Sharks unveil series of secondary logos

The San Jose Sharks have a new look, kind of.

The club unveiled three new secondary logos to be used for merchandise and promotions, while the current logos and jerseys will remain the same.

The new look was designed by Terry Smith, a Bay Area artist that created the original team logo in 1991 when the Sharks entered the league.

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Nick Spaling signs with Swiss club Geneve Servette

Two months after competing for the Stanley Cup with the San Jose Sharks, forward Nick Spaling is heading to Switzerland, signing with Geneve Servette on a one-year contract, according to Swisshockeynews.ch, backed by the team's official website.

The 27-year-old was drafted in the second round by the Nashville Predators in 2007, and spent last season with the Toronto Maple Leafs prior to being dealt to San Jose before the trade deadline.

Spaling recorded 13 points in 58 games between the two clubs last year, and suited up in all 24 of the Sharks' playoff contests.

He joins former NHLers Mike Santorelli and Jim Slater on a Geneve team that finished in third place in National League A in 2015-16 - the top tier of the Swiss national ice hockey league.

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Bettman: NHL participation in 2018 Olympics not a current priority

As of right now, the 2018 Olympics in Pyeongchang are not on Gary Bettman's mind.

The NHL commissioner was at Busch Stadium on Tuesday to discuss January's Winter Classic between the St. Louis Blues and Chicago Blackhawks, but touched on other topics during his press conference.

One of the focal points was whether there's been any progress regarding NHLers participating in South Korea, and according to Bettman, there hasn't.

"We probably won't get to it in terms of serious discussions one way or another with players' association and the IIHF and the IOC until winter. It's not on the front burner right now," Bettman said, according to Chris Kuc of the Chicago Tribune.

Ahead of the start of the Stanley Cup Final in May, Bettman said NHL teams likely aren't interested in interrupting the regular-season schedule, adding that the financial situation is the biggest hurdle to get the players to the games.

If the multiple parties are unable to reach a deal, it would mark the first time since the Nagano games in 1998 that NHL players won't participate.

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Ray Whitney caddying at Rio 2016: ‘It’s not how I thought I’d get to the Olympics’

In this case, it was about the destination.

Former NHLer Ray Whitney finally made it to the Olympics - but he isn't playing, and these aren't the Winter Games. The point is, though, he made it, albeit in unconventional fashion

Whitney is serving as Canadian golfer Graham DeLaet's caddy at Rio 2016, writes The News Observer's Luke DeCock, after DaLaet's caddy - recently married - turned down his invitation over concerns about the Zika virus.

"I mean, it's not how I thought I'd get to the Olympics," Whitney said. But he's in Rio now, and trying to enjoy the experience. He knows what he's there for.

"(DeLaet) knows I know how to play the game. He's going to read his own putts. But I can talk strategy with him, keep him loose. It's no different than when I was in the locker room, trying to keep Roddie (Brind'Amour) loose."

While Whitney always dreamed of playing hockey for Canada at the Olympics, he knew the odds were slim, writes DeCock, despite a career that saw him record an impressive 1,064 points.

DeLaet and Whitney - now a scout with the Carolina Hurricanes - play golf against each other in Arizona, where they both live, and DeLaet was impressed with Whitney's game.

"I wanted a Canadian with me, and I was kind of running through the names and thought it would be a lot of fun. He's a guy who's got experience winning, a real positive guy who likes to have a lot of fun," DeLaet said. "That's really what I was looking for as a rent-a-caddy for the week."

Ray Whitney: A rent-a-caddy with a Stanley Cup ring and, just maybe, an Olympic medal. That'd be something.

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Jack Johnson says shoulder ‘100 percent’ ahead of World Cup

Nothing will stop Jack Johnson from representing the United States at the upcoming World Cup of Hockey.

The Columbus Blue Jackets defender saw last season cut short after undergoing shoulder surgery in March, but offseason rehab has nursed him to perfect health ahead of the World Cup.

"I've got my family at home, so I spend a lot of time at home with my wife and my little girl. And then just training and rehab to get my shoulder back to 100 percent, which it is now, so I put in a lot of time on that," Johnson told Andy Brown of BlueJackets.com. "Right now I've got about a month left before World Cup of Hockey, so just making sure I'm in shape for that."

While he's never played in this event, Johnson has represented his country on numerous occasions - most recently as U.S. captain at the 2012 World Championship - and admits the the thrill of wearing his country's colors never wears off.

"I don't think it's ever routine, I've been very fortunate playing a lot of tournaments for the United States," said Johnson. "This was the one tournament that I haven't played in yet, so I'm really cherishing this opportunity.

"There's absolutely nothing routine about it, whenever you get a chance to represent the United States it could be your last, so you try to cherish it, and make it count."

Johnson will compete on the American blue line alongside Dustin Byfuglien, John Carlson, Erik Johnson, Ryan McDonagh, Matt Niskanen, and Ryan Suter this September.

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Imagining the Gretzky trade in the social media era

It was 28 years ago, a Tuesday in the summer, much like this one.

Aug. 9, 1988: The day the Edmonton Oilers traded Wayne Gretzky, "The Great One," to the Los Angeles Kings. Nothing was the same.

Here's how the trade would have played out on Twitter, had the world been lucky enough for the social media platform to exist back then.

TSN's Bob McKenzie would have broken the deal. He's the Insider Godfather, after all.

Hearing Oilers close to trading Wayne Gretzky to Kings as part of massive package. Multiple sources confirm. Not a drill.

Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman would have been next.

Krushelnyski part of Gretzky package, one other player to LA. Hearing numerous 1st-round picks and cash on the way to Edmonton. Wow.

Now, at this point, Hockey Twitter all but explodes. Imagine Sidney Crosby being traded. Now multiply that reaction by about 1,000. This one would have left Down Goes Brown speechless.

Not Bruce Arthur, though.

This is the end of Canada. Canada is over.

Darren Dreger's up.

Millions in cash going from LA to Edmonton. At least $10M, if not more. This is happening.

The City of Edmonton's Twitter account chimes in at this point, only in emoji.

=(

McKenzie isn't done. This is his baby, his second fictional tweet below becoming the most embedded of all time.

McSorley going to LA. Oilers getting Jimmy Carson (55 goals, 107 points), firsts in '89, '91, '93, $15 million. Confirmed.

Full trade: Gretzky, Krushelnyski, McSorley to LA. Carson, 1st-rounder Martin Gelinas, 3 firsts (89, 91, 93), $15M to Edmonton.

Oilers to have presser. Pocklington, Sather, Gretzky to speak. Done deal. Incredible.

ESPN's Pierre LeBrun, based in L.A., gets a hold of Kings owner Bruce McNall.

Text from Kings owner McNall: "I've got to do something to sell hockey in LA, and there's no name in hockey like Wayne Gretzky." He's right.

Sportsnet's Nick Kypreos has the latest on Edmontonians.

Phones in Oilers offices blowing up. Fans canceling season tickets, saying they'll never buy seat to Oilers game again.

Down Goes Brown can only think of the poor soul running the Oilers' Twitter account.

The Oilers' social media department is going to need years of therapy. All the therapy.

You know Statistics Canada is all over the news.

124% of Canadians think trading Wayne Gretzky is certifiably insane.

McKenzie isn't done. BoBo is never done.

Pocklington gave 99 chance to back out of deal, told him, "I don't want to trade you." 99 refused, new opportunity, good for US hockey.

At this point, the trolls are attacking Janet Jones, Gretzky's wife, on Twitter. Kypreos is on it.

Gretzky, actress Janet Jones married last month. Told her career played factor in decision. Best decision for 99 and his family.

The Oilers' Twitter account confirms the trade. The replies are the worst in history.

Oilers acquire Jimmy Carson, Martin Gelinas, 3 first-round picks, cash in exchange for Wayne Gretzky in five-player trade.

McKenzie is on fire.

Gretzky asked for trade. Family decision with Janet expecting, career in Hollywood. Gut-wrenching decision, but Oilers did right by 99.

Member of Cdn parliament asking federal govt to step in and block trade, or buy 99's contract and sell to Cdn team. Unprecedented.

Fast forward to the press conference:

McKenzie took a private jet from his cottage to the presser. He live-tweeted the festivities.

Sather: "Everything changes, we all get older ... that is the tough part, saying goodbye. I'm going to miss Wayne."

Pocklington: "I believe Wayne has earned the right to determine his own destiny. We are not replacing Wayne Gretzky in this trade."

More Pocklington: "You cannot replace Gretzky. It's like losing a son. He's been more than a hockey player to me."

99: "I'm disappointed with leaving Edmonton. I've enjoyed living here and I love the fans."

Gretzky very emotional. Numerous Oilers staffers as well. #Kleenex

Gretzky crying: "I told Messier I wouldn't do this ..."

Finally, it's all said and done, and McKenzie tweets his final words, followed by a photo of beautiful sunset with a glass of wine in the foreground.

Back at the cottage. Wayne Gretzky is a Los Angeles King ...

An hour later, Gretzky takes to Twitter, posting the following picture and caption:

Thank you, Edmonton. #4Cups

Mark Messier, meanwhile, takes to Instagram.

See you later, not goodbye. #Brothers #11 #99

What a day.

- With H/T to NHL.com

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Kings’ Toffoli: It’s hard losing Lucic

The Los Angeles Kings' top six will look a little different this season.

The club watched Milan Lucic sign a monstrous seven-year, $42-million contract with the Edmonton Oilers, leaving a large gap up front that forward Tyler Toffoli admits won't be easy to fill.

"It's tough," Toffoli said, according to NHL.com's Curtis Zupke. "He's a great player, a great guy to have in the room. But he's moved on and we're going to have to play against him and play hard against him."

Toffoli spent a large portion of last season playing alongside Lucic, and can thank the newest Oiler for much of his success.

The 24-year-old set career highs in both goals and points with 31 and 58, respectively, and Lucic had a hand in 18 of his 58 points.

With no big-time additions during the offseason, the offense will have to be replaced from within.

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Pacioretty: Radulov’s skills could be top 5 in the world

While the move to sign Alexander Radulov may have perturbed much of the Montreal Canadiens faithful, it is one that could pay off if given the chance.

The club inked the Russian forward to a one-year, $5.75-million contract on July 1, and while it appears to be a risk - given Radulov's questionable history - captain Max Pacioretty feels the Canadiens have an extreme talent on their hands, an opinion that was satisfied after watching a few YouTube clips.

"He could be one of the top-5 skilled players in the world right now," Pacioretty told reporters at Michel Therrien's charity golf tournament on Tuesday. "That's a guy as soon as we signed him I looked at his highlights on YouTube and I got goosebumps because this guy is one of the most skilled players in the world, and I'm really excited to play with him."

Heading into next season, Pacioretty feels the Canadiens could be underestimated, especially after their porous 13th place finish in the Eastern Conference last year. He feels that the team's opening day roster will be no pushover.

"I think we can go into this year and fly under the radar a little bit because of the year we had last year, but you pull up our roster and we really like the team we are about to ice," said Pacioretty. "We addressed areas that needed to be addressed. Our power play wasn't good enough last year and we need to score more goals.

"Shea (Weber) scores goals and Shawsy's (Andrew Shaw) really tough to play against, and that's an area we really need to get better at, and Radulov can help out in all departments as well."

Radulov has spent the past eight seasons in the KHL where he has captured the Golden Stick Award as the league's MVP three times.

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