Tag Archives: Hockey

Coyotes name Steve Sullivan director of player development

The changes continue in Arizona.

Coyotes general manager John Chayka announced the club has promoted Steve Sullivan to director of player development, signing him to a multi-year contract extension in the process.

Sullivan served as the team’s development coach over the past two seasons, working with coaches and players in the Coyotes’ minor league system.

"Steve has done an excellent job monitoring and developing our top prospects the past two seasons," said Chayka. "We are pleased with his work and he is very deserving of this promotion."

Sullivan recorded 747 points in 1,011 NHL games.

Newell Brown has also been signed to a multi-year contract extension to continue his role as the team's assistant coach.

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Senators’ Lazar needs new ride after Phillips announces retirement

Curtis Lazar will miss Chris Phillips for a number of reasons.

After the veteran defenseman announced his retirement, the young Ottawa Senators forward tweeted out his appreciation for being taken under Phillips' wing early in his career.

On the flip side, Lazar needs to find a new carpool.

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Senators’ Phillips announces retirement, takes on community engagement role

The Big Rig is putting it in park.

Defenseman Chris Phillips has officially announced his retirement from professional hockey after 18 seasons, all with the Ottawa Senators.

The decision, made along with family and doctors, was a result of a back injury that kept him off the ice for the entirety of the 2015-16 season.

The Senators concurrently announced Phillips will remain with the organization in a front office position. He will continue to engage with the Ottawa-Gatineau community while being involved in community programs, alumni relations, and business development.

Drafted first overall by the Senators in 1996, Phillips made the jump to the NHL at age 19, and went on to appear in 1,179 games with the club, setting a franchise record.

Former and current general managers Bryan Murray and Pierre Dorion were in attendance when Phillips made the announcement Thursday, and praised his time with the club.

"He's been a leader in our dressing room, a leader in our community and he’s had a great career," said Dorion, who also listed off the 20-plus charities Phillips is involved with in the community. "He represents loyalty and what it means to be an Ottawa Senator."

A prototypical stay-at-home defenseman, Phillips scored 71 goals and added 218 assists over the course of his career.

He also appeared in 114 playoff games for the Senators, where he helped the team reach the Stanley Cup Final for the first and only time in 2007 - which they lost to Anaheim in five games - and recorded his most memorable goal in a 2003 series against New Jersey.

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Luongo pays tribute to traded Gudbranson

As only he can, Roberto Luongo took to Twitter on Thursday to pay tribute to Erik Gudbranson, who was traded to the Vancouver Canucks a day earlier.

Related: Panthers' Mitchell tweets 'WTF' after Gudbranson-McCann trade

Gudbranson was drafted third overall by the Panthers in 2010, three years before Luongo rejoined the team.

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Report: Panthers offering 6-year deal to Vincent Trocheck

The Florida Panthers are reportedly looking to make a long-term commitment with Vincent Trocheck.

The club is offering the restricted free agent a six-year contract, and while valuation appears to be a bit of a hangup at this point, neither side is concerned, according to George Richards of the Miami Herald.

The 22-year-old broke out to the tune of 25 goals and 28 assists in 76 games, but was unable to contribute in the playoffs thanks to an ankle injury that sidelined him late in the regular season.

Trocheck was selected in the third round of the 2011 NHL Draft.

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Report: Panthers offering 6-year deal to Vincent Trocheck

The Florida Panthers are reportedly looking to make a long-term commitment with Vincent Trocheck.

The club is offering the restricted free agent a six-year contract, and while valuation appears to be a bit of a hangup at this point, neither side is concerned, according to George Richards of the Miami Herald.

The 22-year-old broke out to the tune of 25 goals and 28 assists in 76 games, but was unable to contribute in the playoffs thanks to an ankle injury that sidelined him late in the regular season.

Trocheck was selected in the third round of the 2011 NHL Draft.

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3 keys to the Lightning and Penguins’ Game 7 faceoff

The Pittsburgh Penguins host the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 2015-16 NHL season's foremost clash to date: Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Final.

It's an event that needs no introduction, but a few keys don't hurt. Here are three things to consider before puck drop at Consol Energy Center on Thursday night:

If the Penguins get a lead, they mustn't sit on it

Pittsburgh's erased two series deficits, also needing a win in an elimination scenario on the road to tee up the decisive clash on home ice. But from game-to-game and shift-to-shift in the series, they must be considered the more dominant team.

The Penguins have created nearly 100 more Corsi events, and registered 68 more shots on goal than Tampa through six games. They've outshot the Bolts in each meeting, three of which by at least a plus-15 margin.

Where they've fallen into trouble, however, is in protection of their leads. The Lightning erased multi-goal deficits twice to force overtime - winning once - and were close to pulling the trick for a third time in Game 6 before Bryan Rust iced it on a breakaway.

Should the Penguins jump out early, they cannot let the Lightning overrun them on the Corsi clock like they did in Game 6. Instead, they must show the killer instinct they had in Game 3, when they peppered the opposing goal with 48 shots in a contest they never trailed.

Who's got net?

It's no longer a question of who's starting; barring a nonsensical decision to turn to an unpracticed vet, Matt Murray and Andrei Vasilevskiy will oppose each other in Game 7. But only one of these young goaltenders - prospects emerging as bona fide future No. 1s - can prevail.

So, who?

Vasilevskiy, with the ice primarily titled toward his net, has been consistently brilliant since spelling an injured Ben Bishop in Game 1. He owns a .921 save rate in seven appearances, only showing vulnerability - and often volatility - in moments when his defense fails him.

Murray, meanwhile, has had stinkers, allowing three or more goals in six of his 14 starts. But at the same time, he's cancelled out the noise in big spots - none more important than his 29-save performance in Game 6 after briefly being unseated by longtime starter Marc-Andre Fleury.

Invariably, the netminders in a Game 7 are of utmost importance. But who has the edge over the other; well, that's anyone's guess.

Second strike

Perhaps the difference in shot disparity between Pittsburgh and Tampa Bay falls on the fact that the Penguins hide weapons up and down the lineup, while the Bolts rely primarily on a handful of top-six contributors.

Brian Boyle's provided important, albeit outlying, production, but, aside from that, Tampa's depth has been muted. Ryan Callahan, Valtteri Filppula, J.T. Brown, Cedric Paquette, and Vladislav Namestnikov have combined for four goals and 16 points in the playoffs, and six points versus Pittsburgh, placing the onus almost entirely on the skilled positions.

By contrast, the Penguins have received at least two goals this spring from every single forward whose appeared with any regularity, and 14 total points from their fourth line.

But that's the thing with these win-or-go-home games. It's almost always the case that a name that's sat dormant throughout arrives with a massive moment. And the Lightning certainly have more who can classify for such distinction.

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