Tortorella explodes on Penguins’ Rutherford, Johnson: ‘Shut the f— up!’

Warning: Story contains coarse language

John Tortorella has repeatedly called the Pittsburgh Penguins "whiners" in the past and has unleashed his fury on both Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, but his latest criticism is zeroed in on Penguins general manager Jim Rutherford.

Following Pittsburgh's signing of former Columbus Blue Jackets defenseman Jack Johnson, who inked a five-year deal in free agency, Rutherford spoke about Johnson's varying usage in Columbus, particularly the postseason when he was scratched for all six games.

"I don't think he had a bad year," Rutherford told Aaron Portzline of The Athletic. "He was a healthy scratch at the end of the season. I know the reason why. It wasn't because of how he was playing."

Johnson's remarks at an introductory press conference didn't help matters, either, as the veteran defenseman said, "I've been looking to be in a winning culture."

Clearly, those comments didn't sit well with the Blue Jackets fiery bench boss.

"All I know is, this organization, from the lawyers, the front office, (president of hockey operations John Davidson), the managers, the coaches, players ... has done nothing but try to help Jack," Tortorella said. "And for him to backhand slap us like this is utter bullshit, and he should know better.

"No one wishes anything bad to happen to him and his family. We wish him the best. But for him to put it the way he put it today is bullshit. And to have a general manager question our decision-making from three hours away, he must be a fucking magician."

Tortorella's response comes after the Blue Jackets worked alongside Johnson to help him through an extensive personal bankruptcy case which saw him forfeit nearly all of his salary over the past two seasons.

(Photo courtesy: Getty Images)

"(Johnson) doesn't have enough balls to call me back, because I've tried to get in touch with him," Tortorella added. "You don't shit on an organization that's done nothing but try to help you. We all know Jack has had some problems along the way here. It's very well-chronicled. All we've done is try to fucking help him."

Tortorella then turned his aim to Rutherford.

"The thing that pisses me off the most is a general manager in this league questioning and talking about our decision-making," Tortorella said. "Shut the fuck up!

"I don't want to go to name-calling, because I know Jimmy. He's a good man. They're both good people. But what the fuck are they doing? Get on with your business! I hope (Johnson) plays his ass off for them, but stay the fuck out of our business when you don't know what’s going on.”

Mark your calendars now. The first meeting between the Blue Jackets and Penguins this coming season is set for Nov. 24.

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Report: Islanders sign center Filppula

The New York Islanders are moving on from the John Tavares era, as the team has reportedly signed center Valtteri Filppula, according to The Athletic's Arthur Staple.

Filppula's signing comes after Tavares signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs in free agency. The team then showed interest in center Ryan O'Reilly, but lost out when he was dealt from the Buffalo Sabres to the St. Louis Blues.

In Filppula, the Islanders get a veteran center who excels at both ends of the ice. The 34-year-old spent the past two seasons with the Philadelphia Flyers, where he finished with 33 points in 81 games last year.

Filppula was a third-round draft pick by the Detroit Red Wings in 2002.

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Blues get O’Reilly from Sabres in exchange for Berglund, 1st-rounder

The St. Louis Blues acquired centerman Ryan O'Reilly from the Buffalo Sabres on Sunday, the team announced.

Related: Sabres didn't have trade in place for O'Reilly at draft, says GM

Heading the Sabres' way in return is an excellent haul that includes a 2019 first-round pick, 2021 second-round pick, and forwards Tage Thompson, Patrik Berglund, and Vladimir Sobotka.

O'Reilly is due a $7.5-million signing bonus that Buffalo would've been on the hook for as of midnight Sunday, but with the trade completed before that deadline, St. Louis will be picking up the hefty price tag.

Rumors had been percolating for the last few weeks regarding O'Reilly and a move away from the Sabres. After another season wallowing in the NHL's basement, the Sabres have pulled the trigger to offload O'Reilly's lucrative contract that carries another five seasons at a cap hit of $7.5 million.

O'Reilly is the biggest name in the deal but the Sabres did get back two veteran centers who will slot into their lineup immediately. As well, they acquire an intriguing prospect in Tage Thompson, who spent last season split between St. Louis and the club's AHL affiliate.

As for O'Reilly, the Blues are getting one of the best two-way pivots in the league. He had 24 goals and 37 assists in 81 games last season to go along with a 60 percent success rate in the faceoff dots.

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Blues get O’Reilly from Sabres in exchange for Berglund, 1st-rounder

The St. Louis Blues acquired centerman Ryan O'Reilly from the Buffalo Sabres on Sunday, the team announced.

Related: Sabres didn't have trade in place for O'Reilly at draft, says GM

Heading the Sabres' way in return is an excellent haul that includes a 2019 first-round pick, 2021 second-round pick, and forwards Tage Thompson, Patrik Berglund, and Vladimir Sobotka.

O'Reilly is due a $7.5-million signing bonus that Buffalo would've been on the hook for as of midnight Sunday, but with the trade completed before that deadline, St. Louis will be picking up the hefty price tag.

Rumors had been percolating for the last few weeks regarding O'Reilly and a move away from the Sabres. After another season wallowing in the NHL's basement, the Sabres have pulled the trigger to offload O'Reilly's lucrative contract that carries another five seasons at a cap hit of $7.5 million.

O'Reilly is the biggest name in the deal but the Sabres did get back two veteran centers who will slot into their lineup immediately. As well, they acquire an intriguing prospect in Tage Thompson, who spent last season split between St. Louis and the club's AHL affiliate.

As for O'Reilly, the Blues are getting one of the best two-way pivots in the league. He had 24 goals and 37 assists in 81 games last season to go along with a 60 percent success rate in the faceoff dots.

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Winners and losers on Day 1 of NHL free agency

There was no bigger story than John Tavares' homecoming on Sunday, but there were plenty of other intriguing moves on the first day of NHL free agency.

Predictably, many clubs paid hefty prices for less-than-stellar players, while others addressed immediate needs while paying market value.

Here's a look at who made out like bandits and whose moves left something to be desired:

Winners

Toronto Maple Leafs

The Leafs were the clear victors on day one, and not just because they won the Tavares sweepstakes.

They also got the superstar center on a hometown discount, for a reasonable seven years and $77 million.

Toronto's transformation into a perennial playoff contender undoubtedly played a part in Tavares' decision. Besides winning the 2016 draft lottery for Auston Matthews, team president Brendan Shanahan and new general manager Kyle Dubas (along with former GM Lou Lamoriello and former assistant GM Mark Hunter) deserve a ton of credit for fully rebuilding the club and putting it in a position to add a player of Tavares' caliber.

The next stage of the "Shanaplan" came to fruition Sunday, and now the future looks exponentially brighter for the Blue and White.

Vegas Golden Knights

The Golden Knights entered their first-ever free-agent period with a boatload of cap space, and while they weren't in the mix for the biggest fish, they did catch an excellent consolation prize.

Vegas signed Paul Stastny to a reported three-year, $19.5-million deal, landing the second-best center on the market at a fair cost.

Stastny gives this past season's Stanley Cup runner-up a skilled two-way pivot to anchor the Golden Knights' second line, and they still have plenty of cap space ($18.75 million, according to CapFriendly) left over to re-sign top-line center William Karlsson.

Tough guys

Sunday was a great day for offensively gifted players, but it was also kind to fighters and pests.

The Golden Knights gave Ryan Reaves a two-year contract reportedly worth $5.55 million in total, perhaps rewarding the grinder for his goal that eliminated the Winnipeg Jets in the Western Conference Final.

Oh, and also for this:

Elsewhere, the Islanders handed Leo Komarov four years and $12 million after losing Tavares, and the Dallas Stars gave Roman Polak a one-year, $1.3-million deal.

Jack Johnson

The Pittsburgh Penguins might deserve to be in the "losers" category for giving marginal defenseman Jack Johnson a five-year pact worth $3.25 million per season, but it's a big win for the veteran whose financial troubles have been well documented.

Johnson was essentially a borderline third-pairing blue-liner toward the end of his tenure with the Columbus Blue Jackets, but regardless of what you think of him as a player, it's nice to see him get some job security. Hopefully he's allowed to keep a good chunk of his new payday.

Losers

New York Islanders

There were no bigger losers on the first day of free agency than the New York Islanders. After weeks of taking part in the Tavares sweepstakes, the team watched hopelessly as its franchise forward left the only NHL organization he's ever known for his hometown team.

New York re-signed defenseman Thomas Hickey to a four-year, $10-million agreement and reunited Komarov with Lou Lamoriello, but neither of those moves will do much to ease the pain of Tavares leaving.

Poor Barry Trotz.

Winnipeg Jets

It was widely believed that the Jets dumped Steve Mason's $4.1 million on the Montreal Canadiens, along with young forward Joel Armia and two draft picks for defenseman Simon Bourque, to create space to re-sign Stastny.

However, the prized free-agent center opted to leave Winnipeg for Las Vegas once free agency opened.

Ouch.

The only one-way move the Jets made as of about 7 p.m. on Sunday was bringing in backup goaltender Laurent Brossoit on a one-year, $650,000 contract. It's not exactly how they were hoping to begin the frenzy.

Vancouver Canucks

The Canucks are supposedly a rebuilding team, but you wouldn't know it based on their free-agent activity.

Vancouver finalized a couple of puzzling signings Sunday, handing out dual four-year, $12-million deals to Jay Beagle and Antoine Roussel, in addition to giving forward Tim Schaller $3.8 million over two years and re-signing Sven Baertschi for $10 million over three years.

Both Beagle and Roussel have shown they can provide value as depth players in limited roles, but general manager Jim Benning went against the grain by adding them to a team that in all likelihood is still far from being competitive.

St. Louis Blues

Bringing back left wing David Perron for four years and $16 million wasn't a terrible move for the Blues, but giving Tyler Bozak $5 million per season for the next three years was a head-scratcher.

The Blues also bid farewell to stellar goaltender Carter Hutton, and while that was a foregone conclusion, they were only able to replace him with Chad Johnson, the journeyman who posted a pedestrian .891 save percentage last season.

(Photos courtesy: Getty Images)

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Best of the rest: Top available NHL free agents by position

With the preseason underway, theScore offers you a roundup of all the best players still available. The biggest names are off the board, but a handful of helpful talent remains up for grabs.

Codie McLachlan / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Left wings

  • Rick Nash
  • Mike Cammalleri
  • Scott Hartnell
  • Jason Chimera
  • Benoit Pouliot
  • Emile Poirier
  • Tanner Glass

Centers

Kirk Irwin / Getty Images Sport / Getty
  • Antoine Vermette
  • Nick Shore
  • Shawn Matthias
  • Dominic Moore
  • Freddie Hamilton

Right wings

Jonathan Daniel / Getty Images Sport / Getty
  • Tomas Jurco
  • Ales Hemsky

Defense

  • Johnny Oduya
  • Paul Martin
  • Kevin Bieksa
  • Clayton Stoner

Goaltenders

Elsa / Getty Images Sport / Getty
  • Steve Mason
  • Kari Lehtonen

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Senators offer extension to Karlsson

The Ottawa Senators are interested in keeping Erik Karlsson in the fold.

On Sunday, Senators general manager Pierre Dorion confirmed the team has presented Karlsson with a contract extension. The superstar defenseman can become an unrestricted free agent next summer and is eligible to sign a long-term extension as of Sunday.

Related - Report: 'Action picking up' on Karlsson trade talks

While Dorion didn't share the details of the offer, he added there's no immediate timeline to seal the deal.

"(The season) starts Oct. 4," Dorion said, per Postmedia's Bruce Garrioch. "We've got lots of time."

The 28-year-old Karlsson is a two-time Norris Trophy winner, presented to the NHL's best defenseman of the year.

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Senators offer extension to Karlsson

The Ottawa Senators are interested in keeping Erik Karlsson in the fold.

On Sunday, Senators general manager Pierre Dorion confirmed the team has presented Karlsson with a contract extension. The superstar defenseman can become an unrestricted free agent next summer and is eligible to sign a long-term extension as of Sunday.

Related - Report: 'Action picking up' on Karlsson trade talks

While Dorion didn't share the details of the offer, he added there's no immediate timeline to seal the deal.

"(The season) starts Oct. 4," Dorion said, per Postmedia's Bruce Garrioch. "We've got lots of time."

The 28-year-old Karlsson is a two-time Norris Trophy winner, presented to the NHL's best defenseman of the year.

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