Monthly Archives: November 2020
NHL Morning Coffee Headlines – November 10, 2020
NHL Facing Long Odds to Start 2020-21 Season on Jan. 1
Matthews to shave mustache if he can raise enough money for Movember
Auston Matthews' upper lip may be a bit colder next season.
The Toronto Maple Leafs superstar announced he'll shave his polarizing mustache - which he sported for all of last season - if he can raise $134,000 by the end of November for Movember proceeds.
In the video below, Matthews also reads out a handful of online comments that both criticize and praise his duster.
Matthews posted a career-high 47 goals and 80 points with his muzzy in 70 games last season. Though hockey players are notoriously superstitious, lacking a lip toupee shouldn't prevent the 23-year-old from another strong campaign in 2021.
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Yzerman optimistic NHL will form strong plan for 2020-21 season
Detroit Red Wings general manager Steve Yzerman strongly believes the NHL and players' association will establish a successful plan for the 2020-21 campaign.
"I'm very optimistic," Yzerman said earlier this week, according to the Detroit Free Press' Helene St. James. "I'm hopeful. I don't really have any control over it. The league can only control so much, as well.
"I think the players' association and the league, the cooperation from both sides has been fantastic. It's my understanding they're working together now to put a plan in place."
The 2019-20 season ended Sept. 28 after being delayed multiple months due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Deputy commissioner Bill Daly reiterated last week that the league is targeting a Jan. 1 start for the 2020-21 campaign.
As of Friday, the NHL-NHLPA return-to-play committee apparently hadn't yet met to discuss next season despite the date being less than two months away.
Yzerman says the biggest hurdle facing the league is the border restrictions between Canada and the United States.
"Ultimately, we're restricted by international governments - the Canada-US border - local, state governments," Yzerman said. "Right now, it looks like we'll be able to come up with some kind of plan, but I don't know specifically what that is."
Yzerman will be hoping the Red Wings can take the next step in their rebuild in 2020-21 after finishing dead last in the NHL for the first time since 1985-86.
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Stars sign Hintz to 3-year, $9.45M pact
The Dallas Stars signed forward Roope Hintz to a three-year deal with an average annual value of $3.15 million, the team announced Monday.
Hintz, 23, will be a restricted free agent when the deal expires following the 2022-23 season.
The 6-foot-3 Finn ranked second on the Stars with a career-best 19 goals - including five game-winners - and added 14 assists through 60 regular-season contests in 2019-20.
He added two goals and 13 points over 25 playoff games during the Stars' run to the Stanley Cup Final.
Stars general manager Jim Nill has kept busy this offseason. He inked netminder Anton Khudobin and forwards Radek Faksa and Denis Gurianov to new deals and brought in defenseman Mark Pysyk. Nill also named Rick Bowness permanent head coach in October.
Dallas now has just under $258,000 in projected cap space with a full 23-man roster, according to CapFriendly.
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Ranking NHL teams by tiers: The bottom 14
This is the first installment of a two-part series ranking all 31 NHL teams by tiers for the 2020-21 season. Part 2, which addresses the top 17 teams, will be published Tuesday.
This is an annual exercise conducted after the dust has settled on the draft and free agency. The tiers are based on projections for the 2020-21 season only, not the long-term trajectories of each franchise. Lastly, keep in mind the timing. We're all awaiting word on the 2020-21 NHL season, which means there's runway for teams before rosters need to be finalized.
Worst of the worst (8th tier)
In a league of their own in a not-so-nice way
Detroit Red Wings
The Red Wings' offseason has been undeniably productive, which is a step in the right direction for a franchise looking to regain respectability. Up front, Vladislav Namestnikov, Bobby Ryan, Sam Gagner, and Adam Erne were brought in on short-term deals. Troy Stecher, Jon Merrill, and Marc Staal are all also under contract for a year or two and were added to the blue line. And inking goalie Thomas Greiss at $3.6 million per season for two years was a tidy piece of business from general manager Steve Yzerman.
These acquisitions improved Detroit, yet the offseason work will only slightly move the needle because the bar was set so laughably low last campaign. The 2019-20 Wings lost 54 of 71 games while finishing with a minus-122 goal differential. Among 31 teams, they're still the furthest away from a Stanley Cup in 2020-21.
Trendline: Still murky | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 7th | 8th |
Head barely above water (7th tier)
Rebuilding with the inside track on prime draft-lottery odds
Anaheim Ducks
Where are the goals going to come from? That's the biggest question tied to the Ducks right now, with Ryan Getzlaf, Rickard Rakell, Adam Henrique, Jakob Silfverberg, Sonny Milano, and Danton Heinen probably making up the team's top six.
Getzlaf, who's 35 years old and on an expiring contract, could be trade bait as the deadline approaches. Anaheim's blue line is solid, especially with Kevin Shattenkirk arriving on a three-year deal, and John Gibson is a premier goalie, so there's a glimmer of hope for this capped-out franchise in transition. But the Ducks will be a bottom-five team in 2020-21, and they'll benefit from finally committing to a full-scale rebuild.
Trendline: Nearing bottom | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 6th | 3rd |
Los Angeles Kings
Of the four teams in the seventh tier, Los Angeles' fan base has the least to gripe about. GM Rob Blake has been honest about trudging through a weighty rebuild while aging stars Anze Kopitar and Drew Doughty remain under contract. So far, so good, with Quinton Byfield, Alex Turcotte, Jaret Anderson-Dolan, Rasmus Kupari, Arthur Kaliyev, Akil Thomas, Samuel Fagemo, and Tobias Bjornfot headlining an impressively deep and talented prospect pipeline.
The club also holds nine picks in the 2021 draft and plenty of cap space to weaponize. The Kings' future looks bright, but don't expect anything beyond minor gains this season.
Trendline: On the rebound | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 7th | 4th |
San Jose Sharks
The Sharks are one of the trickiest teams to gauge. In 2018-19, they lost in the conference finals. Then while struggling through injuries and poor performances this past campaign, they ranked 29th in points percentage, missing the 24-team postseason. Most of their top players are 30 or older, and GM Doug Wilson didn't accomplish much this offseason.
Notable new faces include top-six forward Ryan Donato and goalie Devan Dubnyk, both of whom were acquired in a trade with the Minnesota Wild. On paper, Dubnyk and Martin Jones are far from a reliable goaltending tandem, which is why San Jose lands in this lower tier. Erik Karlsson, Brent Burns, Logan Couture, and other key contributors could bounce back during Bob Boughner's first full year behind the bench, but the Sharks' roster probably isn't strong enough to mask the deficiencies in net.
Trendline: Lacks clarity | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 4th | 3rd |
Ottawa Senators
The Senators are on a similar trajectory to the Wings, though they're a bit further ahead in the rebuilding process. They're not ready to contend for a playoff spot despite graduating from the painful bottoming-out phase. Picking up two-time Stanley Cup champion Matt Murray in a trade should solidify the goaltending position in Ottawa, while former Panthers winger Evgenii Dadonov is set to inject some much-needed offensive punch.
Still, this team's record will largely rest with the growth of core youngsters like Thomas Chabot, Erik Brannstrom, Brady Tkachuk, Colin White, Josh Norris, Drake Batherson, and Alex Formenton. Really, it's in the Sens' best long-term interest to enter the draft lottery again before transitioning into a new, more competitive phase in 2021-22. The wait continues in Canada's capital city.
Trendline: The climb begins | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 8th | 8th |
Notch below the playoffs (6th tier)
For various reasons, 2020-21 doesn't project to be a banner season
Arizona Coyotes
The Coyotes have been a hot mess lately, and that's putting it mildly. The team's effort in the postseason was uninspiring, and Arizona forfeited two high draft picks due to scouting violations. The club then attempted but failed to trade captain Oliver Ekman-Larsson, and it renounced the rights to draft pick Mitchell Miller following a public outcry.
That series of events has left Arizona with a dire outlook over the next few years. The Coyotes should be fine in 2020-21, largely due to stellar netminders and Rick Tocchet's coaching. However, Clayton Keller and Phil Kessel leading an attack isn't intimidating anyone.
Trendline: A drying well | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 6th | 7th |
Minnesota Wild
There are simply too many unknowns with the Wild. The club's center depth leaves plenty to be desired. Who knows how impactful highly touted Russian forward Kirill Kaprizov will be as an NHL rookie. First-round pick Marco Rossi may or may not make the team. Top-four defenseman Matt Dumba has been mentioned in the trade-rumor mill all offseason. Three longtime leaders - Dubnyk, Mikko Koivu, and Eric Staal - are gone. Cam Talbot is the new starting goalie. And much more.
Toss in the fact that GM Bill Guerin, who's been on the job for a year, isn't done turning over the roster, and Minnesota is in an awkward, ho-hum position for 2020-21.
Trendline: Direction TBD | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 6th | 5th |
New Jersey Devils
Tom Fitzgerald is quickly putting his stamp on this team, and the GM's first offseason in charge has been sharp. Signing Corey Crawford makes a ton of sense, as the move gives goalie-of-the-future Mackenzie Blackwood veteran support. The acquisitions of Andreas Johnsson and Ryan Murray were shrewd, and Lindy Ruff appears to be a solid head coach hire.
However, the Devils - an organization with just two playoff appearances over the past decade - will be chasing the seven other Metropolitan Division teams even after all of their moves. With Jack Hughes and Nico Hischier green still, is New Jersey as good as or better than Carolina, Philadelphia, Washington, Pittsburgh, Columbus, or the two New York teams in 2020? Probably not.
It's an optimistic time for the Devils, but they're only starting an upward trajectory.
Trendline: A good start | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 6th | 5th |
Chicago Blackhawks
Like the Kings, the Blackhawks are trying to rebuild without tearing down the entire championship foundation, which, in this case, includes Jonathan Toews, Patrick Kane, Duncan Keith, and Brent Seabrook. Longtime starting goalie Crawford wasn't re-signed, creating a dangerous dynamic in the crease. Chicago is porous defensively, and now Malcolm Subban and Colin Delia will be tasked with bailing out that unit? Good luck.
On the flip side, Kane is an elite player, Toews experienced a resurgent 2019-20, and Alex DeBrincat, Kirby Dach, Dominik Kubalik, Adam Boqvist, and Ian Mitchell are all promising young talents. The Blackhawks finished last year with a .514 points percentage. Just above .500 is a fair prediction for 2020-21.
Trendline: Treading water | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 5th | 5th |
Florida Panthers
No NHL franchise is spinning its wheels more than the Panthers. Jonathan Huberdeau is 27 years old, Aleksander Barkov is 25, and Aaron Ekblad is 24, and the team has accomplished basically nothing over the trio's six seasons together (zero playoff series wins in two appearances).
Now there's been a huge turnover, with the club bidding farewell to Mike Hoffman, Evgenii Dadonov, Mike Matheson, Colton Sceviour, Josh Brown, Erik Haula, Brian Boyle, Lucas Wallmark, and Mark Pysyk while welcoming Patric Hornqvist, Alex Wennberg, Markus Nutivaara, Radko Gudas, Vinnie Hinostroza, Carter Verhaeghe, and Ryan Lomberg. The acquisitions were cost-effective and carry little risk, yet Florida has become worse.
Down the road, Bill Zito and Joel Quenneville - a pretty good GM-head coach tandem - could turn the ship around. In the present, though, prepare for more mediocrity.
Trendline: Slipping back | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 4th | 4th |
Standings purgatory (5th tier)
Playoff potential, but the stars must align perfectly
New York Rangers
Putting the Rangers in the "purgatory" section may seem negative. But it's actually a compliment to the fine job management has done while rebuilding the Original Six franchise.
A playoff spot in 2020-21 isn't out of the question. Then again, even after adding first overall pick Alexis Lafreniere and continuing to develop sophomores Adam Fox and Kaapo Kakko, New York is still in a transition zone. The club's rise has been fast and virtually mistake-free. However, we don't know how good the goaltending tandem of Igor Shesterkin and Alexandar Georgiev will be in the short term. Nor do we know if the defense corps, as currently constructed, is strong enough to protect one-goal leads against high-octane offensive squads.
Trendline: Future forward | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 6th | 5th |
Nashville Predators
It's almost unfair to slot the Predators into any tier right now, as they appear far from finished with their offseason maneuvering. There's $12.9 million in cap space for GM David Poile to work with, and two unsigned free-agent forwards - snipers Mike Hoffman and Anthony Duclair - are obvious fits.
The Preds disappointed in the postseason, losing to the Coyotes in the qualifying round. Despite boasting an elite blue line and quality goaltending, Nashville has generally failed to build off a trip to the 2017 Stanley Cup Final. Unless something drastic happens soon, the franchise could be entrenched in the NHL's mushy middle as an annual toss-up while good but not nearly good enough to win a championship.
Trendline: In decline | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 3rd | 1st |
Buffalo Sabres
The Jack Eichel-era Sabres will finally challenge for a playoff spot this year. Whether they make the postseason is another question. Either way, there's no denying first-time GM Kevyn Adams has upgraded the club's forward group substantially.
The top six now features Eichel, former MVP Taylor Hall, veteran two-way center Eric Staal, former 40-goal scorer Jeff Skinner, young sniper Victor Olofsson, and reliable producer Sam Reinhart, with hot-shot rookie Dylan Cozens also in the mix. There are question marks on the back end and between the pipes, but the Sabres' offense should keep them competitive every night.
Trendline: Slowly upward | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 6th | 7th |
Winnipeg Jets
The Jets land in the fifth tier because there's a lot of variance in their possible outcomes for 2020-21. If everything goes according to plan, they can make some noise in the Western Conference. If the season's bumpy, they're likely not a playoff team.
Reacquiring Paul Stastny to fill the vacant second-line center role has been Winnipeg's lone notable transaction this offseason. The team's defense, which was atrocious last year, is essentially the same. And while he's among the league's best goalies, there's no guarantee Connor Hellebuyck produces another Vezina Trophy-caliber season.
However, Winnipeg's attack remains scary with Blake Wheeler, Mark Scheifele, Kyle Connor, Nik Ehlers, and Patrik Laine (if he doesn't get traded) leading the charge. And head coach Paul Maurice is a difference-maker himself.
Trendline: Hold steady | 2019 | 2018 |
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Previous tiers | 4th | 1st |
John Matisz is theScore's national hockey writer.
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Jets sign 1st-rounder Cole Perfetti to entry-level contract
The Winnipeg Jets signed 2020 first-round draft pick Cole Perfetti to a three-year, entry-level contract, the team announced Monday.
Perfetti was the fifth-ranked North American skater entering the draft, but the Jets landed the dynamic center at 10th overall.
The 18-year-old finished second in the OHL in scoring last season with 111 points in 61 games.
The OHL isn't slated to return until February, but Perfetti is expected to feature prominently on Canada's world junior squad.
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Panthers hire Ulf Samuelsson as assistant coach
The Florida Panthers hired longtime NHL defenseman Ulf Samuelsson as an assistant coach, the team announced Monday.
"Ulf is a knowledgeable and experienced coach who will be a great addition to the Panthers," said general manager Bill Zito. "We are excited for him to join Joel (Quenneville's) coaching staff and look forward to his competitive mentality and the impact that he can have on our team."
Samuelsson most recently served as head coach of the Swedish Hockey League's Leksands IF, while also working as a Seattle Kraken scout. He's coached the AHL's Charlotte Checkers and has been an assistant for the then-Phoenix Coyotes, New York Rangers, and Chicago Blackhawks, where he worked under Quenneville.
Samuelsson's NHL playing career spanned 16 seasons split among the Hartford Whalers, Pittsburgh Penguins, Rangers, Detroit Red Wings, and Philadelphia Flyers. The 56-year-old registered 332 points in 1,080 games, winning two Stanley Cups with the Pens in 1991 and 1992.
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NHL logo rankings: 50-41
40-31 (Nov. 10) | 30-21 (Nov. 11) | 20-11 (Nov. 12) | 10-1 (Nov. 13)
Welcome to the theScore's NHL logo countdown. This list examines logos that date back to the inception of the Original Six and includes the main emblem for all 32 current teams, 11 clubs that moved or changed their name, and seven whose logo has undergone a significant redesign. Only primary ones were considered.
The five-part series concludes with the top 10 on Friday. Let's begin with Nos. 50-41.
50. Anaheim Ducks
Anaheim pulled off perhaps the biggest logo downgrade in NHL history when it shifted out of the Mighty Ducks era. Gold and orange is a bizarre color combination, and an infusion of black and silver simply doesn't work. Whenever the Ducks update their logo again, perhaps it would be wise to actually include, you know, a duck.
49. California Golden Seals (1970-76)
Initially named the California Seals, the team was purchased by Oakland Athletics owner Charlie Finley in 1970 and renamed the Bay Area Seals. After just two games, the club re-branded to the California Golden Seals and switched its colors to green and gold to match those of the MLB's A's. The colors simply didn't work this time around, and the font could have been more aesthetically pleasing.
48. Columbus Blue Jackets
The Blue Jackets' current logo is simple and serves its purpose, though it doesn't exactly stand out. It was used as an alternate logo beginning in 2003 but became the primary one in 2007. It incorporates the Ohio state flag wrapped around a star, paying homage to the team's roots in patriotism.
47. Cleveland Barons (1976-78)
The Cleveland Barons were born when the California Golden Seals relocated to Ohio in 1976. New city, new name, but yet another underwhelming branding decision. The crest was outdated even for the '70s, and the lack of creativity certainly didn't help market the team. The Barons' existence was short-lived, as the club merged with the Minnesota North Stars after just two seasons.
46. Tampa Bay Lightning
Since their inception in 1992, the Lightning have gone with a simple bolt for their logo. It went through a couple of minor tweaks, but the club completely updated the logo and the team's primary colors to the current design ahead of the 2011-12 season. It certainly doesn't push any boundaries, which prevented it from placing higher up the list.
45. Dallas Stars
It's safe to say the Stars organization left all of its best looks in Minnesota. Dallas' current logo is rather simple and uninspiring, and for a city so full of life, it fails to tell much of a story. Perhaps it's time the club considers at least bringing back its look from the Mike Modano era.
44. Columbus Blue Jackets (2000-07)
The Blue Jackets' old primary logo is better than the current iteration but was nothing to write home about. If Columbus is planning a rebrand anytime soon, it can leave this one behind. We want the cannon!
43. Kansas City Scouts (1974-76)
NHL hockey didn't last long in Kansas City, and the Scouts' logo was a neat idea that was executed lackadaisically. The design is an homage to The Scout, an iconic statue located in Penn Valley Park that overlooks downtown. It's certainly a unique look, but it feels incomplete due to a lack of detail.
42. Washington Capitals
The Capitals' emblem is aesthetically pleasing but falls far short of its potential. The colors pop and the stars are an excellent touch, but wordmark logos appear lazy and leave a lot to be desired. With a little bit more imagination, Washington could have one of the better logos in the league.
41. Los Angeles Kings
The Kings have undergone more logo changes than most teams but have donned the current crest since 2011. It incorporates the team's famed crown emblem from the past, but the design is basic overall. While it's not very flashy, the black and silver color scheme helps get the job done.
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