Report: Coyotes may relocate if they lose land auction

Relocation will be a possibility for the Arizona Coyotes if they lose a land auction scheduled for June.

The Coyotes' ownership is keen to win the auction, Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman reported on "Saturday Headlines."

"However, there is also an admission that the status quo cannot continue," according to Friedman.

"(It's unclear) what the timeline would be if they do win it, and how long it would take," he added. "As a result of that, especially if the Coyotes don't win the auction, relocation will be on the table."

The franchise is reportedly preparing for both scenarios.

On Thursday, the Arizona State Land Department Board of Appeals unanimously approved a $68.5-million appraisal for a 95-acre plot of land in Phoenix, clearing the way for the Coyotes to bid on it. That price will be the starting point in the auction, and it must be advertised for 10 weeks beforehand.

The Coyotes' potential relocation has been a talking point for years. However, it's reached a boiling point this season as they've been looking for an alternate plan to avoid remaining at Mullett Arena, the 5,000-seat NCAA facility they were forced to move into starting in 2022-23.

They had a plan to build an arena in Tempe, but a public referendum squashed that possibility last spring.

In January, Utah Jazz owner Ryan Smith made a formal request to bring the NHL to that state. Then in February, NHLPA executive director Marty Walsh lambasted the Coyotes over the uncertainty of their situation. He said he was "extremely disappointed" in the ownership of the club, that he had "serious concerns" about it, and asked, "How long do you wait to get a home?"

The original Winnipeg Jets relocated to become the Phoenix Coyotes in 1996.

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Hurricanes rally late, beat Leafs in shootout

Sebastian Aho scored twice in the final two minutes of regulation to force overtime before the Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-4 in a shootout Saturday.

Aho brought the Canes within a goal at the 18:28 mark of the third period while Carolina was sporting a six-on-four advantage.

Aho then deflected home the equalizer with 5.8 seconds remaining in regulation. Deadline acquisition Jake Guentzel iced the game with a shootout winner.

The Maple Leafs had a glorious chance to end the game in OT with a four-on-three power play, but they couldn't capitalize.

Toronto held leads of 3-0 and 4-2 in the contest.

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Panthers’ Kulikov suspended 2 games for hit on Sheary

Florida Panthers defenseman Dmitry Kulikov was handed a two-game suspension for his check to the head of Tampa Bay Lightning forward Conor Sheary on Saturday night, the NHL's Department of Player Safety announced Monday.

The officials handed Kulikov a match penalty for the hit, which negated a Panthers goal.

Here's a closer look, which shows direct contact to the head:

Sheary was forced to exit his team's eventual 5-3 victory, though he's not expected to miss any further time.

This marks the second suspension of Kulikov's 15-year NHL career. He received a four-game ban for clipping back in 2015.

Kulikov has recorded 16 assists in 64 games this season while playing a bottom-pairing role.

The Panthers' defensive depth will be tested for their next two games - Thursday versus the Predators and Saturday against the Rangers. Tobias Bjornfot, who was claimed off waivers earlier this month, is in line to make his Panthers debut.

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Habs’ St. Louis steps away indefinitely for family reasons

Canadiens head coach Martin St. Louis is taking an indefinite leave from the team for family reasons, Montreal announced Saturday.

Assistant coach Trevor Letowski will handle head coaching duties in St. Louis' absence.

St. Louis joined the Canadiens as bench boss in his first NHL coaching role of any kind when they fired Dominique Ducharme in February 2022. The rebuilding squad has gone 70-94-21 with St. Louis at the helm.

Montreal entered Saturday 25-30-11, tied for last place in the Atlantic Division by points percentage (.462) with the Ottawa Senators.

St. Louis had a Hall of Fame playing career primarily with the Tampa Bay Lightning. He racked up 1,033 points over 1,134 games, helping the Bolts win the Stanley Cup in 2004. The Hall inducted him in 2018.

Letowski is a former NHL forward who spent 10 years behind OHL benches following his on-ice career. He also coached in three World Junior Championships as an assistant, winning gold on Ducharme's staff in 2018.

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Matthews’ math on 70 goals, Kings blue-liners, and 4 other NHL items

Poor Felix Sandstrom.

The Philadelphia Flyers goalie thought he had Thursday off but was called into action against the Maple Leafs after Samuel Ersson allowed three goals on 12 shots in the first period. Sandstrom survived the second, plus the opening minutes of the third, before his life flashed before his eyes.

With both Flyers defensemen somehow on one side of the ice, Auston Matthews, the NHL's greatest goal-scorer, accepted a neutral-zone pass:

Broadcast screenshot / ESPN

Matthews entered the Flyers zone on the breakaway, deked, and fired a snap shot from the high slot for goal No. 55. What a haunting sequence for a backup goalie.

Despite scoring only four goals in his past 10 games, Matthews is certain to pass his career high of 60 and is on pace to finish with 70 goals - technically 69.66 - in 81 games (he missed one tilt in mid-December).

The 26-year-old seems to have his third Rocket Richard Trophy locked up. Former teammate Zach Hyman and division rival Sam Reinhart are tied for second with 46 goals while Nathan MacKinnon (42) and David Pastrnak (41) are the only others in the 40s.

Matthews doesn't have a lot of padding in his goal tally, either. He's yet to score an empty-net goal and 40 of his 55 goals have come at even strength. But he creates goals at a far higher rate than expected: Sportlogiq credited him with only 37.1 individual expected goals ahead of the 6-2 win over Philly.

Icon Sportswire / Getty Images

As in years past, Matthews ranks high in many key offensive categories tracked by Sportlogiq. Before Thursday's game, Matthews on a per-game basis ranked first in the league in slot shots (2.76), sixth in inner-slot shots (1.40), first in scoring chances generated off the cycle (2.19), first in chances off the forecheck (0.63), and eighth in chances off the rush (1.14).

It's possible Matthews doesn't dress for all 17 remaining games, given Toronto's comfortably in a playoff spot and needs No. 34 at his best for the postseason. If he does play all 17, the competition isn't particularly overwhelming: Toronto has three games left against New Jersey; two each versus Carolina, Washington, Florida, and Tampa Bay; and one against Philly, Edmonton, Buffalo, Montreal, Pittsburgh, and Detroit.

Matthews has twice this season recorded back-to-back hat tricks; six goals in two games at any point over the final month would go a long way toward reaching 70. Teemu Selanne and Alexander Mogilny - who both scored 76 in 1992-93 - were the last NHLers to reach the mark.

More insight on hockey analytics

My in-depth feature on the NHL's decade of data published Thursday involved interviews with around 20 people. Even though the story stretched to 4,000 words, plenty of interesting insights ended up being edited out.

Here are a few nuggets:

Nugget 1: Expand the time horizon to 15-20 years and you truly get a sense of how much the NHL's changed with respect to access to cutting-edge technology and statistics. Brant Berglund, the Bruins' video coach from 2002-10, recalls popping tapes into a VHS player to scout future opponents. Berglund, now the NHL's senior director of coaching and GM technology, is amazed to see job postings for roles commonly associated with tech start-ups. In 2024, teams have so much data to collect, organize, and analyze that some front offices are hiring database architects and software engineers. What a stark contrast.

Ethan Miller / Getty Images

Nugget 2: The league's working on the next iteration of NHL Edge, the long-awaited advanced stats hub launched earlier this season. Fans can expect to have access to puck possession, passing, defensive, and special-teams data. The visualizations and sorting filters at NHL Edge will also improve over time. "Part of what we want to do here is present information and allow people to draw their own conclusions from it," said Russell Levine, the group VP of statistics and information. "I think you're going to see much deeper insights as that data set grows and grows more complex."

Nugget 3: OK, this may be surprising: the rise of advanced stats hasn't impacted contract negotiations in any significant way. Games played, time on ice, role, goals, and assists remain the standard talking points, according to one NHLPA agent. Why? Well, only stats on NHL.com can be used in arbitration cases. Negotiations are about the big picture and basic stats often tell a concise story. Teams also have more manpower and access to better data than agencies, so by bringing up advanced stats, the player's side risks "opening Pandora's box" because teams can present more sophisticated data. The agent also stressed that negotiations in the first few days of free agency largely revolve around supply and demand. If a team's desperate, it'll overpay. If a player's desperate, he'll settle for less money or shorter term.

Kings of right-handed D-men

Icon Sportswire / Getty Images

On July 1, 2018, the Kings signed Drew Doughty to an eight-year contract extension. The deal slotted Doughty, then 28, on the right side of Los Angeles' top pair for the foreseeable future, and he remains there today.

Around this time, Matt Roy was beginning to show signs of future top-four potential. He also shoots right. If all went according to plan, the Kings would theoretically have enough talent on the right side to take a conservative approach to right-handed defensemen over the next handful of years.

What they've done instead is acquire righties with NHL potential and then figure out later on what to do with such rare assets. For instance, after the Doughty extension, the Kings signed undrafted free agent Sean Walker and added prospect Sean Durzi in a trade with Toronto.

Gary A. Vasquez / Getty Images

The Kings then selected seven righties over the next five drafts - not an absurdly high rate but high nonetheless. The kicker is they hit on four of them: Jordan Spence, Brock Faber, Helge Grans, and Brandt Clarke.

Spence and Clarke are future pillars of L.A.'s blue line; Faber and a first-rounder were traded to Minnesota for Kevin Fiala; Grans and Walker left in a three-team, eight-piece swap; and Durzi was sent to Arizona for a second-rounder.

You can certainly quibble with the results of those trades. No major wins.

But the takeaway is that the Kings have continued to covet a hot commodity across the league, which is a clever way of approaching the draft and develop process. It also makes me wonder what's in store for Otto Salin and Matthew Mania, righties with NHL potential drafted by L.A. in 2022 and 2023.

Parting shots

Nasty Nate: The Hart Trophy race will be a treat to watch down the stretch. Matthews, MacKinnon, Connor McDavid, Nikita Kucherov, and Connor Hellebuyck all have strong cases with four weeks left. Here's one stat that isn't necessarily relevant to the MVP discussion but highlights the absurdity of some of these performances: MacKinnon has at least one point in every Avalanche home game. In 32 games at Ball Arena, he's racked up 71 points (26 goals, 45 assists), which is more than all but 18 NHLers' season-long total.

MacKinnon's streak is tied with Guy Lafleur (1978-79, Montreal) for third-longest in league history. Wayne Gretzky - obviously - sits first and second on the list. Gretzky snagged a point in all 40 Kings home games in 1988-89. The modern 82-game season gives MacKinnon one extra date, so he'll become the new record holder if he goes wire to wire.

Bo and UPL show: While their chances of making the playoffs remain slim (7.8% according to MoneyPuck), the Sabres' recent spurt should be encouraging to fans. Bowen Byram, acquired from Colorado ahead of the trade deadline, has been terrific alongside Rasmus Dahlin on the top pair. The 22-year-old Byram plays an up-tempo, assertive style suited for Buffalo's system. The club's outscored opponents 6-2 in his 70 five-on-five minutes.

Meanwhile, goalie Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen continues to flourish. His .915 save percentage through 42 games ranks in the top 10, and he leads all NHL netminders with a 77% quality start rate, posting a positive goals saved above expected value in 30 of 39 starts. Luukkonen, 25, and Devon Levi, 22, were battling for the starter's job to begin the season, but there's no doubt who the No. 1 guy is now.

RempeMania: The NHL's in the entertainment business, fighting is part of the on-ice product, and dropping the mitts is Matt Rempe's ticket to the NHL. So there should be no mystery why the 6-7, 241-pound Rangers rookie winger's amassed 54 penalty minutes (and a four-game suspension) in 56 minutes of ice time. He's incentivized to fight and is fully committed to the bit.

Hopefully, Rempe is being educated on what this role could do to his long-term health. Brain trauma is no joke. He needs family, friends, the Rangers, and his representatives at KO Sports to be the adults in the room (Rempe is just 21, after all) and lay out the risks and rewards of how he's playing. The kid can contribute offensively in a net-front role, so picking his spots to fight (as in the video below) is a good start.

Takes, Thoughts, and Trends is theScore's biweekly hockey grab bag.

John Matisz is theScore's senior NHL writer. Follow John on Twitter (@MatiszJohn) or contact him via email (john.matisz@thescore.com).

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