Category Archives: Hockey News

Cowen clears waivers, can be bought out by Maple Leafs

Embattled defenseman Jared Cowen cleared waivers Thursday, making him eligible to be bought out by the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Toronto will earn a $650,000 cap credit with Cowen's impending buy out, but the transaction will cost them $750,000 in valuable cap space in 2017-18, Sportsnet's Chris Johnston reports.

Cowen was acquired in the trade that sent former Maple Leafs captain Dion Phaneuf to the Ottawa Senators.

His tenure will come to an end without dressing for the Maple Leafs.

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Flyers to buy out Umberger

R.J. Umberger admitted he expected to be bought out by the Philadelphia Flyers after a difficult 2015-16 season, and general manager Ron Hextall confirmed Thursday that the team will buy out the final year of the forward's contract.

The 34-year-old was owed $4.6 million next season, and his buyout will help the Flyers gain an extra $3 million in cap space.

Umberger broke into the NHL with the Flyers in 2005. After a six-year stint in Columbus, he returned to Philadelphia in a June 2014 trade that sent Scott Hartnell to the Blue Jackets - a deal that now looks incredibly lopsided.

Production since trade

Player GP G A P
Scott Hartnell 156 51 58 109
R.J. Umberger 106 11 15 26

Despite Umberger's struggles, Hextall said he's "fine" with how the trade worked out, according to Sam Carchidi of the Philadelphia Inquirer.

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Penguins to qualify Beau Bennett, but not Justin Schultz

Following the Pittsburgh Penguins' Stanley Cup victory, general manager Jim Rutherford is already back to work, including dealing with his team's pending restricted free agents.

The Penguins will make a qualifying offer to forward Beau Bennett, but will not give one to defenseman Justin Schultz, Rutherford told reporters Thursday, according to DKPittsburghSports.com's Josh Yohe.

Bennett, 24, was limited to just 33 games this season due to injury, recording six goals and six assists. He appeared in just one playoff game, posting a minus-2 rating in 11 minutes of ice time during his team's Game 5 loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning in the Eastern Conference Final.

He earned $900,000 last season.

Schultz agreed to a one-year, $3.9-million deal with the Edmonton Oilers last offseason before being moved to the Penguins at the trade deadline. Although he recorded a career-low 18 points this season, Rutherford would like to bring the 25-year-old back.

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Malkin’s elbow injury was ‘real serious’, may need surgery

Evgeni Malkin's nagging elbow injury could require surgery.

The Pittsburgh Penguins forward told reporters Thursday he has an MRI pending on his elbow, according to Seth Rorabaugh of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Penguins general manager Jim Rutherford then revealed the extent of Malkin's ailment:

Malkin said his MRI is scheduled for Friday, and he can't rule out surgery until the results come in.

He missed the final 15 regular-season games and the Penguins' first playoff contest against the New York Rangers with what the club only referred to as an upper-body injury at the time.

Malkin collected six goals and 18 points in 23 playoff games after posting more than a point per game in the regular season. He notched two goals and an assist in six Cup Final games.

Penguins forward Bryan Rust said Thursday he broke his finger in Game 6 against the San Jose Sharks, according to Penguins beat writer Josh Yohe.

The rookie scored six postseason goals and had multi-goal games in two series-clinching wins.

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Ward signs 2-year deal to stick with Hurricanes

The Carolina Hurricanes have extended their partnership with Cam Ward for two more seasons, the club announced Thursday.

Ward will earn $6.6 million over the two-year term, including $3.5 million in the 2016-17 season.

The veteran netminder was a lightning rod for criticism in recent seasons, and throughout his mammoth six-year deal that expired at the end of the year. He's largely provided mix-bag results during his tenure, and led Carolina into the postseason just once since his breakthrough performance in the 2006 Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Ward has provided career-average numbers over the course of the last two seasons, but his efficiency has been well below the league's current standard. Ward's .907 save percentage over the last four seasons ranks second-to-last among goaltenders with at least 100 starts.

He'll take almost a 50 percent pay cut to remain in Carolina, but the organization clearly sees value - or doesn't quite have enough trust in Eddie Lack - in having Ward contribute in goal as they continue to develop. This includes grooming their own goaltending prospects, namely U.S. world junior netminder Alex Nedeljkovic.

Ward had the largest cap hit among goaltenders scheduled to hit the open market.

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Panthers promote Mahovlich to special advisor to ownership

The Florida Panthers have promoted NHL great Peter Mahovlich to special advisor to ownership after six seasons as a professional scout, the club announced Thursday.

Mahovlich will continue lending his services to the scouting department in his expanded role.

"Peter is highly respected within our organization and with his peers around the league," owner Vincent Viola said in a press release. "His wealth of experience and knowledge from his years as a player, coach and scout are tremendous assets for our organization."

The four-time Stanley Cup winner has previously worked in the Edmonton Oilers, Tampa Bay Lightning, and Atlanta Thrashers organizations.

Florida has brought extensive changes to its front office structure this summer, Mahovlich's promotion included.

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Penguins’ Bonino played with infected elbow in Cup Final

Nick Bonino played the final stretch of the playoffs with a rather concerning ailment.

The Pittsburgh Penguins forward told reporters Thursday he played in the Stanley Cup Final with an elbow infection that required heavy antibiotics, according to Jenn Menendez of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Bonino said he had his left elbow wrapped, and the condition caused his temperature to rise to around 100 degrees Fahrenheit at times, according to NHL.com's Wes Crosby.

The 28-year-old center would have been shut down had his fever hit 101 degrees.

Bonino posted 18 points in 24 playoff games on the highly productive "HBK" line with Carl Hagelin and Phil Kessel. He scored a goal and added two assists in the six Cup Final games.

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Shaw’s agent intends to talk contract with Blackhawks at draft

Andrew Shaw's agent plans to meet with the Chicago Blackhawks' brass next week to begin working on a new deal.

Pat Brisson told Chris Hine of the Chicago Tribune he intends to meet with the club - presumably general manager Stan Bowman - at the upcoming NHL draft.

Chicago cleared cap space Wednesday by trading forwards Bryan Bickell and Teuvo Teravainen to the Carolina Hurricanes for a pair of draft picks.

Related - Blackhawks' Bowman: Trading Bickell helps ability to re-sign Shaw

The move gave Chicago about $5 million in additional cap flexibility for a total of about $9.5 million.

Shaw would become a restricted free agent if he's not signed by July 1. His cap hit was $2.5 million last season.

The 24-year-old winger recorded 14 goals and 34 points in 78 games.

Shaw was suspended one game for directing a homophobic slur toward an official during the Blackhawks' first-round series against the St. Louis Blues.

The NHL draft takes place Friday, June 24 and Saturday, June 25 at First Niagara Center in Buffalo.

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Report: Crosby topped Kessel in airtight Conn Smythe vote

Amid all the clamoring that Phil Kessel deserved the Conn Smythe Trophy, it turns out he was incredibly close to winning it.

Kessel nearly took home the playoff MVP award that ultimately went to Sidney Crosby in one of the closest votes ever, according to TSN's Frank Seravalli.

Eighteen members of the Professional Hockey Writers Association - including Seravalli - cast first-, second-, and third-place votes, and the other 17 voters revealed their picks to him on the condition of anonymity.

Penguins defenseman Kris Letang and goaltender Matt Murray, as well as San Jose Sharks netminder Martin Jones and forward Logan Couture received votes. Here's how it reportedly broke down:

Player 1st 2nd 3rd Points
Sidney Crosby 9 5 3 63
Phil Kessel 7 8 1 60
Kris Letang 2 2 2 18
Martin Jones 0 2 1 7
Matt Murray 0 1 4 7
Logan Couture 0 0 7 7

The league gives five points for a first-place vote, three points for second, and one for third.

The NHL wouldn't confirm Seravalli's findings, because it's the only major pro league that refuses to reveal playoff MVP voting.

Crosby was held without a goal in the final, but the Penguins captain set up Letang's Cup-clincher, recorded 19 points in 24 postseason games, and notched three game-winners in the earlier rounds.

Kessel led Pittsburgh in the playoffs with 10 goals, 22 points and 98 shots, racking up 11 power-play points.

Not sure this is any consolation for Kessel backers, but it illustrates just how split the decision was.

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NHL Rumor Mill – June 16, 2016

Top-10 NHL draft trade candidates, UFA speculation, updates on the Oilers & much more in your NHL rumor mill.  Top-10 NHL draft trade candidates. THE HOCKEY NEWS: Matt Larkin lists  (top to bottom) Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Marc-Andre Fleury, Columbus Blue Jackets left wing Scott Hartnell, Colorado Avalanche defenseman Tyson Barrie, Chicago Blackhawks center Andrew Shaw, […]