth is going to be a great player. He already is one. And he's just an
awesome guy," MacKinnon said.
If he is introduced to the Denver media at the Pepsi Center on Monday —
as the Avs plan to do with their top pick — it won't be the first time
MacKinnon walks through the arena doors. Last year, he traveled to Vail
with his father to get his knee examined at the Steadman Hawkins Clinic
and had a minor procedure done. They noticed the Avalanche was in
Denver for a game against the St. Louis Blues during the visit, and attended
the game as paying customers.
Soon, the Avs may be paying MacKinnon a lot of money to come to the
arena.
"It's surreal to think about," Graham said.
Denver Post: LOADED: 06.30.2013
682980
Colorado Avalanche
Sakic gets another big shot for Avalanche
By Mark Kiszla
The Denver Post
Posted: 06/30/2013 12:01:00 AM MDT
Here in Colorado, we count on Joe Sakic to deliver the Stanley Cup.
Sunday, we find out if Super Joe can deliver again.
With the first pick in the NHL draft, the Colorado Avalanche selects ... a
path back to championship contention.
Don't mess it up, Mr. Sakic.
Nathan MacKinnon is the best choice. Yes, the young center is a better
choice than Seth Jones, the son of a pro basketball player and a kid who
fell in love with hockey during a golden time in Colorado sports history,
when Sakic could match Broncos quarterback John Elway stride for stride
as a local hero leading the victory parade.
MacKinnon is the better choice because a goal-scorer can light the lamp
and reignite hockey enthusiasm throughout Denver in a way no
defenseman possibly can. MacKinnon is the right choice because he
doesn't shy away from the label of being the next Sidney Crosby.
MacKinnon is the smart choice because if the Avalanche trades down in the
draft, Sakic would never hear the end of it should the No. 1 pick start to
build a Hall of Fame résumé.
Way back in 1996, Sakic presented the Stanley Cup to tens of thousands of
Denver fans who had been waiting all their lives to feel like major-league
winners.
In 2001, Sakic handed the Cup to Ray Bourque in a feel-good moment
guaranteed to shine forever.
As Elway could tell Sakic, however, the goodwill earned as a player doesn't
immunize against second-guessing when you undertake a second career
as a front-office executive.
Elway heard howls of protest when he dumped Tim Tebow for Peyton
Manning and his creaky neck.
The easy way out for Sakic would be to make Jones the No. 1 selection
with a solid Colorado connection.
There's nothing easy, however, about winning the Cup.
Denver Post: LOADED: 06.30.2013
682981
Colorado Avalanche
St. Patrick is back and ready to win
By Woody Paige
The Denver Post
Posted: 06/30/2013 12:01:00 AM MDT
Legend has it that one St. Patrick drove the snakes out of Ireland; the other
drove the dread wings from Colorado.
against two Detroit goaltenders). He could have been a forward or a goon.
"I always studied the complete game and tried to get into the minds of the
attackers and the defensemen, to anticipate what they were going to do and
how they played. I understand every position and aspect of the game," Roy
said.
"Great hockey players don't become great hockey coaches because they're
not willing to put in the hard work and put in the time working their way up.
They show up 25, 30 minutes before practice and ask the assistants, 'What
are we going to do today?' I'm more demanding of myself.
"After retiring (in 2001), no, I wasn't considering being a coach. I became
owner and general manager (of a Quebec Junior Hockey League team).
Then I decided that, yes, I also wanted to coach (in 2005)." As a rookie
coach he guided the Ramparts to the Memorial Cup. "I've approached
coaching the same way I did as a player. I showed up at 7:30 in the
morning and didn't leave sometimes until 1:30 a.m.," Roy said.
Only one tale is true.
There were no snakes in Ireland when the original St. Patrick arrived.
On Sunday afternoon, The Wizard of Wah, Patrick Roy, returns to action for
the Avs for the first time since retiring as a player 10 years ago.
Coach Roy will join with fellow Hall of Famer, former Stanley Cup teammate
and Avalanche executive vice president of hockey operations Joe Sakic to
make the No. 1 pick in the NHL draft and make the Avalanche relevant
again.
Don't mess it up, Joey and Patty.
Just go with Nathan "Kid Magnificent" MacKinnon.
Roy is on the clock.
"I know I will get fired someday," Roy, who has never minced meat or
words, told me.
What? How about if you win the Stanley Cup and retire?
"When I win one, I will want to win another and another, but all coaches get
fired eventually." (The two Avs coaches who won Stanley Cups were.)
Welcome back, St. Patrick. The Avalanche, the NHL and all of us in Denver
have missed you. The Avs haven't won a championship without the game's
greatest goalie. They don't even reach the playoffs (as they did in all eight
of his seasons in Colorado) anymore.
I asked Roy to define his team's personality in 2013-14. "We may not win
the Cup, but I want passion, and we will be entertaining," he said. Roy
always was a passionate entertainer.
It has been pointed out that Roy is a rookie as a coach. He has pointed out
that all NHL coaches had been rookie NHL coaches.
But I pointed out two other problematical and historical issues.
None of the ex-NHL goalies who became NHL coaches ever won a Cup,
and most were unsuccessful and fired.
None of the Hall of Famers who became NHL coaches was the coach for a
Stanley Cup champion the entire season (*).
The list isn't long in both categories.
Roy is only the eighth former goalie to be named an NHL coach. (Two
others served a few games on an interim basis.)
Gerry Cheevers coached the Boston Bruins to four first- and second-place
division finishes, then was fired in his fifth season. Emile Francis coached
the New York Rangers and St. Louis Blues for 13 seasons, but lost in his
only Stanley Cup Finals.
Roy is the 11th Hall of Fame player to become a coach. Cheevers, Wayne
Gretzky, Bryan Trottier, Phil Esposito and the rest didn't earn a title as
coach. *The Devils captured the Cup in 2000 with Larry Robinson, but he
took over with only eight regular-season games left. With Robinson at the
helm for a full season, the Devils lost in the Finals to Roy and the Avs.
Roy listened patiently and silently before responding confidently and
assertively:
"Goalies only concentrated on stopping the puck. I was different," Roy said.
Roy was an aggressive, Sean Connery-like hockey player who wandered
from goal, handled the puck and started plays and fights (particularly
In fact, in 2009, Roy turned down a coaching overture from the Avs
because he didn't think he was ready yet. He is ready now. "My new
challenge is to bring another Cup to Colorado."
What about that legendary Red Wings rivalry? "We believed every year we
would have to go through Detroit to win the Cup. It's not the same. They're
moving to the Eastern Conference (and the teams will play only two games
next season), and I guess we have to find another rival. Maybe Chicago
(which just won the Cup). Maybe we play the Red Wings in the Finals."
Wouldn't that be entertaining?
St. Patrick could drive those snakes from Detroit out of Colorado once
more.
Denver Post: LOADED: 06.30.2013
682982
Columbus Blue Jackets
Michael Arace commentary: Blue Jackets had best act swiftly with
Bobrovsky
By Michael Arace
The Columbus Dispatch Saturday June 29, 2013 6:07 AM
NEW YORK — The Blue Jackets are trying to work out a contract extension
for Sergei Bobrovsky, who is 24 years old, coming off a Vezina Trophywinning season and entertaining a lucrative offer from a team in Russia’s
Continental Hockey League. Both sides are groping for comparable NHL
contracts, and there is not one that fits.
We are here to help. No, really, it’s our pleasure.
Bobrovsky’s agent, Paul Theofanous, is holding a strong hand. His client
has a Vezina. His client’s contract reaches term on Monday, at which point
SKA St. Petersburg can open a vault for him. His client can begin soliciting
offer sheets from other NHL teams on Friday. The upshot of all of this: If the
process is dragged out, Theofanous does not mind, because the price is
only going to rise.
So, if you are Jackets general manager Jarmo Kekalainen, what do you do?
That depends. If you feel that Bobrovsky is the real deal — and his résumé,
although abbreviated, suggests that he is — you do not mess around. You
do this deal sooner rather than later, because the price is only going to rise.
There is a strong indication that Kekalainen believes in Bobrovsky. To wit:
He has said he will match any offer tendered his restricted free-agent goalie
by any other team. If you are Kekalainen, do you let it go that far? For
instance, what happens when, say, the Philadelphia Flyers swoop in and
offer something crazy? After Friday, any one of a handful of teams can step
in and set the market price for your property. You don’t want to take that
risk.
If you want Bobrovsky, you must act with alacrity and decisiveness. If he is
your guy, you get it done.
You do not offer him, say, Artem Anisimov money. Anisimov signed a threeyear, $9.85 million contract — with an annual salary-cap hit of $3.28 million
— this week. Anisimov is a fine player and an important piece. He also is a
second- or third-line center. He is not a No. 1 goaltender holding a Vezina
Trophy.
If you want Bobrovsky, you do not put him in the same contract range as a
top-nine forward.
So, what do you do?
If you want to go long-term, you do not have to pay him as much as, say,
Jonathan Quick, who had a Stanley Cup and a Conn Smythe Trophy at age
26. Quick also has a 10-year contract worth $58 million. It was signed last
year, before front-loaded contracts were strongly regulated. The market is
different now and, besides, Bobrovsky does not have Quick’s bona fides.
Here is a long-term deal: four years, $20 million. That is$5 million per,
which is more than your second/third-line center makes. You are paying a
moderate price to buy Bob out of his first year of unrestricted free agency
and you are assigning him the same salary-cap hit as Marc-Andre Fleury,
who has a Cup. Done.
From what we have heard, Kekalainen would prefer a two-year deal. He
would like to have Bobrovsky next come up with another year of restricted
free agency remaining. Fine — but if you’re going to go short-term,
understand, the annual fee goes up. That is just the way it is, and if you
don’t get that, you are playing ultracheap with your Vezina winner.
Here is a short-term deal: Two years, $11 million. You assign Bobrovsky
the third-highest salary-cap hit on your team, after Marian Gaborik
($7.5 million) and James Wisniewski ($5.5 million). You still have him as a
restricted free agent in 2015, and by then you will know, beyond a doubt,
whether he is your franchise goaltender. Done.
If Bobrovsky turns his back on legitimate offers, he will at least understand
that you are not messing around. After that, he can go solicit the rest of the
NHL. Or, he can bolt for Russia and make a career out of stopping Nikolay
Zherdev and Nikita Filatov.
Columbus Dispatch LOADED: 06.30.2013
682983
Columbus Blue Jackets
Blue Jackets notebook: Richards rewarded with one-year contract
extension
The Jackets still are considering extending qualifying offers to forward
Colton Gillies, defensemen Ted Ruth and Steven Delisle, and goaltenders
Allen York and Patrick Killeen.
If those players aren’t given qualified offers by Tuesday, they will become
unrestricted free agents on Friday.
Columbus Dispatch LOADED: 06.30.2013
By Aaron Portzline
The Columbus Dispatch Saturday June 29, 2013 5:56 AM
NEW YORK — Todd Richards has coached the Blue Jackets through two
of their most chaotic seasons — blockbuster trades, high-level hirings and
firings, etc. — and now he hopes to reap the reward.
Richards signed a one-year extension yesterday, pushing his contract
through the 2014-15 season.
“I’m thrilled to be a part of this organization, and I’m excited, really excited,
about the direction it’s headed,” he said.
Richards was hired as an assistant coach for Scott Arniel’s staff on June
20, 2011. Since then, Arniel was fired, star players Rick Nash and Jeff
Carter were traded, John Davidson was hired as president of hockey
operations and general manager Scott Howson was fired and replaced by
Jarmo Kekalainen.
Richards replaced Arniel 41 games into the 2011-12 season.
In his 89 games as coach of the Blue Jackets, Richards is 42-38-9 (.522),
the highest winning percentage among Columbus coaches with 50-plus
games.
“A lot of things have happened over those 89 games,” Richards said with a
laugh. “Where we were at when I came in almost two years ago — from the
players up to the management — there have been huge changes, but all of
them in the right direction.
“The way we played last season — not the first one-third, but certainly the
final two-thirds of the season — I’m really proud of that. And I want us to
keep pushing for more.”
The Blue Jackets ended the season on a 19-5-5 run, missing a spot in the
Stanley Cup playoffs by a point.
“We believe Todd is one of the top young coaches in our game, and he has
had a steadying influence on our team since taking over,” Kekalainen said.
Richards said the extra year on his contract will make it easier to coach the
2013-14 season.
“It’s security,” Richards said. “Psychologically, it’s much better knowing
going into the year that it’s not your last year. There’s no fretting or worrying
about what’s going to happen next year. It’s all about the hockey, and
winning hockey games.”
Acton leaving
After one season in Columbus, assistant coach Keith Acton is leaving to
become an associate coach with the Edmonton Oilers.
“I’m really happy for him,” Richards said. “It’s another opportunity for him,
and it’s moving up (to associate). It’s more responsibility, but he deserves it.
“But on the other side, I’m disappointed because he made our organization
(and) our team better. It’s going to be tough to fill that spot.”
Acton, heading into his 20th season as an NHL assistant, handled Blue
Jackets forwards and assisted on the power play and penalty kill. Richards
will begin a search for a replacement soon. He said Dan Hinote, a third
assistant who watches games from the press box, will be considered for
promotion to bench assistant.
Qualifying offers
The Blue Jackets extended qualifying offers to goaltender Sergei
Bobrovsky, forward Spencer Machacek, and defensemen Cody Goloubef,
David Savard and Blake Parlett, allowing the club to maintain rights to the
players. All five could have become restricted free agents on Friday.
Bobrovsky and the Jackets are embroiled in contract negotiations that
started in March. The sides are far apart.
682984
Columbus Blue Jackets
Position: Left wing
Vitals: 18, 6-1, 205 pounds
NHL draft prognosis
Last season: 28 goals and 44 assists in 68 games for Quebec of the
Quebec Major Junior Hockey League
— Shawn Mitchell
The skinny: This Connecticut native has a well-stocked toolbox but plays
with little flash. He had 67 penalty minutes in his second season in junior
hockey.
The top 10
16. Anthony Mantha
1. Nathan MacKinnon, C, Halifax (Quebec Major Junior Hockey League)
Position: Left wing
2. Seth Jones, D, Portland (Western Hockey League)
Vitals: 18, 6-4, 190 pounds
3. Jonathan Drouin, LW, Halifax (QMJHL)
Last season: 50 goals and 39 assists in 67 games for Val-d’Or of the
QMJHL
4. Sasha Barkov, C, Tappara (Finland)
5. Valery Nichushkin, RW, Traktor (Continental Hockey League)
6. Sean Monahan, C, Ottawa (Ontario Hockey League)
7. Darnell Nurse, D, Sault Ste. Marie (OHL)
8. Nikita Zadorov, D, London (OHL)
9. Elias Lindholm, C, Brynas (Sweden)
The skinny: He’s one of three players to score at least 50 goals in major
junior last season and has a world-class wrist shot. Conditioning and work
rate could be issues.
17. Joshua Morrissey
Position: Defense
Vitals: 18, 5-11, 182 pounds
10. Bo Horvat, C, London (OHL)
Last season: 15 goals and 32 assists in 70 games for Prince Albert of the
WHL
Prospects Nos. 11 through 30 eligible for the NHL draft Sunday, as
compiled by Ryan Kennedy of The Hockey News. Any of these players
might be available for the Blue Jackets to take with the 14th, 19th or 27th
selections in the first round:
The skinny: This Calgary native has an all-around game that has made
scouts disregard his undersized frame. An open-ice hitter who can
contribute offensively.
11. Curtis Lazar
Position: Center
Vitals: 18 years old, 5 feet 11, 193 pounds
Last season: 38 goals and 23 assists in 72 games for Edmonton of the
Western Hockey League
The skinny: Lazar, of British Columbia, is a physical forward who could fill
multiple roles. A smart and talented skater with leadership qualities.
12. Rasmus Ristolainen
Position: Defense
Vitals: 18, 6-4, 207 pounds
Last season: Three goals and 12 assists in 52 games for TPS of the Finnish
Elite League
The skinny: Has played at the top level in his country for two seasons and
already has some polish. A defense-first defenseman who isn’t afraid of the
rough stuff.
13. Hunter Shinkaruk
Position: Left wing
Vitals: 18, 5-11, 175 pounds
Last season: 37 goals and 49 assists in 64 games for Medicine Hat of the
WHL
18. Frederik Gauthier
Position: Right wing
Vitals: 18, 6-5, 210 pounds
Last season: 22 goals and 38 assists in 62 games for Rimouski of the
QMJHL
The skinny: Has big-time size and smarts, but point production is a question
mark. Excellent on faceoffs and a stout defender.
19. Robert Hagg
Position: Defense
Vitals: 18, 6-2, 204 pounds
Last season: One assist in 27 games for Modo of the Swedish Elite League
The skinny: He is an excellent puck mover who made the jump to Sweden’s
top division last season. Solid skater with two-way skills.
20. Morgan Klimchuk
Position: Left wing
Vitals: 18, 5-11, 180 pounds
Last season: 36 goals and 40 assists in 72 games for Regina of the WHL
The skinny: Klimchuk had 76 points for Regina after having 36 the previous
season for one of the weaker teams in the WHL. Has a solid all-around
game.
The skinny: Shinkaruk, a Calgary, Alberta, native has put up eye-popping
numbers in junior hockey, but his all-around game needs work. He has
speed and agility, but not much size.
21. Zach Fucale
14. Alexander Wennberg
Vitals: 18, 6-1, 181 pounds
Position: Center
Last season: 45-5-3 with a 2.35 goals-against average in 55 games for
Halifax of the QMJHL
Vitals: 18, 6-2, 183 pounds
Last season: 14 goals and 18 assists in 46 games for Djurgardens of the
Swedish second division
The skinny: Wennberg can play all three forward positions with speed, skill
and savvy. He turned heads in his first season as a pro.
15. Adam Erne
Position: Goalie
The skinny: The draft’s top goalie prospect was outstanding in the playoffs
and has a quiet, steady approach to goaltending. Very good lateral
movement.
22. Kerby Rychel
Position: Left wing
Vitals: 18, 6-1, 200 pounds
Last season: 40 goals and 47 assists in 68 games for Windsor of the
Ontario Hockey League
The skinny: Coming off back-to-back 40-goal seasons, this Los Angeles
native isn’t afraid of the rough areas on the ice. Has skill and the ability to
open up the ice for linemates.
The skinny: This agitator from suburban Chicago had 120 penalty minutes
and 60 points in his only season of major junior hockey. Was a standout
during the United States’ run to the gold medal at the world junior
tournament.
30. Mirco Mueller
23. Valentin Zykov
Position: Defense/wing
Position: Left wing
Vitals: 18, 6-3, 184 pounds
Vitals: 18, 6 feet, 210 pounds
Last season: Six goals and 25 assists in 63 games for Everett of the WHL
Last season: 40 goals and 35 assists for Baie-Comeau of the QMJHL
The skinny: Mueller impressed during his first season in North America.
The skinny: This future power forward made the jump to Canadian junior
hockey from his native Russia last season. Has strength, awareness and
skill around the net.
Columbus Dispatch LOADED: 06.30.2013
24. Ryan Pulock
Position: Defense
Vitals: 18, 6 feet, 211 pounds
Last season: 15 goals and 31 assists in 61 games for Brandon of the WHL
The skinny: Brandon’s captain was slowed by injuries but has one of the
better shots among the draft’s defensive prospects. Could be picked just
about anywhere.
25. Max Domi
Position: Center
Vitals: 18, 5-10, 194 pounds
Last season: 39 goals and 48 assists in 64 games for London of the OHL
The skinny: A son of former NHL enforcer Tie Domi, Max is strong but
undersized like his father, but has loads of skill, too. Good combination of
net savvy and physical play.
26. Steve Santini
Position: Defense
Vitals: 18, 6-2, 205 pounds
Last season: Five assists in 25 games for the U.S. National Development
Team
The skinny: This physical, two-way defender’s stock rose after he was
named defensive MVP at the Under-18 World Championships in April.
27. Jacob De La Rose
Position: Center
Vitals: 18, 6-2, 183 pounds
Last season: Six goals and six assists in 38 games for Leksands of the
Swedish second division
The skinny: De La Rose is not a prolific scorer but has an all-around game
good enough to make him a potential first-round pick. A physical and steady
forward.
28. Ian McCoshen
Position: Defense
Vitals: 17, 6-2, 207 pounds
Last season: Nine goals and 27 assists in 46 games for Waterloo of the
United States Hockey League
The skinny: McCoshen, who is headed to Boston College, is projected to be
a shutdown defender who can take up big minutes. A good skater with
some capability on offense.
29. Ryan Hartman
Position: Left wing
Vitals: 18, 5-11, 187 pounds
Last season: 23 goals and 37 assists in 56 games for Plymouth of the OHL
682985
Columbus Blue Jackets
Blue Jackets: Even GM unsure how draft might play out
By Aaron Portzline
The Columbus Dispatch Saturday June 29, 2013 5:49 AM
NEW YORK — Blue Jackets general manager Jarmo Kekalainen isn’t being
secretive or obstinate. He’s being truthful when he says he doesn’t know
how the NHL draft might play out.
The Blue Jackets, who hold three first-round picks (Nos. 14, 19 and 27),
have talked to several teams — including Colorado, which owns the No. 1
overall pick — about trading up in the draft order.
The Jackets also have spoken with Florida (No. 2), Tampa Bay (No. 3),
Nashville (No. 4) and Carolina (No. 5), among others.
Carolina apparently is the only club in that group with welcoming ears, but
not for cheap. The others won’t even listen.
The draft begins at 3 p.m. on Sunday at the Prudential Center in Newark,
N.J.
“It looks like getting up (into the top five) is going to be very expensive,”
Kekalainen said. “But we’ll see what’s there. We’re not going to rule it out
until the sixth pick is on the clock.”
Knowing that it won’t be easy to climb the board, and that this is considered
a deep draft, Kekalainen said the Blue Jackets could trade down if there’s
no discernible difference among a cluster of players still on the board.
There’s a third option, which could apply to one or all of the Blue Jackets’
picks: a trade for immediate roster help.
The NHL salary cap is dropping nearly $8 million next season, to $64.3
million, forcing many teams already in salary-cap trouble to consider drastic
measures.
The Blue Jackets, who were 25th in scoring this season, are looking for a
scoring forward — or two.
“Yeah, we’ve had conversations with a few teams about that,” Kekalainen
said. “That’s something we’re going to look at long and hard with our firstround picks.
“If it’s a player that makes sense, not only in the short term but the long
term, that’s definitely something we’ll consider.”
The most unlikely possibility is that the Blue Jackets walk to the podium and
use all their picks.
“It’s possible,” Kekalainen said with a smile. “Could happen.”
If it does, the Blue Jackets will add three good prospects to the
organization, perhaps one good enough to make an immediate impact.
The top two players in the draft — forward Nathan MacKinnon and
defenseman Seth Jones — are other-worldly talents, but the depth of talent
available is considered the best in many years.
Columbus never has drafted more than one player in the first round. Only
once before have the Blue Jackets owned more than one first-round pick.
In 2002, they entered the draft with the No. 3 and 20 picks. They traded up
fromNo. 3 to draft Rick Nash No. 1 and then, in a pair of moves, traded out
of the No. 20 pick and out of the first round.
Bigger moves might happen this season.
“It’s pretty rare to have three first-round picks,” said Tyler Wright, the Blue
Jackets’ co-director of amateur scouting. “To have three in a draft this deep
… any team would love to be in our spot.
“We’ve spent the whole season looking at these guys, and all of those picks
are going to have really good players available. But we know Jarmo’s
working on other things, too. Whatever it takes to takeke our team forward
and make it better. That’s what this weekend is about.”
Columbus Dispatch LOADED: 06.30.2013
682986
Dallas Stars
Draft Preview: Darnell Nurse
By Mike Heika / Reporter
mheika@dallasnews.com
8:14 am on June 29, 2013 | Permalink
One of the most coveted picks in the draft _ and one of the most
controversial _ Darnell Nurse might be there for the Stars at No. 10.
Nurse is a defensive defenseman, and a very good one. At 6-4, 190, he is
said to be the hardest hitter in the draft, and a very solid net presence. The
question is whether you can afford to take that kind of player in the Top 10.
Many teams think you can, and the general consensus is that Nurse will not
get past Edmonton at No. 7 for the simple fact that he fills the exact need
that the skill-heavy Oilers have.
Nurse grew up in a family of football players. His dad Richard played in the
CFL and his uncle is Donavan McNabb.
Here is International Scouting Services on Nurse: “Not only is Nurse an
excellent 1 on 1 defender but he adds an intense mean streak to put fear in
the opposition. He shows no hesitation in doing what it takes to win from
blocking shots to dropping the mitts, Darnell was born to lead. Offensively
he brings an arsenal of weapons whether it’s using his vision to find his
man up ice or jumping up into the rush he continues to develop in these
areas. He shows excellent mobility on the point and has great quickness for
his size which makes him very effective in PP situations. He has a heavy
shot but could stand to use it more often. Has all the tools to be a franchise
defender and captain down the road.”
If he does slide, should the Stars take a chance? Defending Big D has a
nice story here on the dangers of selecting a defensive defenseman that
early right here.
That said, the Stars took Derian Hatcher at eighth overall way back in 1990,
and that worked out pretty good for them.
Dallas Morning News LOADED: 06.30.2013
682987
Dallas Stars
Draft Preview: Sean Monahan
By Mike Heika / Reporter
mheika@dallasnews.com
7:41 am on June 29, 2013 | Permalink
Another player the Stars would have great interest in but will probably not
be available at 10 is Sean Monhan.
A solid center with good size (6-2, 186), he is a complete package. He’s not
a dangler, but he is a good skater with great hockey sense who sees the ice
well.
Monahan has been consistent with 78 points in each of the past two OHL
season for Ottawa. He had 31 goals and 47 assists in 58 games last
season.
Here is International Scouting Services: “Monahan’s vision off the rush is
right up there with the best in this year’s draft class, he shows incredible
vision, poise and creativity to create scoring chances. Sean has the ability
to find his teammates anywhere in the offensive zone, truly jaw dropping
puck mover. He uses every inch of his frame when protecting the puck and
shows great poise when in possession of the puck. On the puck pursuit and
backcheck he has shown a knack for forcing turnovers with applied
pressure and great stickwork. Fine tuning his stride and consistent game
pace will be crucial in making a much more seamless transition into the pro
game.”
A left-handed shot, Monahan is on the radar to go between 5th and 7th. He
sits ahead of Elias Lindholm in most mock drafts.
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Dallas Stars
Heika: Stars' pursuit of Vincent Lecavalier shows team is ready to rejoin the
big boys
“We want to win, and we want to win now, but more importantly, we want to
win for a long time,” Nill said. “So we have to be careful, and we have to
use this draft to help set ourselves up for a long time. We’re in good shape
[with prospects], and now we need to get in better shape.”
Because, in the end, that’s what will attract players such as Lecavalier to
pick the Stars over any other suitor.
MIKE HEIKA
Follow Mike Heika on Twitter at @MikeHeika.
Staff writer
2013 NHL Entry Draft
mheika@dallasnews.com
What: The NHL’s seven-round entry draft will distribute the rights to players,
most of whom are 18. Colorado has the first overall pick.
Published: 29 June 2013 09:13 PM
Updated: 29 June 2013 10:03 PM
When: 2 p.m. today
Where: Prudential Center, Newark, N.J.
TV: NBC Sports Network
The new-look Stars flexed a little of their muscle Saturday before the NHL
draft.
Stars picks: 10, 29, 40, 54, 68, 101, 131, 149, 182
With former first overall pick Vincent Lecavalier having been bought out by
Tampa Bay and prepared to hit the free-agent market Friday, the Stars tried
to wow the 33-year-old center with a full-on sales job from new general
manager Jim Nill, new coach Lindy Ruff, owner Tom Gaglardi and president
Jim Lites.
Did you know? Defenseman Seth Jones, who is the son of former
Mavericks player and assistant coach Popeye Jones, is expected to
become the highest-ever drafted player born in Texas. Jones is ranked first
in many scouting reports and is expected to go in the top three.
The meeting allowed the Stars to show that despite missing the playoffs for
five straight seasons, they are trying to do things very differently going
forward.
Sean Monahan: Stars covet the do-it-all center from Ontario Hockey
League but might have to move up to sixth to get him.
“We made it clear to him that we’re interested in him, that we think he would
be a good fit on our team, and that we believe he can help us get to where
we want to go,” Nill said. “I think what’s most important is we shared our
vision of where we think this team can be.”
And while the Stars might not end up with Lecavalier, who is being wooed
by as many as 15 teams, they do believe they will end up with someone
good before the summer is over. They have about $13.8 million of cap
space to offer, should they decide to spend to next season’s limit of $64.3
million.
The message of the day might be that the Stars are back in the mix, dealing
with the big boys and grabbing a little NHL respect.
“We’re at a place now where I believe we can get into any conversation,”
Lites said. “I know it hasn’t been that way here for a while.”
The Stars used to be the big rollers. They signed Brett Hull and Ed Belfour.
They showed up on Bill Guerin’s front porch with a $45 million free-agent
offer for five years. They wowed the NHL world on a regular basis. But
bankruptcy killed that reputation, and the five-year run with no playoffs
buried any semblance of the past. It’s not that former GM Joe Nieuwendyk
wasn’t willing to play that game, it’s that he wasn’t able.
Free agents were not lining up to come to Dallas.
But Gaglardi has the team in a better place now. His purchase in November
2011 made that season a transition year. The lockout in 2012 made that
season a wash. But all of that’s out of the way now, and the Stars have two
very experienced salesmen in Nill and Ruff as they head into the NHL’s
new frontier.
As league executives assembled in Newark, N.J., for Sunday’s NHL draft,
Lites said he’s impressed seeing evidence of the contacts Nill assembled in
his 18 years with the Detroit Red Wings.
“It’s amazing to watch Jim work the room,” Lites said. “He knows everyone,
he talks to everyone, he’s just really plugged in.”
And that means he might pull off the Lecavalier signing or a trade at the
draft or a trade after the draft.
Because the salary cap is dropping from $70.2 million in 2013-14, some
teams have to shed money. That’s one of the reasons Lecavalier was
bought out by Tampa Bay. Other teams will be trying to trade high-salaried
players. All of that increases the pool of available players.
The problem is, Dallas doesn’t want to move too fast and take on too much
salary, or it will end up in the same place as the current cap-tight teams.
And that’s why Nill believes the draft is extremely important. The Stars have
nine selections, including four in the first two rounds. They will select 10th
overall, and should be in the mix to get a great player.
Five players for Stars fans to watch
Elias Lindholm: Another talented center for whom Stars might have to move
up. He tallied 30 points in 48 games in Swedish Elite League.
Rasmus Ristolainen: Rangy, two-way Finnish defenseman could fall to
Stars at No. 10, and they would be happy with that.
Darnell Nurse: Big, physical defenseman, the nephew by marriage of exNFL QB Donovan McNabb, could be off the board by No. 10. Many see him
as a Derian Hatcher type.
Max Domi: Son of former NHL tough guy Tie Domi, Max is a skilled center
who could be just the sparkplug the Stars need going forward.
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Dallas Stars
NHL.com's Steven Hoffner
Pick: Elias Lindholm, C
NHL mock draft roundup: Defenseman a popular pick for Stars, but a pair of
centers also offer intrigue
Staff reports
Published: 29 June 2013 09:03 PM
Updated: 29 June 2013 09:03 PM
With the 2013 NHL Draft set to happen Sunday, June 30, here's a look at
how some prominent mock drafters see the Dallas Stars using the 10th
overall pick:
Comment: New GM Jim Nill would be pleased if Lindholm is available at
this spot. He needs to get bigger, but has the makings of another Nicklas
Backstrom.
NHL.com's Mike G. Morreale
Pick: Rasmus Ristolainen, D
Comment: The Stars need a defenseman who can contribute offensively
and strike some fear in the opposition when they enter the zone -- enter the
6-4, 207-pound Ristolainen. The right-handed shot is a solid skater,
effective at both ends of the ice and is a prototype two-way defender with
All-Star potential.
ESPN's Grant Sonier
Sports Illustrated's Allan Muir
Pick: Rasmus Ristolainen, D
Pick: Rasmus Ristolainen, D
Comment: New GM Jim Nill is in Texas by way of Detroit, where he clearly
knows the value of elite D-men. This scouting staff has a very strong
presence in Finland, and Ristolainen would be an attractive building block
for a franchise that lacks depth on the blue line. He would fit in nicely with
prospect Jamie Oleksiak, forming two towers on defense. Ristolainen's
ability to play a transition game, while making opposing players pay a price,
will help get this once-elite franchise back on track.
Comment: The Stars made several deals over the course of the year with
an eye on overloading their cache of blueline prospects, so there's a
chance they may be eyeing a forward with this pick. But new GM Jim Nill
advocates a best possible athlete philosophy, so it's hard to imagine Dallas
passing on a high-skill, two-way defender who Nill might be able to plug into
the lineup as soon as next season. Ristolainen has some Shea Weber in
his game. "The size, the skating, the edge, it's all there," a scout said. And
he can eat the minutes. He was a stalwart for a bad Turku team last year,
averaging more than 25 minutes a game and serving as the team's top
blueliner while playing against men. "He's a beast," wrote another. Like
Weber, he excels in transition. He can move the puck smartly, join the rush
and create chances with his passing or a heavy blast from the point. Add
that he's a right-hand shot, an element in short supply in this organization,
and he seems like the right fit.
Hockey Prospectus' Corey Pronman
Pick: Darnell Nurse, D
Comment: Dallas' pick is hard to pin down. I cannot see them in on Andre
Burakowsky or Anthony Mantha. Domi, Wennberg, and Ryan Pulock could
be options at this spot, with Zadorov and Lazar as outside-shot options.
Even with good defense prospects in their system, Dallas could still take a
defenseman here, and Nurse fits the best-player-available mold. He also
fits the two-way type of player that Dallas tends to look for, plus he exhibits
the great hockey sense Stars executive Jim Nill valued in Detroit.
Sports Net's Sam Cosentino
Pick: Bo Horvath, C
Comment: The “Ox” as he’s known in London, has the most complete game
of anyone in the draft. Having learned from Corey Perry and Drew Doughty
in the lockout, Horvat added net-front presence to his already vast arsenal
this past season. He’s always improving in the faceoff circle, he’s a big
boned guy whose frame should stand up to the rigors of the NHL and he’ll
be able to play second and third line minutes while giving you all you need
in the special teams department. When he gets to the show, he’ll likely start
as a third line guy and with some NHL seasoning will figure out how to
produce enough to make him a mainstay as a second line centre for years
to come.
Defending Big D's Huw Wales
Pick: Elias Lindholm, C
Comment: The Stars are very happy to take this talented Swede with the
10th pick. It helps their centre depth a lot.
NHL.com's Adam Kimelman
Pick: Bo Horvat, C
Comment: A big scorer also highly regarded for his two-way game. He
might be the best faceoff man in this year's draft class.
USA Today's Kyle Woodlief
Pick: Ryan Hartman, RW
Comment: This hard-rock competitor seems like just the type of player Jim
Nill will want to bring in to put his imprint on this organization.
CBS Sports' Chris Peters
Pick: Hunter Shinkaruk, C/LW
Comment: Another team that could use a dose of skill in its prospect
system, Shinkaruk is the most skilled remaining player on the board. Once
considered a potential top-five pick, Shinkaruk has been sliding. He still has
some tremendous skills and a nose for the net. He needs a little work yet
and could get a bit stronger, but Shinkaruk's offensive upside is immense.
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Dallas Stars
Stars have meeting with free agent center Vincent Lecavalier in New York
By Mike Heika / Reporter
mheika@dallasnews.com
7:58 pm on June 29, 2013 | Permalink
The Stars were among several teams to meet with free agent center
Vincent Lecavalier Saturday at the NHL draft. The draft is taking place
Sunday in Newark, N.J., but Lecavalier met suitors in New York.
Among the Stars’ party were new general manager Jim Nill, new head
coach Lindy Ruff, owner Tom Gaglardi and president Jim Lites.
“We made it clear to him that we’re interested in him, that we think he would
be a good fit on our team, and that we believe he can help us get to where
we want to go,’’ said Nill. “I think what’s most important is we shared our
vision of where we think this team can be.’’
The Stars have a need for immediate help at center and could address it in
several ways, including taking a center high in the draft Sunday (they pick
10th overall, but might try to move up if they can get center Sean Monahan
or center Elias Lindholm). They also could fill that need by signing
Lecavalier.
The first overall pick in 1998, Lecavalier has a ton of talent. He is big (6-4,
218) and skilled. He has played 1,037 NHL games, but at 33 should still
have plenty of time left. He has seen his game slip in recent years, but last
season contributed 32 points (10G, 22A) in 39 games.
Lecavalier, a left-handed shot, is a career 48 percent faceoff winner, but
has been a solid 50-percent guy in recent seasons. Last season, he won
54.4 percent of his draws.
So why did Tampa Bay buy him out? Lecavalier had a cap hit of $7.7 million
remaining on his contract for the next seven seasons. The Lightning simply
couldn’t make that work with the salary cap coming down from $70.2 million
to $64.3 million. They will pay Lecavalier $32.67 million over the next 14
years just to get out of the remainder of his deal.
That’s important, as teams know Lecavalier comes into the negotiation with
that ace card. He can pick a team because it’s a good fit and not just
because it can offer the most money.
The question is what does he want? He’s from Quebec, but some speculate
that he doesn’t want to play in the bright lights of Canada. He has been a
part of some great offensive teams in Tampa Bay (winning the Stanley Cup
in 2004), so does he want a team that plays an open style? He is close
friends with Brad Richards, so might be want to rejoin him in New York
(could the Rangers even make that contract work)? Would he go to
Vancouver to reunite with coach John Tortorella? Would he want to stay on
the East Coast or is he open to trying something new?
Those are things Lecavalier will have to decide in the next week. He can
interview with teams now and even make visits, but he can’t sign with a new
team until free agency begins July 5.
Lecavalier is an interesting player who is seen as a bit of project, because
his game has slowed down in recent years. Would a fresh start get him
going? Is he worth a big contract or can a team convince him to take a
short-term deal and keep his options open?
It’s going to make for a very intriguing few days.
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Dallas Stars
Dallas Stars meet with free agent Vincent Lecavalier, make interest 'clear'
MIKE HEIKA
Staff writer
Published: 29 June 2013 05:52 PM
Updated: 29 June 2013 09:09 PM
The Stars were among several teams to meet with free agent center
Vincent Lecavalier Saturday at the NHL draft. The draft is taking place
Sunday in Newark, N.J., but Lecavalier met suitors in New York.
Among the Stars' party were new general manager Jim Nill, new head
coach Lindy Ruff, owner Tom Gaglardi and president Jim Lites.
"We made it clear to him that we're interested in him, that we think he would
be a good fit on our team, and that we believe he can help us get to where
we want to go,'' said Nill. "I think what's most important is we shared our
vision of where we think this team can be.''
The Stars have a need for immediate help at center and could address it in
several ways, including taking a center high in the draft Sunday (they pick
10th overall, but might try to move up if they can get center Sean Monahan
or center Elias Lindholm). They also could fill that need by signing
Lecavalier.
The first overall pick in 1998, Lecavalier has a ton of talent. He is big (6-4,
218) and skilled. He has played 1,037 NHL games, but at 33 should still
have plenty of time left. He has seen his game slip in recent years, but last
season contributed 32 points (10G, 22A) in 39 games.
Lecavalier, a left-handed shot, is a career 48 percent faceoff winner, but
has been a solid 50-percent guy in recent seasons. Last season, he won
54.4 percent of his draws.
So why did Tampa Bay buy him out? Lecavalier had a cap hit of $7.7 million
remaining on his contract for the next seven seasons. The Lightning simply
couldn't make that work with the salary cap coming down from $70.2 million
to $64.3 million. They will pay Lecavalier $32.67 million over the next 14
years just to get out of the remainder of his deal.
That's important, as teams know Lecavalier comes into the negotiation with
that ace card. He can pick a team because it's a good fit and not just
because it can offer the most money.
The question is what does he want? He's from Quebec, but some speculate
that he doesn't want to play in the bright lights of Canada. He has been a
part of some great offensive teams in Tampa Bay (winning the Stanley Cup
in 2004), so does he want a team that plays an open style? He is close
friends with Brad Richards, so might be want to rejoin him in New York
(could the Rangers even make that contract work)? Would he go to
Vancouver to reunite with coach John Tortorella? Would he want to stay on
the East Coast or is he open to trying something new?
Those are things Lecavalier will have to decide in the next week. He can
interview with teams now and even make visits, but he can't sign with a new
team until free agency begins July 5.
Lecavalier is an interesting player who is seen as a bit of project, because
his game has slowed down in recent years. Would a fresh start get him
going? Is he worth a big contract or can a team convince him to take a
short-term deal and keep his options open?
It's going to make for a very intriguing few days.
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Detroit Red Wings
Helene St. James: Sizing up the NHL draft with Detroit Red Wings' Joe
McDonnell
June 30, 2013 |
By Helene St. James
Detroit Free Press Sports Writer
NHL draft facts
When: 3 p.m. today. Seven rounds.
Where: Prudential Center, Newark, N.J.
TV: NBC Sports Network (3-8 p.m.) then NHL Network.
Top picks: 1. Colorado, 2. Florida, 3. Tampa Bay, 4. Nashville, 5. Carolina.
Wings’ picks: One in each round — Nos. 18, 48, 79, 109, 139, 169, 199.
After serving as Jim Nill’s right-hand man, Joe McDonnell is ready to look to
his left, see general manager Ken Holland and know where the buck stops.
When Nill departed this spring as assistant general manager for the head
GM job in Dallas, it didn’t take long for Holland to determine there was no
better man to take over running the Wings’ draft this afternoon at the
Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., than McDonnell, the team’s director of
amateur scouting.
“The people who are here are a big part of the success we’ve had,” Holland
said. “It didn’t make sense to me to bring in someone new.”
I caught up with McDonnell earlier this week and got him to open up about
the Wings’ thoughts going into the draft, what it’ll be like to be in charge,
and his stance on foreign relations.
You’ve had a lot of experience with drafts, but what will it be like now that
you’re the “buck stops here” guy, with final say? “The only difference will be
I’ll look to left and see Ken instead of Jim. But I’ve worked real close with
Jim the last 18 years, we always were on the same page about picks. So
really, not a big change, I think, except in the past he would have final say.”
This is the first year the Wings have had a first-round pick since 2010. Are
they becoming a more precious resource? “I think they’re very precious, but
you can’t take the Stanley Cups we’ve won since 1997 away from us.
Getting quality players back in return for draft picks enabled us to win those
Stanley Cups. ... First- and second-rounders are all very, very important
since the salary cap. You have to draft well to keep a team competitive.
Years ago, every summer there were really good free agents available.
That pile of players seems to be shrinking every year. It’s ultra important
now that you build from within and rely on scouting and developing players.”
It is a gamble, though, isn’t it? “It’s a huge gamble, for sure. That’s why you
do your background work, try to narrow the probability of making a mistake.
You try to be right. It’s not an easy thing to do. You don’t know what’s in
their head, what they’re thinking. Do they have the heart and desire to want
to get better? You try to do a bunch of background work and watch them
play. And then you hope and pray that they turn out and keep you
competitive.”
Pop quiz: A Swede, a Russian, an American and a Canadian are all
available, and you like them all equally. Default goes to Sweden? “Hah.
We’d take the kid who’s from Detroit.”
It seems like you’re deepest in the minors at defense, is that correct? “Yes,
very. We’ve got Ryan Sproul and Xavier Ouellet, Gleason Fournier. We got
Alexei Marchenko, from Russia. Mattias Backman looks like he’s got real
good potential for the NHL in the future. There are a lot of guys back there
who look really good for the future. You’re always looking for d-men. You’d
always love to have one more, but we think we’re pretty well set up there.
It’ll take the kids some time to learn the game in Grand Rapids, but we like
what we’ve got.”
Size isn’t everything in a player, but it does matter? “To an extent. It’s just
the way the game has evolved. You see it in the scrums along the boards,
with the bigger guys who go into the corners. You can’t just have a big guy,
though, you need a big guy with skill. That’s what we’ve got in someone like
Riley Sheahan, for example.
You are the Detroit Red Wings. You can’t leave a draft without at least one
undersized, allegedly soft Euro, right? “Years ago, yes. Now, since they’ve
changed the draft rules where Europeans are on par with North American
players, and you can’t just keep them overseas for years and years, that’s
changed.”
Other than possibly missing out on the first North Korean NHLer, are all
teams scouting all over the globe? “Oh yeah, everyone has scouts in every
location. For the high-end players, nobody has a scoop on anybody. The
best you can hope for is that with the lower-end players, maybe some
teams don’t look at some guys as closely as you do. So maybe you get
somebody that way. But pretty much every region is covered.”
Jim Nill knows your secrets. But hasn’t everyone done due diligence at
least through the first few rounds on every possible player? “Yeah, it’s really
no big deal. Everybody sees the same thing. Some teams like one guy
more than others. Jim doesn’t have any of our secrets, or any secrets from
us.”
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Detroit Red Wings
Detroit Red Wings to meet with Vincent Lecavalier on Sunday, give Jakub
Kindl 4-year deal
9:57 PM, June 29, 2013 |
By Helene St. James
Detroit Free Press Sports Writer
NEW YORK — The Detroit Red Wings got one bit of business done before
engaging in draft weekend, locking up defenseman Jakub Kindl through his
prime.
Sunday, they’ll meet with free agent center Vincent Lecavalier.
A busy weekend figures to segue into a busy week ahead, as Sunday’s
draft leads into the start of unrestricted free agency, with teams able to sign
players Friday. The Wings are in talks with two of their unrestricted free
agents, Damien Brunner and Daniel Cleary, and while they would like to
trade the rights for Valtteri Filppula, Filppula wants to hit the open market,
so at best Filppula’s rights may yield a conditional pick.
The Wings are in the market for a second-line center, and Lecavalier makes
an intriguing possibility. The Wings like Lecavalier’s size and hands, but
have concerns about his pace, and probably will lean against giving him
anything more than a two-year offer. Lecavalier, 34, has said he wants a
long-term deal.
Kindl was one of the team’s four restricted free agents. Rewarding him for a
transformative season, the Wings re-signed him for four years at an
average salary cap hit of $2.4 million.
“He’s 26 years of age,” general manager Ken Holland told the Free Press.
“We felt he established himself as regular NHL defenseman; (he) can play
on second power play. He’s physically stronger, he competes harder.
“He’s become an everyday player for us, the last 35 games of this season.
It’s hard to find defensemen. We drafted him. It’s probably taken a little bit
longer than he would have liked and we would have liked for him to get to
this point, but this year there was an opportunity, and he’s come into his
own. We look for him to keep growing.”
Kindl had four goals among 13 points in 41 games this past season,
rebounding from an early stretch of injuries to become a dependable
defenseman. He has good size at 6-feet-3, 216 pounds, and can play both
special teams.
Defenseman Brendan Smith and forwards Gustav Nyquist and Joakim
Andersson all have received qualifying offers and will all be re-signed at
some point.
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Detroit Red Wings
Red Wings plan to meet with free agent Vince Lecavalier on Sunday
Ted Kulfan
The Detroit News
June 29, 2013 at 1:00 am
Detroit — The Red Wings will have plenty of company in pursuit of Vince
Lecavalier.
General manager Ken Holland is expected to meet with Lecavalier on
Sunday morning, a day after the free-agent center met with numerous
interested teams in Newark, N.J., site of the NHL entry draft.
Montreal, Toronto, St. Louis, Philadelphia, Anaheim and Dallas — and
there may have been others — reportedly met with Lecavalier on Saturday,
with Detroit and Calgary, according to TSN, still scheduled to meet with
him.
Tampa Bay bought out Lecavalier, 33, on Thursday, making the him the
most popular unrestricted free agent on the market.
The Red Wings have serious interest, but the number of teams involved
could drive the salary past what the Red Wings are comfortable with.
Lecavalier played in 39 games last season, scoring 32 points (10 goalsists).
At 6-foot-4 and 215 pounds, Lecavalier — a former No. 1 overall draft pick
— has the size and offensive ability (12 consecutive 20 goal seasons
before this last season) the Red Wings would covet, especially with the
expected free-agent defection of Valtteri Filppula.
Lecavalier has 383 goals and 491 assists in 1,037 career regular season
games, as well as 746 penalty minutes.
From The Detroit News:
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130629/SPORTS0103/306300015#ixz
z2XgclxcI7
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Detroit Red Wings
Nathan MacKinnon could go No. 1 to Avalanche; Wings draft 18th
Dan Gelston
Associated Press
The Colorado Avalanche own the top pick in the NHL draft and a whole lot
of options.
Nathan MacKinnon and Seth Jones. Jonathan Drouin and Aleksander
Barkov. They are the top candidates to go first Sunday at the Prudential
Center.
Colorado won the draft lottery and has flirted with the idea of picking a
puck-moving defenseman in Jones. But it appears the Avalanche are
leaning toward choosing a forward, perhaps the 17-year-old MacKinnon.
MacKinnon, a 6-foot, 182-pound center, is a solid two-way presence with
strong hands and stick-handling and skating skills. He is considered a
natural scorer and a very good puck distributor.
Jones enters the draft as the top-ranked player on the NHL Central
Scouting’s final list of North American skaters.
Even as praise is heaped on him, Jones knows scouts believe he has only
scratched the surface of his potential.
“They’d like to see the shot improve a little bit, be a little more physical,
those kinds of things,” Pracey said.
The Avalanche, however, appear to have narrowed their focus on
MacKinnon.
“He’s a player that has been front and center all year, and he continues to
be so,” Pracey said. “He is a player that has withstood the pressures of a
draft year, withstood the pressures of high expectations and the
comparable that he’s been held accountable to, not only this year but the
past couple of years.”
MacKinnon spent this past season with Halifax of the QMJHL and had 32
goals and 43 assists in 44 games. He scored 11 goals and had 22 assists
in 17 playoff games.
“I think seeing that push and seeing him elevate his game and carry a team
to a championship and then into the Memorial Cup is special,” Pracey said.
“Having this player handle the distractions and the media and all the
scrutiny that goes with being a top player and then being able to perform
and raise his game, are all key, key qualities.”
Of course, Colorado could also decide to trade the pick to the Florida
Panthers, who are slated to pick second, or to the Tampa Bay Lightning at
No. 3, or even farther down to another club that is looking to make a splash
and shoot to the top.
After Florida and Tampa Bay, Nashville and Carolina round out the top five.
All seven rounds will be held on the same day for the first time since 2006.
There is plenty of talent available, and this draft pool already has been
touted as the best in a decade. This year’s prospects have been favorably
compared to the last blockbuster draft in 2003.
“It is certainly one of the better ones probably in the last couple of years in
terms of overall depth,” Flyers general manager Paul Holmgren said.
“Compared to ‘03, it’d be difficult, now. You look back at those players,
there was a lot of impact players from that draft.
Marc-Andre Fleury, Eric Staal, Jeff Carter and Mike Richards highlighted
that first round 10 years ago. Patrice Bergeron and Shea Weber went in the
second round, and future All-Stars and Stanley Cup champions dotted the
list of a loaded draft.
The next decade will tell if this class was worth the hype.
“So, that’s probably for future debate,” Holmgren said.
NHL entry draft
Fast forward to now and there is a new group of prospects vying to become
as well known and decorated as some of today’s stars.
When: 3 p.m. Sunday
MacKinnon, Jones, Drouin, and Barkov are likely to be taken in the top four.
TV: NBC Sports Network, 3-8 p.m.; NHL Network, 8 p.m. until the last pick
Given the track record of defensemen at No. 1, the Avalanche could play it
safe and nab an elite forward instead.
Red Wings picks: 18th, 48th, 79th, 109th, 139th, 169th, 199th
“As far as MacKinnon, I could tell you he’s a heck of a player. Jones is a
heck of a player,” Avalanche coach Patrick Roy said. “It’s the same thing
with Drouin. They’re all premier players in the future for the NHL.”
Fair or not to Jones, teams are skittish about taking a defenseman first. The
last defenseman selected No. 1 was Erik Johnson by St. Louis in 2006.
Johnson, who now plays for Colorado, had only four points in 31 games this
season and has never lived up to his top billing.
Only 12 defensemen have gone No. 1, and Denis Potvin (1973, New York
Islanders) is the only one to make the Hockey Hall of Fame.
The Avalanche could make it 13 after winning the draft lottery for the first
time.
Jones has deep roots with the Avalanche, dating to the early part of last
decade when his father, former NBA forward Popeye Jones, struck up a
friendship with Joe Sakic and Roy when they all played in Colorado.
Sakic now is the Avalanche’s executive vice president of hockey
operations, and Roy is the club’s new coach.
Jones, a 6-foot-4, 205-pound defenseman, could become the first American
picked No. 1 since Chicago’s Patrick Kane in 2007 and the seventh overall.
In a sport in which the majority percentage of players are white, it is that
slice of history he would make as the first black selected No. 1 — topping
Evander Kane, who was picked fourth in 2009.
“Seth could be that poster child for USA hockey,” Popeye Jones said.
It would make for a unique cultural twist if an American was picked No. 1 in
the NHL days after Anthony Bennett of Canada was selected first by
Cleveland in the NBA draft.
“We still have a high amount of interest in him,” Rick Pracey, Colorado’s
director of amateur scouting, said of Jones.
Where: Newark, N.J., Prudential Center.
From The Detroit News:
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130629/SPORTS0103/306290041#ixz
z2Xgd6GZFu
Detroit News LOADED: 06.30.2013
682996
Detroit Red Wings
Wings re-sign Jakub Kindl for four years, $9.6 million
Ted Kulfan
The Detroit News
June 29, 2013 at 6:34 pm
Detroit — The Red Wings have re-signed defenseman Jakub Kindl to a
four-year contract worth $9.6 million.
Kindl, 26, was a restricted free agent, and is coming off the best season of
his young career — playing in 41 games, with four goals and nine assists,
with a plus-15 rating.
Signing Kindl leaves the Red Wings with three other restricted free agents
— defenseman Brendan Smith, and forwards Gustav Nyquist and Joakim
Andersson.
General manager Ken Holland and the rest of his staff are in Newark, N.J.,
this weekend preparing for Sunday's NHL entry draft.
Holland plans to meet with the agents for unrestricted free-agent forwards
Valtteri Filppula, Damien Brunner and Daniel Cleary. All three could hit the
open market July 5, and can sign with any team.
Holland is also exploring trade options, leading into the start of free agency
next week, as he attempts to clear roster and financial space.
From The Detroit News:
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130629/SPORTS0103/306290039#ixz
z2XgdCd0iF
Detroit News LOADED: 06.30.2013
682997
Detroit Red Wings
Free-agent forward Vincent Lecavalier schedules meeting with Detroit Red
Wings
By Brendan Savage | bsavage@mlive.com
on June 29, 2013 at 9:26 PM, updated June 29, 2013 at 10:19 PM
The Detroit Red Wings' pursuit of free-agent forward Vincent Lecavalier has
apparently begun.
According to a Tweet by TSN.ca's Ryan Rishaug, the Red Wings are
among the teams who have scheduled meetings with Lecavalier, whose
contract was bought out by Tampa Bay and will be able to sign with any
team he chooses beginning July 5.
"Sources tell TSN Lecavalier camp has met with Dallas, St. Louis, Philli
and Montreal with more to come tonite," Rishaug Tweeted Saturday night
before later adding "Lecavalier meeting with Anaheim now, Detroit and
Toronto to come still tonite. Lecavalier will meet with one more team early
tomorrow then fly home."
Update: The meting with the Red Wings apparently will take place Sunday,
according to a Tweet by CBC's Elliotte Friedman.
"Check that: hearing Lecavalier will meet with Detroit and Calgary
tomorrow," Friedman Tweeted. "Two meetings, not one."
Hours after learning that the Lightning were buying out his contract,
Lecavalier said the Red Wings were among the teams he was interested in
joining.
Lecavalier, 33, was the No. 1 overall pick in the 1998 NHL entry draft and
has spent his entire 14-year career in Tampa.
He has scored at least 20 goals 12 times in his career, topped 30 five times
and led the NHL with 52 goals in 2006-07.
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Detroit Red Wings
Detroit Red Wings announce forward Drew Miller has signed three-year
contract extension
By Brendan Savage | bsavage@mlive.com
on June 29, 2013 at 11:54 AM, updated June 29, 2013 at 12:16 PM
The Detroit Red Wings have signed forward Drew Miller to a three-year
contract extension, the club announced this morning.
MLive.com first reported June 14 that Miller had agreed to the deal, which
will pay him $4.05 million and locks him up through the end of the 2015-16
season.
Miller had four goals, four assists and a minus-8 rating in 44 games last
season, when he was sidelined for the final four games of the campaign
after suffering a broken hand.
After missing Detroit's first eight playoffs games, Miller returned in Game 2
of the Western Conference semifinals vs. Chicago and had one goal, one
assist and a plus-1 rating in six games.
He scored the game-winning goal in a 3-1 victory over the Blackhawks in
Game 3.
Miller, who plays on the fourth line and kills penalties, has appeared in 257
regular-season games with the Red Wings since being claimed off waivers
from Tampa Bay in November 2009.
He played for Anaheim's 2007 Stanley Cup championship team.
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Detroit Red Wings
Teams appear to have more trade options this year; Detroit Red Wings
'motivated' to make a move
McCollum, the club's top pick in the 2008 entry draft (30th overall) hasn't
panned out as projected, struggling his first three seasons with the Grand
Rapids Griffins. He improved this past season, going 18-11-2, with a 2.63
goals-against average, but still couldn't beat out Petr Mrazek for the starting
job.
By Ansar Khan | akhan1@mlive.com
Next year, the Red Wings have 6-foot-5 free agent Jared Coreau from
Northern Michigan slotted as Mrazek's backup, leaving McCollum's future
with the organization in question.
on June 29, 2013 at 1:01 AM, updated June 29, 2013 at 2:15 AM
Wings hoping to sign Glendening
DETROIT – Trade talks will heat up this weekend at the NHL entry draft in
Newark, N.J., as they usually do.
This year, it appears many more prominent players are being shopped.
Various reports indicate the long list of forwards available includes Thomas
Vanek (Buffalo), Paul Stastny (Colorado), Dave Bolland (Chicago); Sam
Gagner, Shawn Horcoff and Ales Hemsky (Edmonton), Mike Cammalleri
(Calgary), David Perron (St. Louis) and Erik Cole (Dallas).
Detroit Red Wings general manager Ken Holland said Friday that he's had
conversations with some team executives, but nothing is imminent.
“This is the weekend that teams are motivated to make a move, and we're
motivated to make a move or two between now and unrestricted free
agency (which starts next Friday) that we think will make our team a little
better,'' Holland said.
If nothing else, the Red Wings would like to trim a player or two from their
crowded roster, either through trades or a compliance buyout or two.
The club's course of action depends, in large part, on whether it re-signs
any of its unrestricted free-agent forwards – Daniel Cleary, Damien Brunner
or Valtteri Filppula, who appears to have one foot out the door.
Holland will continue talking to the agents for all three players this weekend.
He might opt to shop Filppula's negotiating rights if no progress is made.
If Filppula leaves, the Red Wings would prefer to fill the void on the second
line with a center.
Many teams are expected to make a pitch for Vincent Lecavalier, 33, who
was added to the free-agent list after the Tampa Bay Lightning bought out
the final seven years of his contract on Thursday.
The Red Wings will explore that option, but they're not likely to get into a
bidding war for him.
The smaller, quicker Stephen Weiss of the Florida Panthers is an option.
Matt Cullen, 36, of the Minnesota Wild and Patrik Elias, 37, of the New
Jersey Devils are a pair of older alternatives.
The Red Wings also are interested in right wing Jarome Iginla, the longtime Calgary Flame who was dealt to the Pittsburgh Penguins late in the
season. Whether the interest is mutual is uncertain, since Detroit was not
on his short list of teams he agreed to waive his no-trade clause for this
past season (Pittsburgh, Boston, Los Angeles and Chicago).
They don't appear to be interested in spending big money on the likes of
David Clarkson (New Jersey) or Nathan Horton (Boston), should they hit
the market.
The Red Wings are set on the blue line, unless they can acquire a top-three
defenseman, which is unlikely.
They have eight defensemen and are pondering whether to keep Carlo
Colaiacovo. If they don't trade him this weekend, they might use a
compliance buyout on him before the July 4 deadline (5 p.m.).
But, that would leave them thin on defense if they have an injury or two in
training camp or early in the season. They might opt to keep Colaiacovo
and waive somebody at the start of the season if they need to clear a roster
spot.
Forwards Mikael Samuelsson and Todd Bertuzzi are other buyout
candidates. Players who are bought out must be waived first.
Decision due on McCollum
The Red Wings will wait until Monday's deadline to decide whether to
tender a qualifying offer to goaltender Tom McCollum, thereby retaining his
rights.
Holland is talking with the agent for center Luke Glendening, hoping to sign
him to an NHL contract.
The 5-foot-11, 200-pound, right-handed shooting Glendening (Michigan)
blossomed during the AHL playoffs for the Griffins, tying for third on the
team with 16 points (six goals, 10 assists). He had eight goals and 18
assists in 51 regular-season games.
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Detroit Red Wings
Red Wings are going to pick best available player
By CHUCK PLEINESS
chuck.pleiness@macombdaily.com; @wingsfrontman
Posted: Saturday, 06/29/13 04:28 pm
DETROIT – Like many of the other drafts before it for the Detroit Red
Wings, they’re going to look at the best available player at the time of their
pick.
But this year they’re leaning a bit in one direction … a skilled forward with
decent size.
“The only difference this year is we’d really like to get a forward, unless
there’s a defenseman that’s too good to pass up,” said Joe McDonnell, the
team’s director of amateur scouting. “When it comes to our pick, if we feel
there’s two players that are even we’ll lean toward the forward.”
This goes against many of the mock drafts that have Detroit taking a blue
liner with its first pick.
“Every team’s almost in the same boat,” McDonnell said. “It’s just the way
the game has evolved. It’s a big man’s game. I’m not saying there’s no
room for smaller guys, but if you can get a big, skilled guy, you go that
route. Still take small guys if we have to. But we’re looking to get bigger. We
have bigger guys coming up in (Tomas) Jurco and (Riley) Sheahan.”
The draft, which is one day this year, begins at 3 p.m. on Sunday with the
Wings having the 18th pick, which is their highest pick since 1991.
“We’re excited, at 18, we know we’ll get someone we really like,” McDonnell
said. “The draft in general is strong, in the first round and even into the
second round. It’s deep at the top end of the draft and then it peters out.
There will be guys we like even in the seventh round. But the high-end part
of the draft is good. At 18, we’ll get a quality player.”
The Wings have selected forwards with their top picks in each of the last
three drafts – Martin Frk (2012), Tomas Jurco (2011) and Riley Sheahan
(2010).
“It’s always the best player,” Wings general manager Ken Holland said. “We
feel like we’ve got some good prospects on defense and some good
prospects up front. We’d like to add a few more. We’re hoping to look back
in six years and we’ve got two NHL players out of this draft. If you have a
great, great day maybe you have three.”
The Wings have a number of defensemen coming up through the ranks,
including Brian Lashoff, Ryan Sproul, Xavier Oullette and Mattias Backman.
“We have a lot of good, young defensemen,” McDonnell said. “We think we
have a number of good ones. If we can add a little size up front, it would be
beneficial.”
One position the Wings won’t be looking at highly is goaltending where
they’re well-stocked.
Petr Mrazek just got done leading the Grand Rapids Griffins to the Calder
Cup as a rookie. They’ve also got Jake Paterson, who the Wings drafted in
the third round a year ago, and free agent signee Jared Coreau out of
Northern Michigan.
“It’s not a high priority for us,” McDonnell said. “We’re happy with Mrazek.
Paterson is a high-end kid. We’re not pressed to take a goalie, but if there’s
one rated highly we’ll take him. Not in the top three rounds, though.”
Holland added that the Wings probably won’t be trading up in this draft, but
like in year’s past they’re willing to listen to offers to move down.
“You deal in percentages and hopefully we come down the road and we
have some NHL players,” Holland said. “As we’ve all seen it’s a very patient
process. You’re dealing with 18-year-old kids and most of them, other than
the top end of the draft, there’s a developing process they have to go
through.
“It starts on draft day by holding onto your picks, making selections and
then working their way through juniors, college and then to Grand Rapids,”
Holland continued. “Some funnel up to Detroit and some drop by the
wayside. We have number of prospects within our organization and we’d
just like to our pool of prospects.”
The Wings have picks in all seven rounds – 48th, 79th, 109th, 139th, 169th
and 199th overall.
“In the salary-cap era (the draft is) everything,” McDonnell said. “If you don’t
draft well and develop your players you don’t have any hope. If you’re going
to be a good organization you better draft. It’s the lifeline of an
organization.”
This is McDonnell’s first year of making the final decision on players,
replacing Jim Nill, who was hired as the Dallas Stars’ general manager on
April 29.
“Jim and I were sitting there the past 18 years, the only weird thing is I’ll
look to my left and no Jim Nill, it’ll be Ken Holland,” said McDonnell, whose
first draft with the Wings was in 1995. “Jim taught me a lot in those early
years.”
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Edmonton Oilers
Although his two sisters are both skilled on the court, “no one can take my
mom,” he said.
Darnell Nurse not short of suitors ahead of NHL draft
“My two sisters might be better basketball players, but I don’t think anyone
wants to receive an elbow from Mama Nurse.”
By Joanne Ireland, Edmonton JournalJune 29, 2013
The defenceman is determined to make a push out of camp, no matter
where he ends up, but he also acknowledged he has to put on a bit more
weight this summer.
New York – Darnell Nurse was only a year old when his father, Richard,
was playing out his last season with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the
Canadian Football League. His time at Ivor Wynne Stadium was spent in
the stands rooting for the Tabbies.
He also experienced the game through his uncle, Donovan McNabb, who
directed the Philadelphia Eagles offence, but taking part on the field was
never an option, no matter how much Nurse might have wanted to play.
“I wasn’t allowed to play,” he said. “I tried. My parents wanted to keep me
safe, as crazy as that sounds now that I’m playing hockey. But I do go to as
many Tiger-Cats games as I can, especially the Labour Day games when
they’re playing the Argos.”
The Sault St. Marie Greyhounds defenceman is perched on a chair with his
back to the Hudson River, his eyes on the future — a view that will become
a little clearer Sunday when NHL teams make their draft selections at the
Prudential Centre in Newark, N.J.
If Nurse is still available when Edmonton makes the seventh selection, he
could well end up with the Oilers.
That’s if the Oilers still have the selection. The team was linked to several
trade rumours Saturday, in part because rookie general manager Craig
MacTavish has said he wants to leave the draft with a deal and in larger
part because the team has needs and has some assets to move.
MacTavish will, however, need to find a trade partner. He wasn’t available
for comment on Saturday.
There are several top-tier defencemen in Sunday’s draft, starting with the
Portland Winterhawks’ Seth Jones, ranked No. 1 on Central Scouting’s list.
Nurse is OK with that.
“I think it’s cool to be a part of it,” he said. “You see guys like Seth, who is
such a gifted player and a great guy. You can take some things from guys
like that.”
Nurse made one trip after the NHL combine meetings in Toronto, and that
was to Edmonton at the behest of the Oilers, but he talked to several teams
in Toronto. Two of the more notable interviews were with the Philadelphia
Flyers and the New Jersey Devils.
The 18-year-old grew up as a fan of the Devils, in particular Scott Stevens,
and he has a connection to Philadelphia through his uncle and more
recently Chris Pronger, another favourite. But when it comes to modelling
his game, Shea Weber is Nurse’s measuring stick.
“I’ve watched him a lot and he has an ability to not only have an impact in
the defensive zone but the offensive zone … just keeping it simple.”
What he liked about Pronger was his snarl, a trait that Nurse said he can
pull out when need be. He also likes to hit.
“I think that (aggressive streak) is something you have or you don’t,” he
said. “I’ve always liked to hit people more than I like getting hit. It’s better to
give than receive, right?”
Nurse did get into a fight with the Edmonton Oil Kings’ Curtis Lazar at the
prospects game. Lazar said he was asked about it at several of his
interviews at the combine and later joked he was hopeful teams didn’t have
him pegged as a fighter.
“I wasn’t going in there looking for it,” Nurse said.
“I didn’t think anyone was going to fight, so when Curtis asked me to go, I
said, ‘Fine, we can do this if you want.’ It’s just something that comes with
my game. Even during the season it happens. If you get challenged, there’s
always a right time to step up.”
The one person Nurse won’t take on is his mom, Cathy, especially on the
basketball court. She played at McMaster University.
“I’m six four and just getting to 200 pounds now. It’s going to take some
time,” said Nurse, who grew up in Hamilton. “I just need to eat.
“No matter what situation I’m in, I have to push and give it everything I
have. I’m almost there, but almost isn’t enough. I need to push myself
through the rest of the summer. When it’s all said and done, I could play at
215-220, but breaking in, I think I’d have to get to 205.”
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Edmonton Oilers
Could the Edmonton Oilers move both of their second round picks in trade
for players at the 2013 NHL Draft?
June 29, 2013. 4:00 am
Posted by:
Jonathan Willis
On Tuesday, Edmonton Oilers general manager Craig Mactavish made
reference to second round draft picks as being “the most liquid currency” in
trade talks with other general managers (see our full recap of his press
conference here). The Oilers enter draft weekend with two picks (37th
overall and 56th overall), but yesterday Oilers radio host Bob Stauffer
suggested they might leave the draft without using either of them.
From New York, Stauffer was interviewed by guest host Reid Wilkins, and
offered the following take:
Look, Craig MacTavish basically inferred on Tuesday at the media
availability, if you read between the lines of what he was saying, that they
he’d almost be disappointed if he used both second round picks because
he’s looking to upgrade the team with those second round picks. I
personally feel that Minnesota is a team that would be willing; the
Minnesota Wild are looking to turn two second round picks into a number
one because they want to trade back into the number one after they moved
their number one pick in the deal for Pominville. We know Clutterbuck’s out
there. In a perfect world, the Oilers acquire a top-four left-shooting
defenceman with a second round pick and a prospect, and I wonder if they
don’t move the other second round pick and get a guy like Clutterbuck with
maybe a (B) or (C) prospect. We’ll have to wait and see, but it would not
surprise me if the Edmonton Oilers did not have a pick in the second round.
We know they don’t have a pick right now in the third or in the fourth… it
wouldn’t surprise me in the least if the Oilers trade both [second round
picks].
Asked to clarify whether the Oilers would package those second round
picks together, Stauffer quickly and definitively, “Separate deals” and
suggested the Oilers could make “four or five trades in the next three
weeks.”
It isn’t all that hard to draw up plausible trade scenarios.
Cal Clutterbuck’s name has been circling Edmonton since at least April,
when the Edmonton Journal’s Jim Matheson suggested him as a plausible
target; rumours heated up when Minnesota Wild beat reporter Michael
Russo mentioned the possibility of a deal with Edmonton that would include
prospect Tyler Pitlick. At the time, Pitlick was the only piece suggested on
the Edmonton side (David Staples argued that Pitlick was not a Grade A
prospect and would be expendable in such a deal). Looking at Stauffer’s
comments, might Pitlick and a second round pick (I would suggest the 56th
overall selection) be on the table for Clutterbuck?
As for a top-four left-shooting defenceman, it’s awfully easy to connect the
name Braydon Coburn to that comment. Coburn was mentioned by TSN as
a player who might be on the move yesterday, but Stauffer had actually
brought up his name back on Tuesday, describing him using almost the
exact same words and indicating Philadelphia might part with him to clear
salary space (our analysis of that rumour here). Would the 37th overall pick
and a second-tier prospect – names that come to mind include people like
Mitch Moroz and David Musil – get a trade done there? Would the Oilers be
better off moving that second round pick rather than swapping first rounders
(Edmonton picks seventh, Philadelphia 11th) if the Flyers are open to that
kind of arrangement?
What seems certain is that Craig MacTavish is going to have a very busy
weekend. Stauffer’s comments reinforce the notion that the Oilers are
going to be very active; as one NHL general manager told CBC’s Elliotte
Friedman, MacTavish has “got his fingers in everything.”
Edmonton Journal: LOADED: 06.30.2013
683003
Edmonton Oilers
NHL draft prospect Darnell Nurse not afraid to fight, but willing to be a role
model, too
By Robert Tychkowski,Edmonton Sun
First posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 05:30 PM MDT | Updated: Saturday,
June 29, 2013 07:07 PM MDT
NEW YORK - Kevin Lowe and Craig MacTavish aren’t the only people in
Edmonton defenceman Darnell Nurse had face-to-face meetings with this
season — he traded punches with Edmonton Oil King forward Curtis Lazar
at the Top Prospects game in January.
Getting in a fight in what amounts to an all-star game wasn’t on his agenda,
but when a scrap comes knocking, he’s always quick to answer.
“I didn’t go in there looking for it, I didn’t think anyone was really going to
fight,” said the Sault Ste. Marie captain, projected to go anywhere from fifth
to eighth on Sunday. “When Curtis asked me to go I said ‘We can do this if
you want, nothing wrong with that.”
While some players are reluctant to make physical statements on the ice,
Nurse loves it. In a game where big men are either St. Bernards or German
Shepherds, he’s the latter.
“It’s something you’ve got, or you don’t have,” he said. “I have it. I always
liked hitting people more than getting hit. It’s better to give than receive,
right. That’s just always been the way I’ve been.
“It’s just something that comes in my game. During the season you’re being
someone who’s hard to play against and you get challenged. There’s
always the right time to step up.”
Ironically, Nurse wound up being a hockey ruffian because his father,
former Hamilton Ti-Cat Richard Nurse, and mother Cathy, who played
basketball at McMaster, thought football was too dangerous.
“I wasn’t allowed (to play it),” said Nurse, whose uncle by marriage is longtime NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb. “I tried. But my parents wanted to
keep me safe, crazy as it sounds, playing hockey. I guess in hockey you
control a little more who gets hit when you’re on defence.”
In hockey, he will also be a role model for other minority kids who might not
normally gravitate toward the ice. That isn’t a responsibility he takes lightly.
But after watching one of the most classy and professional players in the
game from afar, he knows what’s expected of him.
“Growing up, I got to watch Jarome Iginla,” he said. “He was one of the
main reasons I loved hockey and became one of my favourite players to
watch.
“It’s probably not the first thought I have — I play hockey because I love
playing hockey — but being an inspiration for somebody some day is
something that drives me, too.”
Dan Marr, executive director of NHL Central Scouting, says whoever winds
up with the 6-foot-4 defender will be getting a good one.
“I’ve always compared him to Shea Weber,” said Marr. “He’s got a mix
where he’s good at the physical game, good at the skill game. He’s got a
good shot from the point. He’s a good package.”
But, despite his athletic lineage, none of this comes naturally.
“I wish it was that easy,” he said. “For me, athleticism wouldn’t get me too
far if I didn’t work the way that I did.
“Everybody is athletic, everyone is in the gym five, six times a week. Having
the athletic part as a background is a good help but it would be hard to find
somebody who works has hard as I do.”
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Edmonton Oilers
Edmonton Oilers - drafting their way through misery, and out?
In 2010 it was Taylor vs Tyler, a decision that seemed obvious on its face,
given that Hall had better numbers, walked over Seguin’s team in the
playoffs and was a two-time Memorial Cup MVP. But it wasn’t very difficult
to over-analyse the situation.
By Robert Tychkowski,Edmonton Sun
The Oilers needed a centre, Hall benefited from a better team and wasn’t
Seguin a few months younger? It provided some great drama right up to the
last moment.
First posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 05:14 PM MDT | Updated: Saturday,
June 29, 2013 06:21 PM MDT
FUTURE SHOP
Oilers First Picks
2004 - Devan Dubnyk
For Edmontonians, the NHL Entry Draft is something to be loved and hated
in the same breath, an exercise of wild extremes that Oilers fans still credit
for the glory years and still blame for the lean years that followed.
Draft day delivered the cornerstones for hockey’s last great dynasty, it led
them into a barren wasteland of mediocrity and is now providing the kind of
talent and hope that Edmontonians haven’t seen here in 20 years.
2005 - Andrew Cogliano
2006 - Jeff Petry
2007 - Sam Gagner
2008 - Jordan Eberle
In the final installment of a three-part series leading up to selection day
2013, The Sun looks at Edmonton’s draft record from 2004 to the present,
also known as the Long Road Back.
2009 - Magnus Paajarvi
After blowing 18 of 20 first picks from 1984 to 2003, the Oilers rediscovered their drafting rhythm somewhat in the mid 2000s.
2011 - Ryan Nugent-Hopkins
They took Devan Dubnyk in the first round of 2004 (14th overall), Andrew
Cogliano 18th in 2005, Jeff Petry 45th (they had no first round pick) in 2006,
Sam Gagner 6th in 2007, stole Jordan Eberle with the 22nd pick in 2008
and picked Magnus Paajarvi 10th in 2009.
The Oilers drew the 7th overall pick this year. Below are recent 7th round
picks and how they've panned out. Hover over the picture for more info. The
story is continued below.
All in all, a very productive run given where they were picking.
But it still wasn’t enough to lift them out of the bottom half of the NHL.
It didn’t help that in 2007 they had three picks in the first round and blew
two of them on Alex Plante (15th) and Riley Nash (22nd) and that when it
came to second or third round picks and late rounders - virtually nothing
panned out.
Rob Schremp and Linus Omark made waves in the media, but couldn’t stick
in the NHL. JF Jacques and Teemu Hartikainen had all the tools, but lacked
big league passion.
Of the 35 players selected with their second pick or later between 2004 and
2009, only two (Theo Peckham and Anton Lander) are still in the mix.
The resulting lack of organizational depth, coupled with bad management
and a capricious owner more interested in buying a winner than building
one resulted in years of bitter hardship - seven straight seasons out of the
playoffs.
It also meant an unprecedented three straight first picks overall, the kind of
second chance most organizations can only dream of.
LOSING'S NOT EXCITING
“Scouts don’t dream of picking first, that’s for sure because it means your
team has been pretty bad, obviously,” said head scout Stu MacGregor, who
took over the top job in 2007. “But when you’re there, it is an opportunity for
an organization to re-stock and get quality players. It’s exciting from that
aspect, it’s just not exciting to watch the whole season when the team isn’t
going very well.”
It wasn’t. For three years, the best part of the season came in June, when
the Oilers got first pick of the NHL litter. And while it might look easy
scooping up the consensus No.1 every year, picking first also involves the
most pressure. It’s a pick that, good or bad, will live with a scout and his
organization forever.
“I don’t think it’s ever easy, no matter where you draft,” said MacGregor.
“But there’s obviously a little more pressure when you pick No.1.
“You have to just be prepared for it, do the work and make sure you feel
right about the pick you’re making. There’s stress, but you deal with it.
“And once the decision is made that you’re picking first, you just get after it.
The stress might be after if they don’t perform.”
2010 - Taylor Hall
2012 - Nail Yakupov
In the end, they took the guy who reminded them of Messier.
The next season, after another 30th place finish and another first round
pick, the decision came down to Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, power forward
Gabriel Landeskog, Memorial Cup MVP Jonathan Huberdeau or
defenceman Adam Larsson.
In the end, they took the skinny kid with eyes in the back of his head who
reminded them of Gretzky.
In 2012, when it came down to Nail Yakupov or defenceman Ryan Murray,
they went with the charismatic Russian whose one-timer reminded them of
a young Jari Kurri.
In hindsight, MacGregor says there weren’t even tough calls.
“Not really,” he said. “I feel good about where we’re at with all three of those
picks. Taylor Hall is starting to establish himself as a high end player. The
Nuge has been really good and I’m sure he’ll recover from his injury and be
just as good or better and I’m sure Yakupov with his 17 goals showed why
we drafted him. I have no issues about where those players are. I think
they’re tracking well.”
They certainly have everyone flashing back to the halcyon days when Barry
Fraser and company set the table for a dynasty by landing Kevin Lowe,
Mark Messier, Glenn Anderson, Paul Coffey, Jari Kurri and Grant Fuhr in a
span of 15 picks.
EXCITING FUTURE
“We got to choose another cornerstone piece of the organization,” said
former general manager Steve Tambellini. “For us, trying to think of what
that’s going to look like with Hopkins, Hall, Eberle, Paajarvi, Hemsky... it’s
exciting.”
It wasn’t that exciting. The Oilers only managed a 24th place finish with all
those guys, suggesting there is still a lot of work left to do heading into
Sunday’s draft in New Jersey, where the Oilers are hoping to keep their
draft day momentum going with a strong first pick (seventh overall).
“I’m glad to be out of the first row of tables,” said MacGregor. That’s a step
forward. Would I have liked to pick 10, 12 or 16? Absolutely, but we are in a
situation where we moved forward a bit last year and feel good about it.
“We’ll get a good player at 7. We know who No. 7 is on our list and I’d be
thrilled to get him.”
Edmonton Sun: LOADED: 06.30.2013
683005
Edmonton Oilers
Speaking of comparisons, small centre Hunter Shinkeruk isn’t shy about
who he wants to be like.
Edmonton Oilers head coach Dallas Eakins doesn't handicap the field …
Seth Jones still excited … Sean Monohan slips the jinx … Hunter Shinkaruk
measures up
“A lot of people look at me and say I’m not very big, but you look at Patrick
Kane, who had a great playoffs,” said the 5-10, 181-pound Medicine Hat
Tiger. “He’s a guy who I feel I play a lot like. We’re probably the same size
and weight right now. There’s work to be done this summer but I’m going to
be committed and at the end of the day we’ll see what happens.”
By Robert Tychkowski,Edmonton Sun
Edmonton Sun: LOADED: 06.30.2013
First posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 04:18 PM MDT | Updated: Saturday,
June 29, 2013 04:33 PM MDT
NEW YORK - Don’t ask Dallas Eakins who he wants Edmonton to select on
Sunday — the Oilers head coach has no idea.
While a lot of people analysing the draft haven’t seen any of these kids play
live, it doesn’t stop them from rating and ranking and speculating. Eakins,
on the other hand, is more honest than most when it comes to evaluating
the class of 2013.
He won’t, because he doesn’t know enough about any of them to make an
informed decision.
“You say a name to me and I’ve heard the name, but I couldn’t tell you if he
shoots left or right,” said Eakins, when asked if there’s a guy in the four to
seven spots he’d love to see in Edmonton.
“I am going buzz in with our amateur scouts and be a fly on the wall and
listen, but for me … these amateur scouts work extremely hard and I have
trust in them to make the right call. For the head coach of an NHL team,
you have to leave it to those guys and trust their pick.”
SPOILER ALERT
Three years ago Taylor or Tyler captivated fans of the NHL draft for
months.
Two years ago, the Oilers kept everyone in suspense before they
announced they were taking Ryan Nugent-Hopkins over Gabriel
Landeskog.
This year, Colorado let the air out of the balloon when they announced that
the top ranked player in this year’s draft won’t be going first overall.
Avs executive vice-president Joe Sakic said they’re going to pass on
defenceman Seth Jones and go with Nathan MacKinnon instead.
Thanks for ruining the drama.
“They have, good for them,” said Jones, adding it doesn’t change the draft
for him, knowing a week ago that he isn’t going first. “Not much. I’m still
going to sit there and wait for my name to be called just like I would if they
hadn’t come out.
“The expectation and excitement have been building up for quite some time
now. I’m just happy that it’s finally here.”
LAST BUT NOT LEAST
Being on a bottom feeder that missed the playoffs usually isn’t good for a
player’s draft status, but Sean Monahan seems to have overcome. He’s
ranked fifth among North American skaters and is being spoken of in
glowing terms despite the last-place Ottawa 67’s 16-46 record.
“The fact Ottawa was going through a rebuilding year didn’t make it easy for
him,” said Dan Marr of NHL Central Scouting. “But NHL scouts are aware of
these factors. It actually worked to his advantage, teams knowing that he
wasn’t playing with a lot of skill to help set him up, that he had to do a lot of
the work on the play. I think he’s a very highly thought of and respected
player.”
Marr compared the 6-2 centre to Carolina’s Eric Staal, who happens to be
one of Monahan’s idols.
“Every team needs an Eric Staal who can play on your team for a long time.
He’s a player who leads by example. He’s got the skill set where he can
generate offence but he’s also very responsible defensively. He’s just a
strong two-way centre who’s going to play for some team for a long, long
time.”
KANE DO
683006
Florida Panthers
Florida Panthers expect game-changing talent with No. 2 pick in NHL Draft
Luce has been watching Jones and MacKinnon for a long time. Although
Jones comes into the draft as the top-rated prospect by NHL Central
Scouting, MacKinnon is a player who has been pegged to be a top pick for
the past few years.
BY GEORGE RICHARDS
Although surpassed by the emerging Jones in the eyes of some scouts —
Jones is approaching 6-5 and can skate as well as anyone in this draft —
many believe MacKinnon is a franchise-changing offensive forward.
Posted on Sun, Jun. 30, 2013
When the Panthers had the third overall pick in the 2011 NHL Draft, Florida
landed forward Jonathan Huberdeau — who is now the NHL’s reigning
rookie of the year.
“There were two players we thought were close to Huberdeau,” assistant
general manager Mike Santos said. “We just waited for the picks to be
made, and he fell into our lap. Looking back, the right guy fell into our lap.”
On Sunday, Florida has the second selection after Colorado. The Panthers
hope history repeats itself and another top-end talent heads to South
Florida.
Colorado, which won the draft lottery in April to pull the top pick away from
the last-place Panthers, said it will select a forward and not top-rated
defenseman Seth Jones.
Of course, this could be a bluff in trying to get the Panthers — or another
team — to trade up for the top pick.
After all, Jones not only has ties to the Denver area and the Avs
organization, but as a defenseman he plays a position where the Avs could
use help. Florida general manager Dale Tallon said he believes what the
Colorado management team of former players Joe Sakic and Patrick Roy is
selling.
“Based on their history as players and as people, they are new to the game,
but I believe they are very truthful,” Tallon said. “I’m just concerned about
what we can do. The top four guys are slam dunks. We’re very prepared
and satisfied they all will help us out.”
If the Avs were to take center Nathan MacKinnon, whom it is believed the
Panthers prefer, Florida is projected to select Jones.
Florida, by virtue of finishing the season in last place, will get what projects
to be a very good player with either MacKinnon, Jones or forwards
Jonathan Drouin and Aleksander Barkov.
“We’re going to get a better-than-normal prospect in this draft,” said Scott
Luce, the team’s director of amateur scouting. “We, as an organization,
would much rather be in the playoffs like we were the year before, picking
at 23 and getting a guy like Mike Matheson every year rather than going
through the top guys in every draft. Our fans deserve that and our staff
deserves that.”
Tallon said Saturday that the Panthers haven’t decided whom they will take
with the second pick and reiterated that Florida could move up in a deal
with Colorado or slide down.
This draft is deep in talent and teams covet Florida’s position.
“We’re going to get one hell of a player,” Tallon said. “I wish I had more
picks. I really do. You try to be greedy, but you only get one kick at the can.
You better make sure it’s the right one. We’re fortunate to be picking where
we’re picking.”
Said Santos: “If you are picking one, two, three or four, you are getting a
player who is a game-changer. Being at No. 2 doesn’t change a heck of a
lot from being No. 1.”
The Panthers will have plenty of suitors Sunday, although Tallon said
Saturday was “eerily quiet” on the trade front.
“Whatever the best option is for us, that’s what we’re going to do,” Tallon
said. “I had conversations with [Colorado] on a couple of occasions. You
have to exhaust every opportunity to get better.
“It would be unfair for me not to ask them if they were thinking about moving
that pick. If they move it for something that we had or … could have given
them, it would be very frustrating for our franchise and for all of us. We
explore every avenue to make sure we have the best available picks. That’s
how I’ve always operated.”
“With our spot, we feel there are four guys out there who are elite guys,”
Luce said. “We spent the past few months looking at those four guys to
determine who is the best fit for our organization. It’s still a work in
progress. We’ve had a lot of conversations.”
Because of the lockout that shortened the 2013 season to 48 games, the
NHL is cramming all seven rounds of this draft into Sunday.
The first round is projected to take just over two hours to complete with the
Panthers kicking off the second round with the 31st selection.
Tallon and his crew are hoping to continue adding to the Panthers depth as
Florida holds five of the first 100 picks. Although Florida doesn’t have a
third-round pick — yet — it does have three early selections in the fourth.
“Those picks are going to turn into something very positive for us,” Tallon
said. “Either we’re going to use them to move up, or it’s such a deep draft,
we’ll fill some needs.”
Miami Herald LOADED: 06.30.2013
683007
Florida Panthers
Florida Panthers interested in ex-Lightning star Vinny Lecavalier
BY GEORGE RICHARDS
Posted on Sun, Jun. 30, 2013
Vinny Lecavalier in a Panthers sweater? If the team has its way, that
scenario — a nightmare for Tampa Bay fans — could come to light next
season.
Lecavalier, the Lightning’s all-time leader in just about everything, was
bought out by the team and is now a free agent. With the Panthers looking
for veteran talent, team management said Lecavalier is a player in whom
they are interested.
Both general manager Dale Tallon and assistant GM Mike Santos said
Saturday that the Panthers’ full attention, right now, is on Sunday’s NHL
Draft, but they are trying to engage in talks with Lecavalier and his
representatives on Sunday before they leave New York.
Lecavalier, like all unrestricted free agents, can’t sign with another team
until Friday.
“We’re very interested in his leadership, his skill level,” Tallon said after
meeting with draft prospects at the team’s hotel near Times Square. “We
have young, big centermen who could learn a lot from him.
“We have some interest; hopefully he has some as well. That’s the way it
starts. It takes two to tango. If he doesn’t want to come, so be it. But I think
there will be some open dialog there. That would be a benefit to our
franchise.”
Lecavalier, who just finished his 14th season, has been the Lightning’s
captain since 2000 and has 26 goals and 42 assists in 78 career games
against the Panthers. Lecavalier had 10 goals and 22 assists in 39 games
last season — with two goals and six points in four games against Florida.
“Even the thought of wearing a different kind of jersey is weird in my head,”
Lecavalier told the Tampa Bay Times on Thursday.
Because of a reduced salary cap — and Lecavalier’s declining numbers —
Tampa Bay decided to exercise its option to buy out the final seven years of
the 11-year, $85 million deal Lecavalier signed with the team’s previous
owners.
So, the Lightning will pay Lecavalier roughly $33 million over the next 14
years and not have that money count against the salary cap.
The Panthers are hoping the lack of a state income tax and South Florida’s
proximity to Lecavalier’s Tampa charities might help sway Lecavalier in
staying local.
“You have to have interest in Vinny Lecavalier,” Santos said. “It’s a little
premature to see what his price will be in years and money. He’s a high
character guy with great leadership skills. … Is he better than what we have
at center right now? Probably.
“There are a lot of reasons for him wanting to stay in the state of Florida.
Let’s face it, there are lots of tax advantages in Florida and the money
Tampa is buying himself out with is considerable.”
Canada’s TSN reported that Lecavalier’s representatives met with Dallas,
Philadelphia, St. Louis and Montreal, among others, on Saturday in New
York.
Elsewhere
• Jonathan Huberdeau received another honor Saturday as he was named
to the NHL’s All-Rookie team for 2013. Huberdeau recently won the Calder
Memorial Trophy as the league’s top rookie.
Huberdeau had offseason surgery on his hip and is expected to resume
skating in the coming weeks.
“He played hurt. That tells you a lot about this kid,” Tallon said. “He played
hurt and extremely well. We didn’t have many players due to injuries, so
teams focused on him. He’s a special kid.”
• Tallon said he spoke with Stephen Weiss’ agent Saturday in the continued
hopes to sign the pending free agent center.
“You only get one shot at being a free agent, and we’re trying to do the best
we can for both parties,” Tallon said. “If I can come up with the right
number, well, that’s fine. We’ll go through [Sunday] and then make a
decision next week.”
• Ed Jovanovski met with his surgeon Friday and told Tallon he is pain free
for the first time in a long time. Jovanovski was limited to six games last
season after having radical hip surgery in April.
Tallon said Jovanovski is expected to begin skating this week, although it’s
not known whether the defenseman will be ready for training camp in
September.
Miami Herald LOADED: 06.30.2013
683008
Florida Panthers
David J. Neal: It’s simple – Florida Panthers should draft Seth Jones
Only two first-rounders that year played fewer than 200 NHL games. That
first round is considered to trail in quality only the legendary 1979 draft that,
because of rules changes on draft eligibility and the death of the WHA,
wound up being three and a half draft classes in one.
“The team that won the Stanley Cup had the puck the longest and that’s
why they won,” Tallon said. “That’s what I like — puck possession.”
BY DAVID J. NEAL
Posted on Sun, Jun. 30, 201
Simplicity works with amazing frequency. How often do you see people
mess up meals, attire, birthday parties, stories (guilty) by trying too hard to
be smart? Sometimes, you just blow up the bounce house and get out of
the way.
That’s what the Panthers should do at Sunday’s NHL Draft: take
defenseman Seth Jones with the No. 2 overall selection in the NHL’s annual
pick-and-pray.
Jones, who plays for the Western Hockey League’s Portland (Ore.)
Winterhawks, draws notice from non-puckheads for his lineage: son of
former NBA player Popeye Jones. Scouts like that Dad passed along size
(6-4 or 6-5, 205 pounds, probably filling out to 230 at full maturity) and the
athleticism manifesting itself in skating ability and offensive skill.
Jones is ranked as the No. 1 North American defenseman or forward by
NHL Central Scouting. Other scouts have him No. 2 behind goal-scoring
center Nathan MacKinnon.
You can definitely be too thin. You can never be too rich. You definitely can
never be too rich in defensemen, especially offensive defensemen with
size. It’s the rarest commodity on a roster.
It’s why I’ve never criticized the Panthers taking Jay Bouwmeester in 2002
instead of power forward Rick Nash. Nash turned out to be the better
player, though consensus opinion had him below Bouwmeester. That’s a
mistake in hindsight, a classic draft “darn,” not a philosophical mistake. The
true killer that year turned out to be moving up one spot — one spot! — to
take center Petr Taticek at No. 9 overall and leaving Alexander Semin on
the board for Washington.
Two of the NHL’s best under-23 defensemen, 21-year-old Erik Gudbranson
(who stands 6-5) and maddening 22-year-old Dmitri Kulikov, wear the
leaping cat with 21-year-old Alex Petrovic in the minors. Don’t care. Give
Jones another two seasons and he’ll be emerging as Gudbranson hits his
prime.
In 2006-07, Anaheim steamrolled to the most predictable Stanley Cup since
pastels and mullets after trading for Chris Pronger (No. 2 overall, 1993) and
putting him with Scott Niedermayer (No. 3 overall, 1991). The No. 2 seed
Ducks took six games to win their second-round playoff series, five games
each in the other three series. With their superior skating, puck handling
and hockey sense, Pronger and Niedermayer helped Anaheim control long
stretches of games.
The 6-6 Pronger has been on St. Louis’ only President’s Trophy (best
record) team; Edmonton’s only Stanley Cup finalist since the breakup of the
1980s Oilers; Anaheim’s only Stanley Cup winner; and one of
Philadelphia’s two finalists of the past 25 years. All that’s not an accident.
Reports say Colorado, the team that caused Jones to fall in love with
hockey during his father’s time with the Denver Nuggets, wants MacKinnon
with the No. 1 overall pick. Maybe that’s a smokescreen. NHL folks aren’t
above a little shuck-and-jive at the top of the draft.
Panthers general manager Dale Tallon agreed in general that you can’t
have too many good defensemen, but said Saturday of their organizational
blue-line state, “We have a pretty good depth chart there.”
Tallon said of his philosophy: “Take the best player available that fits your
needs the most. If you have a philosophy of strength up the middle or build
the back end first, whatever your philosophy is, focus on that.”
True, the Panthers’ season got crippled by injuries up front, exposing the
lack of offensive depth. That’s a short-term view, though. Led by NHL
Rookie of the Year Jonathan Huberdeau, there’s young offense on the
roster and in the system. Besides, the Panthers can find scoring with the
other four of their picks that come within the first 98 of a draft Tallon says is
likened to the 2003 draft.
Tallon knows Chicago well, of course, having had a hand in building
Chicago’s 2010 and 2013 Stanley Cup winners. The way the Blackhawks
moved the puck out of the back, quickly defusing turnover-birthing
forechecking, went a long way to helping the puck possession Tallon
embraces. That’s another reason Jones works.
This isn’t some mixed-bag Chopped draft that requires getting funky at
No. 2. Keep it simple, in concept and name: Seth Jones.
Miami Herald LOADED: 06.30.2013
683009
Florida Panthers
DRAFT DAY DECISIONS FOR PANTHERS: Florida Holds Second Pick on
Sunday
George Richards
NEW YORK -- When the Panthers had the third overall pick in 2011, Florida
landed forward Jonathan Huberdeau -- now the reigning rookie of the year.
"There were two players we thought were close to Huberdeau,'' assistant
general manager Mike Santos said. "We just waited for the picks to be
made and he fell into our lap. Looking back, the right guy fell into our lap.''
central scouting, MacKinnon is a player who has been pegged to be a top
pick for the past few years.
Although surpassed by the emerging Jones in the eyes of some scouts -Jones is approaching 6-foot-5 and can skate as well as anyone in this draft
-- many feel MacKinnon is the goods and is a franchise-changing offensive
forward.
"With our spot, we feel there are four guys out there who are elite guys,''
Luce said. "We spent the past few months looking at those four guys to
determine who is the best fit for our organization. It's still a work in progress.
We've had a lot of conversations.''
Because of the lockout that shortened the 2013 second to 48 games, the
NHL is cramming all seven rounds of this draft into Sunday.
The first round is projected to take just over two hours to complete with the
Panthers kicking off the second round with the 31st selection.
On Sunday, Florida has the second selection after Colorado. The Panthers
hope history repeats itself and another top-end talent heads to South
Florida.
Tallon and his crew are hoping to continue adding to the Panthers depth as
Florida holds five of the first 100 picks. Although Florida doesn't have a third
round pick -- yet -- it does have three early selections in the fourth.
Colorado, which won the draft lottery in April to pull the top pick away from
the last-place Panthers, says it will select a forward and not top-rated
defenseman Seth Jones.
"Those picks are going to turn into something very positive for us,'' Tallon
said. "Either we're going to use them to move up or it's such a deep draft,
we'll fill some needs.''
Of course, this could be a bluff in trying to get the Panthers -- or someone
else -- to trade up for the top pick.
2013 NHL DRAFT
Jones, after all, not only has ties to the Denver area and the Avs
organization but as a defenseman plays a position the Avs could use help
in. General manager Dale Tallon says he believes what the Colorado
management team of former players Joe Sakic and Patrick Roy are selling.
"Based on their history as players and as people, they are new to the game
but I believe they are very truthful,'' Tallon said. "I'm just concerned about
what we can do. The top four guys are slam-dunks. We're very prepared
and satisfied they all will help us out.''
If the Avs were to take center Nathan MacKinnon, whom it is believed the
Panthers higher ups prefer, Florida is projected to select Jones.
Florida, by virtue of finishing the season in last place, will get what projects
to be a very good player with either MacKinnon, Jones or forwards
Jonathan Drouin and Aleksander Barkov.
"We're going to get a better-than-normal prospect in this draft,'' said Scott
Luce, the team's director of amateur scouting. "We as an organization
would much rather be in the playoffs like we were the year before, picking
at 23 and getting a guy like Mike Matheson every year rather than going
through the top guys in every draft. Our fans deserve that and our staff
deserves that.''
Tallon said Saturday that the Panthers haven't decided whom they will take
with the second pick and reiterated that Florida could move up in a deal
with Colorado or slide down.
This draft is deep in talent and teams covet Florida's position.
"We're going to get one hell of a player,'' Tallon said. "I wish I had more
picks. I really do. You try to be greedy, but you only get one kick at the can.
You better make sure it's the right one. We're fortunate to be picking where
we're picking.''
Said Santos: "If you are picking one, two, three or four, you are getting a
player who is a game-changer. Being at No. 2 doesn't change a heck of a
lot from being No. 1.''
The Panthers will have plenty of suitors come Sunday although Tallon said
Saturday was "eerily quiet" on the trade front.
"Whatever the best option is for us, that's what we're going to do,'' Tallon
said. "I had conversation with [Colorado] on a couple of occasions. You
have to exhaust every opportunity to get better.
"It would be unfair for me not to ask them if they were thinking about moving
that pick. If they move it for something that we had or more we could have
given them, it would be very frustrating for our franchise and for all of us.
We explore every avenue to make sure we have the best available picks.
That's how I've always operated.''
Luce has been watching both Jones and MacKinnon for a long time.
Although Jones comes into the draft as the top-rated prospect by NHL
Sunday, 3 p.m.; Prudential Center, Newark, N.J. (NBC Sports Net)
Florida Panthers selections
Round 1 (second overall)
Round 2 (31st)
Round 4 (92nd, 97th, 98th)
Round 5 (122nd)
Round 6 (152nd)
Miami Herald LOADED: 06.30.2013
683010
Florida Panthers
PANTHERS DRAFT NOTEBOOK: Huberdeau All-Rookie; Weiss Talks
Continue; Jovo Feeling Good
George Richards
Jonathan Huberdeau received another honor Saturday as he was named to
the NHL's All-Rookie team for 2013. Huberdeau recently was named the
league's top rookie in winning the Calder Memorial Trophy.
Huberdeau had offseason surgery on his hip and is expected to resume
skating in the coming weeks.
"He played hurt. That tells you a lot about this kid,'' GM Dale Tallon said.
"He played hurt and extremely well. We didn't have many players due to
injuries, so teams focused on him. He's a special kid.''
-- Tallon said he spoke with Stephen Weiss' agent on Saturday in the
continued hopes to sign the pending free agent center.
"We're trying to get something done,'' Tallon said. "You only get one shot at
being a free agent and we're trying to do the best we can for both parties. If
I can come up with the right number, well, that's fine. We'll go through
[Sunday] and then make a decision next week.''
-- Ed Jovanovski met with his surgeon on Friday and told Tallon he is pain
free for the first time in a long time. Jovanovski was limited to six games last
year after having radical hip surgery in April.
Tallon said Jovanovski is expected to begin skating this week although it's
not known whether the defenseman will be ready for training camp in
September.
Miami Herald LOADED: 06.30.2013
683011
Florida Panthers
LECAVALIER A PANTHER? Florida Wants to Look Into Adding Former
Lightning Captain
George Richards
NEW YORK -- Vinny Lecavalier in a Panthers sweater?
If the team has its way, that scenario -- a nightmare for Tampa Bay fans -could happen next season.
Lecavalier, the Lightning's all-time leader in just about everything, was
bought out by the team and is now a free agent. With the Panthers looking
for veteran talent, team management said Lecavalier is a player they are
interested in.
Both general manager Dale Tallon and assistant GM Mike Santos said
Saturday that the Panthers full attention, right now, is on Sunday's NHL
draft.
After that, however, the team will look into Lecavalier's interest in staying in
Florida -- only a few hours southeast of his beloved Tampa Bay.
Lecavalier, like all unrestricted free agents, can't sign with another team
until July 5.
"We're very interested in his leadership, his skill level,'' Tallon said after
meeting with draft prospects at the team's hotel near Times Square. "We
have young, big centermen who could learn a lot from him.
"We have some interest; hopefully he has some as well. That's the way it
starts. It takes two to tango. If he doesn't want to come, so be it. But I think
there will be some open dialog there. That would be a benefit to our
franchise.''
Lecavalier, who just finished his 14th season, has been the Lightning's
captain since 2000 and has 26 goals and 42 assists in 78 games against
the Panthers. Lecavalier had 10 goals and 22 assists in 39 games last year
-- with two goals and six points in four games against Florida.
"Even the thought of wearing a different kind of jersey is weird in my head,"
Lecavalier told the Tampa Bay Times on Thursday.
Because of a lowered salary cap -- and Lecavalier's declining numbers -Tampa Bay decided to exercise its option to buy out the final seven years of
the 11-year, $85-million deal Lecavalier signed with the team's previous
owners.
So, the Lightning will pay Lecavalier roughly $33 million over the next 14
years and not have that money count against the salary cap.
A tireless philanthropist in the Tampa Bay area, the Panthers are hoping
the lack of a state income tax and South Florida's proximity to his Tampa
charities may help sway Lecavalier in staying local. Lecavalier was
reportedly meeting with Dallas on Saturday.
"You have to have interest in Vinny Lecavalier,'' Santos said. "It's a little
premature to see what his price will be in years and money. He's a high
character guy with great leadership skills. .-.-. Is he better than what we
have at center right now? Probably.
"There are a lot of reasons for him wanting to stay in the state of Florida.
Lets face it, there are lots of tax advantages in Florida and the money
Tampa is buying himself out with is considerable.''
Miami Herald LOADED: 06.30.2013
683012
Los Angeles Kings
NHL: Kings, Ducks still find value in draft
History suggests both teams will find good talent after first round.
By Elliott Teaford @ElliottTeaford on Twitter
Posted: 06/29/2013 10:29:45 PM PDT
Updated: 06/29/2013 10:32:25 PM PDT
The Kings have 10 selections in today's NHL draft, but none in the first
round.
The Ducks have five picks, but their first-round selection isn't until No. 26
overall.
It might seem as if the draft is no big deal for the Kings and Ducks, but the
reality is nothing could be further from the truth. Today is the day all 30
teams in the NHL, even the successful ones like the Kings and Ducks, restock their prospect lists and hope for better days.
In 2003, for example, the Ducks were coming off their first trip to the
Stanley Cup Final. They lost in seven grueling games to the deeper and
more polished New Jersey Devils, and there were plenty of reasons to
believe their days as a struggling expansion franchise were history.
In fact, their future was about to get a whole lot brighter.
Ten years ago this month, the Ducks took center Ryan Getzlaf of the
Calgary Hitman of the Western Hockey League with the 19th overall
selection and then picked right wing Corey Perry of the London Knights of
the Ontario Hockey League at No. 28.
At the time, they were two names on a long list of 18-year-old prospects
from around the hockey-playing world. Soon enough, they became Stanley
Cup champions, Olympic champions and pillars of a franchise that had the
third-best regular-season record in the NHL in 2012-13.
Each player signed an eight-year contract extension with the Ducks last
season.
Even if the Kings' roster appears all but set for the next few seasons after
consecutive trips to the Western Conference finals and the franchise's first
Stanley Cup title in 2012, today is critical to the club's future success. After
all, if you're not getting better, you're getting worse.
Or so the theory goes.
It's the same for the Ducks, whose foundation appears to be as strong as
the Kings. Both teams have improved over the years through trades and
free-agent signings, and their rosters have been built from the ground up,
with draft picks serving as cornerstones in each case.
For the Ducks, it's Getzlaf and Perry in '03 and left wing Bobby Ryan (first
round, '05), who make up their top line. There's also defenseman Cam
Fowler and right wing Emerson Etem (first round, '10) and outstanding
goaltending prospect John Gibson (second round, '11).
For the Kings, it's even more pronounced, with left wing Dustin Brown (first
round, '03), center Anze Kopitar (first round, '05), goalie Jonathan Quick
(third round, '05), defenseman Drew Doughty (first round, '08) and
defenseman Slava Voynov (second round, '08) playing key roles.
There's more to the draft than simply first-round picks, too.
Quick stands out as an example of the Kings' ability to unearth a gem
beyond the first round. After all, he was the 2012 Conn Smythe Trophy
winner as MVP of the playoffs after leading the Kings' unexpected march to
the Stanley Cup championship.
The Ducks have had success in the later rounds, too. Left wing Matt
Beleskey was a fourth-round selection in 2006. Going back a decade earlier
Matt Cullen, a center who played last season with the Minnesota Wild, was
a second-round pick in 1996.
So, bottom line, there is no such thing as a meaningless draft.
LA Daily News: LOADED: 06.30.2013
683013
Los Angeles Kings
Draft history under Lombardi, rounds 4-7
Posted by Jon Rosen on 29 June 2013, 11:31 am
As promised, here is Los Angeles’ draft history under Dean Lombardi for
rounds four-through-seven. I’m about to leave for Kings HQ to speak with
several scouts and members of the team’s traveling party – check LA Kings
Insider and KingsVision later today for those interviews – before completing
the recent history of each particular selection that the Kings will make on
Sunday.
For instance, did you know that Matt Martin, who has led the NHL in hits in
each of the last two years, was selected with the 148th overall pick in 2008?
No? OK. I’ll let myself out.
The Los Angeles Kings have 10 selections at the 2013 NHL Draft, which
will take place this Sunday at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J.
Those picks are:
Second Round / 57th overall
Third Round / 88th overall
Fourth Round / 96th overall (via Carolina)*
Fourth Round / 103rd overall (via Philadelphia)**
Fourth Round / 118th overall
Fifth Round / 146th overall
Fifth Round / 148th overall (via Montreal)^
Sixth Round / 178th overall
Seventh Round / 191st overall (via Dallas)^^
Seventh Round / 208th overall
*acquired from Carolina in addition to Anthony Stewart and a 6th round pick
in 2014 in exchange for Kevin Westgarth on 1/13/13.
**acquired from Philadelphia in exchange for Simon Gagne on 2/26/13. This
conditional pick would have been a third round pick had the Flyers made
the playoffs.
^acquired from Montreal in exchange for Davis Drewiske on 4/2/13.
^^acquired from Dallas in exchange for the Los Angeles’ 7th round pick in
2012 on 6/23/12.
Los Angeles’ first round draft pick was a conditional first round pick traded
to Columbus along with Jack Johnson in exchange for Jeff Carter on
2/23/12. The Blue Jackets had a choice between the Kings’ first round pick
in 2012 or 2013 and chose 2013 on the day of the 2012 NHL Draft. The
Kings then selected Tanner Pearson 30th overall in 2012.
LA Kings Insider: LOADED: 06.30.2013
683014
Los Angeles Kings
Not that it’s a surprise, but…
Posted by JonRosen on 29 June 2013, 8:40 am
…expect to see Jonathan Quick named to the 2014 United States Olympic
team in Sochi, Russia.
Nashville president and general manager David Poile will serve as general
manager of the United States team, with Pittsburgh general manager Ray
Shero serving as assistant general manager. Anaheim Ducks consultant
Brian Burke has been tabbed as the director of player personnel.
Los Angeles general manager Dean Lombardi will take part in the selection
of the team along with Florida general manager Dale Tallon, Philadelphia
manager Paul Holmgren, Pittsburgh scout Don Waddell and USA Hockey
senior director of hockey operations Jim Johansson.
Pittsburgh’s Dan Bylsma will serve as head coach.
According to Rogers Sportsnet, the long-awaited agreement that would
send NHL players to the Olympics is on the verge of being finalized.
Dustin Brown should be a lock for the United States team; likewise for
Slava Voynov and Russia. Anze Kopitar shouldn’t have anything to worry
about in regards to being selected for Slovenia’s entry. Expect Drew
Doughty to earn a spot on Team Canada, while Mike Richards and Jeff
Carter will be in consideration. Richards and Doughty represented Canada
in 2010; Carter was a late cut.
Both Brown and Quick were members of the United States team that took
home the silver medal at the 2010 Winter Olympics, losing 3-2 in overtime
to host Canada in the gold medal game.
LA Kings Insider: LOADED: 06.30.2013
683015
Minnesota Wild
Wild's GM in a dealing mood for draft day
Article by: MICHAEL RUSSO , Star Tribune
Updated: June 30, 2013 - 12:19 AM
NEW YORK – In the 21st century, it’s all about technology. But Chuck
Fletcher likes to keep things simple.
That’s why the Wild general manager rarely goes anywhere without his
trusty black Cambridge notepad.
Inside, Fletcher keeps all his trade secrets — literally.
After every single trade conversation Fletcher has with a fellow GM,
Fletcher opens up the notebook and jots down the ideas exchanged.
“This way you don’t forget,” Fletcher said. “There are so many variables and
moving parts to every conversation you have, you need to have a quick,
easy way to keep track. I have conversations in here that I had four or five
years ago that I’ll re-read and think, ‘Geez, I didn’t even remember that.’ ”
As Sunday’s NHL draft arrives at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., it is
safe to say Fletcher has been sharpening his pencil a lot lately.
The draft is most significantly about adding an influx of 18-year-old talent to
the pool of prospects, but it also triggers the start of offseason transactions
in the NHL. Fletcher has a history of trades at or around the draft (from
moving up and down in the draft to executing blockbusters like the Brent
Burns deal to setting up the Martin Havlat-for-Dany Heatley swap).
These days, Fletcher says he’s making as many calls as he’s receiving.
There is a very likely chance Cal Clutterbuck’s time with the Wild ends
Sunday. The Wild has gotten a lot of interest for the 25-year-old restricted
free agent. The Wild would prefer to trade him to the Eastern Conference
(Toronto, Pittsburgh and Columbus, which has three first-round picks, are
teams that have expressed interest).
The Wild has dangled other players as well, from defenseman Tom Gilbert
to center Zenon Konopka. It also has received calls about Devin Setoguchi
and Kyle Brodziak.
Scouts say this is as deep a draft as there has been in 10 years. Because
the Wild traded its first-round pick to Buffalo in the Jason Pominville deal,
the Wild doesn’t choose first until the 46th pick.
In a package for Clutterbuck, the Wild would love to land another secondround pick so it can try to package two seconds and move into the first
round — likely in the Nos. 15 to 30 range. So it can be ready, the Wild has
debated and prepared its draft list as if it still has a first-rounder.
“Often two seconds can get you into the first round, or it can be a second
and a player. Sometimes it can be a prospect,” Fletcher said. “We’ll see
what happens. If we can’t do it, I’m comfortable because this is a deep
draft. We have two thirds. Some years it’s a shallower pool and an extra
third may not mean anything, but I think this year it’ll be a little more
meaning.”
If the Wild can’t move into the first round, it’ll be the first time in history it
doesn’t own a first-round pick. That’s why it’s critical to hit on its later picks.
“We pick 46 this year. We picked 46 last year and got [Raphael] Bussieres,”
Fletcher said. “We were really happy with Bussieres, but after him, there
was a big drop-off. I think this year there will be more options when we pick
at 46, and I think that’ll extend into the third round.”
Other than 2000 second-rounder Nick Schultz, the all-time leader in Wild
games played (743), the Wild hasn’t hit on many players after the first
round. As of now, Clutterbuck (72nd overall in 2006) is clearly the biggest
post-first-round home run.
From 2000-08 — under the Wild’s previous regime — the only post-firstrounders to play more than a handful of games for Minnesota were
Stephane Veilleux and Derek Boogaard (2001), Josh Harding (2002),
Clayton Stoner (2004) and Justin Falk (2007). The Wild still expects 2008
second-rounder Marco Scandella to make an impact.
Things have looked up with the new regime, but it’s still too early to say
concretely.
The promising names still part of the franchise include Darcy Kuemper and
Erik Haula (2009), Brett Bulmer, Jason Zucker and Johan Gustafsson
(2010) and Mario Lucia, Nick Seeler and Tyler Graovac (2011). The Wild
also is high on its 2012 draft class beyond first-round pick Matt Dumba.
“The stats we’ve looked at every year is about 1.9 players per draft per
team play 80 or more games in the NHL,” Fletcher said. “Basically if you’re
drafting two NHLers, you’re treading water, you’re doing what you have to
do.
“Our goal has always been to draft three or more. It’s hard. You can’t do it
every year. This year without a first, it’ll be challenging, but we have eight
picks, we have an extra third, and the second-round pick this year is
probably better than a lot. So that’s still going to be our goal. That’s the goal
I’ve asked of [assistant GM Brent Flahr] and our scouts.
“We still have to aim high.”
Star Tribune LOADED: 06.30.2013
683016
Minnesota Wild
Wild's Parise, Suter earn high praise from U.S. Olympic GM
Article by: MICHAEL RUSSO , Star Tribune
Updated: June 29, 2013 - 10:57 PM
NEW YORK – The roster for the 2014 U.S. Olympic men’s hockey team is
still very much up in the air, but we know two shoo-ins will be the Wild’s
Zach Parise and Ryan Suter.
They were two players on the 2010 team that won the silver medal in
Vancouver.
“When we put together that team, our hope was that those players would
mature, and in 2014, we’d have a good nucleus. That’s exactly the way it’s
played out,” said David Poile, Team USA’s general manager who doubles
as Nashville’s GM. “Parise and Suter are arguably two of the best players in
the NHL.
“Ryan in a 48-game schedule with a no conference crossover was top three
for the Norris and arguably if other people would have seen him could have
been the Norris Trophy winner. Zach Parise is on everybody’s All-Star
team. So those are two good guys to start with.”
Poile, his large management team and Pittsburgh Penguins coach Dan
Bylsma, who will coach the Americans in Sochi, Russia, were introduced
Saturday morning at a news conference in Manhattan.
They made clear that winning gold is the expectation. The Americans won
silver in 2002 in Salt Lake City and in Vancouver. They didn’t medal in
Nagano in 1998 or Turin in 2006. Poile said the Americans have to put
together the proper roster to succeed on the larger 200-foot-by-100-foot
international rink.
“In 2010, you heard [then-GM] Brian Burke using words like truculence,”
Poile said. “I’m not saying that’s not important, but that may be less
important in 2014. Skating is important.”
The United States will hold an orientation camp Aug. 25-29 at the
Washington Capitals’ Iceplex in Arlington, Va. The Wild’s Jason Pominville
might earn an invite, although Poile wouldn’t confirm. Though born in
Canada, Pominville has dual citizenship because his mother is American.
He played for the United States in the 2008 world championships.
“We’re going to get to the point where somebody’s going to be offended,”
Poile said. “We have to sort it out, but we’re close.”
Bylsma raved about the Americans’ potential leadership. Parise should be
in the running for team captain.
First things first, the NHL must agree to officially participate. That could
happen as early as Monday. The Americans should have a terrific roster,
including the past two Conn Smythe Trophy winners (Patrick Kane and
Jonathan Quick). The Americans could be stacked in goal with Quick,
Jimmy Howard, Corey Schneider and Craig Anderson vying for three of the
22 roster spots.
Brodin named All-Rookie
Wild defenseman Jonas Brodin, who finished fourth in the Calder Trophy
race, was named to the All-Rookie team Saturday. He became the first Wild
player to be honored with an All-NHL nomination.
Suter is a likely contender for first- or second-team All-Star, which will be
announced early this week.
Last season, Brodin, the youngest defenseman in the NHL at age 20, led all
rookies in total ice time (1,044:35) and average time on ice (23:12 per
game), becoming only the eighth rookie skater in league history to average
more than 23 minutes a game.
Other members of the All-Rookie team are St. Louis goalie Jake Allen,
Edmonton defenseman Justin Schultz, Montreal forward Brendan
Gallagher, Florida forward Jonathan Huberdeau and Chicago forward
Brandon Saad.
Trade talk heats up
The rumor mill was churning fast and furious Saturday.
With the Vancouver Canucks unable to trade goalie Roberto Luongo, the
Canucks were shopping Schneider. Edmonton apparently was in hot
pursuit.
TSN also reported that with the Bruins working toward extending Patrice
Bergeron and Tuukka Rask, 21-year-old hotshot Tyler Seguin, the second
overall pick in the 2010 draft who can play center or wing, is on the trading
block.
You can bet one team extremely interested in Seguin is the Wild. However,
if a current first-round pick has to be part of the deal, the Wild no longer
owns its 2013 pick.
Pittsburgh Penguins star defenseman Kris Letang might be in play after
reportedly rejecting an eight-year, $56 million contract offer. Other big
names reportedly on the block include Toronto’s Dion Phaneuf, San Jose’s
Dan Boyle, Buffalo’s Ryan Miller, Philadelphia’s Braydon Coburn, Chicago’s
Dave Bolland and Tampa Bay’s Ryan Malone.
No Falk offer yet
Agent Craig Oster confirmed the Wild has yet to extend a qualifying offer to
potential restricted free agent Justin Falk. The Wild, which has been
shopping Falk, has until Tuesday to decide if it wants to retain the
defenseman’s rights. If Falk isn’t qualified, he would become unrestricted
when free agency opens Friday.
Star Tribune LOADED: 06.30.2013
683017
Minnesota Wild
Chart: Wild GM Chuck Fletcher and draft-day moves
Chuck Fletcher has a history of making trades on draft day as Wild GM:
2009: Acquired first-round pick (16th overall, Nick Leddy), third-round pick
(77th, Matt Hackett) and seventh-round pick (182nd, Erik Haula) from New
York Islanders for Wild’s first-round pick (12th overall, Calvin de Haan).
2009: Acquired Kyle Brodziak and sixth-round pick (161st overall, Darcy
Kuemper) from Edmonton for Wild’s fourth-round pick (99th, Kyle Bigos)
and fifth-round pick (133rd, Olivier Roy).
2010: Acquired second-round pick (59th overall, Jason Zucker) from Florida
for Wild’s third-round pick (69th, Joe Basaraba) and fourth-round pick (99th,
Joonas Donskoi).
2011: Acquired first-round pick (28th overall, Zack Phillips) along with Devin
Setoguchi and Charlie Coyle from San Jose for Wild’s Brent Burns and
second-round pick in 2012.
2011: Acquired second-round pick (60th overall, Mario Lucia) from
Vancouver for Wild’s third-round pick (71st, David Honzik) and fourth-round
pick (101st, Joseph LaBate).
Star Tribune LOADED: 06.30.2013
683018
Minnesota Wild
Jonas Brodin makes All-Rookie Team; More on Cal Clutterbuck's future
Posted by: Michael Russo under Rookies, The draft, Wild off-season news
Updated: June 29, 2013 - 12:20 PM
been shopping Falk, has until Tuesday to decide if it wants to retain the
defenseman’s rights.
If Falk isn’t qualified, he would become unrestricted when free agency
opens Friday. I did get an email sent to me regarding a comment on one of
the stories where a reader thought Falk was unrestricted already. He is
indeed restricted.
More later if news breaks.
Star Tribune LOADED: 06.30.2013
Sunday's 2 p.m. CT NHL draft is fast approaching (NBC Sports Network
from 2-7 p.m.; NHL Network after 7 p.m.), and the Wild continues to shop
Cal Clutterbuck and Tom Gilbert, especially.
Typically, deals like this come down on the draft floor or just before the draft
because the Wild is looking for either a first-round pick in the Clutterbuck
deal (teams are hesitant to give up firsts right now because this draft is so
deep) or a second so it could potentially use two seconds to try to move into
the first round.
And often times when picks are involved, the teams involved want to make
certain first the player they want to take is still sitting there. For instance, in
2006 when the Wild acquired Pavol Demitra for a first and Patrick
O'Sullivan, the L.A. Kings didn't agree to the deal until they were certain
Trevor Lewis would still be there.
As you saw in today's story, it is looking increasingly likely that Clutterbuck
will be traded this weekend. He has value, he is a restricted free agent and
the Wild's cap space is limited. The Wild is looking for a second and
prospect, but perhaps the price can go up if there's a bidding war for
Clutterbuck.
I do hear that GM Chuck Fletcher would prefer to trade Clutterbuck to the
East. As I reported the other day, Fletcher had lunch Thursday with Maple
Leafs GM Dave Nonis. Boston may make sense, too. In the West, as I
reported last week, I hear Edmonton has shown significant interest. But I'd
be lying if I said I know all the teams involved.
Again, Gilbert's future is almost certainly elsewhere. If he's not traded, the
Wild will likely buy him out and create an extra $4 million of cap space. It'll
also be interesting to see if the Wild moves guys like Devin Setoguchi or
Kyle Brodziak or Torrey Mitchell. It's listening to offers at least.
As I've reported, with Jake Dowell likely going to be the fourth-line center
next season and Mike Rupp also in the fold, Zenon Konopka is also on the
block. Fletcher said recently that the Wild have a few guys who play the
same role.
I've gotten lots of emails and tweets asking if the Wild's going after this guy
and this guy and this guy and, uh, Vinny Lecavalier, in free agency. Again,
unless the Wild frees up cap space, the answer to virtually everything right
now is, "No." If space is freed, then we'll see then. Remember, if
Clutterbuck is traded for a non-roster player and pick, that doesn't add to
the Wild's roughly $3.6 million in cap space.
That cap space doesn't include unsigned restricted guys Clutterbuck, Jared
Spurgeon and Justin Falk or unrestricted center Matt Cullen.
In other Wild news:
Wild defenseman Jonas Brodin, who finished fourth in the Calder Trophy
race, was named to the All-Rookie team Saturday. He became the first Wild
player in history to be honored with an All-NHL nomination.
Ryan Suter is a likely contender for First or Second-Team All-Star. That
may come out tomorrow.
Last season, Brodin, the youngest defenseman in the NHL at age 20,
drafted 10th overall in 2011, led all rookies in total ice time (1,044:35) and
average time on ice (23:12 per game), becoming just the eighth rookie
skater in league history to average more than 23 minutes a game.
Brodin, who scored 11 points in 45 games, led rookie defensemen with 18
takeaways and was fourth among all rookies with 60 blocked shots.
Other members of the All-Rookie team are St. Louis goalie Jake Allen,
Edmonton defenseman Justin Schultz, Montreal forward Brendan
Gallagher, Florida forward Jonathan Huberdeau and Chicago forward
Brandon Saad.
--Also, the Wild has yet to extend a qualifying offer to potential restricted
free agent Justin Falk, his agent confirmed to me. The Wild, which has
683019
Minnesota Wild
Team USA hockey: Olympic head coach, management announced
By Chad Graff
cgraff@pioneerpress.com
Posted: 06/29/2013 12:01:00 AM CDT
Updated: 06/29/2013 10:17:01 PM CDT
NEW YORK -- USA Hockey didn't try dampening expectations at a press
conference here Saturday to announce the management and head coach
for the U.S. team leading to the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia.
"Hockey in our country has come to the point where winning the gold medal
is not a miracle -- it's an expectation," USA Hockey President Ron
DeGregorio said.
DeGregorio and USA Hockey formally announced that Nashville general
manager David Poile would serve as the team's general manager, while
Pittsburgh's Ray Shero of St. Paul would serve as associate GM and Brian
Burke, of Edina, would serve as director of player personnel.
Burke was traveling and not at the press conference.
"It's a great honor to be named associate GM," Shero said. "We're not
working for Chicago or Pittsburgh, we're working for the USA."
At the press conference, Penguins head coach Dan Bylsma was
announced as the team's head coach.
"We wanted somebody that was a winner and could handle star players,"
Poile said. "We wanted to get one of the best coaches in the National
Hockey League."
Bylsma will likely be coaching the Wild's Zach Parise and Ryan Suter.
Jason Pominville also has a shot to make the Olympic roster.
U.S. Hockey officials will invite players to an orientation camp Aug. 25-29 in
Washington, D.C. The roster will be trimmed from there.
Parise and Suter were a part of the 2010 Olympic team that lost to Canada
in overtime of the gold-medal game.
According to the Associated Press, Commissioner Gary Bettman is
expected to meet Monday with the players' association, the International
Olympic Committee and International Ice Hockey Federation to wrap up a
deal to suspend the 2014 season during the Games and allow NHL players
to participate.
Poile seemed confident.
"A lot of our guys from 2010 are going to be back," he said. "That's going to
be the core."
Pioneer Press LOADED: 06.30.2013
683020
Minnesota Wild
Minnesota Wild eyeing a deep draft and looking for more picks
By Chad Graff
cgraff@pioneerpress.com
Posted: 06/29/2013 12:01:00 AM CDT
Updated: 06/29/2013 10:53:33 PM CDT
NEW YORK -- The Minnesota Wild enter Sunday's draft without a firstround pick for the first time in franchise history. The reason has been welldocumented: They gave up a pair of top prospects, a 2014 pick, and what
would have been pick No. 16 Sunday in exchange for Jason Pominville and
a later pick at last season's trade deadline.
Wild owner Craig Leipold said one of the reasons the team was willing to do
that is a track record of success drafting middle-round talent.
"That's a really valuable point," Leipold said. "Because of Brent Flahr and
because of his scouts -- they have been so successful on second-, third-,
fourth-round picks that it makes us ... more willing to move that first-round
pick because we still feel like we're going to get good assets."
General manager Chuck Fletcher and assistant general manager Flahr
have worked four drafts for the Wild since taking over in 2009. In those
drafts, they've made five second-round selections. It's still too early for
judgment on 2012 pick Raphael Bussieres and 2011's Mario Lucia, but
Johan Larsson, Brett Bulmer and Jason Zucker have shown great promise.
Larsson became a top prospect and was dealt as part of the Pominville
deal. Zucker scored the game-winning overtime goal in Game 3 of the
Wild's playoff series against the Blackhawks and figures to be a top-six
forward for the team next season. Bulmer still needs seasoning in the
American Hockey League.
In 2009, Fletcher took Matt Hackett in the third round and used him in the
Pominville deal.
"We've got the scouts and the system that they've shown they have been
successful in those rounds," Leipold said.
The Wild have eight picks in the seven-round draft but have been actively
engaged in trade talks, for two reasons: 1. They need to shed salaries to
create cap space; and 2. They want more picks for what is considered one
of the deepest drafts in years.
Winger Cal Clutterbuck and defenseman Tom Gilbert are the topics of
many trade discussions, and the team is looking for picks and prospects in
return, a source said.
"We certainly do feel it's a deeper draft," Fletcher said. "Certainly much
deeper than last year. We have our second-round pick, where we expect to
get a good player."
Fletcher has pulled off five draft-day trades, and indications are he'll be
active again Sunday.
"I would be very surprised if we didn't come out with a few players that we
weren't very happy to select," he said. "From there, seemingly every year
we've made moves at the draft table, whether we traded to move up or
traded back."
The Wild are interested in moving into the first round but also would be
happy to acquire another second-round pick.
"There's a lot of things going
on this year which make it a little unique," Flahr said. "I think it will probably
be a little more active this year than in past years."
Teams always say they're going to select the best player available with their
highest pick. The Wild did it last year, taking blue liner Jonas Brodin, who
made the NHL's all-rookie team Saturday, 10th overall. But if their first pick
isn't until No. 46, it really does become about picking the best player.
"When you're picking No. 10, you have the novelty of maybe going after a
need," Flahr said. "I know we always say we'll take the best player
available, but the Brodin draft, we knew we were targeting a defenseman.
When it gets to No. 46, it legitimately gets to we're taking the best player."
The deeper draft also means teams are less likely to have similar boards.
With a thin prospect pool last year, Flahr said, 28 of the first 30 players
taken were in the Wild's top 30. With a deeper draft, consensus is less
likely.
"We could potentially get a player we've got (ranked) at No. 20 at 46," Flahr
said. "That's the way it worked with Zucker and Larsson. That's the way it
was on our list."
Except for possible No. 1 overall selection Nathan MacKinnon (Shattuck St.
Mary's), there aren't likely to be any Minnesotans taken in the first round,
but a flurry of them might go shortly after that, including Minnetonka's
Thomas Vannelli, Eagan's Connor Hurley, Edina's Keaton Thompson,
Grand Rapids' Avery Peterson and Teemu Kivihalme, who played for his
father, Janne, at Burnsville.
Pioneer Press LOADED: 06.30.2013
683021
Montreal Canadiens
Habs GM Bergevin stays mum on plans to pursue Lecavalier
Robert Laflamme
SHORT HILLS, N.J. — The Canadian Press
Published Saturday, Jun. 29 2013, 5:57 PM EDT
Last updated Saturday, Jun. 29 2013, 6:22 PM EDT
Montreal Canadiens general manager Marc Bergevin isn’t giving any hints
about his plans when it comes to pursuing hometown star Vincent
Lecavalier.
Lecavalier quickly became one of the league’s more coveted free agents
after the Tampa Bay Lightning bought out his contract on Thursday.
Bergevin says the possibility of signing Lecavalier depends on a variety of
factors and it’s too soon to say what he’ll do.
“It will depend on many different things,” Bergevin told reporters Saturday.
“Contracts have been bought out and there will be others. Many things can
happen before the opening of the free agent market on July 5.”
Bergevin also wouldn’t say whether he’s working to sign Norris winner P.K.
Subban to an extension before heading into the final season of a two-year
contract. He said any negotiations would be confidential.
For the moment, the GM says his focus is on the draft.
The Canadiens may try to move up from the 25th spot in the first round,
Bergevin said, and even that decision could be made only once the draft
gets underway.
Trevor Timmins, the team’s director of player development, said the team
will be watching eagerly as their first pick approaches.
“Our wish list is ready and we hope that Santa Claus will give us what we
want,” he said.
The Habs hold six picks among the first 86 selections. There’s a good
chance they use one to get a goaltender, Bergevin said.
Bergevin also revealed that forward Colby Armstrong won’t be back for
another year. Armstrong had two goals and three assists in 37 games in his
only season with the Habs.
The Canadian have three choices in the second round, including picks No.
34 and 36, which Timmins said were almost as good as first-round picks.
The extra draft picks were obtained in the 2012 trades that sent Andrei
Kostitsyn to the Nashville Predators and Michael Cammalleri to the Calgary
Flames.
The Canadiens also have two picks in the third round. A pick was acquired
as part of the deal that sent Erik Cole to the Dallas Stars.
The Canadiens also have selections in the fourth, sixth and seventh round.
Globe And Mail LOADED: 06.30.2013
683022
Montreal Canadiens
Habs GM focused but not on Lecavalier
Postmedia News June 29, 2013
SHORT HILLS, N.J. — Montreal Canadiens general manager Marc
Bergevin isn't giving any hints about his plans when it comes to pursuing
hometown star Vincent Lecavalier.
Lecavalier quickly became one of the league's more coveted free agents
after the Tampa Bay Lightning bought out his contract on Thursday.
Bergevin says the possibility of signing Lecavalier depends on a variety of
factors and it's too soon to say what he'll do.
"It will depend on many different things," Bergevin told reporters Saturday.
"Contracts have been bought out and there will be others. Many things can
happen before the opening of the free agent market on July 5."
Bergevin also wouldn't say whether he's working to sign Norris winner P.K.
Subban to an extension before heading into the final season of a two-year
contract. He said any negotiations would be confidential.
For the moment, the GM says his focus is on the draft.
The Canadiens may try to move up from the 25th spot in the first round,
Bergevin said, and even that decision could be made only once the draft
gets underway.
Trevor Timmins, the team's director of player development, said the team
will be watching eagerly as its first pick approaches.
"Our wish list is ready and we hope that Santa Claus will give us what we
want," he said.
The Habs hold six picks among the first 86 selections. There's a good
chance they use one to get a goaltender, Bergevin said.
Bergevin also revealed that forward Colby Armstrong won't be back for
another year. Armstrong had two goals and three assists in 37 games in his
only season with the Habs.
The Canadiens have three choices in the second round, including picks No.
34 and 36, which Timmins said were almost as good as first-round picks.
The extra draft picks were obtained in the 2012 trades that sent Andrei
Kostitsyn to the Nashville Predators and Michael Cammalleri to the Calgary
Flames.
The Canadiens also have two picks in the third round. A pick was acquired
as part of the deal that sent Erik Cole to the Dallas Stars.
The Canadiens also have selections in the fourth, sixth and seventh round.
Montreal Gazette LOADED: 06.30.2013
683023
Montreal Canadiens
Goalie sent message to team at U-18 tourney
facility in Brossard on June 5 as well as combines held by the Toronto
Maple Leafs, Chicago Blackhawks and Buffalo Sabres.
The goalie can’t wait for the draft. A Habs fan since he was a child,
Desrosiers wants to be drafted by his favourite team.
“It’s not me who decides,” he said.
By Brenda Branswell, THE GAZETTEJune 29, 2013
“But if it happens, I’ll be the happiest guy in the world.”
Montreal Gazette LOADED: 06.30.2013
When goaltender Philippe Desrosiers skated over to Team Canada’s bench
during the gold-medal game at the World Under-18 Championship in late
April, he had a message.
The United States team had just scored a second goal, and during a TV
timeout Desrosiers said he told his teammates: “Don’t worry. I’ll stop the
others. Just score and we’ll win.”
Sure enough, Canada went on to beat the U.S. 3-2 at the championship in
Sochi, Russia, with Desrosiers making 33 saves.
“It was really magical, especially when we won,” said Desrosiers, 17, a
native of St-Hyacinthe who plays for the Rimouski Océanic in the Quebec
Major Junior Hockey League.
Desrosiers shone during the tournament, posting a .970 save percentage
and a 0.80 goals-against average.
“I played the best hockey of my life, so I was very happy after that,” he said
this month.
NHL Central Scouting ranked Desrosiers No. 7 among North American
goalie prospects eligible for Sunday’s draft in New Jersey. The only
goaltender prospect from Quebec ranked higher is Rosemère native
Zachary Fucale, who backstopped the Halifax Mooseheads during their
championship season capped by a Memorial Cup victory last month.
Central Scouting ranked Fucale as the No. 1 North American goalie
prospect.
Kevin Prendergast, former head scout at Hockey Canada, told The Gazette
last month that he believes Desrosiers is one of the players who really
helped himself at the under-18 tournament.
“He was outstanding for us,” Prendergast said.
“He’s sort of a kid that sort of flew under the radar all year up in Rimouski.
He was a late pick for the prospects game (in Halifax in January). He
played great there.
“I can understand why they relied on him a lot down the stretch. He’s a kid
that doesn’t feel the pressure and when the pressure does come he wants
it.”
The 6-foot-1, 182-pound Desrosiers excels most under pressure, said
Serge Beausoleil, the Océanic’s head coach.
“I would say he’s a money player,” Beausoleil said.
“Already we see at 17-, 18-years old, when it counts he raises his game a
notch.” (Desrosiers turns 18 in August.)
In 43 games this past season with the Océanic, Desrosiers posted a 3.07
goals-against average and a .900 save percentage. He missed 13 games in
February with a knee sprain.
He’s very athletic, energetic in front of the net and positions himself well,
Beausoleil said. Staying focused is one of the things he can improve on, the
coach added.
When he started in minor hockey at 6, Desrosiers played defence. About 18
months later, he strapped on goalie pads when his team’s goaltender got
fed up after two games and Desrosiers’s father, who was the coach, asked
his son if he wanted to play in net.
Desrosiers’s favourite goalie is Canadiens netminder Carey Price, who he
says is always in control and calm.
Desrosiers’s parents, brother and friends will be with him at the draft in
Newark, N.J. He isn’t the only elite athlete in his family. His 15-year-old
brother, Jérôme, is on Canada’s national cadet basketball team.
Desrosiers had interviews with 18 teams during the NHL Scouting Combine
in Toronto. He also attended the Canadiens’ combine at the team’s training
683024
Montreal Canadiens
Habs’ first draft pick will be up in air
By Pat Hickey, THE GAZETTEJune 29, 2013
NEWARK, N.J. — A year ago, the Canadiens’ first-round draft choice was
predictable.
Scouting guru Trevor Timmins zeroed in on Alex Galchenyuk early in the
process and he was available with the third overall selection.
The Canadiens are slated to draft 25th in the first round Sunday and there
is no consensus on which way Montreal will go.
Talk to pundits and fans and they see the Canadiens addressing such
needs as a forward with some size or depth at the goaltending position.
And, as always, it will be seen as a bonus if the Canadiens can dip into
what is an especially strong crop of Quebec Major Junior Hockey League
prospects and grab a francophone.
As for Timmins and Canadiens general manager Marc Bergevin, their
stance is that the Canadiens will select the best player available, even if he
is an undersized defenceman who can’t speak either of Canada’s official
languages.
Those who dare to engage in mock drafts are all over the map when trying
to identify the Canadiens’ first-round pick. That’s to be expected because
the pundits are faced with the same problem the Canadiens have — it’s
impossible to predict who will still be on the board at No. 25.
In checking out eight draft lists, we found the Canadiens picking seven
different players.
The only player to be mentioned twice is from the QMJHL, but right winger
Valentin Zykov’s first language is Russian. Zykov, a classic power forward,
was named the offensive rookie of the year in the Q and became a fan
favourite in Baie Comeau. The 6-foot-1, 210-pounder is a hybrid with
European skills and North American grit. He is rated eighth among North
American skaters by Central Scouting, but TSN’s Craig Button and Steve
Hoffner of nhl.com believe he’ll be around when the Canadiens pick.
The Hockey News likes Halifax goaltender Zach Fucale as the Canadiens’
pick. Montreal has drafted only two goalies since they made Carey Price
the fifth overall pick in 2005 and neither of them went higher than the fourth
round. The 6-foot, 175-pound Fucale is the top-rated North American
goaltender, but Marc Bergevin is on record as saying it’s difficult to evaluate
young goalies and the Canadiens are more likely to look for a goalie in the
later rounds.
The Hockey Writers has Windsor Spitfires forward Kerby Rychel in the 25th
spot. The Canadiens have seen a lot of the 6-foot-1, 205-pounder because
he played on a line with 2012 Montreal draft pick Brady Vail. The
Canadiens also followed up on the NHL combine in Toronto by inviting
Rychel to their own combine a week later. Rychel has a strong work ethic
that he inherited from his father, former NHL player Warren Rychel. He has
had back-to-back 40-goal seasons on a bad Windsor team. Rychel needs
to work on his skating, but he is a strong, aggressive player who is a
projected as a two-way power forward.
Kyle Woodlief’s mock draft for USA Today has the Canadiens picking longshot Chicoutimi left winger Émile Poirier, but the 6-foot-1, 190-pounder is
more likely to be a target for Montreal with one of their early second-round
choices. Poirier has good instincts and plays at both ends of the ice, but he
isn’t a physical player.
Adam Kimmelman of nhl.com sees the Canadiens looking to Sweden for
centre Alexander Wenneberg. The 6-foot, 175-pound centre played against
men with Djurgarden in the Swedish second division and had 14 goals and
18 assists in 46 games. He’s a skilled two-way player with good
acceleration and those are assets the Canadiens see as valuable.
The third member of the nhl.com crew, Mike Morreale, sees the Canadiens
picking Owen Sound defenceman Chris Bigras. His stock has been rising
after a solid season in the OHL and gold-medal performances at the Ivan
Hlinka and IIHF under-18 championships. But this is another player who
could be around early in the second round. Bigras is a star in the classroom
and that’s evident in his heady play on the ice. He’s a shutdown
defenceman, but many believe the 6-foot-1, 190-pounder has an offence
upside.
Yahoo.com likes Laurent Dauphin from Chicoutimi and he fits the profile of
several current Canadiens. He has skill and quickness and he doesn’t mind
going into the dirty areas. The rub is that at 6-foot and 166 pounds, he’s not
very strong and he gets knocked down a lot. His stock went up when he
was a last-minute addition to the lineup for the CHL Top Prospects game.
He scored a goal and an assist and was the game’s most valuable player.
Montreal Gazette LOADED: 06.30.2013
683025
Nashville Predators
Nashville Predators GM David Poile says Olympic job won't overtax him
Jun. 29, 2013 |
Written by
Josh Cooper
The Tennessean
NEW YORK — Predators general manager David Poile does not believe
his new role as general manager of the 2014 U.S. Olympic hockey team will
sap his drive and commitment to his Nashville job.
“I think this just gives you more energy,” Poile said Saturday at a news
conference introducing him for the Team USA position. “All these
experiences, I hope, are giving me more expertise in making decisions.”
In the next few months, Poile will have two daunting tasks. One will be to
guide the United States to a gold medal in Sochi. The other will be to retool
his Predators roster to avoid a repeat of the 2013 season in which Nashville
finished 27th out of 30 teams.
Poile’s associate general manager for Team USA will be Ray Shero, the
Penguins general manager who used to be Poile’s assistant.
“I’m looking at it for all of us, it enhances our knowledge of hockey as
hockey people,” Poile said.
Smith on short list? Poile indicated that Nashville forward Craig Smith could
be high on the list of players Poile will look to add to the Team USA roster.
Smith has played on U.S. world championship squads each of the past
three years.
“He’s on USA advisory committee’s radar because of how well he has
played (at the world championships),” Poile said.
Wilson off list: Predators forward Colin Wilson might not be on this short list
because of an injury. Wilson had double shoulder stabilization procedures
this offseason and might not be able to participate in the Team USA
orientation camp, tentatively set for late August.
“It might be a little bit different in that he might have to play his way onto the
team based on his play in the early part of the season,” Poile said.
Tennessean LOADED: 06.30.2013
683026
Nashville Predators
Nashville Predators try to pick their next star
NHL draft has talent at the top for many positions
Jun. 30, 2013 |
Written by
Josh Cooper
Since 2005, only one Predators first-round pick — forward Colin Wilson —
has played a full NHL season. Nashville has traded its first-round pick the
past two years, though it recouped some of those losses by trading for Filip
Forsberg at the 2013 trading deadline. The Capitals took Forsberg 11th
overall in 2012.
Nashville’s most recent first-round pick selected by the team was Austin
Watson, who has six games of NHL experience and notched 37 points in 72
games in his first professional season with the Milwaukee Admirals of the
American Hockey League in 2013.
The most recent Hockey News organizational prospect rankings (which did
not include Forsberg on Nashville) listed the Predators at 26th.
That all adds up to a team that needs to hit and hit big today with its firstround pick.
NEW YORK — Predators general manager David Poile was asked if he felt
pressure about today’s NHL entry draft.
“It’s not pressure, it’s stress,” Poile said. “It’s usual. There’s always stress in
this business.”
No matter what he calls it, Poile faces one of the more crucial days in his
tenure in Nashville today. The Predators hold the fourth selection, their
highest pick since they took David Legwand No. 2 overall in 1998. And
coming off a disastrous 2013, Nashville needs to find a franchise-type
player who can act as a cornerstone to help push the Predators out of their
funk.
“It’s really exciting because we know we’re going to get a good player,”
Poile said. “To me, it looks like we can get a defenseman, a winger or a
centerman. That takes your team in three different directions.”
This is considered a prime year to pick high in the draft. The talent level in
2013 is deemed by many analysts as the best since 2003. That year every
player in the first round played at least two NHL games. The Predators set
themselves up nicely by picking cornerstone defensemen Ryan Suter
(seventh), Kevin Klein (37th) and Shea Weber (49th).
The years those three were in Nashville, the Predators made the playoffs
six of seven seasons.
The Predators are likely to get defenseman Seth Jones, center Nathan
MacKinnon, left wing Jonathan Drouin or center Aleksander Barkov. All four
are considered franchise-type players who could play next season for
Nashville.
“They’re all different, different positions. They all bring something different
to the table, but they all in their own way are outstanding players,” Poile
said.
Colorado owns the No. 1 pick and has said it will take MacKinnon — absent
of a trade.
The 6-foot-3 Barkov has become a hot commodity mostly because of his
size and position. He’s a big, strong two-way center, and recent Stanley
Cup champions, such as Chicago (2010, 2013) and Los Angeles (2012),
have been anchored by players like Barkov.
The 6-foot-4 Jones is considered by many to be the top player in the draft,
but teams seem hesitant to pick a defenseman that early. That’s why he
could fall to Nashville.
Drouin is a skilled offensive winger who could help the Predators
immediately. The only issue with him is he is listed at 5-foot-11 and doesn’t
quite fulfill Nashville’s offseason game plan to get bigger and stronger.
“I’m not going to be comfortable until I know who we get at four,” Poile said.
“It’s getting a little tense. There’s stuff written every day, but having said
that it matters, but it doesn’t matter. That’s not something I’m going to be
able to control.”
Nashville could trade the pick, but Poile made that sound unlikely Saturday,
saying, “I doubt there’s going to be an opportunity to move up. I doubt I
have any interest in moving back.”
The Predators took a major step back last season, finishing 27th out of 30
teams. Nashville had made the playoffs seven of the previous eight
seasons.
Poile and coach Barry Trotz have vowed to make some changes to get the
Predators moving back in the right direction.
“I’m in a position that whoever is left, that’s who we’re going to take,” Poile
said. “We’re going to be happy because the players are really good. I just
don’t know the order.”
Top Five Predators draft picks of all time
1. Shea Weber,
49th overall in 2003
The Predators knew before the draft that they would take Weber, believing
they were the only team that high on him. They were right, and Nashville
got its captain and franchise defenseman deep into the second round.
2. Pekka Rinne,
258th
overall in 2004
The Predators have whiffed on a lot of goalies taken high in the draft but hit
big time on Rinne, an eighth-round pick. Rinne is a two-time Vezina Trophy
finalist and arguably the franchise’s best netminder in its history.
3. Ryan Suter, seventh overall in 2003
Although Suter left last offseason by free agency, his contributions to the
Predators as Weber’s defense partner helped the team to consecutive
Western Conference semifinal appearances.
4. Martin Erat,
191st overall in 1999
Erat has the fifth-most points of players picked in the 1999 draft. Despite
being traded this past season, he also has the second-most points in
franchise history and played 723 games in a Predators uniform.
5. Scott Hartnell, sixth overall in 2000
Hartnell has had his most success with the Flyers after a 2007 trade. He
has turned into one of the top power forwards in the NHL and scored 37
goals two seasons ago.
NHL DRAFT
• When: 2 p.m. Sunday
TV: NBC SN
Tennessean LOADED: 06.30.2013
683027
New Jersey Devils
For the No. 1 Pick, the Avalanche May Set Aside Sentiment
The Islanders pick 15th in the one-day draft, shortened from the usual two
days because of the lockout that delayed many late-season events.
Because of previous trades, the Rangers do not have a pick until the third
round.
A version of this article appeared in print on June 30, 2013,
By JEFF Z. KLEIN
Published: June 29, 2013
Sunday’s N.H.L. draft at Prudential Center in Newark will begin either like a
fairy tale, or like a fairy tale overturned. It all depends on whether the
Colorado Avalanche take defenseman Seth Jones with the first overall pick
or choose the talented center Nathan MacKinnon instead.
Certainly Jones, 18, is the sentimental choice for Colorado. He sat along
the glass with his mother and brothers as the Avalanche won Game 7 of the
2001 Stanley Cup finals in Denver. They received those choice tickets
because Seth’s father, Popeye Jones, was playing for the N.B.A.’s Denver
Nuggets and had asked the Avalanche captain Joe Sakic for advice on
nurturing Seth’s hockey obsession. So there young Seth was, looking on as
Sakic lifted the Stanley Cup, a sight Jones recalled a dozen years later as
“unbelievable.”
Jones went on to become a 6-foot-4, puck-moving defenseman who starred
for the gold-medal-winning United States world junior team, a player called
“already the complete package” by B. J. MacDonald of N.H.L. Central
Scouting. He could also be the first player of African-American heritage to
be taken No. 1 over all.
Sakic is now the Avalanche’s new head of hockey operations, and the
club’s new coach is Patrick Roy, the starting goaltender from that 2001
team. Yet despite Jones’s Avalanche connections and the club’s need for a
defenseman of his caliber, Sakic and Roy have repeatedly said they are
leaning toward taking a forward with their No. 1 pick. As recently as
Thursday, Sakic indicated that MacKinnon, who turns 18 on Sept. 1, would
be their man.
MacKinnon’s stock has risen over that of Jones since the Memorial Cup
final last May, when MacKinnon’s hat trick powered the Halifax
Mooseheads past Jones’s Portland Winterhawks for the Canadian Hockey
League championship.
MacKinnon’s story has a fairy tale quality as well. He comes from Cole
Harbour, Nova Scotia, Sidney Crosby’s hometown. When MacKinnon was 7
or 8 and Crosby was 15, their paths crossed in an airport. Young Nathan
posed for a photo with Crosby. Now MacKinnon, who scored 75 points in 44
regular-season games and 13 points in four Memorial Cup games, poses
for photos with children, and he will be posing for more at the draft.
After Colorado chooses, Florida has the No. 2 pick, unless trades change
the draft order. Tampa Bay is No. 3, then Nashville, Carolina, Calgary,
Edmonton, Buffalo, the Devils and Dallas complete the first 10.
Whoever is chosen by Phoenix with the No. 12 pick might play in Seattle or
Quebec when training camp opens in September. N.H.L. Commissioner
Gary Bettman said that the City Council of Glendale, Ariz., must decide by
Tuesday whether to approve an arena lease deal with a prospective buyer
for the club. If there is no deal, Bettman said Thursday, “I don’t think the
Coyotes will be playing there anymore.”
Other players expected to go high on Sunday include MacKinnon’s highscoring Halifax linemate Jonathan Drouin (105 points in 49 games); Sault
Ste. Marie defenseman Darnell Nurse, the son of the former Canadian
Football League wide receiver Richard Nurse, who encouraged him to play
hockey because he said it was safer than football; and the Finnish-Russian
center Aleksander Barkov, whose 48 points in 53 games last season for
Tappara Tampere made him the ninth-leading scorer in Finland’s top
league.
Also expected to go in the first round are the 5-9 London forward Max
Domi, who resembles his father, the N.H.L. brawler Tie Domi, but is a skill
player with 87 points in 64 games, and Windsor forward Kerby Rychel, son
of the former N.H.L. player Warren Rychel, whose 40 goals, 94 penalty
minutes and 8 fights last season mark him as a skill player and an enforcer.
A player to watch in the later rounds is goalie Anthony Brodeur, son of
Devils goalie Martin Brodeur. Anthony, who will play next season for
Gatineau of the Quebec junior league, was born 16 days before his father
won his first Stanley Cup in 1995.
New York Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
683028
New Jersey Devils
Adam Erne, a Connecticut native and projected first-round selection who
played for the N.J. Rockets, and Matawan native Connor Clifton (Christian
Brothers).
Hockey: NJ hopefuls in line to be selected at 2013 NHL Draft
"He's going to drafted in the same building he played junior hockey,"
Rockets' coach Bob Thornton said of Erne. "He'll be in the NHL one day."
By John Christian Hageny/For The Star-Ledger
Star Ledger LOADED: 06.30.2013
on June 30, 2013 at 5:00 AM
Bobby Sanguinetti remembers it like it was yesterday: “With the 21st pick in
the 2006 NHL draft, the New York Rangers select, from Owen Sound of the
Ontario Hockey League...”
For Sanguinetti, who played locally for Lawrenceville and gained notoriety
as a member of the N.J. Rockets' 2001 Tier 1 pee-wee National
championship team, those words reverberated on the sound system at the
2006 National Hockey League amateur draft at GM Place in Vancouver still
ring in his ears.
“An awesome day with all my family,” Sanguinetti, who was born in Trenton
and grew up in nearby Lumberton, said. "Going in you don't know where
you're going, what city you'll be playing for... Being a Rangers fan growing
up -- it was a dream come true.”
The eyes and ears of the next generation will be looking to fulfill their
destiny as the three-time Stanley Cup champion New Jersey Devils, for the
first time in franchise history, host the 2013 NHL draft at The Prudential
Center this afternoon in Newark.
For the first time since Sanguinetti's name was called in '06, all seven
rounds of the draft will be held the same day.
The Devils promise to deliver a first-rate experience with 2013 NHL Draft
FanFest, presented by Stronger than the Storm, set for Championship
Plaza on Market and Mulberry Street at 10:30 a.m. Doors open at 2 p.m.
with the draft to commence at 3.
Sanguinetti, who enjoyed a breakout season in 2012-13 with the Carolina
Hurricanes, has helped break the ice for local New Jersey hockey, which
has seen a total of 11 players with ties to the state drafted by NHL clubs
over the last seven years.
Notable selections, James van Riemsdyk of Christian Brothers-Lincroft
(Philadelphia, 2007), John Carlson of St. Joseph-Metuchen (Washington,
2008), Kyle Palmieri of St. Peter's Prep-Jersey City (Anaheim, 2009),
Kenny Agostino of Delbarton-Morristown (Pittsburgh, 2010) and John
Gaudreau of Gloucester Catholic (Calgary, 2011) have paved the way for
tomorrow's stars.
The impact of grass roots ice hockey in the Garden State has been felt
world-wide.
Gaudreau played a pivotal role in leading the United States to a Gold Medal
at the 2013 World Junior championships in January, and Agostino, along
with fellow Delbarton alumnus Matt Killian and Charles Orzetti, carried Yale
to the 2013 NCAA Frozen Four National championship in April.
“It is quite a statement for New Jersey,” coach John Kovacs, a 26-year
veteran between Mendham and Morris Knolls, said. “New Jersey high
school hockey has really exploded in recent years.”
So what can New Jersey expect from its brethren at the 2013 NHL draft?
Typically, NHL General Managers hold their cards pretty close to their
chest. While it is not uncommon for teams to reach out to potential draft
picks prior to draft date, a whirlwind of trades and transactions throughout
the day alter even the best of intentions.
Delbarton coach Bruce Shatel, who engineered his sixth straight NJSIAA
Non-Public title in March, has witnessed several NHL teams court his
players. One such player may be John Baiocco, the 2013 Star-Ledger
Player of the Year, a potential late-round candidate.
The Next Ones: NHL Draft - John Baiocco
"He's got a bright future whether he gets drafted or not,” Shatel said. “His
quick-strike is second to none. We knew he was going to be a star from day
one."
In what is considered to be one of the deepest drafts in a decade, two
additional prospects who have risen NHL draft boards with local ties are
683029
New Jersey Devils
Politi: Seth Jones, top NHL Draft prospect, is an inspiration to Newark's
young hockey players
By Steve Politi/Star-Ledger Columnist
on June 30, 2013 at 5:00 AM
Alicia Gibson heard the disbelief in the voices of other moms, and truth be
told, she had started to wonder, too.
Her son had picked hockey — ice hockey! — as his favorite sport, and now
she was spending her weekends, wrapped in a blanket, watching young
Ty’re Reeves skate around in downtown Newark.
"Everyone is like, ‘He plays what? That’s not a sport for black people!’ "
Gibson said with a laugh.
More proof to the contrary is coming today. The NHL Draft will take place at
the Prudential Center, and if the projections are accurate, two black players
will be chosen in the top 10 picks — with one, defenseman Seth Jones,
expected to go first or second overall.
It will be a major moment for the sport and for the city acting as host. Ten
years ago, no one could have imagined that the draft would come to
Newark. But, 10 years from now, no one should doubt that an NHL draftee
might come from Newark.
It might be a kid who will be tightening his skates for the first time this
winter, one who gets strange looks from his friends. It might be a kid who
looks at Jones, the son of former NBA player Popeye Jones who spurned
his dad and picked hockey himself, as a trailblazer.
It might be Ty’re Reeves.
"That’s what I want," the 11-year-old said last week. He was on the ice at
the AmeriHealth Pavilion, the practice rink adjacent to the Rock, taking
points from Jones and the other top prospects during a clinic.
Reeves is one of the 260 kids participating in the Hockey in Newark
program, one of the city’s true recreation success stories. When it was
conceived in 2003 as a feeder program for the struggling East Side High
varsity team, Keith Veltre and Dennis Ruppe had five kids sign up.
City leaders told them they were wasting their time. They skated on. A
Zamboni broke down and froze to the ice at the Ironbound ice rink. They
skated on. A player named Harry Smyre needed four coaches to help carry
him off the ice the first time he tried the sport. They skated on.
East Side won two games in 2005, snapping a 36-game winless streak, and
that was seen as such an accomplishment that Veltre and Ruppe were
named co-coaches of the year. The team reached the state playoffs a year
later. Progress was slow, but it was there.
"Really, your ZIP code determines if you play hockey in this country,"
Ruppe said, "and we wanted to change that."
Then came the spark the program needed: The Devils had moved to
Newark, bringing their long-standing commitment to youth hockey.
"Everyone is like, 'He plays what? That's not a sport for black people!' " Newark hockey mom Alicia Gibson
Veltre and Ruppe were able to secure more than $100,000 in donated
equipment allowing them to plaster flyers all over schools in the city with a
pretty good offer: "Try Hockey for Free."
Kevin Lopez saw that flyer. He had tried soccer, without much success, and
became a goaltender. His commitment to the program made for a pretty
good line on his college applications — good enough, it turned out, for
Princeton.
"For me, it was more than a sport," Lopez said. "It was a chance to become
a better individual. Hockey is for everyone."
Lopez, who now plays on the Princeton club team, didn’t start until the
seventh grade. The program is now targeting kids at a much younger age,
speeding their development. Matty Villacis, a seventh-grade goaltender with
NHL dreams, got started when he was 6.
This is why, when asked if Hockey in Newark will have one of its players
drafted in the next decade, Lopez answers, "Absolutely."
Veltre quickly fired back, "Watch the guarantees, Messier."
NHL top prospect skates with Jersey kids NHL top prospect Seth Jones
skates with kids at The Hockey in Newark program's clinic for Jersey kids
with 2013 NHL prospects and New Jersey Devils Alumni at the Prudential
Center practice arena on Saturday, June 29, 2013. (Video by Frances
Micklow / The Star-Ledger)
But that remains the goal. So you can bet the players from Hockey in
Newark will be watching as Jones and Darnell Nurse, the nephew of former
NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb, step to the stage and pull on their new
jerseys today.
It will be a unique, and for the NHL, a much-needed moment. The sport
needs to shed the reputation that it is a white-only game if it ever truly
wants to capture a larger viewership in the country.
Jones wants to help that.
"I want to be a role model to kids who want to play the game. I know it’s a
white-dominated sport, but at the same time, there are a lot more minorities
playing the game, so whatever I can do to help that cause, I’ll do."
It starts with the simple act of walking onto the stage and shaking hands
with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman. The kids from the Hockey in Newark
program will be watching, hoping that someday, it’ll be them. Don’t bet
against it.
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683030
New Jersey Devils
Devils owner Jeff Vanderbeek may sell team
By David Giambusso/The Star-Ledger
Email the author | on June 29, 2013 at 8:51 PM, updated June 30, 2013 at
1:24 AM
New Jersey Devils owner Jeff Vanderbeek is in talks with an investment
group led by attorney Andrew Barroway to obtain a significant influx of
capital and possibly cede Vanderbeek’s controlling interest in the team,
according to two people with knowledge of the negotiations.
The talks are continuing and it remains unclear whether Vanderbeek will
maintain control of the hockey team and its parent company, Devils Arena
Entertainment. The people who spoke requested anonymity because the
deal is governed by a confidentiality agreement.
The people also said there are no plans to move the team out of Newark,
though they stressed the deal, first reported by Forbes.com, is very much in
flux.
The news comes at an auspicious time for the Devils as the team prepares
to host the National Hockey League’s annual draft today at the Prudential
Center.
Vanderbeek declined to comment on the talks during a press conference
Saturday announcing the NHL’s donation of 30 trees to the Newark arena.
NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, who was also at the press conference,
was likewise mum.
"We are not going to confirm or deny that," he said when asked about the
talks. "If we have something to announce, we’ll announce it."
This is not the first time investors have been brought to the table to help
keep the financially strapped franchise afloat, only to have a deal fall
through at the last minute.
In January, Vanderbeek, with the help of a loan from the NHL, negotiated a
restructuring of the Devils’ debt, estimated at $190 million, and bought out
longtime partners Brick City LLC.
The move bought Vanderbeek, a former Wall Street trader, some time, but
the team’s financial situation was hampered by a lockout that cut the
season short. It also did not help the bottom line that the Devils did not
make the playoffs this year after almost winning the Stanley Cup last
season.
In February, the Devils hammered out a new deal with Newark to share
revenue at the arena, which has been a source of contention between
Vanderbeek and the city since its opening in 2007.
Rumors have circulated for weeks that Vanderbeek had missed a payment
to creditors and was looking for investors to help fill the gap.
Since purchasing a controlling interest in the team in 2004, Vanderbeek has
been the public face of the Devils. He was one of the biggest proponents of
moving the team to Newark and building the Prudential Center.
Since then "The Rock" has been a popular venue for sports and
entertainment and has driven major development in Newark’s downtown.
Barroway, 47, is a Pennsylvania-based securities attorney. He specialized
in bringing class-action shareholder lawsuits against publicly held
companies, according to a report in Phillymag.com. In 2006, he led a group
of investors to bid on the Philadelphia 76ers.
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683031
New Jersey Devils
Devils have qualified Adam Henrique, Harri Pesonen among restricted free
agents
By Rich Chere/The Star-Ledger
on June 29, 2013 at 11:32 AM, updated June 29, 2013 at 11:45 AM
The Devils have retained negotiating rights by sending qualifying offers to
restricted free agents Adam Henrique, Harri Pesonen, Mike Sislo and Jacob
Josefson.
General manager Lou Lamoriello said the team did not qualify right winger
Matt D'Agostini and left winger Jean-Sebastien Berube. Both will become
unrestricted free agents on July 2.
"We did not qualify D'Agostini and Berube. Everybody else was qualified,"
Lamoriello noted.
Lamoriello said the Devils are looking into the possibility of trading up from
the ninth overall pick in the entry draft, which will be held tomorrow at
Prudential Center.
"We would look at anything. There are a lot of conversations going on right
now in every direction-- up, down and sideways," Lamoriello said. "What will
happen, I couldn't tell you right now. If we could, we'd move up and we'd go
the other way if it made sense."
Devils vice president of hockey operations David Conte will wait to see
whether the team keeps the ninth overall pick.
“At ninth my part will be a little bit less because some factors will come into
play, whether it’s position or something else. Lou will have a lot of say in it,”
Conte said. “My job is to present the options. I certainly get to say what I
think.”
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New Jersey Devils
Report: NJ Devils may be sold to attorney Andrew Barroway
By Julia Terruso/The Star-Ledger
on June 29, 2013 at 8:35 AM, updated June 29, 2013 at 8:45 PM
The New Jersey Devils may be sold to an attorney who has loaned the
team money and expressed a desire to buy it, according to a memo from
The National Hockey League, published on Forbes.com.
In the memorandum dated June 27, 2013, the NHL Players Association
tells its members that attorney Andrew Barroway has loaned the hockey
team $30 million to help with serious cash-flow issues and may buy it.
Here's the excerpt of the memo as it was published on Forbes:
“The New Jersey Devils and the current ownership group headed by Jeff
Vanderbeek have recently been experiencing serious cash flow issues. This
has resulted in late or missed payments (including required pension and
escrow payments) and League intervention and funding. Importantly, we
believe that all money owed to Players, including pension and escrow, has
now been paid.”
“Recently, the Club was able to arrange a significant infusion of debt capital
($30 million) from an investor that is interested in purchasing the the Club
from Vanderbeek. We understand from League officials that the new
investor, Andrew Barraway, is currently negotiating with Vanderbeek and
thier expectation is that either Barroway or another ownership group will
end up owning the team within the next 120 days or so.”
The attorney formerly tried to buy the 76ers from Comcast, according to
Forbes. The memo does not say how much debt the team or the arena are
in.
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New Jersey Devils
Devils goalie Martin Brodeur will be on EA Sports NHL 14 cover
By Rich Chere/The Star-Ledger
on June 29, 2013 at 7:56 AM, updated June 29, 2013 at 5:36 PM
Devils goalie Martin Brodeur will be the cover boy for EA Sports NHL 14.
The 41-year-old goalie was selected by fans in a vote. He defeated
Columbus Blue Jackets goalie and Vezina Trophy winner Sergei
Bobrovsky.
It will be the first time a goaltender is on the NHL 14 cover since John
Vanbiesbrouck of the Florida Panthers appeared on the cover of NHL ‘97.
NHL 14 will be available on Sept. 10 in North America.
“The support I’ve received throughout the cover vote campaign has been
incredible,” Brodeur said. “My kids pushed me to participate in the
campaign, and they are really excited to see their dad on the cover of the
game they play all the time. I want to thank all the NHL fans who
campaigned and voted for me.”
While campaigning for the cover, Brodeur and Bobrovsky each took over
the @NHLPA Twitter account on the same day for question and answer
sessions with fans.
“At first, I didn’t really know what I was getting into when it came to this
event,” Brodeur told NHLPA.com. “I definitely got a lot of help along the way
from my brother and my friends. It was a lot of fun. I really enjoyed it. It’s
been exciting.”
“I love hockey and I love to play the game. But for me, I’m happy when I
see the joy through other people’s eyes. For me, it’s all about that.”
NHL vice-president of consumer products marketing Dave McCarthy said:
“We would like to congratulate Marty for this exceptional recognition of his
accomplished career and salute our fans appreciation for his incredible
achievements both on and off the ice as they campaigned rigorously and
voted him as the NHL 14 cover athlete. Throughout the cover vote
campaign, our teams and fans exhibited creative and relentless support for
their favorite players and their passion and dedication to hockey is the best
in all of professional sports.”
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New Jersey Devils
NHL Draft 2013: Lou Lamoriello cares about the pick, not the place
By Rich Chere/The Star-Ledger
on June 29, 2013 at 6:30 AM, updated June 29, 2013 at 6:33 AM
Lou Lamoriello was asked why he decided to hold onto the Devils’ firstround pick in this year’s NHL entry draft rather than forfeit it to satisfy a
penalty imposed by the league for circumventing the salary cap with Ilya
Kovalchuk’s initial 17-year, $102 million contract in the summer of 2010.
Was it because the draft is being held at Prudential Center Sunday in front
of Devils fans, and it would have been awkward if the home team had to
wait until the second round?
"No," Lamoriello answered with a glare that would’ve been appropriate had
he been asked whether he plans to let his young granddaughter make the
decision on which player the team picks.
He kept the pick, he stressed, because the Devils have the ninth overall
selection and expect to land a quality prospect. They will instead forfeit their
first-round pick in 2014.
The fact that the draft is in New Jersey for the first time has little or no
bearing on what the Devils will do Sunday.
"I’m trying really hard not to think about that. I don’t think we should be
doing anything to get applause," said David Conte, the Devils’ vice
president of hockey operations. "Whether we trade up, trade down, pick
where we’re at, whether we take a forward or a defenseman, somebody
from the U.S. or somebody from Russia, we should take the best player.
"For the player you pick, it’s kind of cool for him that the draft is in front of
the home fans. For us and for me, I’m thrilled it’s here in New Jersey, but
we also have a team six miles away (the Rangers), a team 25 miles away
(the Islanders) and a team an hour and a half away (the Flyers). So it’s not
going to be just uniquely New Jersey."
The Devils will not play to the crowd. And those at the draft table will not be
looking to make it into a show.
"The focus has to be on the draft. There can’t be any distractions,"
Lamoriello said. "I don’t think there will be. There is a focus on the job that
has to be done.
"This is kind of unique. Having it here I think is going to be great for the fans
to experience. We’ve never hosted the draft before, so it will be a great
opportunity to get a look at what we do in building a team. For the staff and
scouts, it’s going to be business as usual."
It is not lost on Devils’ management that fans might like to see the team
choose a clear-cut successor to 41-year-old goalie Martin Brodeur. A
popular selection with the ninth pick — at least to some — would be Halifax
(QMJHL) goalie Zach Fucale.
"There is a potential top-10 goalie in this draft," Conte said. "Zachary Fucale
in Halifax had an unbelievable year on a great team. But to think of a goalie
as an immediate solution, history is not on your side. We got Marty, and he
was great, but it was three years before we saw him."
The Devils drafted Brodeur 20th overall in 1990 and his first full NHL
season was 1993-94.
It would also be popular if the Devils drafted someone with New Jersey ties,
such as defenseman Brett Pesce, who played for the junior A New Jersey
Hitmen (EJHL) and North Jersey Avalanche (AYHL).
"It’s about picking the best player," Conte cautioned. "I don’t want to read
newspapers (with so-called expert picks). I just want to worry about the
reports we have from our people, the people we pay to do the job. We’re in
good shape. If you called me and told me they moved the draft up to 5
o’clock (in early June), I’d be ready for it."
And the fact it will be conducted in Newark won’t change a thing.
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New Jersey Devils
NHL Draft: Ranking the Top 10 prospects
Sunday, June 30, 2013
– Tom Gulitti
The following are considered the top 10 prospects for today's NHL Draft at
Prudential Center, 3 p.m. The Devils select ninth overall. The Rangers don't
have a first-round pick.
1. Seth Jones, D, Portland (WHL)
The son of former NBA player Popeye Jones, and is the best of a deep
group of big (6 feet 4, 205 pounds), mobile defensemen in this year's draft.
2. Nathan MacKinnon, C, Halifax (QMJHL)
Colorado Avalanche officials have said repeatedly they intend to select this
future No. 1 center with the first pick overall.
3. Jonathan Drouin, LW, Halifax (QMJHL)
MacKinnon's Halifax linemate was the QMJHL's most valuable player and is
projected to be a difference-making scoring winger.
4. Aleksander Barkov, C, Tappara (Finland)
Top-ranked European skater already has excelled playing against men (21
goals, 27 assists) in his native Finland.
5. Valeri Nichushkin, RW, Chelyabinsk (KHL)
The 6-foot-3, 196-pound power winger has allayed concerns that he'll
remain in Russia next season by saying he intends to play in the NHL.
6. Elias Lindholm, C, Brynas (Sweden)
Two-way center who is strong on both sides of the puck.
7. Sean Monahan, C, Ottawa (OHL)
Competitive, playmaking center, can play wing as well.
8. Darnell Nurse, D, Sault Ste. Marie (OHL)
Son of former CFL wide receiver Richard Nurse and nephew (by marriage)
of former NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb, Nurse (6 feet 4, 185 pounds)
plays an aggressive, two-way game.
9. Rasmus Ristolainen, D, TPS Turku (Finland)
Another big (6 feet 3, 201 pounds), mobile defenseman with a big shot.
10. Nikita Zadorov, D, London (OHL)
The 6-foot-4, 200-pound Russian came to North America to play major
junior in 2012-13 and get ready for the NHL.
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683036
New Jersey Devils
Picking in top 10 rare for Devils, but they are ready to get help
Saturday June 29, 2013, 11:45 PM
BY TOM GULITTI
STAFF WRITER
NEWARK – One of the perks of being the host of the NHL Draft is having
the support of the fans.
Devils director of scouting David Conte joked that the crowd reaction might
not be so positive this afternoon, however, when the team’s contingent
steps on stage at Prudential Center to make the ninth pick overall — barring
a trade up or back.
“I’m not sure we’ll get cheered after last year,” Conte quipped, referring to
the Devils missing the playoffs in 2012-13.
After not making the postseason for the second time in three years, the
Devils hold just their second top-10 pick since 1996 — they took
defenseman Adam Larsson with the fourth pick overall in 2011. General
manager Lou Lamoriello understandably doesn’t want this to become an
organizational habit.
That’s why, though having the opportunity to pick a high-quality player in
what is considered to be a draft deep with talent is a good thing, Lamoriello
said, “I’m not going to feel good at all about having it.”
There’s no denying this is a significant first-round pick for the organization,
which is still a bit thin on top prospects, particularly at forward, and, barring
a trade, will not have a first-rounder in next year’s draft in Philadelphia. The
Devils have to surrender their first-round pick next year to complete the
league penalty for Ilya Kovalchuk’s rejected 17-year, $102 million contract
in 2010, which was ruled to be a circumvention of the salary cap.
Although Lamoriello insists, “There’s never more importance on any pick,”
Conte admits, “At nine, it’s actually easier [to make the pick]. It’s just more
important.” That said, Conte, who has been with the Devils for 29 seasons,
doesn’t feel more pressure to get this pick right.
“I don’t consider it that way,” he said. “I’ve done this long enough. My body
of work is not going to be judged on this. I consider it very important.
Pressure? I don’t know what that means. You just try to get the best player
and do the best thing for the organization.”
Conte has put together a list of 10 players he’d like to pick with some room
for adjustment should Lamoriello find a deal worth making to move up from
No. 9 or move back. Lamoriello said the team is “comfortable” with the
player it believes it will get picking ninth.
“But decisions can be changed,” he said. “We can move up if we can. We
can move down if we felt comfortable. There’s nothing in cement.”
Both Conte and Lamoriello say that “all things being equal,” they’d prefer to
select a skilled forward. They already have a host of young defensemen,
including Larsson, Jon Merrill, Eric Gelinas, Alex Urbom, Damon Severson
and Reece Scarlett.
Medicine Hat left wing/center Hunter Shinkaruk, who has been compared to
former Devil Zach Parise, has spoken with the Devils at least three times
leading up to the draft. Other forward options include London’s Bo Horvat
and Max Domi, the highly skilled son for former NHL tough guy Tie Domi,
as well as Sweden’s Alexander Wennberg.
Conte also spoke glowingly, however, of this year’s tempting class of big,
mobile defensemen. That group is headed by Portland’s Seth Jones, who
likely will be picked in the top two, but also includes Sault Ste. Marie’s
Darnell Nurse, Finland’s Rasmus Ristolainen, London’s Nikita Zadorov and
Rimouski’s Samuel Morin.
It all depends on who is available when the Devils pick. Jones and Halifax’s
Nathan MacKinnon and Jonathan Drouin are locks to be the top three picks,
but after that it’s a matter of preference.
“We’re going to get a good player for sure,” Conte said.
And they should get another one with the No. 39 pick in the second round in
a draft that is deep well into the second round. Conte believes they’ll have
an opportunity to get a second guy they have ranked in their top 30.
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683037
New York Islanders
Floor’s the limit for thrifty Isles
By LARRY BROOKS
Last Updated: 4:30 AM, June 30, 2013
Posted: 12:23 AM, June 30, 2013
So The question is this: If the Islanders cannot entice a team into taking
Rick DiPietro — cough, cough, Vancouver — will Charles Wang authorize
an amnesty buyout of the goaltender, or will the Islanders instead use the
netminder’s AHL cap hit in order to reach the floor?
It is believed general manager Garth Snow, not necessarily known as a
truth-teller in his interaction with the press, has chatted with Canucks’ GM
Mike Gillis about the possibility of a deal for Roberto Luongo, with DiPietro’s
contract part of the package that would go the other way.
But as of yesterday, chances of that kind of a swap appeared remote.
Which would leave the Islanders with a decision as they attempt to build
something concrete off last season’s eighth-place finish and playoff taste.
DiPietro has eight seasons at $36 million remaining on his landmark 15year deal that in some ways has turned out to be less an albatross than a
life vest for the franchise that has employed smoke, mirrors, Nino
Niederreiter and the ghost of Alexei Yashin to remain above the NHL cap
floor.
Under the collective bargaining agreement adopted in January, clubs no
longer can use bonuses to reach the floor. By subtracting DiPietro, who
would carry a $3.575 million cap hit with AHL Bridgeport, the Islanders
would be at approximately $31.49 million, or around $12.5 million shy of the
$44 million floor.
Josh Bailey is a Group II free agent whose contract is unaccounted for. The
same applies to defenseman Travis Hamonic and goaltender Kevin Poulin.
Indeed, other than DiPietro, the Islanders don’t have a goaltender under
contract.
Using an amnesty buyout on DiPietro — who would receive $1.5 million
from the Islanders for the next 16 years under that scenario — would put
pressure on Snow to sign a quality free agent or two, or use some of the
stable of prospects to deal for a veteran.
What, for instance, would it take — and would it be smart business — to get
Kris Letang out of Pittsburgh? Or is there a match with Boston if Tyler
Seguin truly is available?
It’s interesting, though, if not typical: While teams across the league are
attempting to figure out how to improve while squeezing under a shrinking
cap, the Islanders are left pondering what moves to make (or not) in order
to reach the floor.
Who said no team is an Island?
* So the Devils will have new ownership within the foreseeable future, news
first broken two weeks ago by our colleague on The Post’s business pages,
Josh Kosman, who exposed the franchise’s financial woes.
Following Friday’s report by Forbes that the Jeff Vanderbeek ownership had
such serious cash-flow problems that it missed or was late with payments
that required league intervention to remedy, Slap Shots has confirmed that
it took several weeks for a number of players to receive their final payroll
checks of the season.
The NHLPA, rather than file default claims that could have resulted in the
unidentified players becoming free agents, worked with the NHL to give all
parties time to deal with the issue.
* Sure, the Rangers would love to acquire Cal Clutterbuck from the Wild,
but the team just doesn’t appear to have the maneuverability under the cap,
let alone the choice draft picks to surrender, in order to get it done.
The decision to retain Brad Richards may make Brian Boyle vulnerable —
$1.7 million is a tidy sum and cap hit for Boyle if he slots in as fourth-line
center behind Richards, Derek Stepan and Derick Brassard.
Except the Blueshirts likely are to be without both Ryan Callahan and Carl
Hagelin for the first few weeks of the season in the aftermath of their postelimination labrum surgeries, so that Boyle likely is to be needed on the
wing in October.
* There is no guarantee at all that John Tortorella would have gotten the call
over Dan Bylsma to coach Team USA at the Sochi Games — the NHL’s
participation in the Olympics could become official following a meeting
tomorrow with the IOC — even if he had the bedside manner of Joe Torre.
But there’s also no doubt the prospect of every press briefing becoming an
international incident did Tortorella no favors.
Oh, and by the way. If Tortorella truly does intend to become a new man,
then bringing Mike Sullivan to Vancouver with him as assistant coach isn’t
likely to help the transformation process.
Truth is that Sullivan, who only reinforces Tortorella’s us-against-the-world
mentality, had alienated more Rangers by the end than the head coach.
News: Patrick Kane becomes the third straight American to win the Conn
Smythe, following Tim Thomas and Jonathan Quick.
Views: Perhaps it’s time for the protectionist CHL — Canadian Junior
Hockey League — to ban Americans.
New York Post LOADED: 06.30.2013
683038
New York Islanders
Islanders in rare air: Middle of first round at NHL draft
Published: June 29, 2013 8:33 PM
By ARTHUR STAPLE arthur.staple@newsday.com
The Islanders are in a rather new position entering Sunday's NHL draft:
middle of the pack. They have their first non-lottery pick in six years after a
modestly successful season, so the excitement surrounding their
appearance on the draft floor at Newark's Prudential Center is rather muted.
And that indeed is progress.
The Islanders hold the 15th pick in what is considered a solid first-round
draft class. With the salary cap going down to $64.3 million next season
and free agency on the horizon Friday -- plus the buyout window currently
open until Thursday -- talk around the league has tended more toward
possible trades and potential signings rather than draft picks, outside of the
top few teams.
But the Islanders still have another prospect to add to their stock of young
talent.
"Obviously, the top end is really, really good," Isles scouting director Trent
Klatt said. "But sitting where we sit, I'm confident we're going to get a player
who will help this organization for a long time, no doubt."
Sitting where the Islanders sit at the NHL level is taking up most of general
manager Garth Snow's time as he tries to find a goaltender, the biggest
need for the team this offseason.
Contract talks with Evgeni Nabokov, who started 41 of 48 games and all six
playoff games last season, have stalled. The sides are not that far apart on
a one-year deal, but the Islanders are not interested in giving the 37-yearold goaltender a decent-sized raise off the $2.75 million he made in 201213. So Nabokov will head to free agency.
Snow has been involved in trade discussions, first for Jonathan Bernier,
who went from the Kings to the Maple Leafs, and then for Roberto Luongo,
who seems headed for a trade or a buyout of his onerous contract from
Vancouver.
The Islanders had offered Rick DiPietro's bad contract in exchange for
Luongo's, which would save the Canucks some money on a buyout and
give the Isles a veteran starter in Luongo, whom former Islanders general
manager Mike Milbury drafted No. 4 overall in 1997.
But the Canucks are looking for an asset in return for Luongo, so it appears
the Islanders have moved on from that option for now. They would have
interest in Luongo if the Canucks buy him out next week.
As for DiPietro, Snow is shopping the 31-year-old's contract -- which has
eight years at $4.5 million per remaining -- to teams who would swap a
player with a bad contract for the purpose of buying DiPietro out. If that
doesn't happen, the Islanders have not indicated what they will do with
DiPietro, but it appears as though a compliance buyout (one that does not
count against the salary cap) is the best option and that the one-time
franchise goaltender has worn the Islanders' jersey for the last time.
So the focus on the draft floor won't be on another top-five Islanders pick.
They traded their second-round pick to the Ducks for Lubomir Visnovsky at
last June's draft, so there doesn't seem to be much ammo for the Islanders
to move up from No. 15.
"Even though things have changed for the better with our NHL team, we've
still done our due diligence on everybody," Klatt said. "You never know
what can happen."
Newsday LOADED: LOADED: 06.30.2013
683039
New York Rangers
Rangers Have Needs but Not High Picks
By DHIREN MAHIBAN
Published: June 29, 2013
Gordie Clark, the Rangers’ player personnel director, hopes to add
defensive depth and a goaltender in the N.H.L. draft on Sunday.
The Rangers do not have first- or second-round picks in the draft, at
Prudential Center in Newark. In July, they dealt their first-round pick, 19th
over all, to Columbus in the Rick Nash trade. On April 2, the Rangers
traded their second-round pick, 49th over all, to San Jose for Ryane Clowe.
But they have five slots in the seven-round draft, including the 65th, 75th
and 80th overall choices in the third round. Their final picks are the 110th, in
the fourth round, and the 170th, in the sixth.
Clark, who has spent 19 years working the draft, has never skipped the first
and second rounds.
“It’s going to be interesting,” he said. “You may not get the star. The one
chance you can possibly get is a goalie because they go later anyway, and
that’s just the way it works in the draft.”
Clark’s staff is looking for a goaltender after missing out on the 18-year-old
Russian Andrei Vasilevski last year. He went 19th to the Tampa Bay
Lightning, nine spots before the Rangers’ pick.
“Tampa Bay called us, and they wanted to know if we wanted to move our
28th pick for a couple of second-round picks,” Clark said. The Rangers
used their first-round spot to draft Brady Skjei, now 19. “We still think Brady
Skjei is a top-four defenseman,” Clark said. “We liked him in that Ryan
McDonagh-John Moore mold of athleticism and skating.”
The Rangers also are seeking defensemen with size and an edge to their
games.
“In the system, you’ve got to have some depth coming on defense, and
we’ve got to stock that back up again,” Clark said. “Defensemen that can
play the top four. Gritty guys that can step in there and play a few minutes.”
He said the Rangers were outmuscled by Boston in their Eastern
Conference semifinal series, which they lost in five games.
So the Rangers are keeping a close eye on defenseman Dylan McIlrath, 21,
their first-round selection in 2010. McIlrath, who is 6 feet 5 inches and 215
pounds, missed the first part of last season after an off-season knee injury.
But he returned to pick up 125 penalty minutes, including 13 fighting
majors, in 45 games with the Connecticut Whale of the American Hockey
League.
“To play what his game is, to match up against the heavyweights, the Milan
Lucics, these guys have three, four, five years’ training as that type of
person,” Clark said. “He might be a little behind. The summer training will
tell us.”
The Rangers also have high hopes for goaltender Cam Talbot, whom they
signed as a free agent in March 2010 from the University of AlabamaHuntsville. Talbot, 25, agreed to a two-year, $1.1 million contract in
February. He posted a 25-28-1 record this season with Connecticut, a 2.68
goals-against average and a .918 save percentage.
“You could go down to Connecticut and watch them lose 5-2 and 6-1 on a
weekend and come away saying, ‘Wow, he played unbelievable,’ ” Clark
said. “He got to play the whole year this year, and he’s really come along.
So he’s going to give a run for the backup spot.
A version of this article appeared in print on June 30, 2013
New York Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
683040
New York Rangers
Draft-day transaction unlikely for Rangers
By LARRY BROOKS
Last Updated: 4:10 AM, June 30, 2013
Posted: 12:26 AM, June 30, 2013
The marquee names on the market will go elsewhere if they go anywhere
during today’s NHL Entry Draft in New Jersey.
The Rangers could shuffle some chairs on the deck if they’re interested in
dealing Michael Del Zotto for a defenseman of the stiffer variety whose cap
hit is commensurate to No. 4’s $2.55 million, but the Blueshirts don’t have
the necessary space available to pull off a blockbuster.
Neither do they own a surfeit of assets to sacrifice in order to make it
worthwhile for a trade partner to assume up to half the cap charge of a
player whom the Rangers might be interested in acquiring — say, someone
like the Maple Leafs’ Dion Phaneuf, who has one year at $6.5 million
remaining on his deal.
Though there could be some work around the margins, today’s business
likely is to be conducted at the draft table, where the Blueshirts aren’t
scheduled to select until 65th overall after having traded their first-rounder
to the Blue Jackets in the Rick Nash deal and their second-rounder to the
Sharks for Ryane Clowe.
Unless the Rangers can move up by bundling at least two of the three thirdrounders (65, 75, 80 overall), this will mark the first Blueshirts’ initial pick in
the 60s since 2000, when the club selected defenseman Filip Novak 64th
overall.
Of course, that was the year the Rangers selected Henrik Lundqvist 205th
overall, proving the adage that all’s well that ends well in the business of
drafting.
“I’ve never had anything like this,” Gordie Clark, in his sixth year as the
club’s director of player personnel, told The Post. “I’ve never had a year
without a first or a second.
“Our staff puts the same amount of preparation into it, but we don’t have
quite as much debate and fighting over where to rank the top players. The
real debates over ranking where our [scouts] were fighting for the players in
their territories that they’d seen most often came when we got to around
No. 50.”
If the Rangers seek to trade up, it likely would be to the back end of the
second round in order to grab a player they had ranked as a higher
selection.
“Not many teams are trading a [high] second-round pick for a couple of
thirds,” Clark said. “But maybe we can move into the last five picks or so of
the second if we spot someone who we believe could be an impact player
and has slipped through.
“If not, if we stand with our three thirds and then the fourth [110], we could
focus in on positions rather than the ‘best player available’ philosophy.”
The organization is light on AHL defensemen ready to step up — hence the
acquisition of Roman Hamrlik — with Dylan McIlrath, the controversial 2010
10th-overall selection held back by the dislocated kneecap he sustained
during last summer’s prospect camp that forced him to miss the first half of
the season in Hartford.
The Blueshirts don’t seem to have prospects up front knocking on the door,
either, unless one counts Chris Kreider and J.T. Miller, which Clark does.
“They’re both so young that despite their NHL experience, you have to think
of them as prospects with a good chance of starting the season with the
Rangers,” Clark said. “I think J.T. would have played at the end if not for his
wrist injury.
“And Chris, he basically has scored six goals in the Stanley Cup playoffs,
three of them game-winners, and other than that didn’t play very much.”
* The Devils own the ninth overall pick while the Islanders are scheduled to
select 15th overall, though they have made it known the pick is available for
the right price.
New York Post LOADED: 06.30.2013
683041
New York Rangers
Northjersey.com : Sports
NHL Draft: Ranking the Top 10 prospects
Sunday, June 30, 2013
– Tom Gulitti
The following are considered the top 10 prospects for today's NHL Draft at
Prudential Center, 3 p.m. The Devils select ninth overall. The Rangers don't
have a first-round pick.
1. Seth Jones, D, Portland (WHL)
The son of former NBA player Popeye Jones, and is the best of a deep
group of big (6 feet 4, 205 pounds), mobile defensemen in this year's draft.
2. Nathan MacKinnon, C, Halifax (QMJHL)
Colorado Avalanche officials have said repeatedly they intend to select this
future No. 1 center with the first pick overall.
3. Jonathan Drouin, LW, Halifax (QMJHL)
MacKinnon's Halifax linemate was the QMJHL's most valuable player and is
projected to be a difference-making scoring winger.
4. Aleksander Barkov, C, Tappara (Finland)
Top-ranked European skater already has excelled playing against men (21
goals, 27 assists) in his native Finland.
5. Valeri Nichushkin, RW, Chelyabinsk (KHL)
The 6-foot-3, 196-pound power winger has allayed concerns that he'll
remain in Russia next season by saying he intends to play in the NHL.
6. Elias Lindholm, C, Brynas (Sweden)
Two-way center who is strong on both sides of the puck.
7. Sean Monahan, C, Ottawa (OHL)
Competitive, playmaking center, can play wing as well.
8. Darnell Nurse, D, Sault Ste. Marie (OHL)
Son of former CFL wide receiver Richard Nurse and nephew (by marriage)
of former NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb, Nurse (6 feet 4, 185 pounds)
plays an aggressive, two-way game.
9. Rasmus Ristolainen, D, TPS Turku (Finland)
Another big (6 feet 3, 201 pounds), mobile defenseman with a big shot.
10. Nikita Zadorov, D, London (OHL)
The 6-foot-4, 200-pound Russian came to North America to play major
junior in 2012-13 and get ready for the NHL.
Bergen Record LOADED: 06.30.2013
683042
New York Rangers
Devoid of top two picks, Rangers seek falling star in draft
Saturday June 29, 2013, 11:38 PM
BY ANDREW GROSS
STAFF WRITER
New coach Alain Vigneault will be waiting to see if the Rangers can land
someone they covet in the third round of today's NHL Draft.
There’s a new coach in place looking to spark more offensive flow.
But while Alain Vigneault will be at Prudential Center for today’s NHL Draft,
Rangers director of player personnel Gordie Clark said he does not
anticipate any changes to the organizational approach of choosing young
talent because of the switch from John Tortorella.
“It really doesn’t affect us,” said Clark, in charge of his sixth draft with the
Rangers. “Most of those guys in the minors are getting prepared by the
minor league coaches, they’re the ones who dictate who’s getting called up.
Coaches on any team I’ve been on really don’t get involved. They’re just
there to show support.”
The draft begins at 3 p.m. The Rangers, having traded their first-round pick
to the Blue Jackets in the Rick Nash deal and their second-rounder to the
Sharks to acquire unrestricted free agent Ryane Clowe – now unlikely to be
re-signed with the team opting not to buy out Brad Richards – will not be on
the clock barring further trades until a trio of third-round selections.
The Rangers have not had one of their third-round picks develop into a
regular NHL player since Garth Murray in 2001 – and he only played 116
NHL games from 2003-09.
The Rangers also have a fourth- and sixth-round pick, and Clark said the
organization is hoping to shore up its depth on defense and goaltending.
“We do have a couple of players we feel, if it works out that way, can be
impact players,” Clark said. “It’s going to be maybe wishful thinking, but
we’ve gone through different mock drafts and it’s not out of the question. If
those players are gone, it’ll possibly be for what we need in positions.”
One reason for the need for defense depth was the dislocated kneecap
suffered by Dylan McIlrath, the 10th overall pick in 2010, and the apparently
career-ending concussion suffered by Michael Sauer two seasons ago.
Sauer, who turns 26 on Aug. 7, is a restricted free agent and the Rangers
are not expected to extend him a qualifying offer.
Meanwhile, Clark is hoping McIlrath can fully recover from his rare injury.
The 6-foot-5, 215-pound McIlrath, 21, played 45 games for Hartford (AHL)
in 2012-13 with five assists and 125 penalty minutes and has yet to play a
full minor league season.
“McIlrath is a little behind because of the injury … so we probably have got
to get a few more in the cupboard,” Clark said. “We’ll just see how the knee
took that. He works out hard anyway. He was hurt at this time last year, so
let’s hope he has a healthy summer.”
The Rangers have not drafted a goalie since Scott Stajcer in the fifth round
of the 2009 draft and the 22-year-old, who has one more season remaining
on his entry-level deal, spent most of last season in the ECHL. Cam Talbot,
25, was Hartford’s No. 1 goalie last season.
Five-time Vezina Trophy finalist Henrik Lundqvist, 31, has been entrenched
as the Rangers’ No. 1 since 2005-06, his rookie season and has one more
season left on a six-year, $41.25 million deal. The Rangers hope to sign
Lundqvist to a contract extension this off-season.
“To develop a guy like Henrik is a tall task,” Clark said. “But what we’re
tasked to do is to get somebody ready for five, six, seven years down the
road.”
BRIEF: As expected, the Rangers will extend qualifying offers to RFAs
Ryan McDonagh, Derek Stepan, Carl Hagelin and Mats Zuccarello by
Tuesday’s deadline.
Bergen Record LOADED: 06.30.2013
683043
New York Rangers
Cap crunch has Rangers looking deep into draft
Published: June 29, 2013 9:02 PM
By STEVE ZIPAY steve.zipay@newsday.com
With the Rangers' first selection in Sunday's NHL draft in the third round -- a
rarity that hasn't occurred since 1968 -- the news of the day could develop
off the board.
The club could be preparing a trade to move up in the annual gathering,
which will be staged at Prudential Center in Newark, or perhaps packaging
picks, prospects and players to bolster the current roster.
Having sent their first-round selection to Columbus in the Rick Nash trade
last July and their second-rounder to San Jose for Ryane Clowe in April, the
Rangers have five picks in the seven rounds: three third-rounders (Nos. 65,
70 and 80), a fourth (110) and a sixth (170).
"The top half of the first round is deep, and teams are holding on to those
picks, so I don't see us going there," director of player personnel Gordie
Clark said. "But we'll be watching to see if players we like will be available
in the second round or fall. Whatever, we believe we can get good players
in the third and later."
So the thinking is that the Rangers certainly will add to their stable of
prospects but won't get any immediate help. Nor are they expected to be
major players in the free-agent market, which opens Friday.
With Rangers brass deciding not to use a special compliance buyout on
veteran Brad Richards this summer, their salary- cap space will be
extremely limited compared to many teams once they sign their top
restricted free agents: Ryan McDonagh, Derek Stepan, Carl Hagelin and
possibly Mats Zuccarello.
The club's recent track record on third-round picks is mixed. Center
Stephen Fogarty (2011, No. 72) had five goals and 10 points in 41 games
as a freshman at Notre Dame. Ryan Bourque (2009, No. 80) is playing for
Hartford. Forward Evgeny Grachev and defenseman Tomas Kundratek
(2008, 75 and 90) no longer are in the organization. Harvard's Dominic
Moore (2000) became an NHL regular.
With enough centers in the system, the Rangers -- who had always had a
first-rounder since 2002 -- are expected to target wingers (especially on the
left side), defensemen and a future goaltender.
"Anybody we're interested in, we've met three or four times during the
season," said Clark, who along with assistant general manager Jeff Gorton
and the scouting staff handles the assessment and recruiting.
On the goaltending front, the consensus No. 1, Zach Fucale (Halifax), will
be gone, but the Rangers should have numerous choices in the third round,
possibly the second-ranked netminder: Tristan Jarry, who led the WHL in
goals-against average and save percentage.
Other options: Philippe Desrosiers, who posted a .970 save percentage in
Under-18 tournament play for Team Canada; Eric Comrie (WHL's Tri-City
Americans), who had some bone shaved from his right hip but has
recovered; Cal Petersen (USHL), headed to Notre Dame, and Spencer
Martin (OHL's Mississauga), who reminds some of Buffalo's Ryan Miller. If
they prefer a Swedish youngster whom Henrik Lundqvist could mentor,
there are juniors Ebbe Sionas (AIK) and Marcus Hogberg (Linkoping).
Among the blueliners who could be on the board in the third round are Brett
Pesce, a Tarrytown, N.Y., native at the University of New Hampshire; Shea
Theodore (WHL, Seattle), a potential power-play QB; Tommy Vanelli, one
of the top high school prospects, who will play at the University of
Minnesota this fall, and Sweden's Linus Arvedsson. Forwards include Nick
Moutrey, Saginaw (OHL); Hudson Fasching (U.S. National Team
Development Program, USHL), and Emile Poirier, Gatineau (QMJHL).
Newsday LOADED: LOADED: 06.30.2013
683044
NHL
Bylsma Takes Dream Job as U.S. Men’s Hockey Coach
By JEFF Z. KLEIN
Published: June 29, 2013
It is not a prerequisite for becoming coach of the United States Olympic
men’s hockey team, but Dan Bylsma has watched “Miracle,” the movie
about the 1980 squad coached by Herb Brooks that won the gold medal.
“A few days ago I was back in Michigan, and my son and his cousin were
watching ‘Miracle,’ “ Bylsma said Saturday, after USA Hockey’s official
announcement that he would lead the Americans at the 2014 Winter
Games in Sochi, Russia. “And they did not know I was going to be named
the head coach of the team.”
“The scene where Herb was in the kitchen and having a conversation with
his wife — I’m like, ‘That’s me; that’s my wife, Mary Beth!’ ” Bylsma added.
“Kind of a surreal moment there.”
Bylsma, 42, has coached the Pittsburgh Penguins for four and a half
seasons, winning a Stanley Cup in 2009. He will have other surreal
moments as he tries to lead the Americans to their third Olympic gold
medal.
“On Feb. 5 and 6, I’ll be coaching Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin,” he
said. “Sometime around the 9th or 10th I’ll be dropping the black and gold
and putting my USA colors on, and trying to stop them.”
Bylsma has no international experience, and he said he would rely on the
advice of Americans who had coached at that level before. He said he had
been consulting with the former Maple Leafs coach Ron Wilson, who led
the United States to a silver medal at the 2010 Vancouver Games, and
Flyers Coach Peter Laviolette, who led the Americans at the 2006 Turin
Games.
David Poile, general manager of the men’s Olympic team and the Nashville
Predators, said that Bylsma’s assistants would be chosen in the next few
weeks.
USA Hockey officials announced that the team’s orientation group would be
at the Washington Capitals’ Kettler training center in Arlington, Va., from
Aug. 25 to 29.
A native of Grand Haven, Mich., Bylsma recalled the mix of emotions he felt
while watching the Olympic final in 2010, when Crosby beat the United
States goalie Ryan Miller for the overtime goal that won the gold medal for
Canada. Bylsma said he was at a local rink in the Pittsburgh area, where
his 10-year-old son was playing.
“I do remember it very distinctly,” he said. “I was watching that game in a
restaurant at an ice hockey rink with a bunch of other U.S.A. supporters
who were cheering. And I was in a corner sitting in a chair when the puck
squirted free, and he broke free from the dot on that angle in front of Miller. I
stood up and knew that it was going to be over. I wasn’t really that pleased
about that, even though it was Sidney.”
He added: “I certainly did congratulate him when he came back, and was
happy for the fact that Sidney scored that goal. But I still took a lot of pride
in the silver medal that Brooks Orpik brought back.”
Bylsma said he was proud to become the 18th coach of a United States
Olympic men’s hockey team. He spoke again about the Americans’ victory
in 1980 at Lake Placid, and what it meant to him.
“Each day that I continue to prepare and think about being the head coach,
it’s a bigger and greater honor,” he said. “For me, I go back to 33, 34 years
ago, in 1980, as a 9-year-old boy. I think I dreamt about winning a gold
medal longer than I dreamt about winning a Stanley Cup. It dates back to
that 1980 team.”
“As an athlete, I’m not sure there’s a bigger stage than winning a gold
medal for your country,” he continued. “For a very, very long time I’ve
wanted to be involved. This is a gold mine, to be able to do this and to be
able to coach this team. For that honor and privilege, it’s very humbling.”
A version of this article appeared in print on June 30, 2013,
New York Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
683045
NHL
Seth Jones and Nathan MacKinnon vie for first overall pick in NHL Draft
By Pat Leonard / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Saturday, June 29, 2013, 9:54 PM
The Islanders need depth across the board, particularly in net, but all three
NHL.com mock drafts project GM Garth Snow selecting a forward with their
15th overall selection. They’ll then draft in the third (76th), fourth (106th),
fifth (136th), sixth (166th) and seventh (196th) rounds. The Isles’ previously
held second-round pick (45th overall) belongs to Anaheim.
Anthony Brodeur, 18, the son of Devils goalie Martin Brodeur, is not ranked
in the top 40 North American goaltending prospects but will be on hand in
his first year of draft eligibility and could be a late-round pick.
New York Daily News LOADED: 06.30.2013
Seth Jones called his trip to the top of the Empire State Building on
Thursday “too scary to ever do again.” But the 6-4, 205-pound defenseman
originally from Texas will be sitting on top of the world once again Sunday in
Newark if he’s selected first overall by the Colorado Avalanche in the NHL
draft, becoming the first African-American ever to be taken No. 1.
Jones, 18, a three-time gold medalist with Team USA — one at the World
Junior Championships and two at the IIHF World U18 Championship — is
the son of former NBA forward and recently fired Brooklyn Nets assistant
coach Popeye Jones.
Jones will have to beat out Nathan MacKinnon, 17, a 6-0, 182-pound
Canadian-born center who many expect to go first overall, in which case the
Florida Panthers would waste no time pouncing on Jones at No. 2.
Both talents are intent on contributing right away.
“I want to be more than ready,” MacKinnon told NHL.com. “I don’t want to
just hang on in the NHL next year and kind of watch.”
But no one can blame Hall of Famers Joe Sakic and Patrick Roy, now
running the Avalanche, for leaning towards MacKinnon, who hails from Cole
Harbour, Nova Scotia, the same hometown as Pittsburgh Penguins captain
Sidney Crosby. MacKinnon led the Halifax Mooseheads to this year’s
Memorial Cup, winning the tournament’s MVP award and recording a hat
trick and five points in the championship game over Jones’ Portland
Winterhawks.
The likely top of the draft is rounded out by left wing Jonathan Drouin, 18
(5-11, 186 pounds) from Quebec, and defenseman Darnell Nurse, 18, (6-4,
193), an Ontario product and the nephew of former Philadelphia Eagles
quarterback Donovan McNabb.
LOCAL FLAVOR
The Devils, who are hosting the draft, own the ninth pick and reportedly are
most interested in drafting a forward, since they are top heavy at the
position, paying Ilya Kovalchuk and Travis Zajac a combined $12.4 million
per year. But Nurse grew up rooting for New Jersey and likely would be too
good to pass up if he fell.
The Devils also own an early second-round pick (39th overall), an early
fourth-round pick (100th) and an early sixth-round selection (160th).
Previously held third-, fifth- and seventh-round picks are gone to Minnesota,
Buffalo and Winnipeg via trade, respectively.
The Rangers’ goal in this draft, meanwhile, likely will be to shore up depth
on defense and perhaps in goal, considering the limited firepower they have
on the draft board. Of course, there is always the possibility of a draft-day
splash deal.
Due to trades in 2012 and 2013, however, the Blueshirts do not have a pick
until their three third-round selections. Their earliest pick is 65th overall,
acquired from Nashville for the 89th overall selection in the 2012 draft.
Perhaps if they make a trade or the puck bounces their way, they’ll be able
to snag Bronxville product Steven Santini, 18, a righthanded shooting
defenseman ranked No. 47 among North American skaters by NHL Central
Scouting. He lists the Blueshirts as his favorite team.
The Rangers own Columbus’ 75th overall selection from the Rick Nash
trade, since they didn’t advance to the Stanley Cup Finals in year one, plus
their original picks in the fourth (110th) and sixth rounds (170th).
Normally the Blueshirts would have a lot more to work with, but they
packaged the rest of their picks in trades: the first-rounder (19th overall) for
Nash, both the second-rounder (49th) and third-rounder (62nd) for Ryane
Clowe, the fifth-rounder to Nashville for last year’s 142nd pick, and the
seventh-rounder to Minnesota for since-traded minor-league forward Casey
Wellman.
Deep NHL draft draws comparisons to stellar 2003 haul
“We felt like we were going to get a player,” said then-Boston Bruins GM
Mike O’Connell, who selected defenceman Mark Stuart in the first round
and Bergeron in the second. “There were enough in this draft where you
had to.”
Michael Traikos | 13/06/29 | Last Updated: 13/06/28 10:51 PM ET
Los Angeles had three picks in the first round. After taking Brown, their
future captain, at No. 13, they made a safe selection with Brian Boyle at No.
26, but chose Jeff Tambellini one spot ahead of Perry at No. 27.
683046
NHL
Ten years after he was a first-round bust who had a cup of coffee in the
National Hockey League, Hugh Jessiman signed a one-year contract last
month to play for Croatian-based team Medvescak Zagreb in Russia’s KHL.
In a news release, the team’s athletic director described its new forward as
a “big, explosive and powerful striker” who “can play a physical game if
necessary. From him we expect a lot of good things.”
Now and then: A closer look at the 2003 NHL draft
Yes, some things never change.
In 2003, scouts were saying similar things about the 6-foot-6 prospect, who
was given the nickname “Huge Specimen.” The New York Rangers thought
so highly of Jessiman they selected him 12th overall, one spot ahead of
Dustin Brown as well as Zach Parise (No. 17), Ryan Getzlaf (No. 19), Ryan
Kesler (No. 23), Mike Richards (No. 24), Corey Perry (No. 28), Loui
Eriksson (No. 33) and Patrice Bergeron (No. 45).
Drafting is one part of it. But even more so is the development that the
players get after that
“The reason Corey Perry goes 28th isn’t because everybody was stupid, it’s
because he wasn’t a very good skater at that time,” said Tampa Bay
Lightning director of amateur scouting Al Murray, who was then working for
the Kings. “The reason Bergeron goes in the second round instead of the
first round is because there were concerns about his skating too.
“Drafting is one part of it. But even more so is the development that the
players get after that. What you had in that case were some guys who had
some limitations [who] obviously worked hard at it.”
Because the NHL had yet to crackdown on obstruction, New Jersey Devils
GM Lou Lamoriello said many teams placed an emphasis on size back
then. It is why Jessiman went as high as he did and why the 5-foot-11
Parise fell to 17th.
Out of that draft, Jessiman became the answer to a trivia question. In a
can’t-miss draft that contained 24 future all-stars, seven captains and onethird of roster that won gold at the 2010 Olympics, he was the one big miss.
“We never felt that Parise would be available when he was,” said
Lamoriello, who added that the 2004-05 lockout was also helpful in allowing
this crop of players to spend a year developing in the American Hockey
League. “Despite having the quality and quantity, they all were allowed to
grow.”
“Hugh Jessiman was a highly regarded prospect,” said Dave Taylor, who in
2003 was the Los Angeles Kings general manager. “He was a giant who
could skate and handle the puck. Hindsight is pretty difficult.”
So will this year’s draft class grow into franchise players? Will there be
another Staal, Parise, Weber, Getzlaf and Perry? Will there be another
Jessiman?
Heading into this Sunday’s draft, there is bound to be a Jessiman or two
lurking in the first round. But in a year in which scouts are salivating at not
only the top-end players but the depth of talent available, there could also
be a haul similar to that of 2003.
Time will tell.
Nathan MacKinnon, Seth Jones and Jonathan Drouin have received most
of the attention so far, but scouts believe the next five — Elias Lindholm,
Aleksander Barkov, Valeri Nichushkin, Sean Monahan and Darnell Nurse
— are right there with them. And unlike last year, in which several
prospects had missed significant time with injuries or virtually came out of
nowhere, the cream of this year’s crop have been impact players on their
team for not just one but two seasons.
I think this is just like 2003. I think they’re all going to be excellent NHL
players
As one scout said, you know this draft has the potential to be special when
Anthony Mantha, a 6-foot-4 winger who was one of only three players in the
CHL to score 50 goals last year, is considered a late first-round pick.
“I think this is just like 2003,” said TSN analyst and scout Craig Button, who
was general manager of the Calgary Flames in 2002-03. “I think they’re all
going to be excellent NHL players. If you want to sit here and say I think
MacKinnon is better than Drouin, it doesn’t matter. It’s a fine line. I can’t sit
here and say you’re wrong.
“I think they’re all equally elite prospects. If you’re looking for that
defenceman, it’s Jones. If you’re looking for a hard-driving, scoring
centreman, it’s MacKinnon. If you’re looking for a brilliant playmaking
winger, it’s Drouin.”
The same logic went into 2003, when Pittsburgh took the best goalie (MarcAndre Fleury) at No. 1, Carolina took the best centre (Eric Staal) at No. 2
and Florida took the best winger (Nathan Horton) at No. 3. And that didn’t
even scratch the surface.
Justin K. Aller/Getty Images
The first round included franchise players such as Thomas Vanek, Ryan
Suter, Dion Phaneuf, Jeff Carter and Brent Seabrook. But players such as
Eriksson, Bergeron, Shea Weber, Corey Crawford, David Backes and
Jimmy Howard selected in the second round. The real finds, of course,
came much later when Joe Pavelski went in the seventh round, Dustin
Byfuglien and Matt Moulson both went in the eighth and goaltenders
Jaroslav Halak and Brian Elliott, now teammates in St. Louis, went in the
ninth.
“I don’t think you can do a comparable and say this year’s draft will have as
many top players as the 2003 draft,” Murray said. “Anyone who is saying
that is pulling stuff out of their butt. You can say it has the same features as
the 2003 draft, in that there’s a high-end group of elite players who have
been elite for two years and there’s a lot of depth. But to say it’s at that
same level is premature.”
“We won’t know until 10 years down the road.”
National Post LOADED: 06.30.2013
683047
NHL
8. Atlanta
Then Braydon Coburn
Now and then: A closer look at the 2003 NHL draft
Michael Traikos | 13/06/29 | Last Updated: 13/06/28 10:52 PM ET
Now Mike Richards (24)
The ultra-fierce competitor would have looked good in a Thrashers or Jets
jersey.
9. Calgary
Marc-Andre Fleury was the first pick of the NHL draft, while Ryan Getzlaf
was No. 19.
Then Dion Phaneuf
Now Ryan Kesler (23)
Looking back, it is difficult to find much fault with the 2003 NHL Entry Draft.
Half of the first round has already played in more than 500 NHL games,
nine have won a Stanley Cup and seven have gone on to become the
captain of their team.
A forward line with Kesler and Jarome Iginla would have terrorized
opposing teams’ defence.
Deep NHL draft draws comparisons to stellar 2003 haul
Then Andrei Kostitsyn
Still, if you had to do it again, would Marc-Andre Fleury go first overall?
Would Shea Weber fall to the second round? Would Hugh Jessiman even
be selected?
Now Brent Seabrook (14)
Here is what the top 15 would look like today:
11. Philadelphia
1. Pittsburgh
Then Jeff Carter
Then Marc-Andre Fleury
Now Loui Eriksson (33)
Now Shea Weber (49th in 2003)
The two-time 40-goal scorer would look good playing alongside Claude
Giroux.
With Weber and Kris Letang on defence, it might not matter who is in
Pittsburgh’s net.
10. Montreal
Think Seabrook and Keith are a perfect match. How about Seabrook and
Subban?
12. NY Rangers
2. Carolina
Then Hugh Jessiman
Then Eric Staal
Now Thomas Vanek (5)
Now Eric Staal (2)
If the Rangers had taken Ericsson instead of Hugh Jessiman …
It’s tough to pass on someone who captained the Hurricanes to their only
Stanley Cup.
13. Los Angeles
3. Florida
Then Nathan Horton
Then Dustin Brown
Now Dustin Brown (13)
Now Corey Perry (28)
The Kings captain has been everything the team had hoped he would
become.
No chance Perry, an MVP and Rocket Richard Trophy winner in 2010-11,
slips to 28th overall.
14. Chicago
4. Columbus
Then Nikolai Zherdev
Then Brent Seabrook
Now Corey Crawford (52)
Now Ryan Getzlaf (19)
The Blackhawks would probably lose out on Seabrook, but they get their
starting goalie one round earlier.
A year after selecting Rick Nash with the No. 1 pick, the Blue Jackets
missed out on taking a centre for him to play with.
15. NY Islanders
5. Buffalo
Then Thomas Vanek
Then Robert Nilsson
Now David Backes (62)
Now Ryan Suter (7)
The St. Louis Blues captain would be the perfect defensive complement to
John Tavares.
With Ryan Miller in net and Suter on the blue line, Buffalo would have been
that much tougher to score on.
National Post LOADED: 06.30.2013
6. San Jose
Then Milan Michalek
Now Patrice Bergeron (45)
Still think the Sharks would not have won a Cup by now had they had this
warrior in the lineup?
7. Nashville
Then Ryan Suter
Now Zach Parise (17)
The Predators have been searching for years for a forward with Parise’s
scoring ability.
683048
Ottawa Senators
Senators players to Murray: Feel free to go on a shopping spree
In many respects, Ottawa Senators players are just like the team’s fans.
by Ken Warren
on June 29, 2013
NEW YORK – In many respects, Ottawa Senators players are just like the
team’s fans.
With general manager Bryan Murray, the team’s coaching staff and scouts
all hanging out together in Times Square this weekend, the players can’t
help but wonder what – or shall we say, who? — is on Murray’s shopping
list.
Buoyed by the return of captain Daniel Alfredsson, they wonder whether
Murray can sway owner Eugene Melnyk to open his wallet a little bit wider
to improve the roster.
It’s generally assumed the Senators internal player budget is in the $50
million range, well below the NHL’s 2013-14 salary cap of $63 million.
“Well, I already did my part to get Alfie back,” joked defenceman Chris
Phillips, when asked if he provided Murray with a gift list before he left
Ottawa. “I really have no part in that, but it’s always an interesting time of
year to see what happens.”
Adding to the drama is the fact that teams with salary cap problems could
be forced to trade quality players who have big money remaining on their
existing deals.
Defenceman Marc Methot, who never strays far from social media updates,
is well aware that countless marquee names will become available as
unrestricted free agents on July 5.
“Anything that makes our team deeper, I’m all for it…as long as it doesn’t
include me going somewhere else,” he said, with a laugh.
The players who could be be on the move are frequently changing,
considering that top draft picks – perhaps even early first round picks
Sunday – could be in play. As Saturday morning gave way to Saturday
afternoon and talks picked up in the suites of Manhattan hotels, more
options were presented. There will be even more on the table on Sunday,
leading up to the start of the 3 pm draft.
“There are a number of players available,” Murray said Saturday, in a press
briefing at the club’s hotel. “I have had a couple of managers suggest some
names to me…there are a few that look like they might be moving if the
right deal is available.”
Some of the questions that are resulting in the most buzz:
–Where will Vinny Lecavalier end up? When Tampa Bay bought out the
remainder of Lecavalier’s contract, it immediately led to speculation that
Lecavalier could end up going back home to Montreal. But would the NHL’s
first overall selection want to face the intense media pressure? It is
generally assumed that Lecavalier wants to stay in the Eastern Conference.
Once upon a time, the Senators were on the verge of acquiring Lecavalier –
a blockbuster deal which would have sent Radek Bonk to Tampa – but it is
difficult to see him coming to Ottawa now. The Senators are solid at centre,
with Jason Spezza, Kyle Turris, Zack Smith, Mika Zibanejad, Jean-Gabriel
Pageau and Jim O’Brien currently at the top of the depth chart, but Murray
isn’t discounting anything.
“I think Vincent Lecavalier would be a good fit for most teams in the league
at the right dollars,” Murray said. “But I haven’t put any feelers out about
him, however.”
–There have been rumblings that the Senators have an interest in
Edmonton Oilers winger Alex Hemsky. Hemsky, who turns 30 in August,
has one year and $5 million remaining on his contract. On the surface, that
would appear to be too high of a price tag for a player who has had long
bouts of inconsistency throughout his career. If the Oilers demand is a top
four defenceman, the Senators aren’t about to give them one, either.
–While the Senators also continue to look at the possibilities of trading for
Anaheim’s Bobby Ryan – it’s generally conceded that the price tag includes
an existing NHL player, a top prospect and/or a high draft pick – there are
other teams in the mix that are driving up Ryan’s value.
–As far as non-Senators developments are concerned, there’s considerable
buzz about what will happen with Pittsburgh defenceman Kris Letang.
Letang, scheduled to become an unrestricted free agent next summer, has
rejected an eight-year, $54 million extension from the Penguins. While
Letang’s agent, Kent Hughes, continues to talk to Penguins general
manager Ray Shero, there’s a distinct possibility Letang gets traded. A
Toronto-based report Saturday suggested the Maple Leafs could be
interested.
It’s all making for great noise in the city where it’s all about noise.
Ottawa Citizen LOADED: 06.30.2013
683049
Ottawa Senators
Pittsburgh Penguins hope to find a way to hold on to Kris Letang
By Bruce Garrioch
,Ottawa Sun
First posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 10:47 PM EDT | Updated: Sunday,
June 30, 2013 12:43 AM EDT
NEW YORK - Sooner or later, push will come to shove for Kris Letang and
the Pittsburgh Penguins.
They haven't reached that stage, yet.
Penguins general manager Ray Shero said here Saturday that he has had
a couple of teams call to show interest in the club's top blueliner, but
Pittsburgh will try to get a contract done with him before deciding what is
next for both sides.
Letang stunned the hockey world by turning down an eight-year, $56-million
contract extension from the Penguins. The sense is he felt he a took a
hometown discount with his present contract, accepting $3.5 million perseason, and won't do it at this time.
Shero said he explained to Letang that the club wants him but this "is a
business." Last year, Shero dealt Jordan Staal to the Carolina Hurricanes
when he turned down a long-term extension. That's why people have their
radar up on Letang.
"He's worth waiting on in terms of making the right decisions and having all
the information," said Shero. "There's a time to make a deal. To sign a
player, there's also time you realize that you can't. That's not apparent to
me right now.
"We're going to continue to work on it and see where this goes."
Letang is going into the final year of his contract and will be an unrestricted
free agent on July 1, 2014. The Philadelphia Flyers and Montreal
Canadiens both have interest in Letang, but Shero isn't ready to throw in
the towel on talks.
"I know he's happy in Pittsburgh. He's a good young player at 26 years old.
We certainly don't want him to go and I won't let emotion play any factor,"
said Shero. "I like Kris as a kid. I explained to him the other day this is a
business.
"I think he wants to stay in Pittsburgh. We're going to try to see if we can
make that happen but it has to make sense for both sides."
THE FIRST ROUND
There is talk the Colorado Avalanche may deal their No. 1 selection for
immediate help. While they covet Halifax centre Nathan MacKinnon -- and
by all accounts he can play immediately -- the belief is newcomers Joe
Sakic and Patrick Roy want to wheel and deal. There is interest in the No. 1
pick, but the Avs want a big return with a player who can help right away, a
top prospect and a No. 1 pick. Roy and Sakic have suddenly made the
festivities interesting. "If they get the right price I think there is a chance,"
said league executive Saturday. "They want a lot for that pick." ... Centre
Nathan Horton has informed the Boston Bruins he wants to test the market
after his strong playoff.
OFF THE GLASS
As mentioned earlier this week, the Flyers are listening to offers for
defenceman Braydon Cobourn. There is talk the Anaheim Ducks asked for
Cobourn and the No. 1 pick in exchange for forward Bobby Ryan. The
Oilers have emerged as a top trade target because they want help on the
back end right away could use Cobourn. Don't forget Edmonton GM Craig
MacTavish and Flyers GM Paul Holmgren are both trying to shake up their
teams ... Minnesota Wild left wing Pierre-Marc Bouchard informed the club
he will test the free agent market. He had a cap hit of $4.08 million last
season.
THIS N' THAT
Speaking of the Wild, expect the club to move left wing Cal Clutterbuck. He
has been offered up to every team because his role has diminished in
Minny and the club needs to shed cash. He is an RFA who made $1.4
million last season ... The Florida Panthers haven't given up hope on
signing UFA centre Stephen Weiss. GM Dale Tallon hopes to hold more
talks with his camp but confirmed Saturday he has interest in bought out
Tampa centre Vinny Lecavalier along with Montreal GM Marc Bergevin. As
many as 15 teams have touched based with Lecavalier, who made his way
to Manhattan to meet with potential teams. Dallas GM Jim Nill has been
aggressive in his pursuit of Lecavalier because he would help the club.
AROUND THE BOARDS
Canucks GM Mike Gillis confirmed he has had calls about goalie Cory
Schneider. "You have to listen," said Gillis. Many believe the team that
called was Edmonton, but whether Gillis would actually make that moves
remains a big question mark. This comes at a time when Vancouver is
trying to either deal goalie Roberto Luongo or possibly buy him in the next
couple of days. Gilllis is also trying to move defenceman Keith Ballard but
hasn't had any luck. "We've had lots of calls and discussions we'll see
where it goes," said Gillis ... The Habs may move the rights of UFA left
winger Michael Ryder before Friday. They've told forward Colby Armstrong
he won't be back.
RUMOURS DU JOUR
Once the dust has settled in Edmonton expect them to deal Ales Hemsky
and buyout Shawn Horcoff. The club has given Horcoff permission to make
his own deal and there isn't a lot of interest ... The name of Bruins centre
Tyler Seguin surfaced on the trade market with talk the Bolts were
interested. He hasn't been shopped to every team because not many had
heard about it. Seguin's a young player, but Boston will have cap issues to
deal with after getting centre Patrice Bergeron and goalie Tuukka Rask
signed.
Have a nice Sunday and enjoy the draft.
Ottawa Sun LOADED: 06.30.2013
683050
Ottawa Senators
Ottawa Senators GM Bryan Murray continues to try to move up from No. 17
at NHL entry draft in New Jersey
By Bruce Garrioch,Ottawa Sun
First posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 10:34 PM EDT | Updated: Saturday,
June 29, 2013 10:41 PM EDT
NEW YORK - Bryan Murray is trying desperately to play Let's Make a Deal
on Broadway.
It might take a Miracle on 34th Street for that to happen.
With the NHL entry draft set for 3 p.m. Sunday at the Prudential Center in
Newark, N.J., the Senators GM made a proposal to two teams to see if he
could make a move into the top 10 from the No. 17 position.
"Both teams said they would consider it," said Murray Saturday afternoon at
the club's Manhattan hotel. "Neither one of them has called me back."
The Senators are certain they'll get a good prospect who can play if they
don't move up from their current spot, but Bryan Murray, assistant GM Tim
Murray and player personnel director Pierre Dorion would love to move
higher.
Yes, the Colorado Avalanche contacted the Senators to see if there was an
interest in the No. 1 pick. The asking price was so high there weren't any
real discussions, but the possibility always exists something could happen
on the floor.
"To move up high in the draft is a hard thing to do," said Tim Murray. "Your
scouts prepare all year, they've made their lists, they're ready to pick and
it's going to be a big price.
"It could happen (Sunday). Bryan could come and say, 'They want this
player off our team and the No. 17 pick,' then we'll make the call at the table
and decide if it's the right choice. At this point, the prices have been
extremely high."
The Senators are continuing to discuss all possible scenarios because the
opportunity to move up could present itself in the middle of the first round.
That's how it played out when Ottawa selected Erik Karlsson at No. 15 in
2008.
Knowing the Anaheim Ducks were ready to take Karlsson with the No. 17
selection in the draft held at Scotiabank Place, Bryan Murray was urged by
Dorion to move up before the player the club wanted was gone.
Nashville Predators GM David Poile accepted an offer to move back to the
No. 18 spot in exchange for that pick and a third rounder in 2009. It ended
up being one of the best moves ever made by the team, but it wasn't reality
until the last minute.
"Bryan came to me and asked me how much I really liked Karlsson and I
said there was no doubt I'd move up to take him," said Dorion.
"It's tough because all scouts fall in love with their list and their picks and
whatever. I give so much credit to Bryan. If it wasn't for him, we wouldn't
have Karlsson now because he moved up to make that deal."
Dorion said he's confident if the Senators stay at No. 17, they will come
away with a strong prospect.
"We're just going to get a good player like we've done in the past few
years," said Dorion. "We just hope to get someone that's going to come in
and play eventually.
"Could there be a surprise and someone comes in to challenge for a spot in
the lineup? You never say no, but most likely we're looking at someone who
will play next year or two years from now."
That's partially why Bryan Murray has been trying to use this draft to find a
Top 6 forward that can help immediately.
The Senators have held talks with the Anaheim Ducks about winger Bobby
Ryan, but the asking price is such that it would be detrimental to the team to
make the deal. The Ducks are looking for a high-end defenceman in return
for Ryan.
If Murray isn't able to get a scoring winger here, he could resume
discussions when he gets back to Ottawa Monday or wait until players shop
themselves around on the unrestricted free agent market starting Friday at
noon.
"We're still going to explore what's available to us to upgrade our team,"
said Murray. "We hope, at some point in time through the summer, that we
can maybe make a acquisition that would help."
All the draft talk can finally turn to action Sunday.
Ottawa Sun LOADED: 06.30.2013
683051
Ottawa Senators
Ottawa Senators goaltender Craig Anderson will get consideration to be
Team USA netminder at Olympics
By Bruce Garrioch
,Ottawa Sun
First posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 12:36 PM EDT | Updated: Saturday,
June 29, 2013 12:55 PM EDT
NEW YORK - Craig Anderson could get a shot at gold at the Olympics in
Sochi next February.
The NHL won’t confirm its participation in the Winter Games until Tuesday,
but Team USA named its Olympic staff during a press conference Saturday
on Broadway and GM David Poile confirmed to the Sun that Anderson is in
the mix.
Poile said the Senators' top goalie will be in a group of six players - it
includes Jonathan Quick (Los Angeles), Cory Schneider (Vancouver), Ryan
Miller (Buffalo) and Jimmy Howard (Detroit) - that will get consideration.
Though there has been much consternation over the way Canadian goalies
are playing, the Americans feel that netminding will be one of their
strengths. Anderson was one of the NHL’s top goalies last season.
“We’ve got a really good group,” said Poile. “We’ve got about six guys that
we’ve talked about that are very deserving. You have to have goaltending
to be successful. Our goaltending was good back in Vancouver.
“We’ve got some goalies that played really well last year. We certainly take
into consideration the body of work, but the goalies certainly have to be
playing well in the first three months (of the season).”
Poile said there are going to be a lot of factors that go into the selection of
the goalie, but you have to think it would help Anderson if he picked up
where he left off last season.
“I know who the best goaltenders are. There could be circumstances like
poor play, outstanding play, injuries and stuff that could affect it,” said Poile.
“We’re going to pick three goaltenders and there’s going to be a chemistry
situation. Back in 2010, we had a really good situation with (Tim) Thomas,
Miller and Quick as the third goalie. We all have to talk about all those
different situations.
"The bottom line is we want the best goaltenders.”
Expect Anderson to get invited to Team USA’s orientation camp in August
in Washington.
Ottawa Sun LOADED: 06.30.2013
683052
Philadelphia Flyers
1
Flyers looking to draft big-shooting defenseman
Colorado Nathan MacKinnon
C
The determined MacKinnon has all the tools, but will the Avs regret passing
on Seth Jones?
2
Florida
Seth Jones
D
Sam Carchidi, Inquirer Staff Writer
The top-rated overall player, according to Central Scouting, Jones will
develop into a franchise player.
Posted: Sunday, June 30, 2013, 3:01 AM
3
NEWARK, N.J. - The Flyers would love to select bruising defenseman
Darnell Nurse in the first round of Sunday's NHL draft in Newark, but unless
they trade up, he probably won't be there when they make the 11th overall
pick.
Rasmus Ristolainen might be a nice consolation prize.
The Finnish defenseman has a lot going for him. He's a righthanded
shooter, has imposing size (6-foot-4, 207 pounds), and is regarded as a
strong player at both ends of the ice.
Oh, and he plays a physical, edgy style, an uncommon trait for most
European players.
Flyers general manager Paul Holmgren said Ristolainen, 18, might be NHLready.
"He looks like a man right now compared to some of the kids you see,"
Holmgren said.
4
5
6
7
"You have a lot of scenarios that you run through and mock drafts that you
run through. . . . But I guarantee there's going to be at least one player
that's taken before we pick that we didn't think would go there," Holmgren
said. "And all of a sudden, it throws things into a little bit of a change of
dynamic at the time."
Among the Flyers' biggest needs: landing a big, physical defenseman, and
getting faster on the front line.
If the Flyers draft a defenseman in the first round - Nurse, Ristolaimen,
Ryan Pulock, and Nikita Zadorov are on their radar - they will be more
patient with their development, Holmgren said.
Hunter Shinkaruk, a center/left winger, is among the speedy forwards who
may be available at No. 11.
C
Carolina
Sean Monahan
C
Calgary
Valeri Nichushkin
RW
Edmonton
Darnell Nurse
D
The Flyers would like to move up and grab this player, who has been
compared to a young Shea Weber.
9
Holmgren said there would be some draft surprises.
Nashville Aleksander Barkov
The rugged, 6-foot-4, 202-pound Russian has a nose for the net and, as a
17-year-old, played in the KHL.
Other than Seth Jones, Holmgren said, Ristolainen is "probably the most
ready [defenseman] to jump right in" and play in the NHL. "Offensively, he
looks like a good, solid prospect with a big shot."
Overall, the Flyers will select 11th, 41st, 72d, 132d, 162d, and 192d. They
are exploring moving up in the draft, and may dangle defenseman Braydon
Coburn and winger Matt Read in a deal.
LW
Respected for his two-way play, Monahan had 31 goals and 78 points in 58
OHL games last season.
8
The Flyers have six picks in the seven-round draft; they dealt their fourthrounder to Los Angeles for Simon Gagne.
Jonathan Drouin
Viewed as a can't-miss prospect, he is the top-rated European player in the
draft.
Ristolainen, No. 4 on Central Scouting's list of draft-eligible European
skaters, logged more than 25 minutes a game last season while playing for
Finland's top league.
Scouts are divided as to whether Ristolainen will be there when the Flyers
pick at No. 11.
Tampa Bay
Regarded as the draft's best playmaker, he will be setting up Steven
Stamkos for many years to come.
Buffalo
Elias Lindholm
C
He starred in Sweden's top pro league last season, and he would bolster
the Sabres' sad-sack offense.
New Jersey
Hunter Shinkaruk
C/LW
He would replace some of the offense the Devils lost when Zach Parise left
for free agency last summer.
10
Dallas
Ryan Pulock
D
Another defenseman who is high on the Flyers' radar, Pulock has a 100m.p.h. tracer of a slapshot.
11
FLYERS Rasmus Ristolainen D
The righthanded-shooting Finn plays with a nasty edge and is a two-way
performer who could be NHL-ready right away.
12
Phoenix
Max Domi C/LW
The little guy plays with quickness and power and will be a scorer, not a
tough guy like his father, Tie.
13
Winnipeg Nikita Zadorov
D
He moves surprisingly well for his size (6-5, 228) and will be an intimidating
player on defense.
14
Columbus Sam Morin
D
Another in a long list of quality defensemen in the draft, the 6-6 Morin is raw
but talented.
15
N.Y. Islanders
Zach Fucale
G
Colorado has the first overall pick and is expected to select center Nathan
MacKinnon, who had 75 points in 44 games for Halifax of the Quebec Major
Junior Hockey League. He seemingly passed Jones with his MVP
performance in the Memorial Cup, during which he had 13 points and a hat
trick in the title game.
The top goalie in the draft, Fucale will be strongly considered by several
teams, including the Devils and Flyers.
More than 20 prospects have ties to current or former NHL players,
including highly touted center Max Domi, whose father, Tie, was a feisty
player who was selected 27th overall by Toronto in 1988 and played across
16 seasons in the league.
Philadelphia Inquirer / Daily News LOADED: 06.30.2013
NHL Draft Forecast
Projections for the first half of Sunday's first round:
Pick
Team
Player
Pos.
Contact Sam Carchidi at scarchidi@phillynews.com. Follow on Twitter
@BroadStBull.
683053
Philadelphia Flyers
Inside the Flyers: Long-term deal with Giroux should make Flyers wary
Sam Carchidi, Inquirer Sports Writer
Ilya Bryzgalov: Nine years, $51 million, signed in 2011.
Financially, the signing was a Bryzaster. Bryzgalov was paid like a star, but
his mediocre play (2.61 goals-against average, .905 save percentage)
caused the Flyers to cut ties two years into the deal. The Flyers announced
Tuesday that they were buying out the remaining seven years of his
contract.
Posted: Sunday, June 30, 2013, 1:09 AM
When the checks stop coming, Bryzgalov will have been paid a little more
than $39 million for his two years in Philadelphia.
NEWARK, N.J. - The Flyers are getting closer to signing star center Claude
Giroux to a long-term contract. That would seem to be a good thing, but . . .
Giroux's agent is talking with general manager Paul Holmgren about a longterm deal. The new collective bargaining agreement limits the length of
contracts to a maximum of eight years (seven if it's a player who is new to
the team).
Going back to Chris Gratton and continuing through Ilya Bryzgalov, the
Flyers have had their troubles with long-term deals.
Sometimes, it has been an injury that has caused a long-term deal to go
haywire. Sometimes it has been alleged off-ice distractions, and sometimes
it has just been a bad signing.
Consider the following:
Chris Gratton: Five years, $16.5 million, including a $9 million signing
bonus.
He signed in 1997, when he was one of the NHL's highest-paid players.
The big center was a bust. He had a disappointing 11/2-year stint with the
Flyers before being traded back to Tampa Bay in 1998.
John LeClair: Five years, $45 million, signed in 2001.
A onetime superstar, LeClair saw his production dip dramatically after he
signed, and he was bought out before the deal expired, helping the Flyers
meet the new salary-cap requirements.
Danny Briere: Eight years, $52 million, signed in 2007.
Briere, one of the classiest players in franchise history, spent six seasons in
Philadelphia after signing. He scored 31 goals in his first season with the
Flyers, helping them reach the conference finals after having the league's
worst record the previous season. Briere was brilliant in the playoffs,
especially in 2010, when he scored 30 points and led an improbable charge
to the Stanley Cup Finals.
Hindered by injuries, Briere was ineffective the last two seasons and the
Flyers are buying out the last two years of his deal, wiping out an annual
$6.5 million cap hit.
Mike Richards: 12-year extension, $69 million, signed in 2007.
The gritty Richards had several highly productive seasons with the Flyers
before they traded him to Los Angeles in 2011. They have maintained they
dealt their captain simply because of the return (Wayne Simmonds,
Brayden Schenn) they received. It's also possible the trade was made
because the Flyers did not like Richards' off-ice lifestyle.
Richards was traded nine years before his contract with the Flyers would
have expired after the 2019-20 season.
Jeff Carter: 11-year extension, $58 million, signed in 2010.
A stunned Carter was traded seven months after signing his big-bucks
contract. He averaged 38 goals per season in his last three years with the
Flyers.
As with Richards, the Flyers' party line for dealing Carter was this: It was all
about the return - Jake Voracek and draft picks that turned into Sean
Coutuier and Nick Cousins. You can believe that, or you can refer to the
Richards theory.
Carter and Richards, of course, both won Stanley Cup rings with the
Jonathan Quick-led Kings in 2012.
Chris Pronger: Seven-year extension, $34.9 million, signed in 2009.
With the snarling, crease-clearing Pronger in the lineup, the Flyers had an
identity - and they went to the Stanley Cup Finals in his first season with the
club. But the team seemed to lose its edge after Pronger went down with a
career-ending concussion in 2011.
Because of the injury, Pronger was able to play only two-plus seasons with
the Flyers, who acquired him from Anaheim for a pair of No. 1 picks, Joffrey
Lupul, and Luca Sbisa at the 2009 draft.
The Flyers hope Giroux will fall into the same category as Kimmo Timonen,
a player who signed a long-term deal (six years, $37.8 million, signed in
2007) and was actually productive.
In Philadelphia.
Philadelphia Inquirer / Daily News LOADED: 06.30.2013
683054
Philadelphia Flyers
Source: Flyers eye Lecavalier
POSTED: Saturday, June 29, 2013, 8:26 PM
Sam Carchidi, Inquirer Staff Writer
The Flyers are in the hunt for 6-foot-4, 208-pound veteran center Vinny
Lecavalier, an NHL source confirmed.
In fact, Flyers officials met with the unrestricted free agent on Saturday.
Several teams are trying to lure him. Free agents can sign on Friday.
Lecavalier is still productive after all these years. He is a terrific playmaker
and would provide the Flyers with some needed size and physicality at
center.
A four-time all-star, Lecavalier, 33, had 10 goals and 32 points in 39 games
with Tampa Bay this season. Lecavalier's contract was bought out by the
Lightning a few days ago. He had over $32 million left on a deal that ran
through 2019-20.
Philadelphia Inquirer / Daily News LOADED: 06.30.2013
683055
Philadelphia Flyers
Our mock NHL draft: Flyers select Ristolainen
9. New Jersey
Hunter Shinkaruk
C/LW
POSTED: Saturday, June 29, 2013, 10:31 AM
Sam Carchidi, Inquirer Staff Writer
Comment: He would replace some of the offense the Devils lost when Zach
Parise left Newark for free agency last summer.
So who will the Flyers select in the first round of Sunday's NHL draft in
Newark?
Here are our projections for the first half of theopening round, including the
Flyers’ pick at No. 11:
Pick Team
Player
10. Dallas
Ryan Pulock
D
Comment: Another defenseman who is high on the Flyers’ radar, Pulock
has a 100 m.p.h. tracer of a slapshot.
Pos.
1. Colorado Nathan MacKinnon C
11. FLYERS
Comment: The determined MacKinnon has all the tools, but will the Avs
regret passing on Seth Jones?
Comment: The RH-shooting Finn plays with a nasty edge and is a solid
two-way performer who could be NHL-ready.
2. Florida
12. Phoenix Max Domi
Seth Jones
D
Rasmus Ristolainen D
C/LW
Comment: The top-rated overall player according to Central Scouting,
Jones will step right into the Panthers’ lineup and develop into a franchise
player.
Comment: The little guy plays with quickness and power and will be a
scorer, not a tough guy like his dad, Tie.
13. Winnipeg Nikita Zadorov D
3. Tampa Bay Jonathan Drouin
LW
Comment: Regarded as the draft’s best playmaker, he will be setting up
Steven Stamkos for many years to come.
4. Nashville Aleksander Barkov
C
Comment: Viewed as a can’t-miss prospect, he is the top-rated European
player in the draft.
5. Carolina Sean Monahan
C
Comment: Respected for his two-way play, Monahan had 31 goals and 78
points in 58 OHL games last season.
6. Calgary Valeri Nichushkin
RW
Comment: The rugged, 6-4, 202-pound Russian has a nose for the net and,
as a 17-year-old, played in the KHL.
7. Edmonton
Darnell Nurse
D
Comment: The Flyers would like to move up in the draft and grab Donovan
McNabb’s nephew, a player who has been compared to a young Shea
Weber.
8. Buffalo
Elias Lindholm
C
Comment: He starred in Sweden’s top pro league last season and he would
bolster the Sabres’ sad-sack offense.
Comment: He moves surprisingly well for his size (6-5, 228) and will be an
intimidating player on D.
14. Columbus
Sam Morin
D
Comment: Another in a long list of quality D-men in the draft, the 6-6 Morin
is raw but talented.
15. NY Islanders Zach Fucale G
Comment: The top goalie in the draft, Fucale will be strongly considered by
several teams, including the Devils and Flyers.
Philadelphia Inquirer / Daily News LOADED: 06.30.2013
683056
Philadelphia Flyers
Lessons to be learned from Bryzgalov mistake
Posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 5:49 pm
“Guys are used to being ’the man,’ so it’s how you’re going to handle that.
And I seem to think that he has a good grasp on how to handle egos and
keep everyone pulling in the same direction.
“He’s an up-and-coming guy. He’s proven that he can win. He coaches in a
high-profile city with high-profile players and has shown that he can handle
them and handle some of the egos.’’
Wayne Fish Staff writer
Wayne Fish: 215-345-3070; e-mail: wfish@phillyburbs.com; twitter:
@waynefish1
Posted on June 29, 2013
Burlington County Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
NEWARK – So, class, what lessons did we learn by observing the Great
Bryzgalov Experiment these past two years?
/n + **Buyer beware.** If a team like the Flyers is weak on goaltending,
don’t go shopping in the high-priced stores. There are plenty of bargains out
there.
/n + **Do some background checks.** Surely Ilya Bryzgalov showed some
signs of wacky behavior in Anaheim and Phoenix before arriving in
Philadelphia. Ask around first.
/n + **Think North American.** The Flyers have had virtually no long-term
success with European netminders, from Tommy Soderstrom to Roman
Cechmanek to Antero Niittymaki. Not sure why, but let’s stick with the
Bernie Parent and Ron Hextall types, eh?
/n + **Save your money for other positions.** Spending millions on goalies
doesn’t always translate into success. Think the last two Blackhawk goalies
– Antti Niemi and Corey Crawford -- will wind up in the Hall of Fame?
Boston’s Tim Thomas? Cups have been won by just-above-average guys
like J.S. Giguere, Cam Ward and Marc-Andre Fleury. No need to offer up
nine-year, $51-million contracts when hardly anyone else around the NHL is
even interested.
That pretty much sums up what went wrong with the decision to go with the
Mad Russian. Question is, will the Flyers resist the temptation to go after
another expensive trinket like a Roberto Luongo (depending on his
availability) at a cap hit of $5.3 million or maybe go with Steve Mason as a
starter and grab a veteran such as Jose Theodore as a backup?
The latter option would appear to make more sense.
Why tie up six or seven million in goalies when that money can be spent to
bring in some better position players?
Olympics-bound: NHL commissioner Gary Bettman is expected to meet
with Olympics officials on Monday to hammer out the final details on an
agreement for the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia.
There had been some speculation that NHL owners might balk at
competing in the Olympics, ending a run of participation which began at
Nagano, Japan in 1998.
Since that first one, the NHL’s presence has made for some exciting hockey
at Salt Lake City, Torino and Vancouver. Backing out this year would have
been disappointing to say the least, especially after that exciting U.S.Canada gold medal game in 2010.
The United States has already jumped the gun a bit. On Friday, the
management team of general manager David Poile (Nashville), associate
GM Ray Shero (Pittsburgh) and player personnel director Brian Burke
(Anaheim) announced Pittsburgh Penguin coach Dan Bylsma to coach the
Americans.
Also reportedly in consideration were Vancouver’s John Tortorella and the
Flyers’ Peter Laviolette, who coached the U.S. team at Torino in 2006.
Bylsma is a good choice. He’s won a Stanley Cup, he’s managed some
strong egos in Pittsburgh (Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin to name a few)
and he deserves a chance.
Mike Knuble worked out with Bylsma (they both come from Michigan) when
Bylsma was still playing in the early 2000s and grew to respect his work
ethic.
That managing egos thing should come in handy, says Knuble, who could
be parting ways with the Flyers shortly.
“When you get those teams together in the Olympics, there are a ton of
them. You get 20 different egos going,’’ Knuble told the Canadian Press.
683057
Philadelphia Flyers
Flyers draft: Will Flyers sit at No. 11, or move up?
Posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 4:17 pm | Updated: 9:58 pm, Sat Jun 29,
2013.
By Wayne Fish Staff Writer
This might be hockey’s ultimate version of Catch-22:
The Flyers, who head into Sunday’s NHL Entry Draft (3 p.m. on NBCSN)at
the Prudential Center slotted at No. 11, would love to move up and get a
shot at a bona fide defenseman like Darnell Nurse, who’s been rated by
some experts as high as No. 5.
But to do that, it would take more than draft picks. Roster players,
specifically young roster players, would have to be included in the deal and
general manager Paul Holmgren appears loathe to do that.
Asked the other day if youngsters like Sean Couturier and Brayden Schenn
still have “untouchable’’ attached to their names, Holmgren’s response was
a simple “yeah.’’
That doesn’t mean Holmgren wouldn’t turn around and try something big,
like he did two years when he shocked the hockey world by trading Jeff
Carter to Columbus (prior to draft day) for the No. 8 pick plus Jake Voracek
to secure Couturier.
Nurse, the nephew of former Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan
McNabb, is said to have a lot of raw ability. How soon he makes it to the
NHL remains to be seen.
But the Flyers realize their defense has some age on it, plus a growing list
of nagging injuries. By the end of last season, they were without Braydon
Coburn, Andrej Meszaros and Nick Grossmann.
Holmgren has watched Nurse play and came away with a good scouting
report.
“I’ve seen Darnell play a few times and he’s a hard-nosed kid,’’ Holmgren
said. “He’s still probably like 6-foot-4 and I’d venture to guess he weighs like
210 pounds.
“When you watch him play – he’s still a lot of elbows and knees, but he’s a
rugged hard-nosed player that can fight pretty good with a puck and he
continues to get better. But I have no idea if he’ll be there at our pick.’’
On the other hand, Holmgren could just sit still and hope that a talented kid
like defenseman Risto Ristolainen falls in his lap at No. 11. After all, this is
said to be perhaps the deepest draft since 2003, when the Flyers took both
Carter and Mike Richards.
“Well it’s certainly one of the better ones probably in the last couple of years
in terms of overall depth,’’ Holmgren said. “Compared to ‘03, it would be
difficult now because you look back at those players and there were a lot of
impact players from that draft. So, that’s probably for future debate.’’
That said, Holmgren knows his chances of landing a quality player are
better at, say, No. 5 than No. 11.
“We probably have to be prepared to do anything if the right thing comes
up,’’ he said. “I think every day there’s more and more talk from around the
league. I know I’ve talked to more guys in the last few days, so I know
there’s certainly potential for movement of picks. Up, down, I think some
teams are looking to trade their picks for the right player.
“I like where we’re at. I think we’re going to get a good player at 11. I mean
if you can move higher, then you know, to get into the guys you really like,
that you think are probably franchise players, you probably got to get up in
the top four.”
Holmgren believes there will be a lot of movement because of the
compliance buyouts. The Flyers have already parted ways with Danny
Briere and Ilya Bryzgalov. Tampa Bay said good-bye to Vinny Lecavalier.
“I think there’s going to be lots of funny stuff happening in the next 10
days,’’ Holmgren said on Wednesday, “leading up to July 5.
“There’s potential for lots of things to happen because of the buyout,
potential buyouts which might become another point. It’s a very competitive
league and we’re all trying to do what the Blackhawks just did.’’
Burlington County Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
683058
Philadelphia Flyers
Flyers top picks last 10 years
Posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 4:12 pm | Updated: 8:07 pm, Sat Jun 29,
2013.
Wayne Fish
How the Flyers' last top draft picks have fared (note: not all were in first
round):
2003: Jeff Carter (11th overall). Had several big years in Philadelphia, then
was traded, later wound up in Los Angeles and won a Stanley Cup last
year.
2004: Rob Bellamy (94th overall). Flyers had no picks in first two rounds.
Made it as high as the Phantoms for three years. Now with Elmira Jackals
in ECHL.
2005: Steve Downie (29th overall). Came with a lot of baggage. A tough kid
but a little out of control. Has bounced around, currently playing for
Colorado Avalanche.
2006: Claude Giroux (22nd overall). Ranks with Bill Barber, Peter Forsberg
and Brian Propp on the franchise's best first-pick-of-the-draft selection list.
2007: James van Riemsdyk (2nd overall). Expectations were just too high,
plus he was haunted by No. 1 Patrick Kane's success. Now playing well in
Toronto after trade for Luke Schenn.
2008: Luca Sbisa (19th overall). Too bad the Flyers couldn't hang onto this
talented kid but someone had to go in the Chris Pronger trade. Now a
regular with Anaheim.
2009: Adam Morrison (81st overall). Flyers never signed him and now he's
developing in the Boston Bruin program.
2010: Michael Chaput (89th overall). There were high hopes for this kid but
then the goalie was shipped to the Columbus Blue Jackets (sound
familiar?)
2011: Sean Couturier (8th overall). Hardly a day goes by that Paul
Holmgren's phone doesn't ring with other GMs inquiring about the kid's
status. As for ability, just ask Evgeni Malkin after the 2012 playoffs.
2012: Scott Laughton (20th overall). Started last year with the Flyers, then
went back to junior. Holmgren believes he has a chance to challenge for a
full-time job this year.
--Wayne Fish
Burlington County Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
683059
Philadelphia Flyers
NHL Draft: Flyers' Paul Holmgren and Co. already negotiating
Sunday, June 30, 2013
By ROB PARENT
NEWARK, N.J. — There is always more excitement inside the building than
out when it comes to the NHL Draft, and that’s especially true this year
since it’s being held in Newark, N.J.
Much of the excitement Saturday night, however, was coming from across
the river in Midtown Manhattan, where many NHL execs were gathered to
discuss player movement in one way or another.
Reportedly, that included the Flyers. Despite plans to stay home until today,
general manager Paul Holmgren, chief exec Peter Luukko and company
were said to be heading to New York to join the bidding for Vincent
Lecavalier, the longtime Tampa Bay Lightning star center that is now a
pending unrestricted free agent via a compliance buyout. The Flyers would
be one of several teams or more who would possibly offer up bidding
packages to Lecavalier’s representatives.
Meanwhile, the Flyers have reportedly floated Braydon Coburn’s name as
potential trade bait as they continue to work on freeing up salary cap space
for a free-agency season that Holmgren says will be wide open.
“I think there’s going to be lots of funny stuff happening in the next 10 days
or 9 days, leading up to July 5,” he said Wednesday. “It’s a very competitive
league and we’re all trying to do what the Blackhawks just did.”
That would be win a Stanley Cup, not buy one.
Meanwhile, a kid named Seth Jones will have that same Cup dream
dancing in his head at Prudential Center today for a draft that won’t start
until 3 o’clock in the afternoon — Happy Hour in Newark.
According to Joe Sakic, now dressing himself up as the executive star in
charge of the Colorado Avalanche, he’d be perfectly happy drafting Nathan
MacKinnon, projected as a dominant center who indeed dominated the
Quebec junior ranks playoffs this spring. The only caveat to that is that
there are still a lot of people who think Sakic is blowing smoke when it
comes to MacKinnon, and that Sakic’s little buddy Jones will be Colorado’s
selection.
Why?
Because Seth Jones is the 18-year-old son of former NBA player Ronald
“Popeye” Jones, who while a member of the Denver Nuggets made contact
with Sakic. So eventually did his three sons, Justin, Seth and Caleb make
real contact with the game of hockey after sitting rinkside to watch Sakic,
new Avalanche coach Patrick Roy and the rest of the Avs win the Cup in
2001.
“That was kind of the moment I can remember I wanted to be a hockey
player, and eventually raise the Cup one day,” Seth Jones said at a
prospects luncheon Friday afternoon in nearby Weehawken.
So now shouldn’t it be expected that Sakic make Jones’ dreams come true
... especially when Jones happens to be the top-rated player in the draft
according to many a hockey draft geek?
“No, not at all,” Jones said. “No. 1 is special, but at the same time, there are
a lot of great players who haven’t been No. 1 and they went on to have
great careers.”
Jones has drawn comparisons to premier physical defenders with an
offensive touch ... a guy like Chris Pronger, for example.
“It’s pretty cool to be put in that category,” Jones said. “I’m at a loss for
words for anybody to say that.”
If Jones, who cut his teeth playing for two years in the U.S. National Team
Developmental Program, isn’t taken by the Avalanche, then the draft will
turn instantly intriguing for the Flyers.
For as vacant as their organization is when it comes to defensive prospects,
they’d love to get Jones or another defender much like him, Darnell Nurse.
It’s just that selecting at No. 11, it would be awfully difficult to move up far
enough to get those guys.
“He’s a big guy, obviously,” Holmgren said of the 6-foot-4, 205-pound
Jones. “He has a lot of range in his game. He’s a great skater. He’s good
with the puck. I wouldn’t call him physically dominating in terms of hitting,
but he dominates with his stick and his hockey sense.”
Jones might have 10 or 15 pounds on him, but Nurse is every bit 6-4, too,
and is working to add bulk to a presence, which already can intimidate.
“As a player I’d like to fashion my game after Shea Weber,” Nurse said. “He
has a lot of impact, not only in the defensive zone but in the offensive zone,
and he just keeps it simple.”
This is not a Draft Day that would seem to go off as simple as it should.
Those so-called “amnesty buyouts” and changing budgets are conspiring to
produce a lot of trade talk, and positioning for the start of the free agency
period July 5. The Flyers, having already dispatched Danny Briere and Ilya
Bryzgalov and their combined annual cap hits of nearly $12.2 million via
compliance buyouts, could fall into that. With the amnesty buyouts, coupled
with the four-year, $21 million contract Holmgren made official with
defensive free agent Mark Streit this weekend, the Flyers were $4.2 million
below the anticipated $64.3 million cap.
Perhaps they’re trying to clear Coburn’s $4.5 million lot in order to try to free
up enough space to bid for Lecavalier or make some other grand move.
And maybe not.
If they don’t make a trading move that influences their current selection
spot, they could be looking at a nice consolation draft prize on defense.
Perhaps they could get Ryan Pulock and his 100 mph shot, or ready-now
physical defender Rasmus Ristolainen or even hulking Russian defender
Nikita Zadorov.
“I think that you have to have an open mind,” Holmgren said. “Eleven is a
good spot. I think we’re going to get a good player, but if we can move up
the food chain and get what we agree is a better prospect, you’ve got to
look at it if it makes sense.”
Delaware County Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
683060
Philadelphia Flyers
Here's who might be available to the Flyers if they keep their draft pick
Sunday, June 30, 2013
By ROB PARENT
If the Flyers don’t move up in the draft, there are a few very intriguing
prospects that could be had at No. 11:
â–  Valeri Nichushkin
18, left wing, 6-4, 196
A rare Russian forward in that he not only uses his size, he seems to enjoy
it. Nichushkin is thought to be able to develop into the type of skilled power
forward who likes to run over people, and people in the NHL will like to see
that.
That said, there are some doubts about the work ethic he put into the
combine, meaning that it’s possible he might drop from an anticipated top10 spot.
â–  Rasmus Ristolainen
18, defense, 6-4, 207
A Finnish defender who is almost a finished product. Played two years
against men in the Finnish ranks, showing a proclivity for being physical.
Needs to develop a bit more offensively, but has impressive skating,
shooting and passing skills and seems just right for a defense-poor
organization like Philadelphia’s.
â–  Nikita Zadorov
18, defense, 6-5, 221
Another Russian playing in the Canadian junior ranks who got a strong
look-see by the Flyers. The boy has already made a name for himself as a
hitter, pure and simple. The Flyers tend to like kids like that.
As a bonus, he’s a willing fighter, yet puts his hands to better use than just
clenching them all the time. Could be a true find.
â–  Ryan Pulock
18, defense, 6-0, 211
Raw prospect, played hurt ... and still has a shot that once was clocked at
101 mph. Yes, 101.
That alone will put his stock on the rise in the first round. But right now, this
converted center and his awesome slapshot could possibly be available
when the Flyers’ turn comes up. He’ll need some real defensive seasoning,
but his offensive prowess could be too intriguing to pass up.
â–  Curtis Lazar
18, forward, 6-0, 190
Anywhere there’s a draft involving the Flyers, there is at least some
attention paid to the kind of player they used to solely concentrate on —
gritty Canadian wingers who play responsible games.
In the tradition of Mike Ricci, comes Curtis Lazar. He’d be a safe pick, and
probably an effective, two-way winger in the NHL within two years.
Delaware County Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
683061
Philadelphia Flyers
With so much uncertain, might as well mock the draft
Sunday, June 30, 2013
By ROB PARENT
NEWARK, N.J. — What, a mock draft for the NHL? Not even the great, allknowing Mike Mayock’s smarter and cooler brother could do something
worthwhile with that. Picking what hockey team takes whatever hockey teen
is anyone’s guess, especially this year, when an anticipated mass selloff of
high contracts via compliance buyouts might spur a flurry of trade activity
when the draft kicks off today at 3 at Prudential Center.
So from this vantage point, here’s another best guess of how that draft’s
first round will go. Call it a mock “mock draft” ...
1. Colorado Avalanche to Florida Panthers: In their first draft together as
Real Fantasy Bosses, former Colorado Avalanche stars Joe Sakic and
Patrick Roy have fun playing the management game. The guys were
honest (brutally so in the Roy’s case) players, but now they get to be
professionally dishonest because, well, that’s what the job calls for. So after
Honest Joe spent the past week talking up Nathan MacKinnon as a No. 1
overall choice, and talking down the idea of taking his friend Popeye Jones’
kid, defensive prospect Seth Jones, he does the right thing by everyone.
He trades the No. 1 overall pick to Florida, which takes MacKinnon, who at
17 is a year away at most from lighting it up as a scoring center.
2. Florida Panthers to Colorado Avalanche: This pick goes to the Avs,
which of course use it to take Seth Jones ... keeping everyone happy in
Colorado’s new extended family.
3. Tampa Bay Lightning: Having cut $10 million man Vinny Lecavalier from
the salary cap, GM Steve Yzerman does the logical thing and replaces that
spot with a 17-year-old Russian kid from Finland named Aleksander
Barkov, who projects to be a point-per-game scorer at center even if he
doesn’t know what country he should play for at the Olympics. As for the
money he’s saving, Stevie Y decides to spread it around for free agents
who might have at least some knowledge of keeping the puck out of the
Lightning net.
4. Nashville Predators: Holding on valiantly to the intimidating defensive
presence everyone else wants in Shane Weber, and at only $20,000 or so
per minute during the season, Preds GM David Poile shocks the crowd by
smiling when he takes the podium. Then he shocks everyone some more
by taking Rasmus Ristolainen ... essentially an 18-year-old Weber
wannabe.
5. Carolina Hurricanes to FLYERS: Continuing a long tradition that dates
back 20 years, ’Canes GM Jim Rutherford consults with former colleague
and lifelong friend Paul Holmgren to see if he can help him out. The result is
the ’Canes trade down to No. 11, handing the No. 5 pick to the Flyers in
exchange for the No. 11 and the rights to Sami Kapanen and Keith
Primeau. The NHL quickly voids the deal, so Rutherford takes Braydon
Coburn instead. Holmgren also agrees to send Carolina a late-round pick
that the Flyers don’t want to use because they want to leave the draft early,
then throws in a box of cigars for Jimmy.
With that, Bob Clarke steps up to announce the Flyers’ pick, but he forgets
the kid’s name. So Holmgren takes the mic in front of red-faced model of
impatience Gary Bettman and announces Darnell Nurse is the Flyers’ new
D-man.
A piercing scream goes up from the crowd at Prudential Center, and the
Philadelphia media quickly hone in on the source of the noise. It’s Donovan
McNabb, better known as Darnell Nurse’s uncle, who is waving a white
towel and yelling his support for the kid. Unfortunately, Uncle Don then gets
sick at his seat.
6. Calgary Flames: Still seeking to recover from trading longtime star
Jarome Iginla and then seeing their Saddledome washed away in a flood,
the Flames throw out their draft plans and are still wondering why top CHL
prospect Jonathan Drouin is available at No. 6. They take him, and all
seems well in Rodeoland.
7. Edmonton Oilers: Having failed on several fronts to make trades in order
to free up the money for a long-term contract for Sam Gagner, Oilers GM
Craig MacTavish takes Valeri Nichushkin, who is projected as a 6-4 guy
who likes to run over people at his wing position. The Oilers need to get a
little more physical.
8. Buffalo Sabres: The Sabres, who never have a clue when it comes to
drafting, developing and actually holding onto scoring talent, try again by
getting Sean Monahan.
9New Jersey Devils: Lou Lamoriello, privy to the rumors that some
company is about to take majority ownership of the Devils, decides he
needs a name player to keep The Kingdom of Lou as his own. So he takes
Tie Domi’s kid. The attendees at Prudential Center, most of whom are given
seats as compensation for helping to park cars before the draft, go crazy
and anticipate a fight to break out right then and there. But aside from being
the same size as his pugilistic pug of a dad, Max Domi is actually a small,
skilled player. Lou figures he’ll score a lot of goals ... and if Devils fans don’t
know any better, well, so what?
10. Dallas Stars: Spending all their time trying to acquire old guys with high
salaries through trades and pending free agent signings, the Stars call out
Elias Lindholm on a whim. He is apparently is a highly rated center. Then
they get back to the phones.
11. FLYERS to Carolina Hurricanes: NOW it’s Jimmy’s turn. So he calls
Paul Holmgren to ask for suggestions, then orders up a plate of Hunter
Shinkaruk. Despite the stinky name, this forward will wind up to be the steal
of the 2013 draft. At least he will be when all the Canadian media
soothsayers tweet that he is.
12. Phoenix Coyotes: Some guy who says he represents the Coyotes is
about to announce his selection when Bettman stops him. The NHL
commish wipes his brow, shakes his head with an odd grin, then promptly
announces he’s moving the pick to Seattle, and, oh yeah, the team is going
with the pick. The now declared Seattle franchise takes a defenseman
named Samuel Morin because he’s 6-foot-6, and the people of Seattle are
used to basketball players.
With that, Bettman then goes back to the mic and declares the 2013 draft,
which began at 3 p.m., is suddenly suspended. Apparently, NBC has
decided to lock out all its union personnel after consulting with NHL officials
on how to run an entire draft in seven hours.
What a perfect way to wrap up the season that never was.
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Philadelphia Flyers
Darnell Nurse isn’t picky, just wants to play in NHL
Sunday, June 30, 2013
By ROB PARENT
WEEHAWKEN, N.J. — Darnell Nurse knew what his job was supposed to
entail Friday. Eat a buffet lunch, shake a lot of hands, and tell the media
gathered here at a posh but blazing spot along the Hudson River what their
readers and listeners wanted to hear: Sure, he’d love to play for their
favorite hockey team.
So to members of the Devils media came an outpouring of affection for
Scott Stevens. And for the Philadelphia contingent, well, of course this still
growing 18-year-old had grown up admiring former Flyers defensive star
Chris Pronger.
He talked of Pronger’s ability to dominate the defensive zone, his ability to
skate, his offensive contributions and, mostly, the snarl with which he
played.
“That’s something you’ve either got or you don’t have,” Nurse said.
“Absolutely ... I have it.”
Perhaps that’s what he’s told a series of teams interested in making him a
top-shelf selection this weekend at the NHL Draft festivities, and that’s why
Nurse was one of six elite prospects being put on display at this watery spot
outside of a Sheraton hotel Friday afternoon.
“I was just being genuine,” Nurse said of meeting with various league
scouts and management officials in recent days, “and trying to let them
know who I am.”
Two of the teams that seem to be buying into his honest optimism are the
Devils and Flyers, though neither is currently in a position of making Nurse
their top choice. The Devils are picking at No. 9, the Flyers at No. 11 when
this one-day rush of a draft commences Sunday at 3 o’clock at the
Prudential Center in Newark.
Both may be poised to make trade overtures that could land them a top-5
drafting position, where both Nurse and fellow exciting defensive prospect
Seth Jones are expected to go. The Flyers aren’t nearly as loaded with
defensive prospects in their organization as the Devils are, which perhaps
makes their interest that much more urgent. Either way, Nurse said he isn’t
picking favorites.
skills are NHL ready. He’s listed at 6-4 and 185, but says he’s perhaps 10
pounds heavier now while acknowledging he still has some growing to do.
With mom’s help, he’s getting there.
“That’s anyone’s goal that goes through this; you want to play as fast
possible,” Nurse said. “I’m 6-4 and just almost getting to 200 pounds now.
Mother Nature hasn’t really taken a toll on me yet. It’s going to take some
time.
“I’m not going to put any limitations on myself and say I can’t do it, but with
that said, I’m going to put in as much work as I can this summer to get
ready.”
And what would that involve?
“Just eating,” Nurse answered. “You work out a lot and that’s never going to
change. But my mom always has the fridge full.”
Nurse is just one defensive prospect Flyers general manager Paul
Holmgren and his staff might be targeting. He’s accompanied by Jones, still
ranked at the top of many draft boards, Finnish defender Rasmus
Ristolainen and Canadian junior Ryan Pulock as the four defensive
prospects that in many minds could make an NHL club out of a 2013
training camp.
Holmgren had good things to say about all of them, but seems to have
scouted Nurse the most.
“I’ve seen Darnell play a few times,” Holmgren said. “He’s probably going to
fill out. When you watch him play, he’s still a lot of elbows and knees, but
he’s a hard-nosed player. He can fight. He’s pretty good with the puck. And
he’ll continue to get better. But I have no idea if he’ll be there at our pick.”
In part, that might be up to Holmgren. Claude Giroux and perhaps Jake
Voracek are the team’s only untouchable assets when it comes to trade
talks, though Holmgren said he’d put Brayden Schenn and Sean Couturier
into that group, too. It could take one of those two latter young centers to
put together a package that could get the Flyers into a position for either
Jones or Nurse.
If Holmgren has determined it’s a necessity to select a defenseman in the
first round — he hasn’t done so to this point — he does have potential
fallbacks in Ristolainen or Pulock, either of whom could slip down a bit in
the first round.
Whether they’d fall as far as 11, however, seems dubious at best.
“You have a lot of scenarios that you run through in mock drafts, so you
generally have a pretty good idea,” Holmgren said. “But I guarantee you
there will be at least one player that’s taken before we pick that we didn’t
think would go there and that all of a sudden throws things into a little bit of
a change of dynamic.”
“I would like to play anywhere in the NHL,” he said. “That’s the honest truth.
I’m not going to say any specific place. It’s just always been my dream to
play there.”
Whatever the dynamic, both Nurse and Jones should impact it once this
draft, one of the deepest in years, commences Sunday afternoon.
But to do so in Philadelphia, where Uncle Donovan McNabb was both
cheered and vilified from start to finish during his long Eagles career? Nurse
is the nephew of McNabb’s wife, Roxy. He was told enough as a kid about
what it was like to play pro sports in South Philly.
“I think it’s cool to be a part of it,” Nurse said. “You see guys like Seth who
are so especially gifted and also great guys. Those are the types of
experiences you want to be around, and also to be able to meet guys like
that and take things away from them.”
“Philadelphia is not an easy place to play, but neither is Toronto,” Nurse
said. “You get in those markets where the fans really care, and no matter
how you play, good or bad, they’re going to let you know. You want to be
from a town where everyone cares about their team.”
Near his Hamilton, Ontario, home, Nurse is perhaps better known as the
son of Richard Nurse, once a wide receiver for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of
the Canadian Football League. Richard and his wife, Cathy, who played
basketball in college, steered their son away from football for what Darnell
calls “safety reasons.” Recently, he came around to their way of thinking
after a session of show and tell with his father.
“His hands are mangled, he can’t move some of his fingers and he’s got an
elbow that doesn’t move right,” Nurse recently told the Canadian Press. “I
looked at that and thought those are battle wounds.”
But that doesn’t mean an NHL career is going to keep him from being the
same way.
“I like to hit,” Nurse said Friday with a grin.
He figures he at least has a chance to make that dream career a reality as
soon as this fall. He has followed the glowing scouting reports that say his
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Philadelphia Flyers
Sources: Finding goalie still Flyers' primary focus
NEW YORK -- On the eve of Sunday’s NHL draft at Prudential Center in
Newark, N.J., the Flyers appear to be leaving no stones unturned in their
efforts to live up to their reputation as a club that makes a splash at the
league’s largest annual gathering.
Numerous sources say Flyers general manager Paul Holmgren has
discussions with more than a half-dozen teams about various draft
scenarios and player trades.
Finding another goalie remains Holmgren’s primary focus with several side
issues.
“He’s made it known he’d like a goalie with no years or one-year left where
they can get a read on that player before committing,” a source said.
Several sources say a deal for St. Louis’ Jaroslav Halak, as reported by
CSNPhilly.com on Friday, would make sense for both clubs, but the Flyers
feel Halak’s salary cap hit of $3.75 million is a bit high. A Blues-Kings
source said Halak would be "a great goalie for the Flyers right now."
The Flyers could feel differently after the draft, if they return home emptyhanded.
One source said today the Flyers had also talked to the Islanders about
Evgeni Nabokov and that the Buffalo Sabres had asked Holmgren if there
were interest in Ryan Miller, who has a year left on his deal with a very
pricey $6.25 million cap hit, even if it’s just one season.
Coburn front
For weeks now, the Flyers have floated Braydon Coburn’s name out there
to various clubs as trade bait.
TSN reported earlier the Flyers would like to strike a deal with Edmonton.
However, an Oilers source said on Saturday the Flyers’ target here is not
Edmonton’s No. 7 overall pick but rather both of the Oilers' second round
picks - No. 37 and No. 56 (from Anaheim). The Oilers want to retain their
first-round pick.
The Flyers pick 41st that round. They could conceivably have three picks in
that round if a deal went down. NHL Central Scouting says this draft is very
deep through the second round which makes it more likely some club could
strike it rich if it had multiple picks.
The Calgary Flames offered the Flyers their sixth overall pick for Matt Read,
Coburn and the Flyers 11th pick - an excessive amount to ask. GM Jay
Feaster feels he can get that from a team like the Flyers looking for an
impact player now. Sources said the Flyers rejected the offer.
Lecavalier and the Flyers
According to a report from TSN and ESPN's Pierre LeBrun, the Flyers are
"quite keen" on former Lightning captain Vincent Lecavalier and met with
him Saturday.
Tampa Bay GM Steve Yzerman announced in a statement on Thursday
that his team would buy out buy out the remainder of Lecavalier's 11-year,
$85 million deal. The total buyout comes to $32.67 million over the next 14
years.
The No. 1 overall pick of the 1998 draft, Lecavalier helped lead the
Lightning to their first Stanley Cup in 2004 and owns the team record for
games played (1, 037) and goals (383). He is second to Martin St. Louis in
total points and assists.
Nathan Horton
The Bruins realize he’s headed for free agency. Horton is going to generate
a huge amount of interest and plays a physical brand of hockey which
would be perfect for the Flyers.
Alas, Horton will command at least $6 million a year and he wants nothing
less than a five-year deal.
Given the Flyers just bought out Danny Briere, who’s cap hit was $6.5
million, Horton would not be a prudent financial investment for the Flyers
unless the club could lose more salary.
Kris Letang
Sometime next season, Penguins general manager Ray Shero may have to
trade his most mobile defenseman, who rejected an eight-year, $56 million
contract extension earlier this week.
But not just yet. Shero said on Saturday he was still hoping to get
something done and time is an ally here.
“Kris seems happy in Pittsburgh and says he wants to stay here, so we’ll
work at it,” Shero said.
“He’s worth waiting on in terms of making the right decisions and have all
the information. There’s a time to make a deal.
“To sign a player, there’s also time you realize that you can’t. That’s not
apparent to me right now.”
It goes without saying, Shero would never trade a franchise defenseman
within the division to a rival such as the Flyers.
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Philadelphia Flyers
Winning gold at Sochi 'an expectation' for USA
June 29, 2013, 2:00 pm
Tim Panaccio
NEW YORK – Shortly before USA Hockey introduced Penguins coach Dan
Bylsma as Team USA’s head coach for the Sochi Olympics, its president,
Jim DeGregorio, perfectly framed the task at hand.
“Winning the gold medal is not a miracle,” DeGregorio said, referencing the
1980 Miracle on Ice at Lake Placid. “It is an expectation.”
An expectation that is going to weigh heavily upon Bylsma, who may have
won a Stanley Cup and a Jack Adams Award, but has zero international
experience.
“I don’t have any experience,” Bylsma said, laughing. “Knowing I was going
to be the head coach, I started going down the road educating myself as
much as possible, in terms of international hockey, competition, playing on
a bigger ice surface.
“Talked to some players and coaches and continue to do that to gain as
much experience on that situation on and off the ice. Getting as much
experience as I can in the next several months and gaining some of that
knowledge.”
Help is nearby. Penguins general manager Ray Shero will serve as Team
USA GM David Poile’s associate.
The Winter Games in Socchi, Russia are 220 days away.
The Americans took the silver medal -- Canada grabbed gold -- at the
Vancouver Games in 2010.
This U.S. team is expected to have two recent Conn Smythe winners on it:
goalie Jonathan Quick and forward Patrick Kane, plus two emerging
American players -- Zach Parise and Ryan Suter.
All of which bolsters hopes that Team USA will finally win the gold after two
silvers in the previous two North American Games (Salt Lake and
Vancouver).
“It’s possible based on we have so many good players,” Poile said during
the news conference held at Marquis Marriott. “We have a pool to choose
from in 2014 that is even bigger. This is a little different challenge for us.
“Our philosophy is going to be a little different because it’s in Europe. We
have not had a lot of success in Europe, whether it be World
Championships or Olympic Teams.”
The challenges of playing in Russia are very different. Though the NHL still
has not formally said “yes” to Sochi, it’s going to happen soon.
“Obviously, our comfort level in Salt Lake City and Vancouver were
reflected in the results,” Poile said. “The ice surface and how we chose our
team. It’s different in Europe. Travel is different.
“We’re going to have to cope with lots of different situations, from sleep to
the size of rinks, and it probably can’t be the same type of team [as
Vancouver]. We haven’t had success over there and we have to change
things around.”
Poile said Flyers general manager Paul Holmgren, who serves on the
advisory board, and former Atlanta Thrashers GM Don Waddell, also on
that board, are expected to give their input on obstacles faced while playing
in Europe, since both were at the Torino Games in 2006. Former Olympians
Bill Guerin and Doug Weight will also chime in.
Bylsma said the quick turnaround from the NHL schedule break to going to
Russia and playing with little practice because of time constraints will be a
significant factor.
“The wear and tear on players stepping into international competition, then
coming back, there is an effect in planning and go in there,” he said.
“Distance, travel, time zone change, planning … sleep, limited practice
time.”
This will be Bylsma’s first chance behind the bench internationally, coaching
against Penguin centers Sidney Crosby (Team Canada) and Evgeni Malkin
(Russia).
“I’ve coached Sidney and Evgeni a long time now, four-plus years, so I am
acutely aware of their strengths as players,” Bylsma said. “… having said
that, I’m a little concerned [Crosby] knows me as a coach and knows my
strengths and weaknesses and will bring that to the Canadian team.”
Poile said the roster will be heavily laced with players who can skate well
because of the larger ice surface.
The timeline for picking the team is still in the discussion stages, although
Team USA’s Orientation Camp will be held Aug. 25-29 at Ketter Ice Plex in
Arlington, Va., where the Washington Capitals practice.
What are the odds Team USA wins the gold?
“We can’t bet in hockey,” Poile laughed. “Just being in hockey is a gamble
itself.”
Team USA braintrust
The advisory board also includes other NHLers: Dale Tallon (Florida GM),
Dean Lombardi (Los Angeles GM), Stan Bowman (Chicago GM), plus
Holmgren and Brian Burke, who will serve as player personnel director.
Both Holmgren and Burke were not present at today’s news conference
because they were not yet in New York for Sunday’s NHL draft at
Prudential Center in Newark, N.J.
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Philadelphia Flyers
him out there. Anytime you get a guy his size, who skates as well as he
does and plays a physical game, it’s fun to watch.”
Draft prospect Nurse models game after Pronger
Nurse was very politically correct when answering where he would like to
play.
June 29, 2013, 10:00 am
“I’d like to play anywhere in the NHL,” he said. “That’s the honest truth. I’m
not going to say anything about a specific place.”
Tim Panaccio
HOBOKEN, N.J. -- He smiles a lot. He seems to exhibit an air of confidence
you don’t expect to find in an 18-year-old.
Did we mention defensive prospect Darnell Nurse idolizes Chris Pronger
and says he someday hopes to match his snarl off the ice?
He feels he already has it on the ice.
Sounds like a perfect candidate for the Flyers were it not for one thing:
Nurse says the Devils and Scott Stevens remain close to his heart, even
though he grew up in Hamilton, Ont., and not North Jersey.
Nurse, from Saulte Ste. Marie, is one of several defensemen the Flyers are
interested in heading into Sunday’s NHL draft at the Prudential Center in
Newark, N.J.
He was among a short, select group of players available Friday at an NHL
draft luncheon.
Ryan Pulock and Rasmus Ristolainen -- two other prospects the Flyers like
-- were not invited to the event, even though NHL personnel originally said
they backed out.
He did mention that McNabb talked to him about being a pro athlete in a
tough town like Philadelphia.
“It’s not an easy town, but Toronto isn’t an easy town, either,” Nurse said.
“[They’re] markets where fans really care how you play, good or bad.
“They will let you know. It’s an atmosphere you want to be in -- a town
where people care about their team. It doesn’t matter to me where I go. For
me, it’s my job to get ready for whatever situation.”
The Flyers could sorely use an impact defenseman who could play right
now. Jones can play now. But Nurse? Scouts feel he needs more time.
“That just depends on what they want and what they need,” Nurse said. “I’m
not going to put limitations on myself and say I couldn’t do it. I will put in as
much work as I can this summer for however long it takes me.
“It’s anyone’s goal who goes through this. You want to play [professional]
as quick as possible. Like I said, I’m 6-4 and just getting to 200 pounds
now. Mother Nature hasn’t really taken her toll on me yet. It’s going to take
some time.”
Wherever he lands, Nurse plans on bulking up his frame. He needs to be
Pronger-size.
His plan?
“I’ve always loved the Devils, ever since I was young,” said Nurse, whose
uncle is Donovan McNabb. His father, Richard, was a wide receiver for the
CFL’s Hamilton Tiger Cats.
“Just eating,” Nurse laughed. “You work out and work out hard. That will
never change. My mom always has the fridge full. It will come. Pizza every
Friday. For breakfast, turkey bacon and omelettes, I love that.”
“The Devils were my favorite team,” he added, “especially with Scott
Stevens when they won the Cup.”
Left-field option
So you didn’t like Flyers if you liked the Devils?
“But I love Pronger!” Nurse laughed. “For me, I have favorite players and
follow them wherever they play.”
Nurse, who is still growing, has ample athletic ability, but lacks the offense
and puck skills of Seth Jones, who is the unanimous No. 1 defensemen in
the draft -- ranked No. 1 overall by NHL Central Scouting.
What Nurse does bring, however, is a raw edge to his game as a shutdown
defender, who also takes his share of penalties and likes to intimidate on
the ice like Pronger.
“You watch the game and [Pronger] has so much room just based on the
fact of how hard he is to play against,” Nurse said. “That is something I like
to take away from his game.”
What about Pronger’s snarl?
“That’s something you either got or don’t have.”
Have it?
“Absolutely,” Nurse replied without hesitation. “Obviously, he showed it
more, but I have it. But you haven’t seen it too much.”
How about Pronger’s sarcasm in interviews?
“I like it, I like it,” Nurse laughed. “That’s as far as I’m gonna go.”
Nurse led the Greyhounds with 116 penalty minutes, was second on his
club with a plus-15 rating and third in scoring among the Greyhounds’
defensive corps with 41 points in just his second season in the OHL.
Dan Marr, director of Central Scouting, compares Nurse to Nashville’s Shea
Weber.
“He’s got a little bit of a mix where he is good at the skill game, good at the
physical game, got a good shot from the point,” Marr said. “He’s a pretty
good package.”
Added Central Scouting’s Chris Edwards: “He’s the kind of guy who is not
going to make a lot of mistakes. He’s steady and solid, and you can trust
In a year when defensemen are expected to rule this draft, it wouldn’t be
unusual to see the Flyers do something totally out of left field and take a
goalie.
The Edmonton Oilers, Buffalo Sabres, Devils and Flyers all have interest in
Zach Fucale, who took Halifax to the Memorial Cup championship and has
established a reputation as a kid who simply can’t be rattled -- a strong
quality in a young goalie.
The Devils pick ninth, two spots ahead of the Flyers. The Sabres pick
eighth and the Oilers pick sixth. There’s a good chance Fucale won’t be
there when the Flyers pick at 11.
Asked about the conversations he had with the Flyers at the scouting
combine in Toronto earlier this spring, Fucale said, “no comment.”
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The definitive 2013 NHL mock draft
The Devils have stocked their organization with promising young
defensemen such as Adam Larsson, Jon Merrill, Damon Severson and
Reese Scarlett but are still thin as far as skilled forwards, so that will be a
priority in this draft. Shinkaruk isn’t big (5-10, 181), but has speed and skill
that will remind some of Zach Parise. He’ll have to work on his game away
from the puck to fit in as a Devil, though. — Tom Gulitti, Bergen Record
Jun. 30, 2013 2:43 AM |
10. Dallas Stars - C Elias Lindholm
Written by
They are in need of center depth in the organization, and while Lindholm is
seen as a wing/center, the Stars would likely put him on a development
path that would hone his play-making skills to the center position. It also
shouldn't be lost that new Stars GM Jim Nill was part of a Detroit
organization that has had a lot of success in Sweden, and probably has a
pretty good take on Lindholm's game and how he can help the Stars. —
Mike Heika, Dallas Morning News
Dave Isaac
Later today, NHL general managers will march up to the lectern at
Prudential Center in Newark and make important additions to their teams.
After months of conjecture, identifying team weaknesses and player
strengths the day has come to draft the future.
We turned to media members across the globe for their two cents on the
teams they cover. Here’s one more mock draft to add to your reading list
before the picks start officially coming in at 3 p.m.
1. Colorado Avalanche - D Seth Jones
The Avalanche's weakness is on the blueline, and Denver-raised Seth
Jones is considered the best young draft-eligible defenseman in some time.
Nathan MacKinnon might contribute more quickly, but Jones is what the
Avs need and they should be patient with a kid that can make a big
difference on and off the ice. — Mike Chambers, Denver Post
2. Florida Panthers - C Nathan MacKinnon
With Jones gone to the Avs, the Panthers look to fill a need in MacKinnon.
With the probability of losing Stephen Weiss to free agency (or, likely, his
rights being traded at the draft), Florida needs to find a quality center.
MacKinnon fills that bill very nicely and will slide in with Calder-winner
Jonathan Huberdeau almost immediately. — George Richards, Miami
Herald
3. Tampa Bay Lightning - LW Jonathon Drouin
The play-making winger has a skill set too enticing to pass up. Although a
bit undersized on a team that already has some smaller players, Drouin
looks to be the perfect eventual replacement for Martin St. Louis as a set-up
guy and compliment for top goal scorer Steven Stamkos for the next
decade. — Erik Erlendsson, Tampa Tribune
4. Nashville Predators - C Aleksander Barkov
Barkov excelled in the Finnish Elite League last season, playing against
men and some NHL players thanks to the lockout. Nashville needs a strong
offensive center in its system, and Barkov more than fits that mold with both
his skill and size. — Josh Cooper, Nashville Tennessean
5. Carolina Hurricanes - RW Valeri Nichuskin
The Hurricanes are after a player who can make the roster as a rookie and
make an immediate impact. Nichuskin, with his size and skill, could be the
answer and possibly a top-six forward. The "Russian factor" probably won't
be a factor if Nichuskin is available. — Chip Alexander, News & Observer
6. Calgary Flames - C Sean Monahan
Desperate for centermen and size, take Sean Monahan, a six-foot-two pivot
out of Ottawa of the Ontario Hockey League. A character kid with offensive
upside. — Scott Cruickshank, Calgary Herald
7. Edmonton Oilers - D Nikita Zadorov
If Edmonton can't get Monahan or Barkov I believe they will trade back, but
for the sake of a mock draft, Zadorov fills a need. — Jim Matheson,
Edmonton Journal
8. Buffalo Sabres - D Darnell Nurse
The Sabres’ draft needs changed considerably recently. Yes, they still have
a dearth of top forwards and must add scorers up front. But their defense
depth has been whittled away considerably. At one point in April, they had
five healthy defenders with NHL experience in the organization. Nurse
might be too good to pass up on. — Bill Hoppe, Olean Times Herald
9. New Jersey Devils - C Hunter Shinkaruk
11. Philadelphia Flyers - D Rasmus Ristolainen
The team says it will take the best available player, but defense is such an
“organizational weakness” as GM Paul Holmgren said in April that they
might be forced to take a blueliner and develop him. Before Flyers fans
freak out at Ristolainen’s scouting report, which says he needs some work
on defensive positioning, they’ll be happy to know he plays a physical game
and can push opponents out of his own crease. That’s something the Flyers
haven’t had in a while. Ristolainen also is an offensive force and has
experience on the power play. — Dave Isaac, Courier-Post
12. Phoenix Coyotes - RW Anthony Mantha
The Coyotes lack pure goal scorers, and they could use Mantha’s skill. A
centerman might top their wish list, but Mantha’s 50-goal performance this
past season in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League isn’t a bad
alternative. — Sarah McLellan, Arizona Republic
13. Winnipeg Jets - C Max Domi
Forget that he is the son of former Jet enforcer Tie Domi. The offspring has
the offensive skillset and hockey sense the franchise desperately needs. —
Ed Tait, Winnipeg Free Press
14. Columbus Blue Jackets - D Samuel Morin
The biggest need in Columbus is scoring punch, but that won't be solved
with No. 14 pick. If they keep this pick - a gi-normous IF - how can you pass
on 6-7, 200 pound defenseman Samuel Morin? He's way ahead of Chara at
this stage in his career. — Aaron Portzline, Columbus Dispatch
15. New York Islanders - C Bo Horvat
The Islanders are always on the lookout for smart, playmaking centers, and
the fact that Horvat plays for Dale Hunter (who coached John Tavares one
season) doesn't hurt either. — Arthur Staple, New York Newsday
16. Buffalo Sabres (from Minnesota) - C Alexander Wennberg
If the Sabres can get a defenseman early, they might take a forward,
especially a center, with the 16th pick. They haven't shied away from
choosing big European forwards in the first round recently, having picked
Joel Armia in 2011 and Mikhail Grigorenko and Zemgus Girgensons in
2012. — Bill Hoppe, Olean Times Herald
17. Ottawa Senators - LW Kerby Rychel
The Senators need a power forward that can compete. By all accounts, he
is a smart player who isn't afraid to get his nose dirty. This club can always
use character players. — Bruce Garrioch, Ottawa Sun
18. Detroit Red Wings - RW Adam Erne
The Wings' top priority with their highest pick since 1991 is to get a goodsized forward with skill. Erne can skate and is capable of playing a physical
game. — Ansar Khan, MLive Media Group
19. Columbus Blue Jackets (from New York Rangers) - C Curtis Lazar
Lazar is a competitive, hardworking forward who sets the tone every night.
Can't have enough of those guys. — Aaron Portzline, Columbus Dispatch
20. San Jose Sharks - C Frederik Gauthier
Other than last year's first round pick, Tomas Hertl, the Sharks are devoid
of top-end offensive prospects. Frederik Gauthier fits the mold of what they
are looking for - a big, two-way center that has the ability to win faceoffs. —
Kevin Kurz, CSN Bay Area
21. Toronto Maple Leafs - D Ryan Pulock
Maple Leafs general manager Dave Nonis insists he'll take the best
available player, even if it's another defenceman. Pulock fits the bill. —
Stephen Whyno, Canadian Press
22. Calgary Flames (from St. Louis) - D Josh Morrissey
Poised blue-liner from the WHL Prince Albert Riaders. Smart and a future
power-play quarterback in the NHL. — Scott Cruickshank, Calgary Herald
* Due to time constraints, we weren’t able to get through the completion of
the first round. Instead, I made the remainder of the picks.
23. Washington Capitals - D Shea Theodore
Over the years, Mike Green has become a leader for the Capitals and
Theodore looks like he’s cut from a similar mold. He was eighth among
defensemen in the WHL in scoring this year and played a big role in Team
Canada’s World Junior Championship team. Like Green, Theodore is a
power play quarterback. The Caps would love to have a player like this in
their system.
24. Vancouver Canucks - RW Zach Nastasiuk
The Sedin twins are 32 and won’t last forever. Vancouver will need scoring
in the years to come and Nastasiuk can help fill that need. He had 20 goals
and 20 assists in 62 regular-season games for the OHL’s Owen Sound
Attack. He can find the front of the net and provides a good two-way game.
25. Montreal Canadiens - D Mirco Mueller
In Montreal, there are six defensemen older than 25 on the roster. It’s time
to replenish the blueline. Mueller is touted as a puck-moving defenseman
who is good in his own end as well. He is said to be good on the penalty kill
and in shot blocking.
26. Anaheim Ducks - G Zachary Fucale
With Viktor Fasth only signed through 2015 and Jonas Hiller an unrestricted
free agent after next season, the Ducks need a future goalie and Fucale is
the cream of the crop between the pipes in this year’s draft. Scouts say he
has great positioning and is hard to get rattled.
27. Columbus Blue Jackets (from Los Angeles) - LW Valentin Zykov
The leading scorer among rookies in the QMJHL this season, Zykov could
help Columbus, a team that was among the league worst in scoring last
season.
28. Calgary Flames (from Pittsburgh) - D Robert Hagg
In a system that has a crop of mediocre defensemen, Hagg can provide a
little help everywhere. He’s good on the power play. He can play physical
and hold his own in front of his goalie.
29. Dallas Stars (From Boston) - RW Ryan Hartman
One thing the Stars could use is a little help up front. Even though he
comes in a small frame at 5-foot-11 and 190 pounds, Hartman showed in
the World Junior Championship that he can find the back of the net and
pack a punch in the physicality department.
30. Chicago Blackhawks - D Ian McCoshen
Last time the Blackhawks won the Cup, they lost a few defensemen.
McCoshen is the kind of player Chicago will want to have in its system in
case that happens again. He has a solid shot from the blueline, but needs
to find a better way to use his 6-foot-3, 207-pound frame.
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683067
Philadelphia Flyers
NHL draft has come a long way
Jun. 29, 2013 11:35 PM |
Written by
Randy Miller
NEWARK — Seth Jones and other top prospects in today’s NHL Entry Draft
took in the New York City skyline Saturday from atop the Empire State
Building.
Today, they’ll wait for their name to be called in front of a packed house at
Prudential Center and television audiences across the United States,
Canada and Europe, then after getting drafted they’ll head to a big stage to
throw on their new team’s jersey for the first time.
Boy, have times changed.
Flyers general manager Paul Holmgren shared just how much the other day
when he was asked if he had any special memories from when the Flyers
took him in the sixth round of the 1975 draft.
“I had no idea I got drafted,” Holmgren said. “I think somebody called me a
couple of weeks later.”
Weeks?
“Yeah,” he said. “From what I remember about it, I’d already signed in the
WHA and then somebody from the Flyers called me.”
Those were the days before drafts were televised ... before hardcore fans
scoured internet sites for the NHL’s Central Scouting and International
Scouting Service latest player rankings ... before the invention of the draft
lottery ... before NHL.com, TSN’s Bob McKenzie and bunch of others
(including the Courier-Post’s Dave Isaac) conducted mock drafts, some of
them adding new ones every few weeks leading up to what has become a
big, big day for hockey.
The draft started getting big in 1980 when it became a public event for the
first time by being held in front of fans at the old Montreal Forum, and by
1985 it was moving to different cities. Next year, it’ll come to Philadelphia
for the first time.
In recent years, the draft has been done over a weekend — the first round
on Day 1, the rest on Day 2 — but this year’s will play out from start to finish
today due to the NHL lockout shortening the offseason, which began late
last Tuesday night with the Chicago Blackhawks winning the Stanley Cup.
Colorado will start things off at 3 p.m. drafting first overall, then all 30 teams
will keep picking for 7-8 hours.
Saturday, Flyers management and several other teams reportedly met with
Vincent Lecavalier, an unrestricted free agent as of last Thursday because
the Tampa Bay Lightning bought out the four-time All-Star center's contract.
This development is interesting because Holmgren previously had said
Flyers personnel wouldn't show up for the draft until Sunday and that the
organization would not be in on Lecavalier, a 33-year-old who had 10 goals
and 32 points in 39 games last season.
Meantime, reports circulated that the Flyers were in talks with the
Edmonton Oilers about trading a second-round draft pick for defenseman
Braydon Coburn, who has a three years remaining on a contract that
carries a $4.5 million cap hit.
Buyouts have added a new wrinkle into what teams may or may not do this
weekend because the poll of unrestricted free agents is growing with the
signing period beginning next Friday. The Flyers added to that list in the last
two weeks by buying out center Danny Briere and Ilya Bryzgalov, moves
that have them $4.18 million under next season's $64.3 million cap.
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683068
Phoenix Coyotes
Even with a new lease deal, there will be no closure for Phoenix Coyotes
fans with this mess
By Dan Bickley, columnist azcentral sports Sat Jun 29, 2013 10:38 PM
check to the growth of youth hockey. They declined. In Arizona, Doan says
the problem is even worse, where the year-to-year existence of this
franchise means little manpower or money available for the community,
grass-roots kind of stuff.
Alas, for the past four years, we’ve all been saddled with the sorry business
of the Coyotes, and not the idea of hockey.
It’s a sport that teaches humility and scorns vanity. In the playoffs, you can
age 17 years in 17 seconds, just like they did in Boston. It’s a sport where
you can fight like men, but only if you shake hands when you’re done.
The Coyotes are a business, and a bad one at that.
There will probably be no such gestures from the losing side on Tuesday.
But hockey is an idea. This is why it matters to me.
Arizona Republic LOADED: 06.30.2013
It’s the last bastion of nobility in sports. The Stanley Cup is treated like the
Holy Grail. It’s a profession where the sincerity is surpassed only by the
sacrifice.
It’s a place where players sprawl on sheets of ice to block shots with their
bodies. After all, if there is no cause, then what shall we die for?
On Tuesday, the Glendale City Council likely will determine the fate of our
hockey team. Will the Coyotes relocate to Seattle, demoting the Valley back
to the minor leagues? Or will four votes align when the witching hour
arrives?
Either way, there will be no closure. That’s just a myth.
If a lease agreement is consummated with the Renaissance Sports and
Entertainment group, there will be an out clause after five years. And it’s not
like there’s a line of people outside the door yearning to buy tickets, waiting
for the moment this team secures some kind of short-term future in
Glendale.
By all accounts, the Coyotes will remain a small-budget team. They might
lose their best goaltender, Mike Smith, to free agency. They will win games
with Dave Tippett’s system and Don Maloney’s keen eye for bargains.
We’ve seen the recipe, and the result: hard-working, well-prepared,
dangerous teams that constantly are skating on the fringe of the playoffs.
But they will not become a juggernaut anytime soon. They will not begin
filling up Jobing.com Arena, especially with surcharges on ticket and
parking fees in the future.
They will need another playoff run to rekindle the lost momentum, and that
might take some time.
Will it happen within five years? If not, we could be facing relocation threats
all over again. Only this time, the decision will be out of our hands.
RSE’s Anthony LeBlanc has sworn his allegiance to the Valley on more
than one occasion. But there are important people very close to the
situation who aren’t totally convinced. That’s frightening.
Conversely, if the Coyotes leave, it doesn’t mean forever. It will only sound
like it.
There will be a probation period, for sure, a time for the NHL to frown down
upon us like we’re some kind of failed partner. That will be the penalty for
embarrassing the league and the commissioner.
But we’re still a destination city, a large market projected to grow even
bigger in the very near future. We’re filled with television viewers and winter
visitors clamoring for live hockey. Somewhere down the line, if someone
figures out how to build an arena in Scottsdale, the NHL will undoubtedly
return.
Just not on Gary Bettman’s watch.
Sadly, the Coyotes have been a mess for most of their existence:
obstructed views in Phoenix, the regrettable failure of Steve Ellman and the
City of Scottsdale to make Los Arcos a reality; the Wayne Gretzky era,
when the NHL’s most iconic player sucked millions of dollars from the
franchise.
And truth is, this team began to die the moment it moved to Glendale.
Can it be resuscitated? Can the math and location ever work? Yes, but
probably not within five years. And whether we’re talking about moving vans
or champagne corks, a terrible price has been paid along the way.
During the recent collective-bargaining sessions, Coyotes captain Shane
Doan urged NHL owners to pledge 10 percent of every revenue-sharing
683069
Phoenix Coyotes
Phoenix Coyotes will target forwards in Sunday’s NHL draft
By Sarah McLellan azcentral sports Sat Jun 29, 2013 9:49 PM
The NHL draft is designed to build for the future, but it’s also become a
playground for making changes to existing rosters.
With all 30 general managers assembled in one room, a shrinking salary
cap and, therefore, rising value in draft picks, trade activity could dominate
this year’s festivities in New Jersey, which start Sunday at noon.
Because of the lockout, the draft has been reduced to one day instead of
the usual two.
“I think there will be a fair amount of movement,” Coyotes General Manager
Don Maloney said. “Everybody’s looking to try and change their rosters up.
We have a short period of time to do it, and history shows this is the time
now before free agency starts, that’s when the deals are made. So I do
think there’s going to be a lot of trades.”
On Day 1 of the 2012 draft, the Coyotes reacquired defenseman Zbynek
Michalek, almost overshadowing their first-round pick of Scottsdale native
Henrik Samuelsson. They could make another trade Sunday as Maloney
has been engaged in talks for swapping a defenseman for a forward.
The Coyotes could also choose to move their 12th overall selection, their
first of seven picks. They will also select 42nd, 62nd, 73rd, 133rd, 163rd
and 193rd.
“There’s a better chance of us moving down and taking a later pick than
going the other way,” Maloney said. “We can’t get high enough to make it
worth the asset cost. I don’t see it.”
The Coyotes won’t trade that pick for a current roster player because they
do want a relatively high prospect from what’s being characterized as an
extremely deep draft.
“We’re looking 22 players deep thinking, ‘We like a player sitting on our
draft board at 20, 21. You know what? If the right deal came along, we
could drop,’ ” Maloney said. “That would be fine. We’d deal with it.”
Defenseman Seth Jones had been labeled the consensus top pick, but in
the weeks leading up to the draft, the Colorado Avalanche have made it
well-known they are not interested in taking Jones with the first pick.
That could be a bluff, but if it’s not, the honor will likely go to center Nathan
MacKinnon. He and Jones have been ranked No. 1 by different scouting
agencies.
Left wing Jonathan Drouin and center Aleksander Barkov are considered
the next-best prospects.
After those four, though, it’s anybody’s guess what the pecking order will
be. The Coyotes are targeting skilled forwards.
If right wing Anthony Mantha is still available at No. 12, he’d be a solid grab.
Mantha was the only player in this draft class to score 50 goals this past
season. He’s currently in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, a
training ground that’s bred other noteworthy players in the organization
(defensemen Keith Yandle and Brandon Gormley).
Centers are arguably the toughest to acquire via trade or free agency, so it
might be wise to stock up at this draft.
Frederik Gauthier plays a 200-foot game that would please coach Dave
Tippett. Max Domi has the offensive instincts to be a game changer. Bo
Horvat is physical and a faceoff specialist. All are ranked in the top 20 by
NHL Central Scouting and projected to be among the top 15 selections.
But if a star defenseman falls out of the top 11, such as Darnell Nurse or
perhaps Rasmus Ristolainen, the Coyotes will gladly scoop him up.
“We’re not going to pass up what we would think is a top-four defenseman
for a third-line forward, even though we need forwards,” Maloney said.
Either way, the moves the Coyotes make at the draft could dictate the
direction for the rest of the off-season. They’ll have another opportunity for
an upgrade Friday when free agency opens.
“It’ll be interesting to see what changes we’ll be able to do,” Maloney said.
“Time will tell.”
Arizona Republic LOADED: 06.30.2013
683070
Pittsburgh Penguins
2 years after being drafted, local hockey players making name for
themselves
By Josh Yohe
Updated 6 hours ago
That historical weekend in Minnesota during which four Pittsburghers were
selected among the first 64 players picked in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft was
just the beginning.
Two years later, all are ahead of schedule.
“It's pretty incredible that we all went that high and that things have turned
out the way they have,” Chicago Blackhawks left wing Brandon Saad said.
They could be on their way to stardom.
Saad currently is the headliner. He will be fitted for a Stanley Cup ring this
summer. He finished third in Calder Trophy voting for Rookie of the Year
and Saturday joined Florida's Jonathan Huberdeau and Montreal's Brendan
Gallagher as forwards on the NHL's all-rookie team.
Saad finished with 10 goals and 27 points in his rookie campaign and has
become a fixture on a team that figures to contend for many more Stanley
Cups.
“That was so awesome for him,” goaltender John Gibson said.
He isn't the only of the Pittsburgh Four to appear to be on the verge of big
things.
Gibson likely will begin working his way through the Anaheim system this
fall. In the past six months, he twice has starred on the international stage
for Team USA: He was the backbone of the World Junior championship
claimed in January, and he performed admirably against numerous NHL
stars while claiming a bronze medal in May's World Championships.
“You always want to get to the NHL as fast as you can, but I try not to think
about it that way,” Gibson said. “You just try to take it day by day. And,
yeah, playing in the Worlds, especially beating Russia, was big. Getting to
play against guys like (Alex) Ovechkin was great for me.”
Center Vince Trocheck also could find himself in the NHL during the 201314 season. The Florida Panthers opted to leave Trocheck in the Ontario
Hockey League this past season, and he responded by claiming the scoring
title and league MVP.
The Panthers have made it clear that they are fond of the third-round
selection and believe there will be a place for him in the NHL.
“I'm happy with the year I had,” Trocheck said. “I'm really excited about the
future.”
J.T. Miller, the first of the four to be drafted, made his debut with the
Rangers and could be on his way to a strong career. He scored two goals in
his second NHL game and showed flashes of someone who could become
notable for his goal scoring and physical play.
A few months before the Rangers dismissed John Tortorella, the fiery
coach was asked about Miller by reporters at Consol Energy Center.
Tortorella isn't one to freely dish compliments, but he praised Miller.
“He's an interesting one,” Tortorella said. “He's got a chance to be really
good.”
Tortorella could have been speaking about any of the four who altered
Pittsburgh youth hockey.
All could be in the NHL as soon as next season.
“We're all friends, and we all keep in touch,” Gibson said. “We're all really
proud to have come from Pittsburgh and proud of what we've done so far.”
Gibson hopes this is only the beginning, not only for his fellow members of
the 2011 draft but also for youth hockey in Western Pennsylvania.
“Hopefully,” he said, “the kids coming behind us keep this going.”
Tribune Review LOADED: 06.30.2013
683071
Pittsburgh Penguins
Penguins’ Shero gives Letang talks one more shot
Crosby and Malkin hold full no-movement clauses, meaning the Penguins
could not trade them without their approval.
Limited-movement clauses are common for players who agree to long-term
deals. Goalie Marc-Andre Fleury and defensemen Brooks Orpik and Paul
Martin have those.
Updated 5 hours ago
Fleury, once the clear No. 3 nucleus player behind Crosby and Malkin, did
not receive a full no-movement clause when signing a seven-year contract
after his career-best postseason in 2008.
NEWARK, N.J. — Ray Shero is waiting on Kris Letang.
Letang, coming off his career-best season, wants a full no-movement
clause, even though he, like Crosby and Malkin, failed to produce a point as
the Penguins were swept from the Eastern Conference final.
By Rob Rossi
He may not wait much longer.
A scheduled face-to-face meeting for Saturday afternoon between Shero
and Kent Hughes, Letang's agent, was viewed by both parties as the last
good chance to bridge a financial gap on a possible long-term contract.
Letang, a defenseman set to enter the final year of his contract, will be
prime trade bait at the NHL Entry Draft on Sunday.
“He's worth waiting on in terms of making the right decisions, knowing all
the information,” Shero said Saturday before meeting with Hughes. “But
there's a time to make a deal, to sign a player, or maybe it's apparent that
you can't, or maybe it's better to wait or do something else.”
Shero said before meeting with Hughes that he already had received calls
about Letang's availability. Montreal, San Jose and Philadelphia are
interested, and the Penguins would prefer to deal with a club that can return
a top prospect and at least two roster players who they would control for
multiple seasons.
The Penguins also would not mind a draft pick as part of a package. They
do not select until the third round because of in-season trades for winger
Jarome Iginla and defenseman Douglas Murray.
Shero reiterated that he would like to keep Letang and acknowledged that
Letang is due a big raise on his $3.5 million salary. Letang, 26, led the NHL
in points-per-game by a defenseman this past season and was a Norris
Trophy (top defenseman) nominee for the first time.
Negotiations between Shero and Hughes have not gone swimmingly, and
Letang has expressed frustration as this past week advanced without
significant movement on a deal.
Shero stressed he wanted emotion to play no factor. “That's not beneficial
to anybody,” he said.
The Penguins remain uncomfortable with a counterproposal to their
willingness to pay Letang about $7 million annually on a maximum-limit
eight-year contract. Shero made that offer Wednesday. Hughes countered
Thursday with a proposed $7.75 million annual salary on an eight-year deal,
but Shero immediately dismissed the deal.
The Penguins have not shied from spending to the salary cap since
ownership authorized doing so in 2008.
At no point during their six-year run as a cap club have the Penguins
entered a season with three players each counting at least $7 million
against the cap. That would happen after next season if Letang is re-signed
for a $7 million-or-more annual hit.
Captain Sidney Crosby has a salary cap hit of $8.7 million. Center Evgeni
Malkin will count $9.5 million against the cap when his new contract begins
after next season.
“It's a challenge,” Shero said. “I mean, OK, an extra $250,000 here, another
$500,000 here, $100,000 more, it all adds up.
“I can't predict where the cap will be in a year or two, but I'd like to try and
keep these players together. I think they're special players, but knowing the
fact that you have to have a well-balanced team, it's a lot of money.”
A return to record revenues, at least $3.3 billion, was projected recently by
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman. That could push the cap, set next
season for $64.3 million, near the pre-lockout range of $70 million for the
first year that Crosby, Malkin and Letang would combine to absorb no less
than $25.2 million of the Penguins' allotted space.
Even if the math works — Hughes contends that a projected rising cap in
what would be Letang's free-agent summer (2014) means bids for his client
would start at $8 million annually — Shero faces another challenge.
“You do have to be careful with that because it becomes (situations) where
maybe the team doesn't do as well as you hoped or maybe the player is not
happy or maybe the cap doesn't go up,” Shero said. “You have to be careful
in how you're doing full no-movement clauses.
“Crosby and Malkin are something, and Kris Letang is a real special player.”
Special players do get traded.
Jordan Staal did a year ago early in Round 1 of the Entry Draft.
Tribune Review LOADED: 06.30.2013
683072
Pittsburgh Penguins
Penguins notebook: Waiting game will play out early in draft
By Rob Rossi
Updated 6 hours ago
NEWARK, N.J. — The Penguins face a long Sunday.
They do not pick until Round 3 of the NHL Entry Draft, which will play out
over the course of one day at Prudential Center.
General manger Ray Shero would like to change that.
“I think it will be hard to get into the first round this year,” Shero said, citing
clubs' lack of willingness to move first-round picks in an entry draft
perceived as deep.
“But the second round, there's a chance we could get a second-round pick
somewhere. If we could do that, I'd like to.”
Trades during the season for winger Jarome Iginla and defenseman
Douglas Murray cost Ray Shero his first- and second-round picks.
Also, Shero said, trading a first-round pick for Iginla was less distressing
because of a move he made one year ago. Shero's trade of center Jordan
Staal at the entry draft last summer netted him an extra first-round pick,
which they used to draft defenseman Derrick Pouliot.
Tenders coming
The deadline to extend qualifying offers to restricted free agents is
Tuesday. Shero said the Penguins likely will beat it, mostly because it is
easiest to file the paperwork at the entry draft.
Wingers Tyler Kennedy and Harry Zolnierczyk, forward Dustin Jeffrey and
defenseman Robert Bortuzzo will be tendered offers, but Shero said he is
hopeful of also reaching multiyear deals with some of those players.
Talks update
The Penguins and winger Pascal Dupuis are far apart on a contract that
would prevent him from becoming a free agent Friday.
Shero and Allan Walsh, Dupuis' agent, met Friday. However, the Penguins
believe Dupuis will test the open market — that is why they signed winger
Chris Kunitz to a three-year contract Thursday.
They continue to negotiate with winger Craig Adams.
Tribune Review LOADED: 06.30.2013
683073
Pittsburgh Penguins
Team USA setup comforts Penguins coach Bylsma
“It's interesting because I've wanted to win a gold medal longer than I've
wanted to win the Stanley Cup,” Bylsma said.
“Representing your country at the Olympics is the ultimate in sports.”
Tribune Review LOADED: 06.30.2013
By Rob Rossi
NEW YORK — Ray Shero could be the Kevin Bacon of USA Hockey's
Olympics hierarchy — he's only a few degrees removed from the group's
top officials.
However, there actually is very little that separates Shero from Team USA
coach Dan Bylsma and general manager David Poile.
“I just think there's comfort there,” Bylsma said Saturday after he officially
was named to his dream job as bench boss for an American Olympics
squad.
“Me knowing how Ray works, and Ray knowing how David works — there's
already chemistry.”
Shero is Team USA's associate general manager. He was Poile's assistant
general manager with the Nashville Predators before taking control of the
Penguins in May 2006.
Bylsma has served Shero as the Penguins' coach since February 2009.
Recent history suggests comfort is helpful for Olympic success.
Team Canada benefited from a then-Detroit Red Wings connection —
Steve Yzerman (executive director) and Mike Babcock (coach) — on its
way to gold at the 2010 Vancouver Games.
Team USA finished second at the Vancouver Games. Its general manager,
Brian Burke, and coach, Ron Wilson, were employed by the Toronto Maple
Leafs.
“When you work with somebody for years, you know how they operate …
you break the ice very quickly,” said Don Waddell, general manager of
Team USA for the 2006 Olympics. “There's no holding back. That makes it
a lot easier to really communicate.”
Waddell, formerly the general manager with Atlanta and now a pro scout
with the Penguins, is also a member of the advisory group for Team USA's
upcoming Olympic efforts. He said the Penguins will benefit greatly from
Shero and Bylsma going through this process of building an Olympic squad.
“It doesn't hurt the team you're with because there is way more value in
getting honest feedback from other general managers,” Waddell said. “And
there are players you wouldn't have a chance to evaluate as close as we all
will in trying to get the right team for Sochi.”
From Poile to Waddell, all members of Team USA's management and
coaching staffs are unpaid volunteers.
They seek to make a priceless kind of history, too.
Team USA has not claimed gold at the Olympics since the 1980 “Miracle on
Ice.” That victory came in Lake Placid, N.Y. The other U.S. gold was won in
1960 in Squaw Valley, Calif.
The Americans have not medaled at an Olympics outside North America
since 1972 — silver in Sapporo, Japan.
The Sochi Olympics will use an international surface — wider (by about 14
feet) and with more room (about 2 feet) behind the net.
Bylsma said a challenge is to adjust his system — a possession attack
reliant on quick, precision passing starting with defensemen in their own
zone — to compete with squads (such as Russia and Sweden) that excel
on the international surface while also not sacrificing the physicality
necessary to match up with rival Canada.
Of course, he must make those plans while also coaching a Penguins
squad that again is favored to win the Stanley Cup.
Shero informed Bylsma that he was USA Hockey's chosen coach June 17.
Bylsma shared the information with only his wife, Mary Beth.
He kissed the Cup in 2009. The symbolic bite of a gold medal would mean
a lot — except that only Olympic athletes receive medals.
683074
Pittsburgh Penguins
Potential aplenty in 2013 NHL draft
June 30, 2013 12:18 am
By Dave Molinari / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
NEWARK, N.J. -- Anything is possible, of course.
Nothing says that general manager Ray Shero couldn't work out a major
trade today, one that allows the Penguins to make their first selection in the
NHL draft while most of the crowd is making its way into the Prudential
Center.
As things stand, however, no fewer than 76 prospects are supposed to be
chosen before the Penguins make their first pick, around the middle of
Round 3.
That means their chances of ending up with an impact player aren't very
good.
But not necessarily as bad as some might suspect.
For while the quality of a draft class can't be accurately assessed until years
later, this one has the potential to go down as one of the deepest in recent
summers.
Not quite the equal of, say, 2003, but worthy of comparison to 2008.
"You go down almost any list that's out there, in publications, and you see
that there are good players probably deeper than in the last several years,"
said Jay Heinbuck, the Penguins' director of amateur scouting.
The 2003 draft has become something of a gold standard by which drafts
can be measured.
If not because of the players who were the first few to go -- Marc-Andre
Fleury, Eric Staal and Nathan Horton were the top three -- then because of
the quality contributors that teams were able to pick up as the opening
round was winding down.
New Jersey got Zach Parise at No. 17. Ryan Getzlaf went 19th to Anaheim.
Vancouver grabbed Ryan Kesler with the 23rd choice, one spot before
Philadelphia claimed Mike Richards.
After which Florida snagged Anthony Stewart at 25, Brian Boyle went to Los
Angeles and, one choice later, Anaheim put an exclamation point on the
round with its selection of Corey Perry.
"That was a pretty good draft," Heinbuck said. "There were a few misses in
there, but geez, it goes down pretty far.
"There's sort of a drop-off after 29 or 30, then it gets to be start of a [mix] of
guys who made it and guys who didn't. That certainly was a very good first
round, for the most part."
And while he won't rule out the opening round in 2013 proving to be the
equal of that from a decade earlier, neither does he seem eager to draw
that parallel.
"Possibly, but it's hard to predict," Heinbuck said. "Boy, you have some nice
players there in the 20s [in 2003], and that doesn't always happen."
There definitely are some pretty good headliners in this year's group.
Center Nathan MacKinnon, defenseman Seth Jones and left winger
Jonathan Drouin are universally regarded as elite prospects; the only
uncertainty is which will prove to be the best pro.
Although MacKinnon is the favorite to go first overall to Colorado if the
Avalanche retains that pick, that doesn't mean he's a consensus choice.
"Even within our staff, there are some guys who really like Jones, some
who like MacKinnon and some who like Drouin," Heinbuck said. "They're
such good players, and they all offer something different.
"Jones is that big defenseman who does a lot of things well, Drouin is such
a crafty but smaller player, and MacKinnon, he's intensity with skill and grit.
There's a lot to like there, and all for different reasons."
Mind you, unless Shero makes a bold move, the top three prospects might
be on flights home before the Penguins make their first trip to the arena
stage to announce a selection because of the trades that sent their firstrounder to Calgary for Jaroma Iginla and their No. 2 to San Jose for
Douglas Murray.
With the Penguins having no choices before Round 3, their scouting staff
likely spent many hours evaluating players who have no chance of being
available when it's their turn to select. That, Heinbuck said, simply is an
occupational hazard.
"Your ultimate goal is to try to win the Cup, and that's what we tried to do,"
he said. "It's exciting when you have a first-round pick, but we all
understand that [trading them can be] part of the process.
"You use assets to make trades. Sometimes, the asset's an upcoming draft
pick, and sometimes, it's players you've already picked. That's our job, to
work with what we're given and see how it turns out."
Of course, it could have been worse. Could have been a repeat of 2008,
when the Penguins didn't select until the fourth round. Or almost any other
year, when the talent pool isn't as deep and diverse as this one looks to be.
"In the past, more often than not, it seems to me, we've had a pretty strong
group of defensemen, but this year, it's pretty spread between forwards and
defensemen," Heinbuck said. "There's a good mix."
Post Gazette LOADED: 06.30.2013
683075
Pittsburgh Penguins
Center • 6 feet 2, 187 pounds
June 30, 2013 12:17 am
Had 31 goals and 47 assists in 58 games with Ottawa (OHL). ... His
grandfather, Rick Hay, played one game for the Pittsburgh Hornets of the
American Hockey League in 1961-62. ... Is regarded as one of the top twoway performers available and has excellent intangibles and attention to
detail, which allow him to be effective in all situations. ... Has skill level and
instincts required to have an offensive impact as a pro.
By Dave Molinari / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Rasmus Ristolainen
NHL draft top 10 prospects
Defenseman • 6 feet 3, 201 pounds
Nathan MacKinnon
Center • 6 feet, 182 pounds
Had 32 goals and 43 assists in 44 games with Halifax in the Quebec Major
Junior Hockey League. ... Was named MVP of Memorial Cup tournament
after leading Mooseheads to the championship. ... Shares hometown of
Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia, with Sidney Crosby. ... Is widely regarded as
being ready to step directly into the NHL, thanks to exceptional offensive
talents and instincts. ... Highly competitive with a lot of grit even though, like
most draft-eligible players, he is continuing to mature physically.
Seth Jones
Defenseman • 6 feet 4, 205 pounds
Had 14 goals and 42 in 61 games with Portland of the Western Hockey
League. ... Son of former NBA player "Popeye" Jones. ... Spent much of
childhood in Denver and was an Avalanche fan. ... Regarded by many
scouts as the top player in the draft, but executives of Colorado, which
owns the No. 1 pick, say Avalanche plans to draft MacKinnon if pick isn't
traded. ... Size and strength have some scouts projecting him as a Chris
Pronger-type impact player. ... Skates and passes well and is solid in his
own end.
Had three goals and 12 assists in 52 games for TPS in Finland's top
league. ... Good skater who can handle and move the puck. ... Play in his
own end needs some work, which hardly is unusual for a teenager at his
position. ... Is reputed to have a mean streak and is expected to get bigger.
... Has a good shot from the point.
Elias Lindholm
Center • 6 feet, 181 pounds
Had 11 goals and 19 assists in 48 games with Brynas in Sweden's
Elitserien. ... Told NHL.com his favorite team is the Penguins and his two
favorite players are Crosby and Malkin. ... Plays a well-rounded game that
gives him a chance to move into a top-six role in the NHL immediately. ...
Must fill out some but isn't shy about operating in high-traffic areas. ...
Excellent hockey sense.
Hunter Shinkaruk
Center/Left winger • 5 feet 11, 174 pounds
Jonathan Drouin
Had 37 goals and 49 assists in 64 games with Medicine Hat of the Western
Hockey League. ... A gifted goal-scorer and playmaker who is among the
most crowd-pleasing talents in this draft. ... Has outstanding speed, but it's
possible his modest size will make the challenge greater when he turns pro.
... Purported to be a good leader.
Left winger • 5 feet 11, 187 pounds
Post Gazette LOADED: 06.30.2013
Had 41 goals and 64 assists in 49 games as MacKinnon's teammate in
Halifax. ... Crafty playmaker who is fast, creative and shifty and is viewed by
some scouts as the finest pure talent available. ... Was honored as player of
the year in the Canadian Hockey League, which covers the three majorjunior leagues. ... Put together a 29-game scoring streak during the regular
season. ... Not only is able to get the puck to linemates but has a welldocumented willingness to do so.
Aleksander Barkov
Center • 6 feet 2, 207 pounds
Had 21 goals and 27 assists in 53 games with Tappara in his native
Finland. ... Lists Penguins center Evgeni Malkin as one of his favorite
players. ... Fluent in English and Russian as well as Finnish. ... Projects as
a top-six forward in the NHL with excellent hockey sense that complements
his size and strength. ... Was knocked out of the playoffs by a shoulder
injury. ... Sound and responsible at both ends of the ice. ... Physical style
should ease his transition to North American hockey.
Valeri Nichushkin
Right winger • 6 feet 4, 202 pounds
Had four goals and two assists in 18 games with the Kontinental Hockey
League team in his hometown of Chelyabinsk. ... Has size, speed and
strength that give him the potential to be top power forward in the NHL. ...
Played in the Kontinental Hockey League last season but tells anyone who
asks that he wants to move to the NHL immediately. ... Has earned a
reputation for producing in high-stakes situations.
Darnell Nurse
Defenseman • 6 feet 4, 185 pounds
Had 12 goals, 29 assists and 116 penalty minutes in 68 games with Sault
Ste. Marie of the Ontario Hockey League. ... Nephew of former NFL
quarterback Donovan McNabb. ... Steady, reliable and responsible all over
the ice and isn't shy about playing the body. ... Despite playing a position
that often requires some seasoning in minor leagues, could move directly
into the NHL if drafted into the right situation.
Sean Monahan
683076
Pittsburgh Penguins
Decision on Kris Letang has no deadline
June 30, 2013 12:06 am
By Dave Molinari / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
NEW YORK -- Eventually, Ray Shero says, a decision must be made.
At some point, negotiations on a new contract for defenseman Kris Letang
will have to be wrapped up.
Still, Shero said Saturday he isn't ready to set a deadline for that just yet,
which means it's far from certain Letang's future will be resolved before the
NHL draft at 3 p.m. today at Prudential Center in Newark, N.J.
He even seemed to float the possibility that talks could be suspended at
some point and picked up later, though that seems unlikely.
"There's a point in a negotiation when you have to make a decision," he
said. "Kris is going to have to make one at one time, and so am I.
"That doesn't mean if you don't agree on a contract, he's getting traded.
There's no guarantee, of course, but it's one of those things where maybe
we just need a little break, to kind of see where it takes us."
Whether Shero and Letang's agent, Kent Hughes, can find enough
common ground to strike a deal is unclear, though both sides have been
consistent in saying that is their intent.
"I know he's happy in Pittsburgh, and Pittsburgh's happy having him," Shero
said. "He's a good person, a great kid and I believe he wants to stay in
Pittsburgh.
"And we're going to try to see if we can make that happen [in a way] that
makes sense for both sides."
That, clearly, has been the tough part.
Late last week, Letang rejected an eight-year offer that would have doubled
his $3.5 million salary. Hughes is believed to have countered with a
proposal worth at least $500,000 more per year, and the Penguins
obviously didn't accept it.
"An extra $250,000 here, another $500,000 here. ... It all adds up," Shero
said.
Hughes said Saturday evening he had spoken with Shero and added, "We'll
see what happens."
Shero said "a couple of teams" have inquired about Letang's availability in
trades, but have been rebuffed.
"They read the paper," he said. " 'Just in case, if you don't do something,
can you keep us in mind?' I haven't explored any of that, and I don't think
that's productive at this point. Our goal is to try to sign him.
"I can't try to sign a guy and try to trade him at the same time. I'm going to
try to sign him and the next day or so, we'll see how this goes."
Working out contracts with Letang and unrestricted-free-agents-to-be such
as Pascal Dupuis, Matt Cooke and Craig Adams, and today's draft -- with
their first two selections not until Round 3, the Penguins are trying to move
up to at least the second round -- are Shero's most pressing concerns at
the moment, but he has added another facet to his job description.
He formally was introduced as the associate general manager of the 2014
U.S. Olympic team Saturday at a news conference in Times Square. Dan
Bylsma was named head coach of that squad at the same time.
Team USA earned a silver medal at the 2010 Games in Vancouver, losing
to Canada in overtime of the championship, and a lackluster performance in
the winter in Sochi, Russia, wouldn't go over well.
"Hockey in our country has come to the point where winning the gold medal
is not a miracle," USA Hockey president Ron DeGregorio said. "It's an
expectation."
Bylsma has not chosen his assistants yet but he, Nashville Predators
general manager David Poile and Shero have discussed the qualities, such
as international experience, that would enhance his staff.
Bylsma noted he has no experience coaching the international game and
said he plans to immerse himself "the next couple of months" in information
about matters such as national styles of play so that it doesn't interfere with
his duties with the Penguins after training camp opens in September.
There won't be much time to absorb such knowledge during the Olympic
break, he said, because "literally, we're going to be dropping our stuff in the
NHL and getting on a plane and a couple of days later, we're going to be
playing our first [Olympic] game."
Consequently, Bylsma said, he already has reached out to longtime NHL
coach Ron Wilson, who led Team USA in Vancouver and has extensive
international experience, and will do so with other coaches who have
competed in tournaments outside of North America.
Despite Bylsma's lack of international work, Poile said he was chosen
because the USA Hockey decisions-makers "wanted a winner" who could
"handle star players," of which Bylsma has several with the Penguins.
Bylsma acknowledged being "acutely aware" of the challenges posed by
players such as Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, but having to deal with
them in Sochi wouldn't alter his bottom-line goal.
"We have one objective," Bylsma said. "That's to go to Sochi and win gold."
Post Gazette LOADED: 06.30.2013
683077
San Jose Sharks
2nd, No. 49, from Rangers in Ryane Clowe trade
2nd, No. 50, own pick
NHL draft: San Jose Sharks hold four picks in the top 58
2nd, No. 58, from Pittsburgh in Douglas Murray trade
4th, No. 111, own pick
By Curtis Pashelka
5th, No. 141, own pick
cpashelka@bayareanewsgroup.com
7th, No. 201, own pick
Posted: 06/29/2013 04:16:41 PM PDT
7th, No. 207, from Colorado (via Anaheim) in 2012 five-player trade
Updated: 06/29/2013 10:16:15 PM PDT
San Jose Mercury News: LOADED: 06.30.2013
SAN JOSE -- Sharks general manager Doug Wilson didn't try to disguise
his excitement about Sunday's NHL draft at the Prudential Center in
Newark, N.J., as the team holds four of the top 58 picks in what is
perceived as one of the deepest draft classes in a decade.
That gives Wilson plenty of options for a draft that he said features quality
players "all the way through the second round."
The Sharks have eight picks. In the first two rounds, they hold their own
picks at Nos. 20 and 50, plus No. 49 acquired from the New York Rangers
in the Ryane Clowe deal in April and No. 58 from Pittsburgh in the Douglas
Murray trade in March. Clowe and Murray are set to become unrestricted
free agents July 5.
The Sharks would not be afraid to package their early picks to move up and
select a player they covet, but Wilson would also be content to keep what
he has.
"We have the extra second-round picks to jump up if we want if things fall
the way they do, but we may not need to," Wilson said. "To get quality and
quantity, that's your ultimate goal, and we're in a really good position for
that.
"We think next year's draft will be pretty good, too. But this draft in
particular, it factored into the decisions we made prior to the trade deadline.
To lose some players and not get really valuable picks back in a year of a
strong draft would have been a double-whammy."
Depth at forward might be one of the Sharks' more pressing needs, as Joe
Thornton,
Patrick Marleau and Joe Pavelski are set to become unrestricted free
agents at the end of the 2013-14 campaign. Considering the depth of this
draft, it is not unrealistic to think that one or two of the players the Sharks
select Sunday would be on the roster during the 2014-15 season.
The Sharks could also trade a player to clear up salary cap space for free
agency. After re-signing defenseman Jason Demers to a one-year deal for
$1.5 million, the Sharks have a little more than $3.5 million in cap space,
and that does not include the deal for 19-year-old prospect Tomas Hertl.
The Sharks also have six defensemen under age 26 who played at least
one NHL game this season, and Brent Burns, signed for the next four
seasons, remains an option at the blue line. Goalie Antti Niemi is signed for
the next two seasons, and a number of younger netminders are in the
pipeline.
Two forwards who might fall to the Sharks at No. 20 are Hunter Shinkaruk
of the Medicine Hat Tigers and Curtis Lazar of the Edmonton Oil Kings.
Both are versatile players who can play center and the wing.
Lazar is the more realistic of the two to be available at No. 20. Thought of
as a tremendous skater, Lazar had 38 goals and 61 points this season in
the WHL, with a plus/minus rating of plus-25.
Wilson praised the job his scouts have done leading into the draft.
"You have to forecast to see who might be available," Wilson said. "We
don't just have a list and say, 'OK, let's take our next best guy.' What we try
to do is go get the guys we want. So if you have to move up to get them,
we'll move up to get them."
Where the Sharks draft
Here are the selections the Sharks own going into the NHL draft Sunday
(round, overall pick, how acquired):
1st, No. 20, own pick
683078
St Louis Blues
Blues see prospects in NHL draft
“Our group has always been pretty unique, and if there’s something that we
really want, we’ll find a way to get it,” Armstrong said. “The management
listens to us, and if this guy is coming down in the draft and we’ve got a
chance to go up and get him, we’re pretty good about finding ways to move
up.”
4 hours ago • By Jeremy Rutherford jrutherford@post-dispatch.com 314444-7135
The Rundblad-Tarasenko move was pulled off by Kekalainen. This year,
Armstrong’s predecessor will be at the Columbus draft table, after taking
over as its general manager last season. The Blue Jackets are slated to
have three first-round picks, barring any trades.
In 2008, the Blues selected goaltender Jake Allen in the second round of
the NHL draft. On Saturday, Allen was announced as the No. 1 goalie on
the league’s 2012-13 all-rookie team.
Armstrong joked that knowing Kekalainen’s tendencies won’t help the Blues
know who their ex-boss will take, but “I know the guys he’s not taking.
You’ve been in the room with him when he’s said, ‘I’m not going to take that
guy.’ That doesn’t really help us, though, and they’re going to be swinging
three times before we even get up to the plate.”
Although the maturation process takes time — five years in Allen’s case —
these types of developments are the driving force behind the Blues’
amateur scouting staff.
“For sure,” said Bill Armstrong (no relation to general manager Doug
Armstrong), who was the Blues’ scout who pushed the club to take the
goalie. “The process to be a really good goaltender in the NHL takes a long
time. Jake has shown great steps, and he continues to do so. It’s an
exciting time for him and a good reward for our staff, too.”
Since then, Armstrong has been promoted to director of the Blues’ amateur
scouting department, replacing Jarmo Kekalainen in 2010. On Sunday,
Armstrong will be in charge of his third draft with the organization and his
goal is to find more players that will be labeled rewards in the coming years.
The task will be made more difficult this offseason because the Blues will
enter the NHL draft, which begins at 2 p.m. (St. Louis time), with only six
selections. If they indeed leave with a half-dozen players, it will match 2009
for the fewest taken in the last three decades.
The Blues’ first scheduled pick, after trading their first-rounder to Calgary for
defenseman Jay Bouwmeester, will be in the second round (No. 47). After
that, the club holds one choice in the third round (No. 83), two in the fourth
round (Nos. 94 and 113), one in the sixth round (173) and one in the
seventh round (No. 203).
So Armstrong and Co. won’t be in the running for players such as Halifax’s
Nathan MacKinnon and Jonathan Drouin and Portland’s Seth Jones, but
with a deep draft the Blues are expecting to come away with a significant
prospect.
“If any year you’re picking 47 as your first pick, this year would be it,”
Armstrong said. “This year in particular, there’s a little more depth in certain
areas of the draft, and when we’re picking, it could be a pretty good player.
Somebody could fall down to you that you really, really may like. So there’s
good odds that that could happen.”
Two years ago, in Armstrong’s first draft, the Blues also did not have a firstround pick after dealing it away to Colorado in the Erik Johnson trade. And
while it will take time before the 2011 picks can be graded accurately, the
class appears to rank as one of the best overall in recent years, with Ty
Rattie (No. 32), Dmitrij Jaskin (No. 41), Joel Edmundson (No. 46) and
Jordan Binnington (No. 88).
Again armed without a top pick, Armstrong is hoping for a repeat.
“We hope so,” he said. “But you have to remember that when we go pick on
Sunday, 46 selections are already happening in front of us. Some of it has
to do with what’s left over … you get the best. Then when we pick, it’s up to
us to get the right order — that whatever is sitting in front of us, we select
the right one.”
There will be one difference perhaps complicating this year’s draft. In recent
years, the selection process has been a two-day event, with the first round
on day one and Rounds 2-7 on day two. That format gave clubs a chance
to re-group after the first 30 picks.
“You don’t get the time to go back to the hotel room and do some more
digging, like ‘Hey, why is this guy still on the board?’” Armstrong said. “For
example, when we selected Rattie, we had a night to go back and dig. You
won’t get that opportunity. We have to be over-prepared and be ready to
make adjustments on the fly.”
The Blues aren’t expected to move up into the first round, but that can
change. In 2010, the club dealt defenseman David Rundblad for the No. 16
overall pick and took Vladimir Tarasenko.
But if the Blues make no moves, they will get six swings themselves and
the club is planning to come away with a few prospects like Allen.
“It’s exciting,” Armstrong said. “It’s like before a hockey game, you’re
nervous and that’s a good thing. Here we go, let’s go, let’s go get it. You
work all year, you travel through all of those snow storms, all the plane
flights, and now you’ve got a chance to get these kids. It’s an addicting job.”
St Louis Post Dispatch LOADED: 06.30.2013
683079
St Louis Blues
Strauss: Stillman insists club ‘not sitting idle’
4 hours ago • Joe Strauss jstrauss@post-dispatch.com
The Blues enter today’s NHL draft between a puck and a hard place, a
locale that offers hard financial truths and difficult perceptions stemming
from an abrupt postseason exit.
Good enough to enter a strike-shortened season billed as a viable Stanley
Cup contender, the Blues lost their first-round playoff matchup against the
Los Angeles Kings without selling out at home. Worse than just losing, they
teased a fatalistic fan base by winning the first two games and leading the
fourth by two goals before being dismissed in six games.
The Kings might have been defending Cup champions but for the second
consecutive spring they entered seeded lower than the Blues.
A year ago, the Kings rolled the Blues. This time the Blues played the Kings
shift for shift, a show of progress. However, losing by a sliver rather than a
chasm only enhanced a sense of “what if?”
The Blues see themselves as a team still ascending but a crestfallen fan
base sees a team that failed to duplicate its opening series win of 2011-12
and suspects a plateau, even regression.
So close to breaking out its city’s third pro sports franchise, the Blues
instead hear the “same old” accusations.
New ownership and a decorated general manager and head coach see
momentum. Much of their fan base is getting over the irritation from being
asked to commit to a season-ticket price hike in order to retain priority for
this year’s playoff seats. A number of fans saw the demand as insulting so
soon after a lockout truncated the regular season by 34 games.
Ownership compares the franchise now to where it stood two seasons
before – nearly bankrupt and not part of the postseason. The fan base
awaits its first Cup since the club’s inception almost a half-century ago. It’s
no fun being labeled “the Chicago Cubs of the NHL.”
The Blues see themselves doing it the right way, developing their own
talent, refusing to overextend for players past their prime.
Fans wonder if the franchise has the jack to push itself over its historical
hump. Meanwhile, owner Tom Stillman pledges payroll will escalate
significantly before next season.
The Blues have indicated a willingness to retain their restricted free agents
and have opened talks with unrestricted free agent defenseman Jordan
Leopold. Financial pressures, insists Stillman, will not manifest themselves
on ice.
“We didn’t buy this team with the idea of just participating,” he says. “The
intention here – the plan – is for this team to win Cups. That’s plural. And
I’m not backing away from that.”
There is much to like about a franchise that boasts local ownership and
men such as general manager Doug Armstrong and head coach Ken
Hitchcock who have constructed a champion in Dallas. The Blues remain a
young but not necessarily inexperienced team. If the adage holds that a
player fully develops after appearing in 300 games at this level, only star
defenseman Alex Pietrangelo awaits further definition. A postseason that a
front office might consider invaluable to taking the next step may strike
many outside the building as underachievement stacked atop immaturity.
The Blues can endure a difference of opinion with their fans. They can not,
however, survive disconnect.
Stillman purchased the team from a carpet-bagging front man while hopeful
that the lockout would provide small-market teams another $10 million or so
via revenue-sharing. Whether naïve or sandbagged, it doesn’t really matter.
Stillman’s group got nothing except another year of operating in crimson.
Popular as the sport is here, hockey has not worked in St. Louis for
decades.
The Blues operate with an atrocious concessions deal negotiated in a fit of
desperation by former owner Dave Checketts to enhance cash flow. That
same leadership fabricated attendance figures. A poor deal with cable
rightsholder Fox Sports Network doesn’t expire until 2018, when a
partnership with the Cardinals on a regional sports network may prove
appealing if this group can hang on. The Blues don’t enjoy the same tax
breaks as the behemoth down Clark Street. Stillman pared more than 40
jobs from the franchise’s business side after purchasing the club. He sold
the Peoria affiliate. But sources insist the club isn’t close to breaking even.
Loathe to provide specifics about the team’s balance sheet, Stillman has
set a goal of advancing revenues by at least $10 million before next
season. A ticket price hike covers a small fraction. Stillman’s emphasis is
on the local and regional corporate community.
“That’s our project for this offseason,” he says. “Our group came in. We
reduced the debt in half. We cut non-hockey payroll expenses. We cut our
other expenses. We started increasing our revenue in various ways. But
now we need to develop a much bigger increase in our revenues. That has
to come with more businesses on board. We’re grateful to the companies
that give us great support. You can see those names around the arena. We
need to get fuller participation from the business community. We need to
get that participation or I don’t see how the Blues can be successful longterm here....We need to do it now.”
Stillman faces an uphill climb. The city has bled corporations for the last
decade while others embrace the Cardinals or Rams. Making the Blues
cool – something success typically accomplishes – seems imperative.
The Blues have not cut hockey operations. And Stillman insists he has not
plans to do so. Pursuing the kind of player needed by an offensivelychallenged roster, the Blues have engaged free agent and former Tampa
Bay Lightning center Vinny Lecavalier in talks, according to league sources.
Also, Armstrong is aggressively defining the potential market for goalies.
Any suggestion that the Blues were satisfied with their first-round exit
causes Stillman’s voice to raise an octave. He squirms a bit in his seat and
tries to control his decibel level. Complacency, he realizes, would be a
death sentence to this ownership group.
Success on the ice hasn’t guaranteed profits in the past but a lack of
success will certainly assure an erosion of support.
“Believe me, we know what’s at stake here,” Stillman says. “We’re not
sitting idle. Everything we discuss is about getting better, not just staying
where we are.”
There are worse things than to be caught between a puck and a hard place.
You can move the puck. Freezing it, however, is no longer acceptable.
St Louis Post Dispatch LOADED: 06.30.2013
683080
St Louis Blues
Next wave of Blues prospects shows bright promise
The Blues drafted Binnington more on potential than anything back in 2011
and since then have been rewarded with excellence. He played for Tam
Canada at the last World Junior Championships and is considered one of
the top goaltending prospects in his age group.
He could see time with the Blues' new minor-league affiliate in Chicago this
season depending on his progress.
Published: June 29, 2013 Updated 4 hours ago
By NORM SANDERS — News-Democrat
While the St. Louis Blues have continued to assimilate their top prospects
onto their NHL roster, the next wave is coming and has displayed plenty of
promise.
Some of these names could end up with the Blues' new Chicago minorleague affiliate and will likely get a look in training camp:
Ty Rattie, winger
Age: 20
Size: 6-foot, 167 pounds
Drafted: 2nd round (32nd overall) 2011
Team: Portland, WHL
2012-13 stats: 48 goals, 110 points in 62 games, plus 20 goals and 36
points in 21 playoff games.
"With goaltending when they're draft eligible sometimes they don't play a lot
in the junior ranks so they're tricky to draft," Armstrong said. "There always
seems to be some question marks. Where we really liked him was his long,
lanky body type with a lot of room to grow."
Armstrong and several Blues scouts watched Binnington help lead Owen
Sound to the 2011 Memorial Cup tourney, one of the top honors in Canada.
He was named the top goaltender at the event.
"He's playing in a national championship tournament and here's this kid's as
cool as a cucumber and fluid in his motions where nothing rattled him,"
Armstrong said. "There's this young kid playing in net and he was just great.
We were all convinced that he was going to be a good goaltender. It was
just a little bit of luck that he falls on your plate."
Binnington earned Ontario Hockey League Goaltender of the Year and
Owen Sound MVP honors this season, posting seven shutouts.
Most teams are fairly patient with goaltending prospects. Jake Allen spent
much of the past three seasons in minor-league Peoria after being drafted
in the second round in 2008.
"You can't really be in a rush with these guys," Armstrong said.
In the last two seasons, Rattie has piled up an incredible 105 goals and 231
points in 131 games with the Western Hockey Leagues Portland
Winterhawks.
"He's an exciting player because his brain processes the game on the
offensive side of the puck very quickly," said Bill Armstrong, the Blues'
Director of Amateur Scouting. "He's really detailed in his game as far as
working hard on the defensive side of the puck and he's made huge strides
that way."
Armstrong knows that Rattie's off-the-charts numbers suggest something
special. However, his size could be a concern in the NHL.
"He's got crazy numbers where he's scored the most playoff goals in the
WHL of all time, (50)," Armstrong said. "With somebody with that type of
offensive hockey sense, it takes some time to develop and his game has to
translate into the NHL, so that's going to take a little bit of time with the
strength and speed factor."
Jani Hakanpaa, defenseman
Age: 21
Size: 6-5, 218 pounds
Drafted: 4th round (104th overall) 2010
Teams: Finland Blues, Peoria, AHL
2012-13 stats: 3 goals, 9 points, 40 penalty minutes in 48 games.
The Blues believe they have quite a find in Hakanpaa, a large, mobile
defenseman with plenty of upside. He finished last season with the Peoria
Rivermen, his first season in North America.
"He's the kind of guy that flies a little bit under the radar because other guys
get more attention," Armstrong said. "I'd put him on the (top prospect) board
because he's a big man with a lot of effort. I'd keep my eye on him, there's a
lot of people on staff that like him.
"He's played in the Finnish Elite League for a couple years now and has
had some good seasons over there."
Jordan Binnington, goaltender
Age: 19
Size: 6-foot-2, 170 pounds
Drafted: 3rd round (88th overall) 2011
Team: Owen Sound, OHL
2012-13 stats: 32-12-6, 2.17 goals-against average, seven shutouts, .932
save percentage
Belleville News-Democrat LOADED: 06.30.2013
683081
St Louis Blues
Blues know success in the NHL draft combines hard work and a little bit of
luck
Published: June 29, 2013 Updated 4 hours ago
By NORM SANDERS — News-Democrat
During a St. Louis Blues pre-draft meeting in 2010, General Manager Doug
Armstrong was listening to opinions on two players being considered for a
first-round pick.
After listening to the pros and cons about college forward Jaden Schwartz
and Russian forward Vladimir Tarasenko, one of the Blues' scouts offered
his thoughts.
"We were all sitting in the room and Doug had asked a question about the
players," said Bill Armstrong, the Blues' Director of Amateur Scouting. "Dan
Ginnell said 'What the heck. Let's go get both of these guys, we love them.'
That kind of planted a seed with Doug and the (staff). The next thing you
know, we're walking out of the first round and we had both Schwartz and
Tarasenko."
The Blues, who had only one first-round pick heading into the draft, made it
happen by acquiring Ottawa's No. 1 pick at 16th overall for former firstround pick and defense prospect David Rundblad.
They drafted Schwartz at No. 14 and Tarasenko two picks later. Two years
later, both were on the Blues' opening night roster and made significant
impacts at times last season.
Right now, the Blues don't own a first-round pick in Sunday's NHL Draft in
New Jersey, having traded it to Calgary last season for veteran
defenseman Jay Bouwmeester.
But with Doug Armstrong's track record for under-the-radar deals -- and the
Blues apparently shopping goaltenders and looking for forward help -- don't
rule anything out.
"It would be difficult right now to move up into the first round," Doug
Armstrong said, "because I think we're a team that's positioning itself as
trying to compete at the upper echelon right now.
so many different divisions of the hockey club and if you want to be
successful, everybody has to take part in that.
"We get attached to them, but the scouts understand we have to put the
best team on the ice."
The Blues have scouts around the globe scouring their particular areas for
talent. Much cross-checking is done and players are seen numerous times
searching for tendencies and potential flaws.
The team also does in-person interviews with players and coaches and
anyone else connected to a prospect.
After that, the scouting staff meets and compiles a draft board list of talent
from which the selections are made.
"We go back and massage it a little bit with new information that we find out
in the weeks before the draft," Armstrong said. "We keep working at it and
plugging along until there's a complete list on the board."
Before a pick is made, the Blues' braintrust of Doug Armstrong, Bill
Armstrong, senior advisers Al MacInnis and Larry Pleau and vice president
Dave Taylor all have final input.
"There's a lot of good hockey minds that sit around that table," Bill
Armstrong said, noting that Doug Armstrong has the final say. "The main
thing is to get the talent through the door."
Through the years the Blues have endured more first-round misses than
hits.
They used the 17th-overall pick on goalie Marek Schwarz (six NHL games)
in 2004, the 30th-overall pick on Shawn Belle (20 NHL games) in 2003 and
the 48th overall pick in 2002 on Alexei Shkotov (never played in the NHL).
However, those same drafts produced David Backes (second round, 2003),
Lee Stempniak (fifth round, 2003) and defenseman Roman Polak (sixth
round, 2004).
In 1987, the Blues drafted Keith Osborne (16 NHL games) 12th overall only
to see future Hall of Famer Joe Sakic go to Quebec (later the Colorado
Avalanche) three picks later.
Signability is also important when considering European players, especially
those from Russia. Many get lucrative offers from the KHL, the Russian pro
league, and some use that as a stepping stone to the NHL.
"The way we're currently sitting I wouldn't predict us moving into the first
round."
The team was disappointed earlier this year when one of their top forward
prospects, 2008 draft pick Jori Lehtera from Finland, passed on the Blues'
offer to come to North America this season and instead signed with a KHL
team.
While the Blues typically stress a need to take the best player available,
they're not picking until 46 other players have been selected. They own one
pick in the second and third rounds, two in the fourth, none in the first and
one each in the sixth and seventh.
"There' a lot of different factors when you draft players from overseas,"
Armstrong said. "Sometimes when you talk to them, you can see that in his
personality and his commitment that he's already made up his mind that he
wants to come over and play.
Bill Armstrong believes the Blues will leave this draft with talent despite not
having a first-round pick.
"You meet with these kids and try to talk to everybody and do a background
search."
"I just think the depth of the draft is there," he said. "Sometimes you get into
certain areas and you wouldn't be as excited with the talent level there. This
year after you get through the first round it just runs for a long time and
there's some exciting players there that could be pushed back.
Belleville News-Democrat LOADED: 06.30.2013
"There's going to be a good player that comes down the pipe to us."
Armstrong talked about the 12 months of work that go into making the
Blues' NHL draft day a successful one.
"It is a great job in a sense because you work as a team," he said. "There's
a team on the ice and a team of scouts off the ice that are relentless in their
pursuit of information about players. We've got a lot of passionate guys that
have been around the Blues for a number of years, but it's all about
projecting and looking into the future.
"When you do get one that works out, it's certainly worth the time you put in
to get them."
Does it bother the scouting staff when picks and prospects are included in
trades?
"Not really because if you look to win a Stanley Cup, you have to have a
good amateur scouting side and a good pro side," Armstrong said. "There's
683082
Tampa Bay Lightning
Top-five draft picks in Lightning history
By Erik Erlendsson | Tribune Staff
Published: June 30, 2013
The The Lightning hold the No. 3 overall pick in today's NHL entry draft,
marking the 10th time in franchise history Tampa Bay has held a top-five
pick. Seven times the team used its pick to select a player - in 1999, Tampa
Bay traded the No. 1 overall pick and in 2002, Tampa Bay traded the No. 4
pick to Philadelphia. Here is a look at the players the Lightning chose in the
top five:
Year Player Pick Pos.
2009 Victor Hedman No. 2 Defenseman
Comment: Hedman continues to improve his overall game as a top-two
defenseman, showing marked gains in each of his first four seasons. The
23-year-old, under contract until the 2015-16 season, has 16 goals and 89
points in 258 games.
2008 Steven Stamkos No. 1 Center
Comment: Stamkos is one of the game's top scorers and a two-time
Richard Trophy winner as the league's goals leader. No other player has
scored more goals than the 185 Stamkos has during the past four seasons.
The 23-year-old is under contract through the 2014-15 season.
2003 Alex Svitov No. 3 Center
Comment: The big, two-way center never panned out for the Lightning - or
any other team. Tampa Bay traded him to Columbus for Darryl Sydor in
2004. He is currently in his native Russia, playing the last six seasons with
Salavat Yulaev in the Kontinental Hockey League.
1998 Vinny Lecavalier No. 1 Center
Comment: Lecavalier played his entire career with Tampa Bay before being
bought out on Thursday and is the franchise leader with 383 goals. While
not the 50-goal scorer he was while winning the Richard Trophy in 2006-07,
the former team captain is a consistent 25-goal, 75-point threat, and his
defensive game has improved.
1995 Daymond Langkow No. 5 Center
Comment: After four up-and-down seasons with the Lightning, which
included a suspension for failing to accept a minor-league assignment,
Langkow was traded to the Flyers. After scoring 27 goals in four seasons
with Tampa Bay, he went on to score 270 goals in 1,090 career NHL
games.
1993 Chris Gratton No. 3 Center
Comment: Gratton never lived up to his power-forward potential, but he
played three stints with the Lightning. He first left the team as a free agent
after four seasons. He returned in a trade with the Flyers in 1998 and
served as Tampa Bay's captain for the 1999-2000 season. But in March
2000 he was traded to Buffalo. After subsequent stops in Phoenix and
Florida, Gratton was traded back to the Lightning in 2007. He was off to a
good start in 2007-08, but a hip injury marked the beginning of the end of
his career. He retired with a respectable 214 goals in 1,092 career games
while playing for seven teams.
1992 Roman Hamrlik No. 1 Defenseman
Comment: An offensive defenseman, Hamrlik was the first draft pick in
franchise history. He played five-plus seasons with Tampa Bay before
being traded to Edmonton. After 20 seasons and seven teams, he's still
active during an NHL career that has spanned 1,395 games, the most by
any active player.
Tampa Tribune LOADED: 06.30.2013
683083
Tampa Bay Lightning
Impact player on the way for Lightning
By Erik Erlendsson | Tribune Staff
Published: June 30, 2013
NEWARK, N.J. - Franchises adapt and evolve. Players come and go.
But the transformation of a team can take place with one move, one right
selection on draft day.
The Lightning have that chance this afternoon when the 2013 NHL Entry
Draft takes place at Prudential Center.
While each draft has its own personality, strengths and weaknesses, there
is one consensus heading into today - holding the No. 3 pick gives Tampa
Bay the chance to reshape the roster with a franchise player.
"You are going to get a player that can potentially impact your franchise for
the next decade,'' NHL director of scouting Don Marr said of holding a topthree pick this season.
Tampa Bay has been here before in previous drafts and is holding a topfive pick for the 10th time in franchise history after making seven previous
selections.
There have been varying degrees of success with those picks: Vinny
Lecavalier, Roman Hamrlik, Steven Stamkos and Victor Hedman made
substantial and positive impacts. But Alex Svitov, Daymond Langkow and
Chris Gratton did not have the same sort of impression on the franchise.
Of those seven selections, Lecavalier, Hamrlik, Stamkos and Hedman were
taken with a top-two pick. Svitov and Gratton were selected with the third
pick and Langkow was a fifth overall selection.
There are no guarantees that Tampa Bay's selection - assuming it holds on
to the pick - will turn into a star player or help turn the Lightning into a
perennial playoff contender.
But the potential is there.
"This draft is very strong at the top,'' Lightning director of scouting Al Murray
said. "If you have a pick in the top five, you might be getting a star player
who can really help carry your team to another level.
"We are going to get one of those guys and hopefully that guy can come in
and have that kind of impact on our organization. ... Lots of impact players
in this draft and you don't get that every year.''
This year's draft class is already drawing comparisons to the 2003 draft that
produced Eric Staal, Nathan Horton, Thomas Vanek, Ryan Suter, Dion
Phaneuf, Jeff Carter, Dustin Brown, Zach Parise, Ryan Getzlaf, Mike
Richards and Corey Perry, among others.
Marr believes there is the potential for some of the top players in this year's
draft to have an even bigger impact on the league than the class of 2003.
In particular, playmaking winger Jonathan Drouin out of Halifax has drawn
some heavy comparisons.
"A lot of older scouts in the business have told me, and I agree with them, I
think Joe Sakic is a good comparison,'' Marr said. "(Drouin) has the
potential to be a Hall of Fame player.''
With Drouin's ability to make plays, find seams and set up teammates in the
offensive zone, the potential of him playing alongside center Steven
Stamkos could prove a dynamic combination.
"Oh for sure, (Drouin) would set him up all night and day, all day long,'' Marr
said. "Anyone that gets to play alongside Jonathan Drouin really
appreciates him, and there will be guys who want to play with him.
"Everyone talks about playing on the third line, but you may have some of
those first- and second-liners wanting to play with him because he will feed
him the puck.''
There is the same potential impact, albeit in a different manner, with players
such as defenseman Seth Jones, center Nathan MacKinnon, center
Aleksander Barkov or winger Valeri Nichuskin.
And with the Lightning holding a top-five pick, one of them has the potential
to help steer Tampa Bay back in the right direction.
"We are hopeful in that top five that you will be getting a player that will play
for you for 15 to 18 years and be a real good player for you,'' Lightning
general manager Steve Yzerman said. "And I think if you go back and
analyze the drafts every year, there are very few that really kind of turn a
franchise around.
"Everybody picking that high, we are all hoping we get one of those couple
of guys. Real impact players are hard to get, so it's important, and there is a
little bit of luck involved, but you can really set yourself up for a long, long
time.''
Rumor of the day
The days leading up to the draft are as rumor-filled as the days leading up
to the trade deadline.
One of the biggest rumors Saturday had Tampa Bay showing interest in
acquiring Boston winger Tyler Seguin. The third-year pro was the second
overall pick in 2010 and will begin a six-year, $34.5 million contract next
season that carries a $5.75 million salary cap hit.
In three seasons with the Bruins, Seguin has 56 goals and 121 points in
203 games.
Draft party
The Lightning are hosting a draft party from 2-5 p.m. today at Champps at
International Plaza.
Team broadcasters Rick Peckham, Bobby Taylor and Dave Mishkin will be
on hand for a special edition of "Lightning Hockey Night" that will air from 35 p.m. on 1250 AM. Former Lightning all-star Brian Bradley also will be
present.
Fans in Lightning attire will receive a 10 percent discount on food and
beverage, while season-ticket holders wearing their jerseys or who present
their STM card will receive a 15 percent discount.
There will also be giveaways and raffle prizes.
Tampa Tribune LOADED: 06.30.2013
683084
Tampa Bay Lightning
Lecavalier meeting with several teams
Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer
Saturday, June 29, 2013 4:30am
Vinny Lecavalier cannot sign with a new team until Friday, when he
becomes an unrestricted free agent. But with the buyout of his contract, the
former Lightning star is free to negotiate with any team except Tampa Bay.
Lecavalier, 33, and his camp met in New York on Saturday with the Stars,
Flyers, Blues, Ducks, Maple Leafs and Canadiens, and will meet with the
Red Wings and Flames today, Canadian media reported.
"We're trying to move the process forward as quickly as possible,"
Lecavalier's agent, Kent Hughes, told the Tampa Bay Times. "We haven't
set a definitive timetable."
Up to 15 teams are said to have shown interest in Lecavalier, including the
Sharks and Panthers. Lecavalier hoped to have a list of teams in which he
is seriously interested by this morning, to help teams with their draft-day
strategies, reports said.
Lecavalier, whose $32.667 million buyout is the richest in league history,
has not spoken publicly since Thursday's buyout announcement.
Asked how his client is handling the realization his 14-season career with
the Lightning is over, Hughes said, "It's been a whirlwind. First, dealing with
the media and then trying to figure out in short order what his future has in
store. So, I don't know how much time he's had to sit back and think about
it."
Bruins: Wing Nathan Horton told the team he wants a new beginning and
will become an unrestricted free agent Friday, reports said.
Canucks: General manager Mike Gillis said teams have inquired about
trading for goaltender Cory Schneider, the latest twist in Vancouver's yearlong saga of what to do about its goalie situation. For months the team has
been trying to get rid of Roberto Luongo, 34, who has nine years left on a
deal with an annual salary cap charge of $5.33 million, but the deal has
been hard to trade because of the money and the haul the team wants in
return. Luongo also has been the subject of buyout speculation.
All-rookie team: As voted by Professional Hockey Writers' Association, the
members are forwards Jonathan Huberdeau (Panthers), Brendan Gallagher
(Canadiens) and Brandon Saad (Blackhawks); defensemen Jonas Brodin
(Wild) and Justin Schultz (Oilers); and goalie Jake Allen (Blues).
Olympics: As expected, the Penguins' Dan Bylsma was named by USA
Hockey as coach of the team for next year's Games at Sochi, Russia.
Bylsma, 42, has no international coaching experience; he said he would
rely on the advice of Americans who had coached at that level before.
Tampa Bay Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
683085
Tampa Bay Lightning
No bad options in draft for Lightning at No. 3
"And I have no idea what Florida is thinking right now," Yzerman said. "I
know (GM Dale Tallon) has considered moving back to four (from No. 2), so
that could change things if Nashville were able to move up (from No. 4). We
could potentially have to make a decision."
One that, it seems, will provide a good outcome.
Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer
Damian Cristodero can be reached at cristodero@tampabay.com.
Saturday, June 29, 2013 6:31pm
Top of the list
The Lightning likely will choose one of these players with the No. 3 overall
draft pick today.
NEWARK, N.J. — Jonathan Drouin said exactly what he likely was coached
to say when asked what he anticipates from today's NHL draft at the
Prudential Center.
Aleksander Barkov
"It's been a long process," he said. "A lot of hype. I just want to be in a great
organization."
POS: C
But when pressed about perhaps being taken by the Lightning with the No.
3 overall pick and maybe one day playing on a line with Steven Stamkos,
the left wing perked up.
"For sure," he said. "Tampa is a team I really like. They have a lot of young
prospects. They have a really good team, so, obviously, I'd like to go to
Tampa."
If things play out as many expect, Drouin, 18 — the MVP of the junior
Quebec league last season and whom Al Murray, the Lightning's director of
amateur scouting, called "as good a play-maker as there is in the draft" —
might be Tampa Bay's choice.
Then again, the Lightning, desperate for an impact center after the buyout
of Vinny Lecavalier, could go with Finland's Aleksander Barkov, who some
believe is most NHL ready.
AGE: 17
HT/WT: 6-2; 205
Need to know: Ranked by NHL Central Scouting as the No. 1 European
skater. … Second on Tappara (Finland) with 48 points on 21 goals, 27
assists.
Jonathan Drouin
AGE: 18
POS: LW
HT/WT: 5-10;186
Need to know: The junior Quebec league's MVP with 41 goals and 105
points in 49 games for Halifax.
Seth Jones
On the other hand, there are scenarios in which defenseman Seth Jones,
ranked by NHL Central Scouting as the No. 1 North American skater, might
fall to No. 3. If so, he would merit serious consideration.
AGE: 18
The point is, Lightning general manager Steve Yzerman said, "regardless of
who goes one and two, we get a really good prospect."
HT/WT: 6-4; 205
Yzerman is comfortable enough with his options, he said, that he doesn't
feel a need to trade up or down.
POS: D
Need to know: Ranked by NHL Central Scouting as the No. 1 North
American skater. … Led the junior Western league at plus-46 and with 56
points on 14 goals, 42 assists in 61 games for Portland.
That said, the Bruins, whose first pick is No. 60, want to move up and were
rumored to have engaged Yzerman in talks for speedy right wing Tyler
Seguin. How much traction the talks had was unclear. There also have
been plenty of rumblings Yzerman is willing to part with left wing Ryan
Malone. Tampa Bay also has a deep well of prospects with which to deal.
(For more on the Seguin rumors, go to tampabay.com/blogs/lightning.)
Nathan MacKinnon
Otherwise, what Tampa Bay does is dependent on what happens with the
Avalanche at No. 1 and Panthers at No. 2. Colorado has indicated it will
take right wing Nathan MacKinnon. Reports point to Florida taking Jones.
Need to know: MVP of the Memorial Cup (the Canadian junior
championship) with a tournament-best seven goals, 13 points in 13 games
for winner Halifax.
If it plays out that way, Tampa Bay might be deciding between Drouin, who
last season had 41 goals and 105 points in 49 games for Halifax, and
Barkov, whose 48 points last season were second for Tappara and a record
for a 17-year-old in Finland's elite league.
Valeri Nichushkin
A separated shoulder sustained in the first round of the playoffs is not
expected to affect Barkov's status.
HT/WT: 6-4; 202
"He's big, and he's a very good skater," Murray said of the 6-foot-2, 202pounder he compared to San Jose's Joe Thornton. "He doesn't run all over
the place. He's not the first guy in on hits, but he's very conscious of his
defensive positioning."
As for Drouin, "he will set (Stamkos) up night and day, all day long," said
Don Marr, the director of NHL Central Scouting. "Anyone who gets to play
next to Drouin really appreciates him. Everybody talks about the kid playing
on the third line, but he may have some of those first- and second-liners
wanting to play with him."
AGE: 17
POS: C
HT/WT: 6-0; 182
AGE: 18
POS: RW
Need to know: Had four goals, seven points in six games for Russia at the
2013 under-18 world championship. … A poor NHL combine hurt his status.
Draft details
Makeup: All seven rounds are today
Lightning picks: First round (third overall), second (33rd), fifth (124th), sixth
(154th), seventh (184th and 186th)
Lightning watch party: 2-5 p.m., Champps Americana Sports Bar,
International Plaza, Tampa
The Lightning certainly will need another playmaker once Marty St. Louis,
who turned 38 this month, calls it quits, and Drouin on Saturday met with
Tampa Bay.
Draft order
There still is plenty of time for intrigue. Trade chatter heated up for the
Avalanche on Saturday.
1. Colorado
First round
2. Florida
3. Tampa Bay
4. Nashville
5. Carolina
6. Calgary
7. Edmonton
8. Buffalo
9. New Jersey
10. Dallas
11. Philadelphia
12. Phoenix
13. Winnipeg
14. Columbus
15. N.Y. Islanders
16. Buffalo (from Minnesota)
17. Ottawa
18. Detroit
19. Columbus (from N.Y. Rangers)
20. San Jose
21. Toronto
22. Calgary (from St. Louis)
23. Washington
24. Vancouver
25. Montreal
26. Anaheim
27. Columbus (from Los Angeles)
28. Calgary (from Pittsburgh)
29. Dallas (from Boston)
30. Chicago
Tampa Bay Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
683086
Tampa Bay Lightning
As rumors swirl ahead of draft Lightning said to have interest in Bruins'
Tyler Seguin
Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer
Saturday, June 29, 2013 3:49pm
The rumor mill kicked into high gear on Saturday and the Lightning had a
prime place at the table as there was speculation it had interest in speedy
Bruins right wing Tyler Seguin.
The basis for this rumor: Lightning general manager Steve Yzerman and
Bruins GM Peter Chiarelli were seen speaking at the Jersey City hotel that
is headquarters for both organizations ahead of Sunday’s draft in Newark
N.J.
Of course, as one report noted, perhaps they were just making dinner
plans. Still, Canada's RDS television network reported the Lightning was
"one of many teams in the mix."
That said, it was unclear if the talks really had any traction, but they
apparently were instigated by Boston’s wish to move up in the draft. The
Bruins first pick is No. 60. Their first-round pick (No. 29) went to the Stars in
the Jaromir Jagr deal.
The Lightning has the No. 3 overall pick. There also have been plenty of
rumblings Yzerman wouldn’t mind parting with left wing Ryan Malone.
Tampa Bay also has a deep well of prospects at forward with which to deal.
Yzerman has said he feels no need to move up or down because of the
high quality prospects available at the top of the draft. On the other hand,
for a team looking to get faster and younger and add an immediate impact
player, Seguin might be an attractive asset.
Seguin, 21, had 16 goals, 32 points and was plus-23 in 48 games last
season. The No. 2 overall pick of 2010 has 56 goals, 121 points in 203
career games. But he is expensive with five years left on a six-year, $34.5
million contract that pays $5.5 million next season.
The Lightning, thanks to its buyout of Vinny Lecavalier’s contract, has about
$9 million of salary cap space.
Tampa Bay Times LOADED: 06.30.2013
683087
Toronto Maple Leafs
NHL draft: Maple Leafs have plenty of possible picks at No. 21
By: Kevin McGran Sports reporter, Published on Sat Jun 29 2013
In the first round of Sunday’s NHL draft (TSN, 3 p.m.), the Maple Leafs pick
21st overall (barring a trade). Leafs GM Dave Nonis promises to take the
best player available, regardless of position, in the first round. Here’s a look
at some players who might be available at No. 21.
C Peter Lodge, Saginaw Spirit
Lodge is rated the 21st-best North American skater by NHL Central
Scouting. He had 28 goals and 39 assists in 64 games for the Spirit, a
substantial jump from his rookie season (eight goals, four assists in 45
games). He represented the United States at the 2012 Ivan Hlinka
Memorial Tournament, getting two assists in four games. His parents
moved from Pennsylvania to Toronto so he could play for the Toronto
Titans of the GTHL.
C Bo Horvat, London Knights
Horvat, ranked 15th among North American skaters, scored a leagueleading 16 goals in 21 games during the 2013 Ontario Hockey League
playoffs, including the game-winning goal in Game 7 of the OHL
championship with 0.1 seconds left in regulation. The six-foot, physical
centre was named the most valuable player of the OHL playoffs. In 201213, Horvat had 33 goals and 28 assists in 67 regular-season games. He
represented Canada at the 2012 Ivan Hlinka tournament with four points in
five games for the gold-medal team.
C Max Domi, London Knights
Domi is the 19th-ranked skater in North America, according to NHL Central
Scouting. His stock seems to be rising the closer we get to the draft. A slick
playmaker, the five-foot-nine Domi led the Knights and finished second
overall in playoff scoring with 32 points (11G, 21A) in 21 games. Domi also
tied for eighth in regular-season scoring with 87 points (39G, 48A) in 64
games. He’s a Type 1 diabetic and celiac, which may scare a few teams.
The Leafs drafted his father, Tie, 27th overall in 1988.
LW Kerby Rychel, Windsor Spitfires
Speaking of sons of former Leafs, Rychel is ranked 17th among North
American skaters by NHL Central Scouting. Warren Rychel’s kid led the
Spitfires by scoring 40 goals for the second consecutive season and
finished in a tie for eighth in the OHL with 87 points in 68 games. Rychel
won bronze with Team Canada at the 2012 under-18 world championship,
tying for the team lead in goals (5), and won gold as an alternate captain at
the 2011 Hlinka tournament.
F Frederik Gauthier, Rimouski Oceanic
Gauthier is ranked seventh among North American skaters by NHL Central
Scouting, but one respected mock draft — by TSN — has him dropping
down.
He ranked fourth among first-year players in the Quebec Major Junior
Hockey League with 60 points (22G, 28A) in 62 games during the 2012-13
season. He also led all first-year players in faceoff winning percentage (46.6
per cent). He helped Team Canada earn gold at the 2013 under-18 world
championship with a goal and three assists in seven games. All three
assists came during playoff games.
G Zachary Fucale, Halifax Mooseheads
Fucale is the top-rated goalie in the draft. He posted a 16-1-0 record in the
QMJHL playoffs before backstopping Halifax to its first Memorial Cup. In
2012-13, Fucale led all QMJHL goaltenders with 45 wins (45-5-2-1) and
was second overall with a 2.14 goals-against average. He is almost certain
to be Canada’s goalie next year at the world junior championship.
D Rasmus Ristolainen, Finland
There’s been a lot of pre-draft buzz about Ristolainen, the fourth-ranked
European skater. He’s a physical defenceman, patterning himself after
Shea Weber. He competed for Team Finland at the 2012 and 2013 world
junior championships, totalling nine points (two goals, seven assists) in 13
tournament games.
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Toronto Maple Leafs
NHL draft: Tyler Seguin, Cory Schneider in trade buzz
Nashville, at No. 4, had seemed likely to trade its pick, but GM David Poile
sounded like he was staying put.
“I’m not going to be comfortable till we know what we get at four,” Poile
said.
Toronto Star LOADED: 06.30.2013
By: Kevin McGran Sports reporter, Published on Sat Jun 29 2013
NEWARK, N.J.—There may be more NHL trade rumours than there are
draft picks.
It was a wild Saturday on the eve of the draft, if speculation is what you’re
after: Now both Vancouver goalies on the trade market, Tyler Seguin is
available from the Boston Bruins, David Perron from the St. Louis Blues,
Cal Clutterbuck from the Minnesota Wild.
Everybody — except Chicago, apparently — wants Vincent Lecavalier. The
Maple Leafs and Flyers met with the bought-out Lightning star on Saturday.
Some teams are pressed up against the salary cap. Some are trying to
move up the draft ladder.
“A lot has to do with the buyouts and the cap number going down,” said
Florida GM Dale Tallon. “The next five or six days, there’ll be an explosion.”
On the hard-news front:
The Maple Leafs have tendered contracts to all of their restricted free
agents: Nazem Kadri, Joe Colborne, Frazer McLaren, Carl Gunnarsson,
Cody Franson, Mark Fraser and Jonathan Bernier. Fraser appears ready to
turn down the two-way deal he was offered. The deadline for acceptance is
July 15. Teams retain a player’s rights, but they become eligible to accept
offer sheets.
Nathan Horton has told the Bruins he’ll be leaving to test the free agent
market. He’ll be an unrestricted free agent July 5.
“This was his choice,” Horton’s agent, Paul Krepelka, told CSNNE.com.
“This wasn’t a monetary decision. This was the choice that Nathan thought
was best for him.”
The Bruins are taking offers on Seguin, who has a six-year deal that will
start paying him $5.75 million per season beginning next year. They want to
open up some salary cap room to give Patrice Bergeron a mega-deal.
The goaltending mix, which already includes Ilya Bryzgalov, bought out in
Philly, got more crowded with word the Sabres are shopping Ryan Miller.
Buffalo sniper Thomas Vanek is also said to be available from the
rebuilding team.
Minnesota Wild centre Pierre-Marc Bouchard, a 10-year veteran, will also
test free agency, said agent Allen Walsh.
Lecavalier, meanwhile, also met with the Dallas Stars, who have money to
spend.
“Vincent Lecavalier would be a good fit with most teams in the league at the
right dollars,” said Ottawa GM Bryan Murray.
The circus that is Vancouver’s goaltending situation took a surprising turn
when GM Mike Gillis revealed he’s been asked about Cory Schneider, with
rumours suggesting Edmonton is after him. The Canucks, of course, have
been trying to trade Roberto Luongo for months. Gillis said he may have to
buy out Luongo, but nothing was certain.
“You have to listen,” Gillis said Saturday. “If you’re in any business, you
have to listen to what the proposals may be and act accordingly. That’s
what we’re doing.”
As for the draft, there was all kinds of speculation that Colorado would trade
the No. 1 overall pick. Patrick Roy, the Avs’ new coach and a member of
the club’s complicated front office, was not speaking on Saturday.
Florida’s Tallon, who holds the second pick, said he wasn’t holding his
breath about Colorado’s decision.
“I know we have four guys or five or six guys we really like,” said Tallon.
“We’re going to take the best player we think will help our franchise. We’re
very fortunate to have the second pick in such a deep draft. Whatever
Colorado does, I can’t control.”
683089
Toronto Maple Leafs
NHL draft: ‘It’s all guesswork,’ professor says
By: Kevin McGran Sports reporter, Published on Sat Jun 29 2013
NEWARK, N.J.—This is the day NHL general managers will boast that they
can’t believe a certain player was still around.
This is the day that will give rise to those backstories down the road about
the guy taken in the fifth round who scores the winning goal in the Stanley
Cup final.
The top of Sunday’s NHL draft is almost too easy to predict. We know
Nathan MacKinnon, Seth Jones and Jonathan Drouin are going to be taken,
just not the order. It’s the bottom of the draft where careers are made and
myths are born.
It’s all a bit much to Peter Tingling, a business professor at Simon Fraser
University in B.C. who has analyzed years of NHL drafts looking for insight
into how decisions are made.
His conclusion:
“It’s all guesswork,” asserts the professor. “Our research says nobody is
particularly good at making (draft) decisions. There are people who have
the reputation of having made great decisions. There’s this myth of Detroit
as a great late-round chooser.
“I would tell you it’s a bit of a myth. They do a great job (scouting) in
Europe, not so good in North America. But what Detroit is absolutely
tremendous at is retaining and developing players.
“At some point, drafting well is useless if you can’t develop and retain (the
players), as many teams know.”
Tingling looked at the 1995-2003 draft years — he even presented a paper
called “Better Off Guessing” before reaching his conclusions.
“What teams are really good? “ said Tingling. “The short answer is no team
is consistently good. Central Scouting does an amazing job of identifying
the first 60, 70 players, maybe 100. After that, it basically flatlines.
“There doesn’t appear to be any decision process at all,” added Tingling.
“Teams generally hope to not be unlucky in the first round.”
Some findings:
A top-10 pick works out 88 per cent of the time.
An 11-to-30 pick works out about 65 per cent of the time.
A pick in rounds 2 and 3 works out about 22 per cent of the time.
A pick in rounds 4 to 7 works out about 12 per cent of the time.
Tingling defines a player who got into at least 160 NHL games as one who
worked out.
He’s noticed a couple of other trends along the way. For instance, NHL
GMs last about 5.4 years in the job. Those who are early in their tenure
take more risks than those in the later years of their tenure.
This particular scenario fits the new front office in Colorado of Joe Sakic
and Patrick Roy. They face a great deal of pressure to pick Jones, the local
product deemed by Central Scouting to be the No.1 skater in the draft. The
Avs have made it clear they’re not taking Jones first overall and they’ve
been very loud about possibly trading the pick.
“It would take an incredibly bold GM to not pick the top one or two guys,”
said Tingling. “It also depends on how long you’ve been GM for.
“When you’re a GM in the early part of your tenure, you could probably
afford to take a few risks. Toward the end, your leash is shortened, you
have to make more conforming decisions in many ways.”
Most teams say the goal in the seven-round draft is to go seven-for-seven.
None have. But it is possible, says Tingling, because every year late-round
draft picks make it.
“Very few teams actually measure their scouts in terms of the quality of their
decision making,” said Tingling. “Success has many fathers and failure is
an orphan.”
He cites the story of some Ottawa scouts telling their GM in 1992 that the
Senators should pick Chris Pronger instead of Alexandre Daigle. The
pressure was on the Sens to take a francophone scoring phenom.
“Wouldn’t you want to know who those scouts were? That’s the key
question,” Tingling said. “People don’t really track that stuff, and they
probably should.
“I would say NHL scouts have a memory somewhere between a goldfish
and a mutual fund manager.”
Toronto Star LOADED: 06.30.2013
683090
Toronto Maple Leafs
n one season.
By: Tim Alamenciak News reporter, Published on Sat Jun 29 2013
The NHL lockout will soon pay dividends for hockey card collectors.
For just the second time, next season’s batch of cards will include two
valuable rookie series instead of one, after none were released during the
recent abbreviated campaign.
“The rookies are the juice that keeps this industry simmering,” said Steve
Edgar, manager of From Hockey to Hollywood, a Toronto collectibles store.
After the lockout of 2004-05, fans scrambled for boxes of Upper Deck’s
Series 1 for a shot at Sidney Crosby’s rookie card, now valued at $300.
Boxes — containing 192 cards in 24 packs — that were hoarded and kept
sealed from that season more than tripled in value in just two years,
according to Edgar, adding there was bedlam at the time of that release.
The cartons sold for $79.99 at first, then went for as much as $300 as they
became harder to get.
“You sold through whatever you could get, and then you’d try and find them
on the secondary market,” Edgar said of the 2005-06 sets, which also
included Alex Ovechkin’s rookie card.
Calder Trophy winner Jonathan Huberdeau will be among the drawing
cards when the new sets hit the market, starting with the Trilogy series on
July 2 — just two days after the NHL draft. The premier Upper Deck Series
1, though, won’t reach stores until early November. One game of NHL
experience makes a player eligible for a rookie card.
The unpredictable timing of the end to the recent lockout meant companies
couldn’t get cards printed in time, said Upper Deck spokesperson Chris
Carlin, resulting in this year’s rookie double cohort: “What you have is a
situation where there’s a tremendous amount of value.”
Gregg Lang, who first took up card collecting after that 2004-05 lockout,
says he spent $100 a week that first year and doubled his money because
of the extra rookie content.
“It’s like a lottery ticket. You just get lucky or you don’t,” he said. “As an
investment opportunity, these are probably the world’s most colourful stock
and bond. When you pop open a pack, the new card smell is very addictive
to people. There’s often jokes that they put a little whiff of heroin inside.”
Toronto Star LOADED: 06.30.2013
683091
Toronto Maple Leafs
Leafs have sit-down with Lecavalier
August orientation camp in Washington, ., in fact 2013 star draft pick Seth
Jones is on the radar. But before Poile could be asked about other potential
Leafs such as Phil Kessel, John-Michael Liles and James van Riemsdyk,
he said he had not discuss current NHLers until his staff meets.
“I don’t want to offend anyone,” Poile said.
By Lance Hornby
,Toronto Sun
First posted: Saturday, June 29, 2013 11:32 PM EDT | Updated: Sunday,
June 30, 2013 12:02 AM EDT
NEW YORK — - Like hopefuls trying to land a big part in a Broadway play,
the Maple Leafs joined the lineup of teams being auditioned by Vincent
Lecavalier.
General manager Dave Nonis and his assistant/salary cap specialist
Claude Loiselle came to a hotel in midtown New York late Saturday for a
meeting with the surprise free-agent catch of draft weekend.
Lecavalier and agent Kent Hughes spoke to about half the 30 teams as day
and night wore on with more to come Sunday.
Nonis would not comment on the vibe of the meeting when contacted by the
Toronto Sun.
Boston, Detroit, Dallas, Philadelphia and Montreal were among the suitors
granted a few minutes to make a pitch and one team (not the Leafs) met
with him at least an hour. Toronto, with a need for size and experience
down the middle, even if UFA Tyler Bozak returns, have obvious interest in
a quick fix such as Lecavalier.
Though he’s now sitting on a $30 million US compliance buyout from
Tampa Bay spread over the next 14 years, the 33-year-old Lecavalier is
adamant he has something to offer the right team if a dollar figure is
reached. He had a $7.7 million cap hit last year, but would take a haircut
after his production numbers began to fall off a few years ago.
As a team, the Leafs are in much better shape than if this chance had
arisen a couple of years ago, but there is likely concern from Lecavalier
about the optics. Picking Toronto means snubbing his home-province of
Quebec, which has fantasized about his return for years.
Fraser phased out?
While chasing Lecavalier, the Leafs might be saying goodbye to one of their
hardiest performers last season. Defenceman Mark Fraser, who fought his
way back to the NHL through the Marlies and helped Toronto forge its
abrasive identity, has rejected a two-way qualifying offer, according to a
TSN report.
Such a move on the Leafs’ part would not have sat well with Fraser, whose
season ended with a frontal skull fracture after being struck with a puck in a
playoff game against the Bruins.
“He rejected his offer which was tendered simply to retain his rights,” Nonis
said in an e-mail. “(It was) not unexpected.”
Fraser’s agent, Larry Kelly, could not be reached for comment.
Burke back to work
The last time Team USA named its Olympic Games hierarchy, Brian Burke
and Ron Wilson were chortling how unpopular they would be in Toronto and
Canada as GM and coach, respectively, if the Yanks won.
They did get within a goal of a gold medal in Vancouver in 2010, but wound
up being reviled in Leafs Nation for other reasons. For 2014, Burke has an
undefined player personnel role, in a group including six current NHL GMs.
Wilson has been replaced as coach by Pittsburgh’s Dan Bylsma.
Burke, who was hired as a scout in Anaheim and has mostly kept a low
profile since his dismissal in January, and Flyers’ GM Paul Holmgren were
the only execs absent at a Team USA press conference on Saturday in
New York. Burke was changing planes in Moscow said an official.
Rushing Jake to Russia
When Poile said he would put a premium on skating for his team on the big
ice in Sochi, Russia, next year, Jake Gardiner’s ears must have perked up.
Why not look at the young Leaf defenceman, who glides almost effortlessly,
can pinch and get back in a flash? Poile agrees youth will be part of his
Loose Leafs
The Leafs and all teams will be closely monitored on the three-minute rule
per pick on Sunday at the Prudential Center in Newark as the NHL attempts
to get all seven rounds completed between
3 p.m. and the 11 o’clock news. The league intends to chop one hour off
the usual ceremonies in the first round alone. “It’s going to be rock and roll,”
said Florida GM Dale Tallon .... Among those at the Leaf table on Sunday
will be Nonis, Loiselle, VP Dave Poulin, amateur scouting director Dave
Morrison, advisors Cliff Fletcher and Steve Staios, player development
director Jim Hughes and European scout Thommie Bergman ... A rare sight
Sunday will be a Leaf wearing Mats Sundin’s 13. Drafted juniors are getting
the franchise leading scorer’s number for the photo-op because it’s the
2013 class, but it will likely remain as sacrosanct as Wendel Clark’s 17 has
the past decade ... Toronto could get the 2017 draft as part of their 100th
anniversary ... This is the 50th anniversary of the first NHL draft, when only
16-year-olds were eligible. The Leafs first pick was Walt McKechnie, who
didn’t start out in blue and white but was traded to Toronto in 1978. Garry
Monahan, picked first overall by Montreal, also eventually played for the
Leafs. Defenceman Jim McKenny was also among the 21 picked that year.
Toronto Sun LOADED: 06.30.2013
683092
Toronto Maple Leafs
Two weeks to fix a franchise: Toronto Maple Leafs
Michael Traikos | 13/06/29 | Last Updated: 13/06/28 3:23 PM ET
The Leafs need to figure out whether to keep unrestricted free agent Tyler
Bozak or look elsewhere.
With the National Hockey League Entry Draft taking place on Sunday and
NHL free agency right around the corner, the league’s general managers
will have a chance to retool or reload for the next season. Throughout the
week, we’ll look at the seven Canadian teams and the moves they could
make. Our last piece: the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Two weeks to fix a franchise: The Ottawa Senators
2013 season 26-17-5, third in Northeast, fifth in the East
First-round picks No. 21 overall
Moveable pieces Toronto already traded backup goalie Ben Scrivens and
forward Matt Frattin to Los Angeles for Jonathan Bernier, but with a bevy of
young defencemen (Cody Franson, Jake Gardiner, Jesse Blacker, Stuart
Percy), there is another potential deal to be made.
Buyout-bound Mike Komisarek, who was buried in the minors last season,
has one year remaining at US$3.5-million.
What should happen The Leafs, who acquired Bernier to challenge James
Reimer for the starting job, addressed their goaltending situation. Now it is
time to look elsewhere in the lineup. The biggest hole is still up the middle,
where the team lacks a legitimate top-line centre. The defence could also
use a big body to play in the top four, as well as some size and skill on the
wings to replace the losses of Frattin, Leo Komarov, and potentially Clarke
MacArthur.
What shouldn’t happen The Leafs should not automatically assume that last
year’s success will be replicated and try to get by with the same lineup.
Sure, impact players such as Nazem Kadri and James van Riemsdyk are
likely to get better as they mature, but this team was exposed down the
stretch and is still not good enough to advance past the first round. The
acquisition of Bernier is an indication that general manager Dave Nonis also
believes this roster needs to get better.
Immediate needs Before the Leafs can hit the open market they have to
take care of some house-cleaning. Kadri, Franson and Carl Gunnarsson
need new contracts — and they will not be cheap. From there, the team
needs to figure out whether to keep unrestricted free agent Tyler Bozak or
look elsewhere.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Luis M. Alvarez
Best-case scenario The Leafs let Bozak walk and send Franson to the
Colorado Avalanche (and perhaps a second-round pick) for centre Paul
Stastny. The team, which has just 11 players under contract and US$19million in available cap space, signs both David Clarkson and Andrew
Ference.
Worst-case scenario Nonis overpays for Bozak, who is seeking around
US$5-million, and is once again forced to rely on a minor-leaguers such as
Mark Fraser and Mike Kostka or a teenager like Morgan Rielly to play a big
roles on defence.
Post-script Will the Leafs take a chance on Vincent Lecavalier? He might
not be the same player who scored 50 goals, but he is still an upgrade over
Bozak and the closest thing this team would have to a No. 1 centre since
Mats Sundin.
National Post LOADED: 06.30.2013
683093
Washington Capitals
Capitals’ practice facility to host 2014 U.S. Olympic men’s team camp
Katie Carrera
June 29, 2013 at 4:33 pm
USA Hockey announced Saturday that the Capitals’ practice facility, Kettler
Capitals Iceplex in Arlington, will host the 2014 U.S. Olympic men’s national
team orientation camp from Aug. 25 to 29.
Designed to prepare the team that will compete during the 2014 Winter
Olympics in Sochi, Russia, the camp will be an offseason highlight in the
Washington area not long before the start of NHL training camps in
September.
“We are thrilled that Kettler Capitals Iceplex has been chosen by USA
Hockey to host their 2013 U.S. Men’s National Team Orientation Camp,”
General Manager George McPhee said in a news release. “This selection is
a testament to the growing popularity of hockey in the Washington area and
we feel there is no better place to hold the U.S. Olympic camp than the
Nation’s capital.”
Details about the camp, including whether the sessions will be open to the
public, have not been released yet.
Also on Saturday, USA Hockey named Pittsburgh Penguins Coach Dan
Bylsma as head coach of the 2014 U.S Olympic men’s team.
Nashville Predators General Manager David Poile, who was the Capitals’
GM from 1982 to 1997, will serve as the squad’s general manager.
Pittsburgh’s Ray Shero will join as associate general manager while Brian
Burke will be director of player personnel.
While the NHL and the International Olympic Committee have yet to reach
a formal agreement that allows NHL players to participate in Sochi, the
sides are expected to strike a deal soon. A resolution could even come as
early as Monday, when officials from the NHL, IOC and International Ice
Hockey Federation are scheduled to meet in New York.
Washington Post LOADED: 06.30.2013
683094
Winnipeg Jets
Manitoba's big shooter
Staff Writer
NEW YORK -- When there wasn't a microphone stuck in his face or an NHL
GM probing his psyche this week, Ryan Pulock's mind invariably drifted
back to one place. The memory of his younger brother Brock.
"I've thought of him a lot this week. I wish he was here. My whole family
does," said Grandview's Pulock.
The 18-year-old Brandon Wheat Kings captain is predicted to be a firstround selection in today's NHL Draft and, according to TSN draft expert Bob
McKenzie, owns the best shot in the draft.
Pulock spoke to the Free Press on Saturday from his hotel in Newark,
surrounded by eight family members including his father Dave, mother
Tannis and older brother Derrick.
Younger brother Brock was killed in a car accident in March of 2010.
"Most of my memories of Brock this week have been from our time playing
minor hockey together or just fooling around at the rink. We were only a few
years apart in age and we were close. We spent a lot of time together," said
Pulock. "If I get to hear my name called on Sunday, I'll turn to mom and dad
first and I know all of us will be thinking about Brock."
It doesn't take much to realize whatever team drafts Pulock will be getting a
lot more than a shot that has been compared to that of Hall of Famer Al
Macinnis.
"His defining trait is his shot. He's got an elite NHL shot right now," said
Brandon Wheat Kings GM and owner Kelly McCrimmon. "He makes the
simple play and he passes the puck hard and on the tape. He's a powerful
guy. He's already 214 pounds. But there are a lot of intangibles with Ryan.
"He's from a great family. He has great commitment and does everything
possible to be the best player he can be. He's got great leadership qualities
and is very respected by his teammates. (He) shows all people respect.
He'll give himself every opportunity to be a good pro."
McCrimmon drafted Pulock and brought him to Brandon just a few short
months after Brock died. He carefully watched over Pulock to make sure he
was OK on the ice and emotionally.
In September of 2011, McCrimmon lost his own brother and long-time
NHLer Brad, in an airplane crash involving the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl of the
Kontinental Hockey League.
"March 29th is the day Brock died and it's also Brad's birthday," said
McCrimmon. "As it turns out that day has some significance to the both of
us."
Pulock agrees.
"It's an important day for both us. It's a unique situation," he said. "We'll
both think of our brothers on that day forever. Brock has been in my family's
hearts and minds a lot this week. One hundred per cent I'll be thinking of
him (Sunday). He'll be right along there with us as the experience unfolds."
Pulock quickly adjusted to life in the WHL, scoring 42 points as a rookie to
break the franchise mark for 16-year-old defencemen previously held by
Wade Redden (39 points).
"I wouldn't be surprised if he's a top-pair NHL defenceman, but as a fallback
he's for sure a second-pair D-man," said McCrimmon.
As for the big shot, Pulock says it's part hard work and part genetic.
"When we went to the rink as kids I took a lot of shots. I might have
inherited some of it. My dad played junior in Dauphin and they tell me he
could shoot it, too," Pulock.
Any playful banter in the house over who had the better shot?
"Nope. He doesn't bring it up. Which makes me think I have the better
shot," said Pulock with a laugh.
Pulock may have a lot more fans after an NHL team and its supporters latch
on to him today, but he won't forget the folks in Grandview, a town of 800
people located 45 kilometres west of Dauphin.
"The support I've been given from the people at home in Grandview, they've
been great to me. I wish I could have brought them all with me," said
Pulock.
While all of Grandview won't be in the Prudential Center today when the
NHL Draft gets underway, many local folks will be gathered to watch one of
their favourite sons go through a moment of a lifetime.
The Grandview Kinsmen Community Centre will be full of his friends and
neighbours.
"There will be more than 200 of us," said Grand Plains minor hockey
volunteer Jeff Legaarden via telephone. "If you know the Pulock family, you
know what great people they are. And if you know Ryan, you know what a
respectful young man he is. He's great with people of all ages. Whether it's
the two-year-old kids hanging around at the rink for the first time or their 85year-old grandparents that are there to watch them, Ryan has time for all of
them. And a way with all of them. It's not too often that a Parkland kid has
the chance to get drafted, let alone go in the first round. It doesn't matter if
it's the first or second round, it'll be pretty wild when they call his name.
We're proud of Ryan as a community."
Pulock said he's ready for the moment.
"I'm feeling good. Getting a little excited. This is what all kids think of when
they're skating on the rink or just dreaming about hockey," he said. "This is
the first step towards playing in the NHL."
As for where he gets drafted, Pulock says it doesn't matter, but admits there
would a something a little special about hearing one team call his name.
"I just want to play in the NHL one day and whatever team it may be, I'm
going to be thrilled by it," he said. "Being from Manitoba and playing all of
my hockey in Manitoba, Winnipeg would be pretty cool. Any team will make
me happy but the Jets would be special and unique for obvious reasons."
The Jets, eh? We all understand hockey is a business and they'll have to do
what is best for the team when their number comes up. Pulock is ranked a
little deeper in the first round than Winnipeg's pick at 13th.
So it's an unlikely scenario.
But part of the package teams look for is the quality of the person. It's not
just about the best player and I can tell you this, the Jets couldn't draft a
better person.
Not this year. Not any year.
Winnipeg Free Press LOADED 06.30.2013
683095
Winnipeg Jets
Jets' Enstrom victimized in robbery, beating
Ed Tait
JERSEY CITY, N.J. -- Toby Enstrom probably wishes he could put 2013 in
the rear-view mirror.
The Winnipeg Jets defenceman was robbed and assaulted in his hometown
of ñrnskldsvik, Sweden Friday night but is recovering with only minor
injuries. Swedish website SportExpressen.se first reported the 28-year-old
defenceman was beaten by three men and robbed.
The Jets became aware of the incident Saturday morning.
"We've done some digging through our team security," said Jets GM Kevin
Cheveldayoff Saturday at his media conference in advance of Sunday's
NHL Draft in Newark.
Minor cut
"Apparently Toby was out for dinner with his family and went to pick up the
cheque and went to the ATM to get some money and was robbed by three
people. Supposedly, to the best of our knowledge, those people have been
apprehended by police. Toby is fine. He received a minor cut above the
eye. He's putting it behind him."
Cheveldayoff spoke Jets' security and later Saturday to Enstrom himself
and was assured Enstrom was OK.
Enstrom is coming off a frustrating campaign with the Jets in which he
appeared in only 22 games because of injuries. But he remains a key cog in
the team's defensive corps and, before being injured, was leading NHL
defencemen in scoring.
The Jets are breathing a sigh of relief the assault left Enstrom with just
minor injuries.
"They're like your kids and when they go away for the summer you're
always worried about different things like that," said Cheveldayoff.
"Toby's such a good guy, and to have it happen to him is unfortunate, but it
just goes to show you're never safe and you always have to be on guard."
Winnipeg Free Press LOADED 06.30.2013
683096
Winnipeg Jets
Time for Jets' scouts to relax
Ed Tait
NEW YORK -- The Winnipeg Jets have stockpiled 10 picks in the 2013 NHL
Draft, tied for the most among their rivals with Buffalo, Los Angeles and
Nashville.
Now the question is, will director of amateur scouting Marcel Comeau and
the scouting staff hear 10 different names called out by his boss Kevin
Cheveldayoff, or will some of them be moved?
WINNIPEG PICKS
Round 1: 13th
Round 2: 43rd, 59th, 61st
Round 3: 74th, 91st
Round 4: 104th
Round 5: 134th
Round 6: None (164th traded to Pittsburgh for Eric Tangradi)
Round 7: 190th, 194th
Prepared
"My staff, I told them to be prepared in the event we don't use them," said
Cheveldayoff.
"They're all good about it. When the phone rings and you're on there with
someone and (Jets' scouts) hear a third- or a fourth- or a fifth- (round pick),
they're not paying attention as much.
"They hear second or they hear first and it's like they have to strain their
neck a little bit.
"They're invested in making this organization better. They're the ones, on
the amateur side, they don't get to watch the Jets play 82 times. They're out
on the rinks, they're out pounding the pavement, going through the
snowstorms to try and find that player that is going to put us over the top.
That needs to be respected.
"We're very focussed on working to keep our RFAs and working to build
through the draft to develop an organization that is strong and has lots of
depth. It starts right here."
The Jets have their first-round pick, 13th overall, and three in the second
round -- their own at 43rd, a compensatory pick at 59 for not signing 2008
first-rounder Daultan Leveille and the 61st choice as part of the deal that
sent Johnny Oduya to Chicago at the trade deadline in 2012.
"It's been a lot of work, but this is a day you look forward to," said Comeau.
"Right now everybody's got a smile on their face, all the work we've put in is
just around the corner and we're going to get something for it.
"We're all in this together, we all want to see this team get better as soon as
we can, so whatever pieces we can add is all for the good as far as I'm
concerned. Our job is to acquire assets for management to manage."
Hailed
This draft is being hailed as among the deepest and best in over a decade,
drawing comparisons to the star-studded lot of 2003 that included MarcAndre Fleury, Eric Staal, Nathan Horton, Ryan Suter, Dion Phaneuf, Jeff
Carter, Brent Seabrook, Dustin Brown, Zach Parise, Ryan Getzlaf, Ryan
Kesler, Mike Richards and Corey Perry.
Comeau, like a lot of NHL types, figures there are at least five players who
are NHL-ready right now.
"It's really good," Comeau said. "There's going to be some really good
players who go in the second round, and as you go deeper into the draft,
players (will) need more development time and have a couple more warts
than some of the guys who went in front of them.
"There's a lot of scouts saying this (draft) is the best in quite awhile."
Winnipeg Free Press LOADED 06.30.2013
683097
Winnipeg Jets
Chevy looking to move up
Ed Tait
WHO MIGHT BE THERE AT NO. 13?
JERSEY CITY, N.J. -- There was a moment Saturday when the tall and the
short of the 2013 NHL Draft -- both literally and figuratively -- was on display
in a hotel lobby, with the diminutive Max Domi spotted walking alongside
mammoth defenceman Samuel Morin.
Upstairs conference rooms were buzzing as four NHL teams -- the
Winnipeg Jets, Tampa Bay Lightning, Boston Bruins and Calgary Flames -are all sharing space in the same hotel, all conducting last-minute player
interviews, all sharing chatter and gossip in the hours before today's draft.
"Right now the happiest people are the phone companies, there's no
question about it," said Jets' GM Kevin Cheveldayoff with a grin. "There's
lots of GMs with cellphones attached to their ear.
"It's unpredictable. Each draft seems to take on its own life and certainly
there's lots of new factors that come into play on this one. At some point in
time I imagine some trades will start to happen. Will they happen today,
tomorrow on the floor or after the draft... people have mentioned
compliance buyouts... there's lots of different nuances and complexities."
The Jets, who hold the 13th pick in the first round, three more in the second
and 10 overall, conducted interviews with 88 players at the draft combine
earlier this month and planned to chat again with 10-12 players this
weekend. Sources say the last three interviews Jets conducted Saturday
included Domi, Morin and Curtis Lazar of the WHL's Edmonton Oil Kings.
Other prospects spotted Saturday at the Jets' hotel included Ottawa 67s
centre Sean Monahan, Valeri Nichushkin of the KHL's Chelyaninsk, both of
whom are now expected to be plucked before Winnipeg picks at 13...
unless the Jets make a deal to move up in the first round.
"We're trying," Cheveldayoff admitted. "It's different for different teams to try
and move up. Sitting at 13, depending on where you want to go, sometimes
it's a roster player (being asked for) and you have to decide whether you
have that ability to move a roster player to move into that situation, and
sometimes it's pick. A lot of times the teams you are talking to don't want to
commit until they know who's there for them. If it's a player (available) that
they like, then all your work is for naught.
"Similarly, teams below us are making the calls and the requisite overtures
and you set your prices from those things. You're here to re-stock and stock
your teams with young talent and future building blocks for your
organization."
And it's here where the Jets must weigh filling the current holes on their
roster vs. stockpiling young talent. Cheveldayoff has key restricted free
agents to re-sign, such as Blake Wheeler and Zach Bogosian, and nine
unrestricted free agents -- a good half dozen of which are likely to leave -that leave some significant question marks on the depth chart.
There has been talk about compliance buyouts and the usual assortment of
trade rumours -- the speculation swirling even more so this year because of
the drop in the salary cap that has handcuffed teams pushed up against it.
"There's lots of conversation and it goes in both directions, players that
we've asked about, players (of their own) that have been asked about us,"
said Cheveldayoff. "Obviously at the draft here, draft picks are en vogue
part of the conversation. You make certain calls to different teams
depending on their situations and where they are in the draft, about maybe
potentially moving up and seeing what that price is, what their appetite is
and when they are going to do it or if they are going to do it."
It would be shocking if the Jets used their first-round pick to grab a
goaltender and there are some young defensive prospects in the system,
including last year's first-rounder, Jacob Trouba. The Jets have some
serious needs, both with the big club and in their system, along the right
side, and so the consensus from draft watchers is they will likely go with a
forward with their first pick.
"I do have several No. 1 priorities," said Cheveldayoff. "We're a team that's
made it well known that we'd like to find some things on the right side, on
the right wing, but we're looking to enhance any position.
"There is some unpredictability. I can only go back to last year and think
about the excitement that was beginning to brew at our table when it looked
like Jacob Trouba was going to potentially be there for us. When that came
to fruition, you almost wanted to run up to the podium and make sure it is
your turn.
"To say that (a player) will ever be there when you're in your meetings and
then you catch yourself and say, 'Well, you never know...' especially when
you are getting into that realm.
"Scouting is an art, not a science, and like many artists, they all have
different styles. Every scouting director is going to look at different things.
That's what makes for the most intriguing part of the draft: the
unpredictability."
Winnipeg Free Press LOADED 06.30.2013
683098
Winnipeg Jets
Cheveldayoff focused on priorities as buzz builds at NHL Draft
Ed Tait
"I do have several No. 1 priorities," said Cheveldayoff. "We’re a team that’s
made it well-known that we’d like to find some things on the right side, on
the right wing, but we’re looking to enhance any position.
"There is some unpredictability. I can only go back to last year and think
about the excitement that was beginning to brew at our table when it looked
like Jacob Trouba was going to potentially be there for us. When that came
to fruition, you almost wanted to run up to the podium and make sure it is
your turn.
06/29/2013 9:23 PM
"To say that (a player) will ever be there when you’re in your meetings and
then you catch yourself and say, ‘Well, you never know...’ especially when
you are getting into that realm.
JERSEY CITY, N.J. — There was a moment Saturday when the tall and the
short of the 2013 NHL Draft — both literally and figuratively — was on
display in a hotel lobby, with the diminutive Max Domi spotted walking
alongside mammoth defenceman Samuel Morin.
"Scouting is an art, not a science, and like many artists, they all have
different styles. Every scouting director is going to look at different things.
That’s what makes for the most intriguing part of the draft: the
unpredictability."
Upstairs conference rooms were buzzing as four NHL teams — the
Winnipeg Jets, Tampa Bay Lightning, Boston Bruins and Calgary Flames —
are all sharing space in the same hotel, all conducting last-minute player
interviews, all sharing chatter and gossip in the hours before today’s draft.
Winnipeg Free Press LOADED 06.30.2013
"Right now the happiest people are the phone companies, there’s no
question about it," said Jets’ GM Kevin Cheveldayoff with a grin. "There’s
lots of GMs with cellphones attached to their ear.
"It’s unpredictable. Each draft seems to take on its own life and certainly
there’s lots of new factors that come into play on this one. At some point in
time I imagine some trades will start to happen. Will they happen today,
tomorrow on the floor or after the draft... people have mentioned
compliance buyouts... there’s lots of different nuances and complexities."
The Jets, who hold the 13th pick in the first round, three more in the second
and 10 overall, conducted interviews with 88 players at the draft combine
earlier this month and planned to chat again with 10-12 players this
weekend. Sources say the last three interviews Jets conducted Saturday
included Domi, Morin and Curtis Lazar of the WHL’s Edmonton Oil Kings.
Other prospects spotted Saturday at the Jets’ hotel included Ottawa 67s
centre Sean Monahan, Valeri Nichushkin of the KHL’s Chelyaninsk, both of
whom are now expected to be plucked before Winnipeg picks at 13...
unless the Jets make a deal to move up in the first round.
"We’re trying," Cheveldayoff admitted. "It’s different for different teams to try
and move up. Sitting at 13, depending on where you want to go, sometimes
it’s a roster player (being asked for) and you have to decide whether you
have that ability to move a roster player to move into that situation, and
sometimes it’s a pick. A lot of times the teams you are talking to don’t want
to commit until they know who’s there for them. If it’s a player (available)
that they like, then all your work is for naught.
"Similarly, teams below us are making the calls and the requisite overtures
and you set your prices from those things. You’re here to re-stock and stock
your teams with young talent and future building blocks for your
organization."
And it’s here where the Jets must weigh filling the current holes on their
roster vs. stockpiling young talent. Cheveldayoff has key restricted free
agents to re-sign, such as Blake Wheeler and Zach Bogosian, and nine
unrestricted free agents — a good half-dozen of which are likely to leave —
that leave some significant question marks on the depth chart.
There has been talk about compliance buyouts and the usual assortment of
trade rumours — the speculation swirling even more so this year because
of the drop in the salary cap that has handcuffed teams pushed up against
it.
"There’s lots of conversation and it goes in both directions, players that
we’ve asked about, players (of their own) that have been asked about us,"
said Cheveldayoff. "Obviously at the draft here, draft picks are en vogue
part of the conversation. You make certain calls to different teams
depending on their situations and where they are in the draft, about maybe
potentially moving up and seeing what that price is, what their appetite is
and when they are going to do it or if they are going to do it."
It would be shocking if the Jets used their first-round pick to grab a
goaltender and there are some young defensive prospects in the system,
including last year’s first-rounder, Jacob Trouba. The Jets have some
serious needs, both with the big club and in their system, along the right
side, and so the consensus from draft watchers is they will likely go with a
forward with their first pick.
683099
Winnipeg Jets
Jets' Enstrom robbed, assaulted in Sweden
Ed Tait
06/29/2013 7:11 PM
JERSEY CITY, N.J. — Toby Enstrom probably wishes he could put 2013
permanently in the rear-view mirror.
The Winnipeg Jets defenceman was robbed and assaulted in his hometown
of Örnsköldsvik, Sweden Friday night but is recovering with only minor
injuries. Swedish website SportExpressen.se first reported the 28-year-old
defenceman was beaten by three men and robbed.
The Jets became aware of the incident Saturday morning.
"We’ve done some digging through our team security," said Jets GM Kevin
Cheveldayoff Saturday at his media conference in advance of Sunday’s
NHL Draft in Newark.
"Apparently Toby was out for dinner with his family and went to pick up the
cheque and went to the ATM to get some money and was robbed by three
people. Supposedly, to the best of our knowledge, those people have been
apprehended by police. Toby is fine. He received a minor cut above the
eye. He’s putting it behind him."
Cheveldayoff spoke to Jets’ security and later Saturday to Enstrom himself
and was assured Enstrom was OK.
Enstrom is coming off a frustrating campaign with the Jets in which he
appeared in only 22 games because of injuries. But he remains a key cog in
the team’s defensive corps and, before being injured, was leading all NHL
defencemen in scoring.
The Jets are breathing a sigh of relief the assault left Enstrom with just
minor injuries.
"They’re like your kids and when they go away for the summer you’re
always worried about different things like that," said Cheveldayoff.
"Toby’s such a good guy and to have it happen to him is unfortunate, but it
just goes to show you’re never safe and you always have to be on guard."
Winnipeg Free Press LOADED 06.30.2013
683100
Winnipeg Jets
Jets gear up for future
Ken Wiebe
June 29, 2013 11:48 PM CDT
NEW YORK CITY -- It's down to a matter of when the Winnipeg Jets will
make their first pick in the 2013 NHL Entry Draft and ultimately, who it's
going to be.
Going into what is likely to be an incredibly long day, cramming seven
rounds into Sunday at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., the Jets hold
10 selections, including six in the first three rounds in what is being called
the deepest draft in recent memory.
Currently holding the 13th overall selection, Jets general manager Kevin
Cheveldayoff reiterated hat he's interested in moving up in the draft but
based on reports, the price tag right is still pretty high right now.
"Ultimately, you're here to restock and stock your teams with young talent
and future building blocks for your organization. That is really the first and
foremost topic on our minds," said Cheveldayoff. "We spent a lot of time
with our scouts, our scouts have spent the whole year putting their hearts
and souls into the list. It's an exciting time for them and it's an exciting time
for the organization."
Cheveldayoff said it's important to keep an open mind and be able to adjust
on the fly, exploring all options.
With that in mind, the Jets brought in Ottawa 67s centre Sean Monahan in
for a second interview on Saturday afternoon and he's projected to be
picked between fifth and eighth.
The Jets brought roughly 12 players back for second interviews this week
after meeting with 88 guys at the NHL combine in Toronto.
One of the interesting dynamics at play is the fact the Jets hold three
second-round picks.
Whether the Jets hold onto all three picks or end up sacrificing one for a
player that can help them win now is one of the more intriguing storylines to
follow going into Sunday.
"It certainly creates a great deal more conversation pieces, it gives you a lot
more opportunity to get into the game, if you want to get into the game,"
said Cheveldayoff. "But there's still so many different things that come into
play, when you even go to use one of those pieces for a player. You have
to make sure that you keep one eye always looking at where you're at right
now and where you need to be in the future."
Jets director of amateur scouting Marcel Comeau made it clear that the fact
the organization has only selected North American players during the past
two drafts since the NHL returned to Winnipeg is merely a coincidence.
"It really is," said Comeau, noting the scouting staff took a few extra trips
overseas this year. "There's obviously some high-end players over there.
We wanted to make sure we had some good viewings on those players.
"We have nothing against drafting European players. We have some of
those players in prominent spots on our list this year, so it's just one of
those things. Certainly no bias on our part."
Winnipeg Sun LOADED 06.30.2013
683101
Winnipeg Jets
Jets ready to pick up ‘building blocks’ in 2013 NHL Entry Draft
Ken Wiebe
Saturday, June 29, 2013 12:21 PM CDT
JERSEY CITY, N.J - The Winnipeg Jets are huddling up one last time to put
the finishing touches on their draft list.
Going into Sunday’s draft with 10 picks, including six in the first three
rounds, it’s now a question of whether the Jets are going to use them all or
package one (or some) of them in a deal to help them win right now.
“We plan things accordingly,” Jets general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff
said on Saturday afternoon at the hotel where the team is meeting.
“Ultimately, you’re here to restock and stock your teams with young talent
and future building blocks for your organization and that is really the first
and foremost topic on our minds.
“We’ve spent a lot of time with our scouts and our scouts spent the whole
year putting their hearts and souls into the list. It’s an exciting time for them
and an exciting time for the organization. Sometimes, draft picks can be
overvalued and undervalued and you have to look at that.”
The Jets currently hold the 13th pick in the 2013 NHL Entry Draft.
While the primary focus is on the draft, there are plenty of calls and
meetings regarding potential trades.
“There’s lots of conversation,” said Cheveldayoff. “It goes in both directions,
players that we’ve asked about and players that have asked about us.
You’re at the draft here, so draft picks are an in vogue conversation. You
make different calls to different teams, depending on their situations, where
they are in the draft and potentially about moving up and seeing what that
price is and what their appetite is.
“You get a lot of groundwork laid to see if anything does come into place.”
Cheveldayoff said he’s met with several of the agents for Jets’ prospective
restricted and unrestricted free agents.
“Even at the draft here, we’ve had an opportunity to meet with some
representatives,” said Cheveldayoff. “It’s an ongoing process, we’ve had
great dialogue going back and forth and again, to try to predict timing and
everything like that is premature for me.”
Cheveldayoff also said he hasn’t told any of those free agents that their
services won’t be required next season, though he expects some of them to
test the market on July 5.
Winnipeg Sun LOADED 06.30.2013
683102
Winnipeg Jets
Winnipeg Jets' Toby Enstrom robbed, assaulted
Paul Friesen
June 29, 2013 02:50 PM
Winnipeg Jets defenceman Toby Enstrom suffered minor injuries when he
was robbed and assaulted in his native Sweden, Saturday night.
The Jets have confirmed reports at aftonbladet.se and expressen.se that
say Enstrom was in the town of Örnsköldsvik when he was confronted by
three men with knives.
“Apparently Toby was out for dinner with his family and went to pick up the
check, and went to the ATM to get some money and was robbed by
apparently three people,” Jets GM Kevin Cheveldayoff said at the NHL draft
in New Jersey. “And supposedly, to the best of our knowledge, those
people have been apprehended by police and Toby's fine. He received, I
think, a minor cut above his eye and is fine.”
Cheveldayoff said he hadn’t spoken to Enstrom, personally, instead
receiving the information from the Jets security person.
Saying Enstrom apparently received stitches, Cheveldayoff expressed relief
the results of the incident aren’t more serious.
“They're like your kids,” he said. “When they go away for the summer you're
always worried about different things like that. Toby's such a good guy and
to have it happen to him is unfortunate, but I think it just goes to show
you're never safe. You always have to be on guard.”
Enstrom’s home town is listed as Nordingra, Sweden.
Injuries limited the smooth-skating 28-year-old to 22 games (four goals, 11
assists) last season.
Enstrom goes into next season with a new, five-year contract that will pay
him $5.75 million per season.
It’s not the first time a member of the Jets has made headlines in the
summer.
Last year, goalie Ondrej Pavelec was convicted of drunk driving after he
crashed a car in his native Czech Republic, while prospect Ivan Telegin
sliced his hand open, forcing him to miss the Jets’ July development camp.
The year before, defenceman Dustin Byfuglien was charged with impaired
boating in Minnesota.
683103
Vancouver Canucks
Lack of prospects heightens’ Canucks draft needs
Ben Kuzma
NEW YORK — Trading a goaltender is of immediate concern to the
Vancouver Canucks.
However, with a genuine lack of prospect depth at forward and defence, the
club should be concerned about being ranked 27th by Hockey’s Future in
an assessment of picks projected to play in the NHL.
The Canucks didn’t even have a player rated in the top 50. Part of that is
picking late in five years with general manager Mike Gillis at the hockey
operations helm — 26th, 29th, 115th, 22nd and 10th — and part of it is bad
drafting.
The best year in the last 10 was 2004, in which Cory Schneider (26th), Alex
Edler (91st), Mike Brown (159th) and Jannik Hansen (287th) were selected.
With an annual pledge to pick the best player when the Sunday selection
process begins in Newark, N.J., it should also come a real need to fill a
roster void with picks at Nos. 24, 85, 115, 145, 175 and 205.
The Canucks could lean toward a history of picking by position because
they’ve taken 11 defencemen and seven centres the last five drafts. With
Derek Roy not back and Maxim Lapierre an unrestricted free agent, they
may shore up the middle.
Then again, there’s a lack of organization depth at left wing with Mason
Raymond expected to also test unrestricted free agency. The Canucks
don’t have a second-round choice, having surrendered it along with Kevin
Connauton at the trade deadline.
With new coach John Tortorella looking for more bite and the Canucks
drafting bigger centres in Brendan Gaunce, Alexandre Mallet and Joseph
Labate, they could use the same amount of size and sandpaper on the left
side with their 24th pick — if they don’t move up by swapping selections or
in a possible Cory Schneider trade.
“We’ve talked to some teams about that possibility and you would always
like to,” said Gillis. “You don’t know who’s available at No. 24 until you get
into it. You have your list and you’re asking me questions I can’t answer.”
A trio of left wingers could provide that answer.
Kerby Rychel of the Windsor Spitfires in coming off successive 40-goal
OHL seasons and Adam Erne of the Quebec Remparts had a 72-point
QMJHL campaign. The 6-foot-1, 205 pound Rychel is the son of former
NHL forward Warren Rychel, and the Canucks are attracted by the hockey
lineage and the fact the Spitfires winger plays a hard, physical game and
goes to the net to battle and fight for rebounds and deflections. Skating is
said to be an issue, but the Los Angeles native had 87 points (40-47) last
season and 94 penalty minutes.
“A typical power forward with a big, booming shot,” said NHL Central
Scouting director Dan Marr. “He was used a lot on the point on the power
pay and is good down low. He protects the puck well coming out of the
corner.”
The 6-foot-1, 210 pound Erne has that certain snarl and nastiness that
Tortorella would also favour. He’s not only able to drive the net, the New
Haven, Conn., native has a good scoring touch and soft hands to bring an
added dimension to the left side. A banger and a crasher, he won’t hesitate
to hit and agitate. Another consideration is Valentin Zykov of Baie-Comeau
in the QMJHL. The 6-foot, 210 pound native of St. Petersburg, Russia had
40 goals and 75 points in 67 games.
If the Canucks are looking at defensive depth, 6-foot-1, 211 pound Brandon
Wheat Kings blueliner Ryan Pulock should be of interest. The Grandview,
Man., native had 14 goals and 45 points in 61 games.
“He’s probably a little underrated but he has one of the best shots,” said
Marr. “He can move the puck and has all the ingredients to be a potential
all-star in the league.”
OF NOTE — Gillis will interview former New York Rangers assistant coach
Mike Sullivan to possibly team with Torotrella behind the Canucks bench.
Scott Arniel is being considered as an assistant.
Vancouver Province: LOADED: 06.30.2013
683104
Vancouver Canucks
Luongo Watch: Canucks considering Schneider trade card
Ben Kuzma
NEW YORK — It was supposed to be about No. 24. It's now about No. 1
and No. 35.
Whoever the Vancouver Canucks were supposed to select with the 24th
pick in the NHL draft on Sunday has already been overshadowed by what
becomes of those who wear No. 1 (Roberto Luongo) and No. 35 (Cory
Schneider). The never-ending Luongo trade watch went off in another
direction Saturday morning with reports that general manager Mike Gillis
was considering dealing Schneider because of failed attempts to move
Luongo's mammoth contract. It was never the plan to trade Schneider, but it
could become reality.
The Edmonton Oilers would have obvious interest because Devan Dubnyk
has one year left on his contract at $3.5 million US and Nikolai Khabibulin is
an unrestricted free agent. The possible return of a first-round draft choice
— the Oilers pick seventh Sunday — and a prospect are more than the
Canucks would get for Luongo. At the trade deadline, they asked the
Toronto Maple Leafs for two second-round picks and goalie Ben Scrivens.
"It all depends on the team and the pick," Gillis said Saturday afternoon.
"Things are really busy and I'm getting lots of calls and discussions. You
have to listen to what the proposals may be and act accordingly. We'll never
say never. Cory is a very good young player and teams are after them all
the time."
Two years ago, the Tampa Bay Lightning and Columbus Blue Jackets had
more than just passing interest in Schneider before settling their situations.
And the added intrigue of this draft day is that five teams above the
Canucks in the selection process have unsettled goaltending situations.
Calgary, Edmonton, Philadelphia, Phoenix and the Islanders pick sixth,
seventh, 11th, 12th and 18th respectively, so the Canucks could have two
first-round picks Sunday and a prospect in a possible trade.
The crease conundrum is simple math. The Canucks can't tie up $9.3
million in cap space between two stoppers with the ceiling falling to $64.3
million and they're already at that figure with 17 roster players signed for
next season. The nine years and $40.5 million remaining on Luongo's 12year contract — it pays $6.7 million the next five seasons and has a salary
cap hit of $5.3 million — is a tough fit for any club.
Then again, Luongo is 34 and not 44 and can handle a heavy workload and
will play for many years. Schneider has a bright future as a 27-year-old
under contract for two more seasons at $4 million, but it remains to be seen
whether he can handle the bulk of an 82-game schedule. Splitting the slate
with Dubnyk makes sense and taking over as the starter the following
season would be a satisfying scenario in Edmonton.
If Schneider is moved, the Canucks would be more confident in Eddie Lack
and Joacim Eriksson competing for the back-up position because Luongo
logged 68 games in 2009-10. Schneider played a career-high 33 in 2011-12
which could forced the Canucks to find a veteran presence next season if
he stays because Lack is coming off hip surgery and Eriksson is untested
against NHL competition. Joe Cannata is the other goaltender under
contract and the Canucks may consider adding to their depth Sunday.
Schneider went 17-9-4 in the lockout-shortened season before sustaining a
groin strain April 22 in a 3-1 win over the Chicago Blackhawks. However,
when Luongo lost the first two games of the Western Conference
quarterfinal series against the San Jose Sharks, it was somewhat surprising
that Schneider got the call because his injury was kept quiet. He was
yanked in Game 3 after allowing five goals on 28 shots but did respond with
a 43-save performance in Game 4 as the Canucks lost in overtime to be
swept aside. Even so, there was some surprise with Luongo not starting the
season finale because it wouldn't be a stretch to suggest that Schneider
wasn't 100 per cent healthy.
Schneider's strong regular season is another reason for heightened
interest. He was eighth in goals-against average (2.11) and fourth in saves
percentage (.927) to prove he has the potential to handle more starts.
Luongo was 2.56 in GAA (25th) and .907 in saves percentage (31st). And
as much as the past season created a strange situation, trying to come up
with a workable Luongo trade scenario has been just as strange. One even
had the swapping of big contracts to raise some eyebrows.
With the Islanders expecting Evgeni Nabokov to flee to unrestricted free
agency, Luongo could return to a team that drafted him and be the big draw
in Brooklyn. The trade has been broached in theory and could work under
the right circumstances. The Islanders could get the bonafide starter in
exchange for the Canucks acquiring Rick DiPietro's huge contract and then
buying it out — If the Islanders also send at least a roster player their way.
But buying out DiPietro's at $1.5 million over 16 years and Keith Ballard at
$2.6 million over two years may be tough for the owner to swallow. The
compliance buyout window closes July 4 and Gillis said Saturday he wasn't
sure if he was going to go that route with Ballard.
"We've got a lot of balls in the air and we have to sort through some
different proposals," summed up Gillis.
Vancouver Province: LOADED: 06.30.2013
683105
Vancouver Canucks
Canucks Draft Day: Trading a goalie overshadows need for left wing depth
June 29, 2013. 9:11 pm
NEW YORK — Trading a goaltender is of immediate concern to the
Vancouver Canucks.
However, with a genuine lack of prospect depth at forward and defence, the
club should be concerned about being ranked 27th by Hockey’s Future in
an assessment of picks projected to play in the NHL. The Canucks didn’t
even have a player rated in the top 50. Part of that is picking late in five
years with general manager Mike Gillis at the hockey operations helm —
26th, 29th, 115th, 22nd and 10th — and part of it is bad drafting.
The best year in the last 10 was 2004, in which Cory Schneider (26th), Alex
Edler (91st), Mike Brown (159th) and Jannik Hansen (287th) were selected.
With an annual pledge to pick the best player when the Sunday selection
process begins in Newark, N.J., it should also come a real need to fill a
roster void with picks at Nos. 24,85,115,145,175 and 205. The Canucks
could lean toward a history of picking by position because they’ve taken 11
defencemen and seven centres the last five drafts. With Derek Roy not
back and Maxim Lapierre an unrestricted free agent, they may shore up the
middle. Then again, there’s a lack of organization depth at left wing with
Mason Raymond expected to also tested unrestricted free agency. The
Canucks don’t have a second-round choice, having surrendered it along
with Kevin Connauton at the trade deadline.
With new coach John Tortorella looking for more bite and the Canucks
drafting bigger centres in Brendan Gaunce, Alexandre Mallet and Joseph
Labate, they could use the same amount of size and sandpaper on the left
side with their 24th pick — if they don’t move up by swapping selections or
in a possible Cory Schneider trade.
“We’ve talked to some teams about that possibility and you would always
like to,” said Gillis. “You don’t know who’s available at No. 24 until you get
into it. You have your list and you’re asking me questions I can’t answer.”
A trio of left wingers could provide that answer.
Kerby Rychel of the Windsor Spitfires in coming off successive 40-goal
OHL seasons and Adam Erne of the Quebec Remparts had a 72-point
QMJHL campaign. The 6-foot-1, 205 pound Rychel is the son of former
NHL forward Warren Rychel and the Canucks are attracted by the hockey
lineage and the fact the Spitfires winger plays a hard, physical game and
goes to the net to battle and fight for rebounds and deflections. Skating is
said to be an issue, but the Los Angeles native had 87 points (40-47) last
season and 94 penalty minutes.
“A typical power forward with a big, booming shot,” said NHL Central
Scouting director Dan Marr. “He was used a lot on the point on the power
pay and is good down low. He protects the puck well coming out of the
corner.”
The 6-foot-1, 210 pound Erne has that certain snarl and nastiness that
Tortorella would also favour. He’s not only able to drive the net, the New
Haven, Conn. native has a good scoring touch and soft hands to bring an
added dimension to the left side. A banger and a crasher, he won’t hesitate
to hit and agitate. Another consideration is Valentin Zykov of Baie-Comeau
in the QMJHL. The 6-foot, 210 pound native of St. Petersburg, Russia had
40 goals and 75 points in 67 games.
If the Canucks are looking at defensive depth, 6-foot-1, 211 pound Brandon
Wheat Kings blueliner Ryan Pulock should be of interest. The Grandview,
Man. native had 14 goals and 45 points in 61 games.
“He’s probably a little underrated but he has one of the best shots,” said
Marr. “He can move the puck and has all the ingredients to be a potential
all-star in the league.”
OF NOTE — Gillis will interview former New York Rangers assistant coach
Mike Sullivan to possibly team with Torotrella behind the Canucks bench.
Scott Arniel is being considered as an assistant.
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Gillis will address the media on Saturday afternoon.
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Luongo Watch: Canucks reportedly considering playing Schneider trade
card
June 29, 2013. 8:01 am
Ben Kuzma
NEW YORK — It’s always been the ace up their sleeve, but the Vancouver
Canucks have never wanted to play that card.
In attempting to trade Roberto Luongo and his mammoth contract — the
nine years and $40.5 million US remaining on his 12-year pact pays $6.7
million the next five seasons and has a salary cap hit of $5.3 million —
general manager Mike Gillis continues to talk to four or five teams about
moving the 34-year-old stopper. Those talks haven’t produced much
because he’s reportedly considering what the market might be for Cory
Schneider. It could a matter of kicking the tires, but if nothing comes to
fruition with moving Luongo here at the NHL draft — league’s new trade
deadline — then the reality of keeping Luongo and trading Schneider has to
be at least broached. And Schneider doesn’t have no-movement or notrade clauses in his current contract.
Simply put, the Canucks can’t tie up $9.3 million in the crease next season
with the league’s salary-cap ceiling falling to $64.3 million and already being
maxed out with 17 players signed.
The Edmonton Oilers would have rumoured interest in Schneider and the
possible return of a first-round pick and a prospect is more than the
Canucks are going to get for Luongo. The Oilers own the seventh-overall
selection in the 2013 draft on Sunday in Newark, N.J. They have Devan
Dubnyk under contract for one more season at $3.5 million and Nikolai
Khabibulin is an unrestricted free agent. Other teams would also be
interested and this is certainly a means to gauge interest.
If Schneider is moved, the Canucks would have Luongo, Eddie Lack,
Joacim Eriksson and Joe Cannata in their stable of goaltenders. Although
confident in his stoppers, Gillis may add to that group with seven rated in
the first two rounds of this draft. The Canucks pick 24th, but surrendered
their second-round pick and Kevin Connauton in the Derek Roy tradedeadline acquisition.
At the trade deadline, the Canucks wanted two second-round picks and
back-up goalie Ben Scrivens from Toronto but the Maple Leafs wouldn’t
budge. Two years ago, there was considerable interest in Schneider from
the Tampa Bay Lightning and Columbus Blue Jackets. Schneider has two
years left on his contract at an attractive $4 million salary cap hit. More
importantly, at age 27, he would be attractive to pair with a stopper now or
be the starter after going 17-9-4 in the shortened regular season before
sustaining a groin strain April 22 in a 3-1 win over the Chicago Blackhawks.
With Luongo losing the first two games of the Western Conference
quarterfinal series against the San Jose Sharks, Schneider laboured and
was yanked in Game 3 after allowing five goals on 28 shots. He responded
with a 43-save performance in a 4-3 loss in Game 4 as the Canucks were
easily swept aside.
Schneider was 0-2-1 in the series with a 4.62 goals-against average and
.880 saves percentage. In the regular season, he was eighth in GAA (2.11)
and fourth in saves percentage (.927). Luongo went 0-2-1 in in playoffs with
a 2.57 GAA and .915 saves percentage after posting a 2.56 GAA (25th) and
.907 saves percentage (31st) in the regular season. Earlier this week, Gillis
was somewhat confident that Luongo could be moved as opposed to
waivers or a costly compliance buyout option.
“I remain optimistic,” he said. “We’ve been talking to teams like we have for
a long time. At the draft, I’m not sure what’s going to happen but we will
continue to have discussions with a group of teams and we’ll see how it
works out. In this business, you have to be absolutely firm in what you want
to do. And that’s what we’ve done.
“There are a lot of moving parts in a Roberto Luongo deal which lots of
people want to ignore. He does have a no-trade clause and a contract
perfectly legal and ratified by the league at the time. We have to be patient
enough to sort through it.”
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ESPN / Bylsma eager to test international waters
Scott Burnside
NEW YORK -- Dan Bylsma figures there have been a couple of times in his
life that he would describe as surreal.
The moment he found out he would coach the U.S. hockey team at the
2014 Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia, ranks as one of them.
“When I was first told, there was about a 15-minute period of a lot flashing
before your eyes,” Bylsma told ESPN.com on Saturday after he and the rest
of the U.S. management team were formally announced.
There were memories of other Olympics, the 1980 Miracle on Ice goldmedal team, his own hockey experiences growing up and a long-held
desire to get this kind of opportunity.
“A lot of things that pass in front of you,” said the Pittsburgh Penguins
coach.
But if there was one overriding impression upon learning he had the gig, it
was that the road to the medal podium in Sochi begins now.
“Daily, the honor this represents gets bigger,” Bylsma said.
There were a number of qualities USA Hockey and the management
committee, charged with creating a team that can build on 2010’s dramatic
silver medal, were looking for in a head coach.
Ron Wilson was the man behind the bench in Vancouver, but he has not
worked in the NHL since being fired by longtime friend and then-Toronto
Maple Leafs GM Brian Burke in January 2012. The committee, under GM
David Poile, was looking for an NHL coach who had won, who exuded
passion for the game and who could handle star players.
The fact Bylsma had little in the way of international coaching experience
wasn’t a deterrent for Poile and the committee members. Er, scratch that -not little, none.
“I don’t have any experience, so ‘very little’s’ wrong,” Bylsma said with a
smile.
He is the fastest coach to 200 wins in NHL history, has won a Stanley Cup
and has handled some of the game’s biggest stars, including Sidney
Crosby and Evgeni Malkin.
Bylsma recalled watching the gold-medal game between Canada and the
United States in an arena after his son’s youth hockey game. As he saw
Crosby gain possession of the puck deep in the U.S. zone in overtime,
Bylsma got out of his seat.
“I had a pretty good idea he was going to put that home,” he said.
Bylsma will have some input into who rounds out the coaching staff, and
although it’s possible that Tony Granato, one of his assistants in Pittsburgh,
may find his way onto the staff, it’ll be hard to ignore new Vancouver
Canucks coach John Tortorella, who was an assistant to Wilson in 2010,
and Scott Gordon, an assistant in Toronto to Randy Carlyle who was also
on Wilson’s Olympic staff and has significant international coaching
experience.
Among the many hurdles to clear in forming a contender in a short period of
time, Bylsma said, is the challenge of flying halfway across the world and
playing meaningful tournament games in the space of two days. If there is a
goal, he has said it will be in introducing an atmosphere to which the team
can build on a day-to-day basis, reaching for its best when it matters most.
After all, he said, the team that’s the best at the end of the tournament is
going to win.
“That’s a great challenge,” Bylsma said. “That will be part of our message
and part of our approach.”
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ESPN / As U.S. GM, David Poile in tuneup mode
It was Burke who came up with the idea of opening the process of selecting
teams for international competition to American GMs. He invited colleagues
like Paul Holmgren (Philadelphia Flyers), Dean Lombardi (Los Angeles
Kings), Stan Bowman (Chicago Blackhawks), Dale Tallon (Florida
Panthers) and former Atlanta Thrashers GM Don Waddell to join in the
process.
Scott Burnside
The openness and inclusiveness established by Burke was universally
praised by those involved, and as Poile pointed out Saturday, the validation
of the process was in the result -- a silver medal.
NEW YORK -- Of the many memorable hours leading up to the epic goldmedal game at the Vancouver Olympics in 2010 between Canada and the
United States, this is one that has stayed with us.
That Burke, dismissed from his post as GM and president of the Toronto
Maple Leafs on the eve of the lockout-shortened regular season in January,
continues to have a strong voice in the building of the 2014 team is an
important nod to what he’s accomplished. To have marginalized him would
have sent a disappointing message.
It was a conversation with then-U.S. associate GM David Poile the day
before that game.
He had spoken earlier in the process about the importance of the Olympics,
specifically the impact a strong showing might have on future generations of
U.S. players. About how the 1980 Miracle on Ice team became a beacon for
a generation or more of American players as well as -- to a lesser degree -the U.S. team that defeated Canada in the 1996 World Cup of Hockey
championship.
As the gold-medal game approached, it was hard not to be swept up in the
emotion of what lay ahead.
“I don't think anybody knew how good we'd be. We didn't know how good
we'd be,” Poile said that Saturday. “Let's call it like it is.”
The Americans would be denied a shot at Olympic immortality by the
slimmest of margins, a Sidney Crosby goal in overtime, from a bad angle at
that.
We were reminded of the legacy -- or at least the potential legacy -- of that
team Saturday, when we were swept up once again in the quest for
Olympic glory as Poile was formally announced as GM of the U.S. team for
the 2014 Olympics in Sochi, Russia.
Part of the charm of the Vancouver team was the fact it was the youngest
team in the tournament. As GM, Brian Burke was fond of repeating that no
one gave the Americans a spit of a chance to earn a medal, let alone battle
for gold.
No question the dynamics will be dramatically different in Sochi on a host of
fronts.
“In Vancouver, we were turning the page,” Poile told ESPN.com on
Saturday.
That team was the first that didn’t hearken to the glory days of Brian Leetch,
Chris Chelios and Keith Tkachuk et al. The idea was that if the team had
any success at all, it would provide a good base on which to build for 2014.
The Americans’ run to the silver (going 5-1 in the tournament) means they
will not sneak up on anyone in Sochi. Not with the past two Conn Smythe
Trophy winners on the roster in Patrick Kane and Jonathan Quick. Throw in
top-end talent like Ryan Suter, who in our book was the hands-down best
defenseman in the NHL this season (finished second to P.K. Subban in
Norris Trophy voting), Minnesota Wild teammate Zach Parise, David
Backes, Joe Pavelski, Phil Kessel and Dustin Brown and there will be a
strong core returning from the Vancouver squad.
Still, trying to handicap Olympic contenders based on results from a
tournament four years in the past is a mug’s game. Yes, some continuity is
important. Understanding the routines of an Olympic tournament, the
media, the schedule and the ebbs and flows of a short, high-drama
competition is critical to how a team comes together.
But each tournament represents a different world, and that is where the
management structure and coaching staff are so critical to a team’s
success.
USA Hockey neatly sidestepped a potential public relations problem early
on by structuring its management team in the manner it did. Poile moved up
the ladder and will be joined by Pittsburgh Penguins GM Ray Shero, who
will act as associate. The two worked together for the Nashville Predators
and were part of the U.S. management committee that helped put together
the 2010 team.
But Burke, the architect of that team, has been kept in the fold as director of
player personnel. He will accompany the team to Sochi.
“He will have a big part in the formation of this team in 2014,” Poile said.
But a nod to the past is also being balanced by a nod to the future, which is
critical given that neither Canada nor the U.S. medaled in the two Olympics
held away from North American soil since the NHL began participation in
1998 in Nagano. (2006 in Torino was the other.)
A bigger ice surface, time issues and different cultures will conspire to make
life in Sochi exponentially more difficult than it was in Vancouver and,
before that, Salt Lake City in 2002, when Canada defeated the U.S. for the
gold medal.
The committee, which represents 150 years of NHL GM experience and six
Stanley Cup championships, will have to keep all those things in mind, Poile
said, when making selections, just as it did in choosing the Pens’ Dan
Bylsma as head coach.
Burke built a team that could play an NHL-style game with a blend of hardnosed forechecking, strong defense and goaltending mixed with
opportunistic scoring, but the style of play in Sochi may make some of
those qualities less important.
Clearly, skating and puck movement will be at a premium on the big ice
surface, which suggests players like Keith Yandle, Kevin Shattenkirk and
perhaps Matt Carle or John Carlson may be more attractive than other,
more physical defensemen.
What about a speedy, skilled forward like Alex Galchenyuk, who had a
strong rookie campaign for the Montreal Canadiens?
“Our philosophy is going to be a little bit different because this is in Europe,”
Poile said. “We have to tune up our thinking a little bit.”
One thing Poile made clear is that, while a résumé of strong play has
historically been a factor in inclusion on the final roster handed in late in
December, getting off to a good start next fall will be key in the committee’s
final decisions.
In introducing the management team Saturday in New York, president of
USA Hockey Ron DeGregorio suggested that an American team is no
longer the stuff of miracles but rather the stuff of expectations.
A fine sentiment, and after Vancouver, it would seem it is true. Now it’s up
to Poile and the rest to meet those heady expectations.
“This is the ultimate honor and challenge,” Poile said.
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ESPN / Horton out; B's willing to listen on Seguin
“To be honest, it makes sense in a way,” a rival GM told ESPN.com on
Saturday after the news broke.
With a lack of trade interest in Luongo, the thinking is that if a team pays big
for Schneider, the Canucks can improve and still have a world-class goalie
in net.
Pierre LeBrun
Another player who generated a lot of calls toward Vancouver is
defenseman Alex Edler. His no-trade clause kicks in July 1, but teams are
already calling.
NEWARK, N.J. -- The Boston Bruins appeared ready to shake things up
Saturday on the eve of the NHL draft.
Schneider would be a good fit on teams like the New York Islanders,
Calgary Flames or Edmonton Oilers.
All confirmed by sources:
“He’s definitely in play,” an agent told ESPN.com on Saturday afternoon.
• Nathan Horton's camp informed Bruins GM Peter Chiarelli on Saturday
afternoon that the unrestricted free agent winger was leaving the
organization.
Schneider has two years left on his deal at $4 million per season.
“Nathan Horton has informed the Bruins that he is going to explore his
options via unrestricted free agency," agent Paul Krepelka reiterated to
ESPN.com, a statement that he first gave to TSN's Bob McKenzie.
• Tyler Seguin’s name was making the rounds in trade chatter, with the
Bruins willing to listen.
• The Bruins would like to move up in the draft.
• And add Boston to the long list of teams that have inquired about UFA
center Vincent Lecavalier.
The Bruins have a lot of balls in the air, a rival team executive told
ESPN.com, and they are talking to a lot of teams about a lot of things.
Chiarelli was spotted at one point Saturday chatting closely with Lightning
GM Steve Yzerman. Could it have been about Seguin? Hard to say. Maybe
Chiarelli was getting a scouting report on Lecavalier. Or maybe they were
making a dinner date.
Meanwhile, Lecavalier and agent Kent Hughes were in the process of
reducing their list of suitors. The expectation was that they would have a
short list by the end of the night or early Sunday.
Hughes was also meeting with interested teams Saturday. Aside from
Boston, other confirmed teams that have expressed varying degrees of
interest for Lecavalier include the Detroit Red Wings, Toronto Maple Leafs,
Montreal Canadiens, Dallas Stars, San Jose Sharks, Vancouver Canucks,
Philadelphia Flyers and St. Louis Blues. As reported Friday, some 15 teams
have called.
Don't sleep on Dallas. The Stars have serious interest in Lecavalier. They
want to make the playoffs next year, and new GM Jim Nill sees Lecavalier
as a perfect addition.
But you can scratch the Chicago Blackhawks off that list. A source told
ESPN.com on Saturday that the Hawks are not interested. Some fans may
have dreamed of having Lecavalier fit in as the team’s No. 2 center, but the
Hawks aren’t going to enter the fray, instead focusing on trying to re-sign
winger Bryan Bickell. The Hawks and Bickell’s agent, Todd Diamond, have
had constant dialogue throughout the week and spoke again Saturday.
The reasoning behind the Lecavalier camp wanting to produce a short list in
quick order is that the teams involved need to know as soon as possible.
For whichever teams are seriously in the hunt, it could have a domino effect
on what needs to be done with the rest of their rosters and potentially in the
draft.
So in fairness to that reality, the Lecavalier camp is keen to try to expedite
the process this weekend.
He can’t officially sign with a team until July 5, but all the leg work can be
done now.
Schneider in play
Saturday got off to quite a bang in NHL circles with my colleague Darren
Dreger of TSN breaking the story via Twitter that the Canucks were
suddenly putting Cory Schneider in play.
Hello!
After trying without success for a year to unload Roberto Luongo and his
monster contract, could it be the Canucks figured they had to move the
younger goalie instead?
Thing is, dealing away Schneider wouldn’t necessarily solve the Luongo
mess. I believe Luongo wants out regardless. Trading Schneider, I don’t
think, would change his feelings on that.
Oye, stay tuned ...
Elsewhere
• Hearing positive vibes out of the talks between pending UFA netminder
Mike Smith and the Phoenix Coyotes. GM Don Maloney and some of his
staff met with Smith in Vancouver last week to have a heart-to-heart
session. Still a factor is the future of the franchise, so I wouldn’t expect
Smith to be willing to sign until after that July 2 Glendale lease vote. But the
re-signing of coach Dave Tippett was an important move in terms of Smith
wanting to stay. If he does sign, I believe it will be a six-year deal.
• Hughes, the agent for Kris Letang, was slated to meet with Pittsburgh
Penguins GM Ray Shero on Saturday afternoon in the N.Y./N.J. area. In the
wake of Letang rejecting Pittsburgh’s $56 million, eight-year offer Thursday,
sources around the league confirm that Shero made some calls to other
teams Friday to lay the groundwork for potential trade talks. But Saturday’s
meeting, I think, is being viewed by both sides as a chance to salvage the
situation and find common ground on keeping Letang in Pittsburgh. We
shall see.
• The Canadiens hold the 25th pick in the first round Sunday. I’m told they
would like to move up and have made some calls to that effect. But I think
the Habs will wait until the draft has begun and see how it progresses
before making a move in that regard. It will depend on whether certain
prospects they have circled on their scouting list are still available.
• The Flyers are taking calls on blueliner Braydon Coburn, multiples sources
confirm. He has three years on his deal with a $4.5 million cap hit.
• USA Hockey announced its coaching staff for the Olympics on Saturday,
and the Penguins’ Dan Bylsma gets the nod as head coach. If the NHL and
NHLPA can wrap up the Olympic deal at Monday’s meeting with the
International Olympic Committee and International Ice Hockey Federation,
the plan is for Hockey Canada to announce its coaching staff shortly
thereafter, perhaps within a day or two. As I reported in April, the Canadian
coaching staff will have Mike Babcock at the helm again, along with Ken
Hitchcock, Lindy Ruff and newcomer Claude Julien (who replaces the
retired Jacques Lemaire).
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NBCSports.com / NHL to Glendale: July 2 deadline is no bluff
Jason Brough
Jun 29, 2013, 1:12 PM EDT
If Glendale Mayor Jerry Weiers thinks the NHL is bluffing about July 2 being
the deadline for the city to approve an arena-management deal for the
Coyotes, deputy commissioner Bill Daly has a message for him, via Craig
Morgan of Fox Sports Arizona.
“He can characterize it the way he wants, but it is what it is,” said Daly. “We
either get certainty in Glendale by July 2, or we immediately pursue our
other options outside of Glendale. We have already gone past the date we
were comfortable accommodating in the first place. I hope for the sake of
the Coyotes fans in Glendale that they don’t lose the team because of a
miscalculation made by members of the City Council.”
You may recall prior to the Stanley Cup Final when Daly characterized the
situation like this: “No decision could be a decision.”
Translation: if the city waffles too long, the NHL will have no choice but to
relocate the Coyotes.
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But Bylsma has plenty of experience coaching high level players because
his Penguins have Sidney Crosby and Malkin.
USA TODAY / U.S. hockey team might have different look at Sochi
He joked that he does have inside knowledge on Sidney Crosby that could
help the Americans.
Kevin Allen
"But I'm also a little bit concerned (Crosby) knows me as a coach, my
strengths and my weaknesses he's going to bring that to the Canadian
team,'' Bylsma added.
3:02 p.m. EDT June 29, 2013
One of the themes of the news conference was that Americans believed
they were going to Sochi to win the gold medal. Poile said it. Bylsma said it.
USA Hockey president Ron DeGregorio called it an "expectation."
NEW YORK – Newly named U.S. general manager David Poile believes
that the return of Olympic hockey to the larger European-size hockey rink
means the Americans have to expand their thinking on the team they
should send to Sochi.
"A player who was successful in Vancouver in 2010 may not be successful
in Sochi," Poile said.
The Sochi games will be played on the standard 200 by 100-foot
international rink, meaning it will be 15 feet wider than the 2010 Vancouver
rink.
"(In 2010) you heard Brian Burke talking about words like truculence," Poile
said. "I'm not trying to say that's not important, but maybe it's less important
in 2014."
The NHL started allowing its players to participate in the Olympic Games in
1998, and the Americans have won silver medals in both Olympic Games in
North America (2002 in Salt Lake City and 2010 in Vancouver) and didn't
medal in the two Olympics on foreign soil (1998 in Nagano and 2006 in
Torino).
"We have not had a lot of luck in Europe," Poile said, making it clear that
figuring out why would be a point of emphasis for his new management
team.
"It can't be the same type of team," Poile said.
Poile didn't discuss specific players, but he said the expected there would
be a large core group of players that will return. That group would include
Zach Parise, Patrick Kane, Ryan Suter and Jack Johnson, among others
He said he wouldn't reach any final conclusions about how the team should
be different for Sochi, until he has met with his advisory group.
"I know everyone has a slightly different opinion and we have to mold them
together," Poile said.
One general theory is that teams need more speed on the wider ice
because players have more space to make a move.
Joining Poile on the management team will be associate general manager
Ray Shero, the Pittsburgh Penguins GM who previously worked with Poile
in Nashville, plus Anaheim Ducks consultant Burke, who was the GM for
the silver medal team in 2010. He will be the director of player development
in Sochi.
In 2010, Burke developed an advisory council to help him decide who
should be on the team and Poile will use the same approach. The advisors
will include Dean Lombardi (Los Angeles Kings), Dale Tallon (Florida
Panthers), Stan Bowman (Chicago Blackhawks), Paul Holmgren
(Philadelphia Flyers) and Don Waddell (Pittsburgh).
Pittsburgh's Dan Bylsma was introduced as the U.S. coach. His assistants
haven't been named.
One new wrinkle in the 2014 Games is an increased roster size. Team will
be allowed 22 skaters, instead of the 20 they were allowed in 2010.
That would allow the Americans, for example, to take a young skilled player
such as Alex Galchenyuk, who could be inserted into the lineup to give the
team an offensive boost.
The Americans could also add a ninth defenseman with toughness, just to
use in the expected physical game with Canada.
When a reporter pointed out in a question that Bylsma had no international
coaching experience, Bylsma corrected him by saying he had no
international coaching experience.
Someone pointed out that Burke talked boldly in 2010, offering his
assessment of the USA's chances. Poile was asked whether he might
provide some odds for American success.
Said Poile: "We can't bet in hockey."
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USA TODAY / Who are the top Americans at the draft?
Kevin Allen
6:04 p.m. EDT June 29, 2013
NEWARK - The American talent pool can claim the best defenseman in
Seth Jones and maybe the best sleeper pick in Jimmy Lodge heading into
Sunday's NHL draft.
"(Lodge has) got great hands, phenomenal hands," said USA Hockey's
director of hockey operations Jim Johannson.
Lodge is ranked 20th by Central Scouting, and mock drafts don't give him
much love as a first-round possibility. But NHL scouts seem to like his
chances of sliding into the 25 to 40 range.
The complaint about Lodge, a Pennsylvania native, is that he is skinny,
listed as 6-0, 166. He scored 28 goals and 67 points in 64 games with
Saginaw (Mich.) of the Ontario Hockey League.
MORE: Kyle Woodlief's mock draft
This is not projected to be a strong year for Americans, at least in terms of
first-round selections.
Jones, who played youth hockey in Colorado and Texas, is ranked No. 1 on
many lists, although the Colorado Avalanche are suggesting that they will
take Halifax (Nova Scotia) forward Nathan MacKinnon with the first overall
pick.
Chicagoan Ryan Hartman (Plymouth Whalers, OHL) and Connecticut
native Adam Erne (Quebec, Quebec Major Junior Hockey League) are
projected to go in the middle of the first round. Hartman is a feisty, prickly,
scoring winger and Erne is a power forward.
The possible late first-round projections include forward J.T. Compher and
defenseman Steve Santini who played with the U.S. National Team
Development Program. Compher is a smart, two-way forward and Santini is
a rugged, hard-nosed defenseman.
MORE: Expect some trades at draft
Their teammate John Hayden, a center, rose late in the season after he
recovered from a knee injury. The 6-2, 220 center is expected to be taken
at the top of the second round. He has committed to Yale.
Ian McCoshen, a 6-3 defenseman for Waterloo (Iowa) in the United States
Hockey League, could go anywhere from late in the first to the middle of the
second round. He had 11 goals and 44 points in 54 games.
"He is thick, sturdy and real competitive," Johannson said.
Another possible second-rounder is U.S. National Team Development
Program winger Michael McCarron.
"He's 6-5 and he can skate," Johannson said.
Scouts also like the pedigree and playing style of Ryan Fitzpatrick, a Boston
College recruit is the son of respected former NHL player Tom Fitzpatrick.
The elder Fitzpatrick is an assistant to general manager Ray Shero in
Pittsburgh.
USA TODAY LOADED: 06.30.2013
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