Report: Penguins to sign Jack Johnson to 5-year deal

The Pittsburgh Penguins intend to sign pending unrestricted free-agent Jack Johnson to a five-year contract that will be in the $16-million range, Jason Mackey of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported Wednesday.

Johnson's new deal can't be made official until July 1, when free agency officially opens.

Penguins general manager Jim Rutherford said earlier Wednesday that the club made adding a defenseman a priority this offseason.

Johnson spent parts of the last seven seasons with the Columbus Blue Jackets.

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Blackhawks trade Berube to Blue Jackets for Schroeder

The Chicago Blackhawks and Columbus Blue Jackets have swung a minor deal.

Goaltender Jean-Francois Berube has been dealt to the Blue Jackets in exchange for forward Jordan Schroeder, the clubs announced Wednesday.

Berube split this past season between the Blackhawks and the AHL's Rockford IceHogs, posting an .894 save percentage in 13 NHL games.

Schroeder spent most of the campaign with the Cleveland Monsters, racking up 36 points in 48 AHL contests while adding a pair of points in 21 NHL appearances in 2017-18.

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Penguins GM: Offseason priority is to add a defenseman

The Pittsburgh Penguins made noise on Wednesday when they dealt forward Conor Sheary and defenseman Matt Hunwick to the Buffalo Sabres for a conditional fourth-round pick.

It was a compelling deal that, as general manager Jim Rutherford noted, is par for the course in the modern NHL.

"This is just part of the system now," Rutherford told reporters, via Jonathan Bombulie of the Tribune Review. "It makes it hard to keep all the players. If you're going to free up cap space these are the things you have to do."

With the deal, the Penguins were able to shed $5.25 million in cap space which could be used on a defenseman. And as Rutherford admits, adding another D-man is his priority going into the offseason.

On top of that, Rutherford also hopes to get restricted free agent Jamie Oleksiak and unrestricted free agent Riley Sheahan signed to new contracts.

"That's just in the process now," Rutherford said of a new contract for Oleksiak. "It'll get done at some point."

He added that the team was getting closer to a Sheahan deal.

Thanks to Wednesday's trade, Rutherford will now have a total of just over $10 million to address his needs at defense and his pending free agents.

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Penguins to trade Sheary, Hunwick to Sabres for draft pick

The Pittsburgh Penguins are on the verge of dealing forward Conor Sheary and defenseman Matt Hunwick to the Buffalo Sabres for a draft pick.

TSN's Darren Dreger reported a trade call was pending Wednesday, and Penguins general manager Jim Rutherford confirmed the move to The Athletic's Josh Yohe shortly thereafter.

The pick is a 2019 fourth-round selection that can become a third-rounder, according to Dreger.

There is no salary being retained in the deal, Sportsnet's Chris Johnston reports. Sheary is on the books for $3 million over the next two seasons, and Hunwick is also under contract for two more years at a cap hit of $2.25 million.

Sheary potted 18 goals this past season and 23 goals in 2016-17, often playing on Sidney Crosby's wing. He was a member of the Penguins' back-to-back Stanley Cup championship squads, and played parts of three seasons with the club after being signed as an undrafted NCAA free agent out of UMass-Amherst.

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Report: Tavares narrows decision down to 6 teams

There is a bit more clarity to the John Tavares free-agency sweepstakes.

The pending unrestricted free agent has already spoken to the New York Islanders, Toronto Maple Leafs, San Jose Sharks, and Boston Bruins, and on Wednesday will speak to representatives from the Tampa Bay Lightning and Dallas Stars. Outside of those six, Tavares' reps have no plans to speak to any other teams, according to Sportsnet's Chris Johnston.

Related - Johnny T sweepstakes: Ranking contenders to sign Tavares away from Isles

This latest news comes after it was originally reported that Tavares would take additional calls from two to three other clubs, possibly meeting with one or two of them in person.

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The Carlson effect: Projecting Drew Doughty’s next contract

Drew Doughty had to be over the moon seeing what John Carlson got from the Washington Capitals on Sunday night.

The Los Angeles Kings' star defenseman was already in line for a sizable raise on his next deal, but Carlson's eight-year, $64-million agreement bodes even better for Doughty, who has one year left at $7 million and can begin negotiating an extension on July 1.

Erik Karlsson is in the same boat as Doughty, with one more season left on his current contract at $6.5 million, but his future remains unclear (and his payday could balloon significantly if he lands with a team with significant cap flexibility like the Vegas Golden Knights), so that deal is a bit more difficult to predict.

As for Doughty, the Kings will have their work cut out for them in terms of clearing cap space, especially after signing Ilya Kovalchuk - but they'll clearly do whatever it takes to get their franchise blue-liner locked in long term.

Let's take a look at the factors that what will undoubtedly impact Doughty's negotiations:

The comparables

Player Age Cap Hit Years Total Value Years Left
P.K. Subban 29 $9M 8 $72M 4
Brent Burns 33 $8M 8 $64M 7
John Carlson 28 $8M 8 $64M 8
Erik Karlsson 28 $6.5M 7 $45.5M 1
Oliver Ekman-Larsson 26 $5.5M 6 $33M 1

P.K. Subban's contract is the richest among NHL defensemen, and Carlson's new one puts him into a tie with Brent Burns for second-richest.

Oliver Ekman-Larsson and the Arizona Coyotes reportedly have a verbal agreement on an eight-year extension that is expected to bump his cap hit up to $8.25 million in 2019-20.

Karlsson is obviously in line for a mega-deal of his own at some point, either in the form of an extension before the summer of 2019, or as an unrestricted free agent.

All of these players' contracts will only serve to strengthen Doughty's case, and his camp might be wise to wait out the Karlsson situation to see what the Ottawa Senators star gets, whether it be with them or a new team that acquires him.

If Karlsson gets traded to a team with oodles of cap space like the Golden Knights and subsequently cashes in at $10 million to $11 million or more, Doughty's gap-toothed grin will only get wider, because that would obviously set a new market standard and he could then argue he's comparable to Karlsson and therefore deserves the same, if not more.

Doughty could also decide it's not worth waiting around for the Karlsson situation to be resolved. Even if he does that, he's still likely to command a contract that's larger than Subban's nearly four-year-old agreement.

The resume

While the Kings' 2012 and 2014 championships might not be incredibly relevant to the present, and while claiming the Stanley Cup is obviously a team effort, Doughty's two rings still put him ahead of the aforementioned comparables in the winning department.

More importantly, though, his immense individual impact is inarguable.

Doughty led all NHL skaters in ice time this season while logging 2,200:31 overall (no one even had 2,100) for an average of 26:50, and suiting up for all 82 regular-season games.

The ice-time figures were actually his lowest since 2013-14, but at age 28, there's no reason for concern, especially considering his elite offensive production.

Doughty notched career highs in assists (50) and points (60) in 2017-18, and those totals were especially impressive considering the Kings ranked 16th in the league with 2.89 goals per game.

He drove possession with a 53.2 percent even-strength Corsi For percentage this season, his lowest since 2009-10, but he has hit 50 percent or greater in all of his 10 NHL campaigns.

Doughty won the Norris Trophy as the league's best defenseman in 2016, and he was also a finalist for the award in 2010, 2015, and 2018.

Will the King stay a King?

There's also the matter of whether he opts to test the free-agent market a year from now.

He has said he wants to remain with the Kings, and for what it's worth, the club's president, Luc Robitaille, said he's confident Doughty will.

The rearguard has spent his entire career in L.A., and this contract might be his last.

Another rather important matter will be how the Kings manage to squeeze Doughty in under next year's cap. The Kovalchuk signing put them within about $3 million of the cap ceiling for the upcoming season without much scheduled to come off the books next summer.

At least one key piece or declining veteran up front may have to be shipped out to accommodate a new contract for Doughty, so it will be interesting to see if the Kings make any pre-emptive moves before July 1, or if they use their summer cap flexibility (when there is no ceiling, for all intents and purposes) to figure it out after getting Doughty's signature on the dotted line.

No matter how they approach it, retaining Doughty as soon as they're able to is going to be their top priority.

The verdict

Regardless of how it all unfolds, an eight-year deal with an average annual value in the neighborhood of $10 million wouldn't be too far-fetched.

Based on the deals his contemporaries are getting and likely will get before next season is over, he's well positioned to exceed that.

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What Willie O’Ree’s Hall call means to hockey’s black community

Theo Peckham considers himself fortunate.

Through more than a decade of minor hockey, four years of junior, and nine years as a pro, the former Oilers defenceman was rarely the subject of overt racism.

There was an incident in the late 2000s, Peckham says, when he locked an intoxicated Oilers teammate out of their hotel room. "He told me to 'stick to basketball' then dropped the n-bomb on me," Peckham recalled in an interview on Tuesday.

A few years later, there was another incident in Slovakia. Peckham, who has a white mother and whose late father was black, remembers feeling intimidated for the first time in his hockey-playing life.

"I’d walk through the mall there," he said, "and people would stare at me." Inside the rink, rival fans reached over the short glass and grabbed his collar.

Aside from those ugly events, Peckham was largely left alone in his pursuit to make a living playing hockey. Perspective is everything, he says, especially with the backdrop of Tuesday’s announcement from the Hockey Hall of Fame offices.

Finally, Willie O'Ree is in.

O’Ree, the NHL’s first black player and the sport’s face for diversity, will be enshrined in the Hall of Fame’s builder category. The man who inspired the now annual Willie O'Ree Community Hero Award will be inducted in November alongside players Martin Brodeur, Jayna Hefford, Martin St. Louis, and Alexander Yakushev, as well as fellow builder Gary Bettman.

O’Ree, a native of Fredericton, New Brunswick, has lived two hockey lives. The first came as a player, and the second as an ambassador. The latter role likely convinced the Hall’s selection committee to pull the trigger on his induction. Regardless, this is an indisputable fact: Nobody faces more resistance than the trailblazer.

"Because of guys like him, I didn’t have to think about it," Peckham, now 30 and retired, said of dealing with racism in hockey. "That’s what is so special to me. I’ve never thought 'Maybe I can’t do this because I'm black.'"

'Very symbolic'

Every major North American sport except hockey recognized its black pioneers years ago. Many felt O’Ree was long overdue, and if you squint hard enough at the following quote, it's obvious hockey’s Jackie Robinson is relieved, too.

"I was laughing and crying and at a loss for words," O’Ree, 82, told reporters Tuesday, including Lance Hornby of the Toronto Sun. "Just so happy I'm alive to share this with my family and friends."

O’Ree made his historic debut 60 years ago, on Jan. 18, 1958, filling a forward spot in the Bruins' lineup at the Montreal Forum. He dressed for 45 NHL games, recording four goals and 10 assists, before carving out a 21-season minor-league career. Despite losing sight in his right eye at the age of 19, O’Ree still played professionally, mainly in the old Western Hockey League, until he was 43.

Old, fuzzy footage shows No. 22, a left-handed Bruins winger during the Original Six era, motoring through the neutral zone, paving the way for all the black hockey players who followed - from Mike Marson, the second black NHLer, to stars like Jarome Iginla, and 2020 top prospect Quinton Byfield.

"It is very symbolic, if you think about it," said Jalen Chatfield, a 22-year-old Canucks prospect. "Growing up, some of my black friends would ask me why I was into hockey. They always had questions and I always had to educate them on it, tell them how fun it is to play. They hadn't been around it too much, but with this being done, with Willie in the Hall of Fame, hopefully some kids will see that and take a chance with hockey."

"Behind the Blackhawks winning the 2010 Cup, this is probably the second happiest day for me as a hockey fan," added Chris Watkins, a writer for Hockey-Graphs.com, the hockey analytics think tank. "From a cultural-significance standpoint, it's a recognition of the efforts and energy we have put into growing and expanding the marketplace for the game."

The list of black people inducted into the Hall is tiny. O’Ree, who was named to the Order of Canada in 2008, will join five-time Stanley Cup champion Grant Fuhr (2003) and legend Angela James (2008). Coincidentally, Peckham and James are half-siblings.

Not the end

While the Hall of Fame honoring O’Ree is a cornerstone moment, it doesn’t signal an overhaul of hockey culture.

Racism is still present around the game, as evidenced by the racial slurs hurled at Red Wings prospect Givani Smith during an OHL playoff series in May, fans chanting "basketball, basketball, basketball" at Capitals forward Devante Smith-Pelly in February, and then-Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban enduring racist tweets after a 2014 playoff win.

"It's a step in the right direction, but in no way is this a cure," said William Douglas of the Color Of Hockey blog. Douglas applauded the Hall of Fame Selection Committee and hopes O'Ree's inclusion opens the door for other pioneers, including Herb Carnegie, who attempted to blaze the NHL trail 10 years earlier but encountered too many obstacles.

Prominent NHLers, such as Flyers forward Wayne Simmonds and Sharks forward Joel Ward, as well as some of O'Ree's friends from the east coast, have lobbied on his behalf over the years. Part of O'Ree's appeal is a down-to-earth personality and ability to communicate with children.

"He has a serene aura about him," Douglas said. "You see that he’s been through the wars, but that he’s come out at the better end of it."

In April, Simmonds penned a powerful essay about O'Ree. In the Players' Tribune, he wrote about how "Willie set the table for everyone else to eat, and he did it all with dignity and class." O'Ree, to Simmonds, "wasn’t just a hockey player. He was an astronaut."

Chatfield is 60 years younger than O'Ree. Yet, his message to black kids interested in hockey sounds like something you might hear from a certain Hall of Famer.

"I think you should just go for it," he said. "Stick with your dreams. It's a great sport to play and you can accomplish a lot in life, more than you think."

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Report: Blackhawks express interest in pending UFA Bernier

The Chicago Blackhawks are considering turning to Jonathan Bernier for a little insurance between the pipes, reports Scott Powers of The Athletic.

Bernier, 29, can become an unrestricted free agent on July 1. He's at least the second netminder the team has reached out to during the pre-free agency discussion period, as a Monday report indicated the Blackhawks had also expressed interest in Carter Hutton.

What sort of workload Bernier could expect in Chicago remains unknown, as starter Corey Crawford's injury status is unclear. An upper-body ailment limited Crawford to just 28 games last season, with his final appearance coming in late December.

On Thursday, Blackhawks general manager Stan Bowman told Powers that he could not provide an update on Crawford's status, but added he expects the goalie to be ready for training camp.

As for Bernier, a move to Chicago would mark his fourth stop since 2016 after spending the past three seasons with Toronto, Anaheim, and Colorado. He posted a 19-13-3 showing and a .913 save percentage across 37 appearances with the Avalanche in 2017-18.

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